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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Flower of the North, by James Oliver Curwood
+#6 in our series by James Oliver Curwood
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+Title: Flower of the North
+
+Author: James Oliver Curwood
+
+Release Date: December, 2003 [Etext #4703]
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+[This file was first posted on March 3, 2002]
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Flower of the North, by James Oliver Curwood
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+
+FLOWER OF THE NORTH
+
+A MODERN ROMANCE
+
+BY JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD
+
+AUTHOR OF THE DANGER TRAIL, PHILIP STEELS, ETC.
+
+
+
+
+
+TO MY COMRADES OF THE GREAT NORTHERN WILDERNESS, THOSE FAITHFUL
+COMPANIONS WITH WHOM I HAVE SHARED THE JOYS AND HARDSHIPS OF THE
+"LONG SILENT TRAIL," AND ESPECIALLY TO THAT "JEANNE D'ARCAMBAL."
+WHO WILL FIND IN HERSELF THE HEROINE OF THIS STORY, THE WRITER
+GRATEFULLY DEDICATES THIS VOLUME.
+
+DETROIT. MICHIGAN
+
+JANUARY, 1912
+
+
+
+
+
+FLOWER OF THE NORTH
+
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+
+"Such hair! Such eyes! Such color! Laugh if you will, Whittemore,
+but I swear that she was the handsomest girl I've ever laid my
+eyes upon!"
+
+There was an artist's enthusiasm in Gregson's girlishly sensitive
+face as he looked across the table at Whittemore and lighted a
+cigarette.
+
+"She wouldn't so much as give me a look when I stared," he added.
+"I couldn't help it. Gad, I'm going to make a full-page 'cover' of
+her to-morrow for Burke's. Burke dotes on pretty women for the
+cover of his magazine. Why, demmit, man, what the deuce are you
+laughing at?"
+
+"Not at this particular case, Tom," apologized Whittemore. "But--
+I'm wondering--"
+
+His eyes wandered ruminatively about the rough interior of the
+little cabin, lighted by a single oil-lamp hanging from a cross-
+beam in the ceiling, and he whistled softly.
+
+"I'm wondering," he went on, "if you'll ever strike a place where
+you won't see 'one of the most beautiful things on earth.' The
+last one was at Rio Piedras, wasn't it, Tom? A Spanish girl, or
+was she a Creole? I believe I've got your letter yet, and I'll
+read it to you to-morrow. I wasn't surprised. There are pretty
+women down in Porto Rico. But I didn't think you'd have the nerve
+to discover one up here--in the wilderness."
+
+"She's got them all beat," retorted the artist, flecking the ash
+from the tip of his cigarette.
+
+"Even the Valencia girl, eh?"
+
+There was a chuckling note of pleasure in Philip Whittemore's
+voice as he leaned half across the table, his handsome face,
+bronzed by snow and wind, illumined in the lamp-glow. Gregson, in
+strong contrast, with his round, smooth cheeks, slim hands, and
+build that was almost womanish, leaned over his side to meet him.
+For the twentieth time that evening the two men shook hands.
+
+"Haven't forgotten Valencia, eh?" chuckled the artist, gloatingly.
+"Lord, but I'm glad to see you again, Phil. Seems like a century
+since we were out raising the Old Ned together, and yet it's less
+than three years since we came back from South America. Valencia!
+Will we ever forget it? When Burke handed me his first turn-down a
+month ago and said, 'Tom, your work begins to show you want a
+rest,' I thought of Valencia, and was so confoundedly homesick for
+those old days when you and I pretty nearly started a revolution,
+and came within an ace of getting our scalps lifted, that I moped
+for a week. Gad, do I remember it? You got out by fighting, and I
+through a pretty girl."
+
+"And your nerve," chuckled Whittemore, crushing the other's hand.
+"That was when I made up my mind you were the nerviest man alive,
+Greggy. Did you ever learn what became of Donna Isobel?"
+
+"She appeared twice in Burke's, once as the 'Goddess of the
+Southern Republics' and again as 'The Girl of Valencia.' She
+married that reprobate of a Carabobo planter, and I believe
+they're happy."
+
+"It seems to me there were others," continued Whittemore,
+pondering for a moment in mock seriousness. "There was one at Rio
+whom you swore would make your fortune if you could get her to sit
+for you, and whose husband was on the point of putting six inches
+of steel into you for telling her so, when I explained that you
+were young and harmless, and a little out of your head--"
+
+"With your fist," cried Gregson, joyously. "Gad, but that was a
+mighty blow! I can see that knife now. I was just beginning my
+paternoster when--chug!--and down he went! And he deserved it. I
+said nothing wrong. In my very best Spanish I asked her if she
+would sit for me, and why the devil did he take that as an insult?
+And she was beautiful."
+
+"Of course," agreed Whittemore. "If I remember, she was 'the
+loveliest creature you had ever seen.' And after that there were
+others--a score of them at least, each lovelier than the one
+before."
+
+"They make up my life," said Gregson, more seriously than he had
+yet spoken. "They're the only thing I can draw and do well. I'd
+think an editor was mad if he asked me to do something without a
+pretty woman in it. God bless 'em, I hope I'll go on seeing them
+forever. When I can't see beauty in woman I want to die."
+
+"And you always want to see it in the superlative degree."
+
+"I insist upon it. If she lacks something, as Donna Isobel wanted
+color, I imagine that it is there, and she is perfect! But this
+one that I saw to-night is perfect! Now what I want to know is
+this, Who the deuce is she!"
+
+--"where can she be found, and will she sit for a 'Burke,' two or
+three miscellaneous, and a 'study' for the annual sale," struck in
+Whittemore. "Is that it?"
+
+"Exactly. You've a natural ability for hitting the nail on the
+head, Phil."
+
+"And Burke told you to take a rest."
+
+Gregson offered his cigarettes.
+
+"Yes, Burke is a good-natured, poetic old soul who has a horror of
+spiders, snakes, and sky-scrapers. He said to me: 'Greggy, go and
+seek nature in some quiet, secluded place, and forget everything
+for a fortnight or two except your clothes and half a dozen cases
+of beer.' Rest! Nature! Beer! Think of those cheerful suggestions,
+Phil, while I was dreaming of Valencia, of Donna Isobels, and
+places where Nature cuts up as though she had been taking
+champagne all her life. Gad, your letter came just in time!"
+
+"And I told you little enough in that," said Philip, quickly,
+rising and pacing uneasily back and forth across the cabin floor.
+"I gave you promise of excitement, and urged you to join me if you
+could. And why? Because--"
+
+He turned sharply, and faced Gregson across the table.
+
+"I wanted you to come because the thing that happened down in
+Valencia, and that other at Rio, isn't a circumstance to the hell
+that's going to cut loose pretty soon up here--and I'm in need of
+help. Understand? It's not fun--this time. I'm playing a single
+hand in what looks like a losing game. If I ever needed a fighter
+in my life I need one now. That's why I sent for you."
+
+Gregson shoved back his chair and rose to his feet. He was a head
+shorter than his companion, of almost delicate physique. Yet there
+was something in the cold gray-blue of his eyes, a peculiar
+hardness of his chin, that compelled one to look at him twice and
+rendered first judgment unsafe. His slim fingers closed like steel
+about Philip's.
+
+"Now you're coming down to business, Phil," he exclaimed. "I've
+been waiting with the patience of Job--or of little Bobby Tuckett,
+if you remember him, who began courting Minnie Sheldon seven years
+ago--and married her the day after I got your letter. I was too
+busy figuring out what you hadn't written to go to the wedding. I
+tried to read between the lines, and fell down completely. I've
+been thinking all the way up from Le Pas, and I'm still at sea.
+You called. I came. What's up?"
+
+"It's going to sound a little mad--at first, Greggy," chuckled
+Whittemore, lighting his pipe. "It's going to give your esthetic
+tastes a jar. Look here!"
+
+He seized Gregson by the arm and led him to the door.
+
+The cold northern sky was brilliant with stars. The cabin, its
+logs half smothered in dying masses of verdure which had climbed
+about it during the summer, was built on the summit of one of the
+wind-cropped ridges which are called mountains in the far north.
+Into that north swept infinite wilderness, white and gray where
+the starlit tops of the spruce rose up at their feet, black in the
+distance. From somewhere out of it there came the low, weeping
+monotone of surf beating on a shore. Philip, with one hand on
+Gregson's shoulder, pointed with the other into the lonely
+desolation which they were facing.
+
+"There isn't much between us and the Arctic Ocean, Greggy," he
+said. "See that light off there, like a great fire that has half a
+mind to die out one minute and flares up the next? Doesn't it
+remind you of the night we got away from Carabobo, when Donna
+Isobel pointed out our way to us, with the moon coming up over the
+mountains as a guide? That isn't the moon. It's the aurora
+borealis. You can hear the wash of the Bay down there, and if
+you're keen you can catch the smell of icebergs. There's Fort
+Churchill--a rifle-shot beyond the ridge, asleep. There's nothing
+but Hudson's Bay Company's posts, Indian camps, and trappers
+between here and civilization, which is four hundred miles down
+there. Seems like a quiet and peaceful country, doesn't it?
+There's something about it that makes you thrill and wonder if
+this isn't the biggest part of the universe after all. Listen!
+Hear the Indian dogs wailing down at Churchill! That's the primal
+voice in this world, the voice of the wild. Even that beating of
+the surf is filled with the same thing, for it's rolling up
+mystery instead of history. It is telling what man doesn't know,
+and in a language which he cannot understand. You're a beauty
+scientist, Greggy. This must sink deep."
+
+"It does," said Gregson. "What the deuce are you getting at,
+Phil?"
+
+"I'm arriving gradually and without undue haste to the point,
+Greggy. I'm about to tell you why I induced you to join me up
+here. I hesitate at the last word. It seems almost brutal, taking
+into consideration your philosophy of beauty, to drop from all
+this--from that blackness and mystery out there, from Donna
+Isobels and pretty eyes, down to--fish."
+
+"Fish!"
+
+"Yes, fish."
+
+Gregson, lighting a fresh cigarette, held the match so that the
+tiny flame lighted up his companion's face for a moment.
+
+"Look here," he expostulated, "you haven't got me up here to go--
+fishing?"
+
+"Yes--and no," said Philip. "But even if I have--"
+
+He caught Gregson by the arm again, and there was a tightness in
+the grip of his fingers which convinced the other that he was
+speaking seriously now.
+
+"Do you remember what started the revolution down in Honduras the
+second week after we struck Puerto Barrios, Greggy? It was a girl,
+wasn't it?"
+
+"Yes, and she wasn't half pretty at that."
+
+"It was less than a girl," went on Philip. "Scene: the palm plaza
+at Ceiba. President Belize is drinking wine with his cousin, the
+fiancee of General O'Kelly Bonilla, the half Irish, half Latin-
+American leader of his forces, and his warmest friend. At a moment
+when their corner of the plaza is empty Belize helps himself to a
+cousinly kiss. O'Kelly, unperceived, arrives in time to witness
+the act. From that moment his friendship for Belize turns to
+hatred and jealousy. Within three weeks he has started a
+revolution, beats the government forces at Ceiba, chases Belize
+from the capital, gets Nicaragua mixed up in the trouble, and
+draws three French, two German, and two American war-ships to the
+scene. Six weeks after the wine-drinking he is President of the
+Republic, en facto. And all of this, Greggy, because of a kiss.
+Now, if a kiss can start a revolution, unseat a President, send a
+government to smash, what must be the possibilities of a fish?"
+
+"I'm getting interested," said Gregson. "If there's a climax, come
+to it, Phil. I admit that there must be enormous possibilities in
+--a fish. Go on!"
+
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+For a moment the two men stood in silence, listening to the sullen
+beat of surf beyond the black edge of forest. Then Philip led the
+way back into the cabin.
+
+Gregson followed. In the light of the big oil-lamp which hung
+suspended from the ceiling he noticed something in Whittemore's
+face he had not observed before, a tenseness about the muscles of
+his mouth, a restlessness in his eyes, rigidity of jaw, an air of
+suppressed emotion which puzzled him. He was keenly observant of
+details, and knew that these things had been missing a short time
+before. The pleasure of their meeting that afternoon, after a
+separation of nearly two years, had dispelled for a time the
+trouble which he now saw revealing itself in his companion's face
+and attitude, and the lightness of Whittemore's manner in
+beginning his explanation for inducing him to come into the north
+had helped to complete the mask. There occurred to him, for an
+instant, a picture which he had once drawn of Whittemore as he had
+known him in certain stirring times still fresh in the memory of
+each--a picture of the old, cool, irresistible Whittemore, smiling
+in the face of danger, laughing outright at perplexities, always
+ready to fight with a good-natured word on his lips. He had drawn
+that picture for Burke's, and had called it "The Fighter." Burke
+himself had criticized it because of the smile. But Gregson knew
+his man. It was Whittemore.
+
+There was a change now. He had grown older, surprisingly older.
+There were deeper lines about his eyes. His face was thinner. He
+saw, now, that Philip's lightness had been but a passing flash of
+his old buoyancy, that the old life and sparkle had gone from him.
+Two years, he judged, had woven things into Philip's life which he
+could not understand, and he wondered if this was why in all that
+time he had received no word from his old college chum.
+
+They had seated themselves at opposite sides of the table, and
+from an inside pocket Philip produced a small bundle of papers.
+From these he drew forth a map, which he smoothed out under his
+hands.
+
+"Yes, there are possibilities--and more, Greggy," he said. "I
+didn't ask you up here to help me fight air and moonshine. And
+I've promised you a fight. Have you ever seen a rat in a trap with
+a blood-thirsty terrier guarding the little door that is about to
+be opened? Thrilling sport for the prisoner, isn't it? But when
+the rat happens to be human--"
+
+"I thought it was a fish," protested Gregson, mildly. "Pretty soon
+you'll be having it a girl in a trap--or at the end of a fish-
+line--"
+
+"And if I should?" interrupted Philip, looking steadily at him.
+"What if I should say there is a girl--a woman--in this trap--not
+only one, but a score, a hundred of them? What then, Greggy?"
+
+"I'd say there was going to be a glorious scrap."
+
+"And so there is, the biggest and most unusual scrap of its kind
+you ever heard of, Greggy. It's going to be a queer kind of fight
+--and queer fighting. And it's possible--very probable--that you
+and I will get lost in the shuffle somewhere. We're two, no more.
+And we're going up against forces which would make a dozen South
+American revolutions look like thirty cents. More than that, it's
+likely we'll be in the wrong locality when certain people rise in
+a wrath which a Helen of Troy aroused in another people some
+centuries ago. See here--"
+
+He turned the map to Gregson, pointing with his finger.
+
+"See that red line? That's the new railroad to Hudson's Bay. It is
+well above Le Pas now, and its builders plan to complete it by
+next spring. It is the most wonderful piece of railroad building
+on the American continent, Greggy--wonderful because it has been
+neglected so long. Something like a hundred million people have
+been asleep to its enormous value, and they're just waking up now.
+That road, cutting across four hundred miles of wilderness, is
+opening up a country half as big as the United States, in which
+more mineral wealth will be dug during the next fifty years than
+will ever be taken from Yukon or Alaska. It is shortening the
+route from Montreal, Duluth, Chicago, and the Middle West to
+Liverpool and other European ports by a thousand miles. It means
+the making of a navigable sea out of Hudson's Bay, cities on its
+shores, and great steel-foundries close to the Arctic Circle--
+where there is coal and iron enough to supply the world for
+hundreds of years. That's only a small part of what this road
+means, Greggy. Two years ago--you remember I asked you to join me
+in the adventure--I came up seeking opportunity. I didn't dream
+then--"
+
+Whittemore paused, and a flash of his old smile passed over his
+face.
+
+"I didn't dream that fate had decreed me to stir up what I'm going
+to tell you about, Greggy. I followed the line of the proposed
+railroad, looking for chances. All Canada was asleep, or too much
+interested in its west, and gave me no competition. I was alone
+west of the surveyed line; east of it steel-corporation men had
+optioned mountains of iron and another interest had a grip on
+coal-fields. Six months I spent among the Indians, French, and
+half-breeds. I lived with them, trapped and hunted with them, and
+picked up a little Cree and French. The life suited me. I became a
+northerner in heart and soul, if not quite yet in full experience.
+Clubs and balls and cities grew to be only memories. You know how
+I have always hated that hothouse sort of existence, and you know
+that same world of clubs and balls and cities has gripped at my
+throat, downing me again and again, as though it returned my
+sentiment with interest. Up here I learned to hate it more than
+ever. I was completely happy. And then--"
+
+He had refolded the map, and drew another from the bundle of
+papers. It was drawn in pencil.
+
+"And then, Greggy," he went on, smoothing out this map where the
+other had been, "I struck my chance. It fairly clubbed me into
+recognizing it. It came in the middle of the night, and I sat up
+with a camp-fire laughing at me through the flap in my tent,
+stunned by the knockout it had given me. It seemed, at first, as
+though a gold-mine had walked up and laid itself down at my feet,
+and I wondered how there could be so many silly fools in this
+world of ours. Take a look at that map, Greggy. What do you see?"
+
+Gregson had listened like one under a spell. It was one of his
+careless boasts that situations could not faze him, that he was
+immune to outward betrayals of sensation. This seeming
+indifference--his light-toned attitude in the face of most serious
+affairs would have made a failure of him in many things. But his
+tense interest did not hide itself now. A cigarette remained
+unlighted between his fingers. His eyes never took themselves for
+an instant from his companion's face. Something that Whittemore
+had not yet said thrilled him. He looked at the map.
+
+"There's not much to see," he said, "but lakes and rivers."
+
+"You're right," exclaimed Philip, jumping suddenly from his chair
+and beginning to walk back and forth across the cabin. "Lakes and
+rivers--hundreds of them--thousands of them! Greggy, there are
+more than three thousand lakes between here and civilization and
+within forty miles of the new railroad. And nine out of ten of
+those lakes are so full of fish that the bears along 'em smell
+fishy. Whitefish, Gregson--whitefish and trout. There is a fresh-
+water area represented on that map three times as large as the
+whole of the five Great Lakes, and yet the Canadians and the
+government have never wakened up to what it means. There's a fish
+supply in this northland large enough to feed the world, and that
+little rim of lakes that I've mapped out along the edge of the
+coming railroad represents a money value of millions. That was the
+idea that came to me in the middle of the night, and then I
+thought--if I could get a corner on a few of these lakes, secure
+fishing privileges before the road came--"
+
+"You'd be a millionaire," said Gregson.
+
+"Not only that," replied Philip, pausing for a moment in his
+restless pacing. "I didn't think of money, at first; at least, it
+was a secondary consideration after that night beside the camp-
+fire. I saw how this big vacant north could be made to strike a
+mighty blow at those interests which make a profession of
+cornering meatstuffs on the other side, how it could be made to
+fight the fight of the people by sending down an unlimited supply
+of fish that could be sold at a profit in New York, Boston, or
+Chicago for a half of what the trust demands. My scheme wasn't
+aroused entirely by philanthropy, mind you. I saw in it a chance
+to get back at the very people who brought about my father's ruin,
+and who kept pounding him after he was in a corner until he broke
+down and died. They killed him. They robbed me a few years later.
+They made me hate what I was once, a moving, joyous part of--life
+down there. I went from the north, first to Ottawa, then to
+Toronto and Winnipeg. After that I went to Brokaw, my father's old
+partner, with the scheme. I've told you of Brokaw--one of the
+deepest, shrewdest old fighters in the Middle West. It was only a
+year after my father's death that he was on his feet again, as
+strong as ever. Brokaw drew in two or three others as strong as
+himself, and we went after the privileges. It was a fight from the
+beginning. Hardly were our plans made public before we were met by
+powerful opposition. A combination of Canadian capital quickly
+organized and petitioned for the same privileges. Old Brokaw knew
+what it meant. It was the hand of the trust--disguised under a
+veneer of Canadian promoters. They called us 'aliens'--American
+'money-grabbers' robbing Canadians of what justly belonged to
+them. They aroused two-thirds of the press against us, and yet--"
+
+The lines in Whittemore's face softened. He chuckled as he pulled
+out his pipe and began filling it.
+
+"They had to go some to beat the old man, Greggy. I don't know
+just how Brokaw pulled the thing off, but I do know that when we
+won out three members of parliament and half a dozen other
+politicians were honorary members of our organization, and that it
+cost Brokaw a hundred thousand dollars! Our opponents had raised
+such a howl, calling upon the patriotism of the country and
+pointing out that the people of the north would resent this
+invasion of foreigners, that we succeeded in getting only a
+provisional license, subject to withdrawal by the government at
+any time conditions seemed to warrant it. I saw in this no blow to
+my scheme, for I was certain that we could carry the thing along
+on such a square basis that within a year the whole country would
+be in sympathy with us. I expressed my views with enthusiasm at
+our final meeting, when the seven of us met to complete our plans.
+Brokaw and the other five were to direct matters in the south; I
+was to have full command of affairs in the north. A month later I
+was at work. Over here"--he leaned over Gregson's shoulder and
+placed a forefinger on the map--"I established our headquarters,
+with MacDougall, a Scotch engineer, to help me. Within six months
+we had a hundred and fifty men at Blind Indian Lake, fifty
+canoemen bringing in supplies, and another gang putting in
+stations over a stretch of more than a hundred miles of lake
+country. Everything was working smoothly, better than I had
+expected. At Blind Indian Lake we had a shipyard, two warehouses,
+ice-houses, a company store, and a population of three hundred,
+and had nearly completed a ten-mile roadbed for narrow-gauge
+steel, which would connect us with the main line when it came up
+to us. I was completely lost in my work. At times I almost forgot
+Brokaw and the others. I was particularly careful of the funds
+sent up to me, and had accomplished my work at a cost of a little
+under a hundred thousand. At the end of the six months, when I was
+about to make a visit into the south, one of our warehouses and
+ten thousand dollars' worth of supplies went up in smoke. It was
+our first misfortune, and it was a big one. It was about the first
+matter that I brought up after I had shaken hands with Brokaw."
+
+Philip's face was set and white as he stood in the middle of the
+room looking at Gregson.
+
+"And what do you think was his reply, Greggy? He looked at me for
+a moment, a peculiar twitching around the corners of his mouth,
+and then said, 'Don't allow a trivial matter like that to worry
+you, Philip. Why--we've already cleaned up a million on this
+little fish deal!'"
+
+Gregson sat up with a jerk.
+
+"A million! Great Scott--"
+
+"Yes, a million, Greggy," said Philip, softly, with his old
+fighting smile. "There was a hundred thousand dollars to my credit
+in a First National Bank. Pleasant surprise, eh?"
+
+Gregson had dropped his cigarette. His slim hands gripped the
+edges of the table. He made no reply as he waited for Whittemore
+to continue.
+
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+For a full minute Philip paced back and forth without speaking.
+Then he stopped, and faced Gregson, who was staring at him.
+
+"A million, Greggy," he repeated, in the same soft voice. "A
+hundred thousand dollars to my credit--in a First National Bank!
+While I was up here hustling to get affairs on a working basis,
+eager to show the government and the people what we could do and
+would do, triumphing in our victory over the trust, and figuring
+each day on my scheme of making this big, rich north deal a
+staggering blow to those accursed combinations down there, they
+were at work, too. While I was dreaming and doing these things,
+Brokaw and the others had formed the Great Northern Fish and
+Development Company, had incorporated it under the laws of New
+Jersey, and had already sold over a million dollars' worth of
+stock! The thing was in full swing when I reached headquarters. I
+had authorized Brokaw to act for me, and I found that I was vice-
+president of one of the biggest legalized robbery combinations of
+recent years. More money had been spent in advertising than in
+development work. Hundreds of thousands of copies of my letters
+from the north, filled to the brim with the enthusiasm I had felt
+for my work and projects, had been sent out broadcast, luring
+buyers of stock. In one of these letters I had said that if a half
+of the lakes I had mapped out were fished the north could be made
+to produce a million tons of fish a year. Two hundred thousand
+copies of this letter were sent out, but Brokaw and his associates
+had omitted the words, 'If a half of the lakes mapped out were
+fished.' It would take fifteen thousand men, a thousand
+refrigerator cars, and a capital of five million to bring this
+about. I was stunned by the enormity of their fraud, and yet when
+I threatened to bring the whole thing to smash Brokaw only laughed
+and pointed out that not a single caution had been omitted. In all
+of the advertising it was frankly stated that our license was
+provisional, subject to withdrawal if the company did not keep
+within laws. That very frankness was an advertisement. It was
+something different. It struck home where it was meant to strike--
+among small and unfledged investors. It roped them in by
+thousands. The shares were ten dollars each, and non-assessable.
+Five out of six orders were from one to five shares; ninety-nine
+out of every hundred were not above ten shares. It was damnable.
+The very people for whom I wanted the north to fight had been
+humbugged to the tune of a million and a quarter dollars. Within a
+year Brokaw and the others had floated a scheme which was worse
+than any trust, for the trusts pay back a part of their steals in
+dividends. And _I_ was responsible! Do you realize that, Greggy?
+It was I who started the project. It was my reports from the north
+which chiefly induced people to buy. And this company--a company
+of robbers licensed under the law--I am its founder and its vice-
+president!"
+
+Philip dropped back into his chair. The face that he turned to
+Gregson was damp with perspiration, though the room was chilly.
+
+"You stayed in," said Gregson.
+
+"I had to. There wasn't a loophole left open to me. There wasn't a
+single point at which I could bring attack against Brokaw and the
+others. They were six veritable Bismarcks of deviltry and
+shrewdness. They hadn't over-stepped the law. They had sold a
+million and a quarter of stock on a hundred-thousand-dollar
+investment, but Brokaw only laughed when I raged at this. 'Why,
+Philip,' he said, 'we value our license alone at over a million!'
+And there was no law which could prevent them from placing that
+value upon it, or more. There was one thing that I could do--and
+only one. I could resign, decline to accept my stock and the
+hundred thousand, and publicly announce why I had broken off my
+connections with the company. I was about to do this when cooler
+judgment prevailed. It occurred to me that there would have to be
+an accounting. The company might sell a million and a quarter of
+stock--but in the end there would have to be an accounting. If I
+was out of the game it would be easily made. If I was in--well, do
+you see, Greggy? There was still a chance of making the company
+win out as a legitimate enterprise, even though it began under the
+black flag of piratical finance and fraud. Brokaw and the others
+were astonished at the stand I took. It was like throwing a big,
+ripe plum into the fire Brokaw was the first to hedge. He came
+over to my side in a private interview which we had, and for the
+first time I convinced him completely of the tremendous
+possibilities before us. To my surprise he began to show actual
+enthusiasm in my favor. We figured out how the company, if
+properly developed, could be made to pay a dividend of fifty cents
+a share on the stock issued within two years. This, I thought,
+would be at least a partial return of the original steal. Brokaw
+worked the thing through in his own way. He was authorized to vote
+for one of the directors, who was in Europe, and he won over two
+of the others. As a consequence we voted all of the money in the
+treasury, nearly six hundred thousand dollars, and the remainder
+of the stock that was on the market, for development purposes.
+Brokaw then made the proposition that the company buy up any
+interest that wished to withdraw. The two M. P.'s and a
+professional promoter from Toronto immediately sold out at fifty
+thousand each. With their original hundred thousand these three
+retired with an aggregate steal of nearly half a million. Pretty
+good work for yours truly, eh, Greggy! Good Heaven, think of it! I
+started out to strike a blow, to launch a gigantic project for the
+people, and this was what I had hatched! Robbery, bribery, fraud--
+"
+
+He paused, his hands clenched until the blue veins stood out on
+them like whipcords.
+
+"And--"
+
+Gregson spoke, uneasily.
+
+"And what?"
+
+Philip's fingers relaxed their grip on the table.
+
+"If that had been all, I wouldn't have called you up here," he
+continued. "I've taken a long time in coming down to the real hell
+of the affair, because I wanted you to understand the situation
+from the beginning. After I left Brokaw I came north again. I
+possessed all the funds necessary to make an honest working
+organization out of the Northern Fish and Development Company. I
+hired two hundred additional men, added twenty new fishing-
+stations, began a second road-bed to the main line, and started a
+huge dam at Blind Indian Lake. We had thirty horses, driven up
+through the wilderness from Le Pas, and twenty teams on the way.
+There didn't appear to be an important obstacle in the path of our
+success, and I had recovered most of my old enthusiasm when Brokaw
+sprung a new mine under my feet.
+
+"He had written a long letter almost immediately after I left him,
+which had been delayed at several places. In it he told me that he
+had discovered a plot to wreck our enterprise, that some powerful
+force was about to be pitted against us in the very country we
+were holding. I could see that Brokaw was tremendously worked up
+when he wrote the letter, and that for once he felt himself
+outwitted by a rival faction, and realized to the full a danger
+which it took me some time to comprehend. He had discovered
+absolute evidence, he said, that the bunch of trust capitalists
+whom he had beaten were about to attack us in another way. Their
+forces were already moving into the north country. Their object
+was to stir up the country against us, to bring about that
+condition of unrest and antagonism between the people of the north
+and ourselves which would compel the government to take away our
+license. Remember, this license was only provisional. It was, in
+fact, left to the people of the north to decide whether we should
+remain among them or not. If they turned against us there would be
+only one thing for the government to do.
+
+"At first Brokaw's letter caused me no very great uneasiness. I
+knew the people up here. I knew that the Indian, the Breed, the
+Frenchman, and the White of this God's country were as
+invulnerable to bribery as Brokaw himself is to the pangs of
+conscience. I loved them. I had faith in them. I knew them to
+possess an honor which is not known down there, where we have a
+church on every four corners, and where the Word of God is
+preached day and night on the open streets. I felt myself warming
+with indignation as I replied to Brokaw, resenting his
+insinuations as to the crimes which a 'half-savage' people might
+be induced to commit for a little whisky and a little money. And
+then--"
+
+Whittemore wiped his face. The lines settled deeper about his
+mouth.
+
+"Greggy, a week after I received this letter two warehouses were
+burned on the same night at Blind Indian Lake. They were three
+hundred yards apart. There is absolutely no doubt that it was
+incendiarism."
+
+He waited in silence, but Gregson still sat watching him in
+silence.
+
+"That was the beginning--three months ago. Since then some
+mysterious force has been fighting us at every step. A week after
+the warehouses burned, a dredge and boat-building yard, which we
+had constructed at considerable expense at the mouth of the Gray
+Beaver, was destroyed by fire. A little later a 'premature'
+explosion of dynamite cost us ten thousand dollars and two weeks'
+labor of fifty men. I organized a special guard service, composed
+of fifty of my best men, but it seemed to do no good. Since then
+we have lost three miles of road-bed, destroyed by a washout. A
+terrific charge of dynamite had been used to let down upon us the
+water of a lake which was situated at the top of a ridge near our
+right of way. Whoever our enemies are, they seem to know our most
+secret movements, and attack us whenever we leave a vulnerable
+point open. The most surprising part of the whole affair is this:
+in spite of my own efforts to keep our losses quiet the rumor has
+spread for hundreds of miles around us, even reaching Churchill,
+that the northerners have declared war against our enterprise and
+are determined to drive us out. Two-thirds of my men believe this.
+MacDougall, my engineer, believes it. Between my working forces
+and the Indians, French, and half-breeds about us there has slowly
+developed a feeling of suspicion and resentment. It is growing--
+every day, every hour. If it continues it can result in but two
+things--ruin for ourselves, triumph for those who are getting at
+us in this dastardly manner. If something is not done very soon--
+within a month--perhaps less--the country will run with the blood
+of vengeance from Churchill to the Barrens. If what I expect to
+happen does happen there will be no government road built to the
+Bay, the new buildings at Churchill will turn gray with disuse,
+the treasures of the north will remain undisturbed, the country
+itself will slip back a hundred years. The forest people will be
+filled with hatred and suspicion so long as the story of great
+wrong travels down from father to son. And this wrong, this crime--"
+
+Philip's face was white, cold, almost passionless in the grim
+hardness that had settled in it. He unfolded a long typewritten
+letter, and handed it to Gregson.
+
+"That letter is the final word," he explained. "It will tell you
+what I have not told you. In some way it was mixed in my mail and
+I did not discover the error until I had opened it. It is from the
+headquarters of our enemies, addressed to the man who is in charge
+of their plot up here."
+
+"He waited, scarce breathing, while Gregson bent over the
+typewritten pages. He noted the slow tightening of the other's
+fingers as he turned from the first sheet to the second; he
+watched Gregson's face, the slow ebbing of color, the gray white
+that followed it, the stiffening of his arms and shoulders as he
+finished. Then Gregson looked up.
+
+"Good God!" he breathed.
+
+For a full half-minute the two men gazed at each other across the
+table, without speaking.
+
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+Philip broke the silence.
+
+"Now--you understand."
+
+"It is impossible!" gasped Gregson. "I cannot believe this! It--it
+might have happened a thousand--two thousand years ago--but not
+now. My God, man!" he cried, more excitedly. "You do not mean to
+tell me that you believe this will be done?"
+
+"Yes," replied Philip.
+
+"It is impossible!" exclaimed Gregson again, crushing the letter
+in his hand. "A man doesn't live--a combination doesn't exist--
+that would start such a hell loose as this--in this way!"
+
+Philip smiled grimly.
+
+"The man does live, and the combination does exist," he said,
+slowly. "Greggy, I have known of men, and of combinations who have
+spent millions, who have sacrificed everything of honor and truth,
+who have driven thousands of men, women, and children to
+starvation--and worse--to achieve a victory in high finance. I
+have known of men and combinations who have broken almost every
+law of man and God in the fight for money and power. And so have
+you! You have associated with some of these men. You have laughed
+and talked with them, smoked with them, and have dined at their
+tables. You spent a week at Selden's summer borne, and it was
+Selden who cornered wheat three years ago and raised the price of
+bread two cents a loaf. It was Selden who brought about the bread
+riots in New York, Chicago, and a score of other cities, who swung
+wide the prison doors for thousands, whose millions were gained at
+a cost of misery, crime, and even death. And Selden is only one
+out of thousands who live to-day, watching for their
+opportunities, giving no heed to those who may fall under the
+juggernaut of their capital. This isn't the age of petty
+discrimination, Greggy. It's the age of the almighty dollar, and
+of the fight for it. And there's no chivalry, no quarter shown in
+this fight. Men of Selden's stamp don't stop at women and
+children. The scrubwoman's dollar is just as big as yours or mine,
+and if a scheme could be promoted whereby every scrubwoman in
+America could be safely robbed of a dollar you'd find thousands of
+men down there in our cities ready to go into it to-morrow. And to
+such men as these what is the sacrifice of a few women up here?"
+
+Gregson dropped the letter, crumpled and twisted, upon the table.
+
+"I wonder--if I understand," he said, looking into Philip's white
+face. "There has undoubtedly been previous correspondence, and
+this letter contains the final word. It shows that your enemies
+have already succeeded in working up the forest people against
+you, and have filled them with suspicion. Their last blow is to
+be--"
+
+He stopped, and Philip nodded at the horrified question in his
+eyes.
+
+"Greggy, up here there is one law which reigns above all other
+law. When I was in Prince Albert a year ago I was sitting on the
+veranda of the little old Windsor Hotel. About me were a dozen
+wild men of the north, who had come down for a day or two to the
+edge of civilization. Most of those men had not been out of the
+forests for a year. Two of them were from the Barrens, and this
+was their first glimpse of civilized life in five years. As we sat
+there a woman came up the street. She turned in at the hotel.
+About me there was a sudden lowering of voices, a shuffling of
+feet. As she passed, every one of those twelve rose from their
+seats and stood with bowed heads and their caps in their hands
+until she had gone. I was the only one who remained sitting! That,
+Greggy, is the one great law of life up here, the worship of woman
+because she is woman. A man may steal, he may kill, but he must
+not break this law. If he steals or kills, the mounted police may
+bring the offender to justice; but if he breaks this other law
+there is but one punishment, and that is the punishment of the
+people. That is what this letter purposes to do--to break this law
+in order that its penalty may fall upon us. And if they succeed,
+God help us!"
+
+It was Gregson who jumped to his feet now. He took half a dozen
+nervous steps, paused, lighted a cigarette, and looked down into
+Philip's upturned face.
+
+"I understand now where the fight is coming in," he said. "If this
+thing goes through, these people will rise and wipe you off the
+map. They'll lay it to you and your men, of course. And I fancy it
+won't be a job half done if they feel about it as I'd feel. But,"
+he demanded, sharply, "why don't you put the affair into the hands
+of the proper authorities--the police or the government? You've
+got--By George, you must have the name of the man to whom that
+letter was addressed!"
+
+Philip handed him a soiled white envelope, of the kind in which
+official documents are usually mailed.
+
+"That's the man."
+
+Gregson gave a low whistle.
+
+"Lord--Fitzhugh--Lee!" he read, slowly, as though scarce believing
+his eyes. "Great Scott! A British peer!"
+
+The cynical smile on Philip's lips cut his words short.
+
+"Perhaps," he said. "But if there is a British lord up here he
+isn't very well known, Greggy. No one knows of him. No one has
+heard a rumor of him. That is why we can't go to the police or the
+government. They'd give small credence to what we've got to show.
+This letter wouldn't count the weight of a feather without further
+evidence, and a lot of it. Besides, we haven't time to go to the
+government. It is too far away and too slow. And as for the
+police--I know of three in this territory, and there are fifteen
+thousand square miles of mountains and plains and forest in their
+'beat.' It's up to you and me to find this Lord Fitzhugh. If we
+can do that we will be in a position to put a kibosh on this plot
+in a hurry. If we fail to run him down--"
+
+"What then?"
+
+"We'll have to watch our chances. I've told you all that I know,
+and you're on an even working basis with me. At first I thought
+that I understood the object of those who are planning to ruin us
+in this cowardly manner. But I don't now. If they ruin us they
+also destroy the chances of any other company that may be scheming
+to usurp our place. For that reason I--"
+
+"There must still be other factors in the game," said Gregson, as
+Philip hesitated.
+
+"There are. I want you to work out your own suspicions, Greggy,
+and then we'll compare notes. Lord Fitzhugh is the key to the
+whole situation. No matter who is at the bottom of this plot, Lord
+Fitzhugh is the man at the working end of it. We don't care so
+much about the writer of this letter as the one to whom it was
+written. It is evident that he had planned to be at Churchill, for
+the letter is addressed to him here. But he hasn't shown up. He
+has never been here, so far as I can discover."
+
+"I'd give a year's growth for a copy of the BRITISH PEERAGE or a
+WHO'S WHO," mused Gregson, flecking the ashes from his cigarette.
+"Who the deuce can this Lord Fitzhugh be? What sort of an
+Englishman would mix up in a dirty job of this kind? You might
+imagine him to be one of the men behind the guns, like Brokaw.
+But, by George, he's working the dirty end of it himself,
+according to that letter!"
+
+"You're beginning to use your head already, Greggy," said Philip,
+a little more cheerfully. "I've asked myself that question a
+hundred times during the last three days, and I'm more at sea than
+ever. If it had been plain Tom Brown or Bill Jones, the name would
+not have suggested anything beyond what you have read in the
+letter. That's the question: Why should a Lord Fitzhugh Lee be
+mixed up in this affair?"
+
+The two men looked at each other keenly for a few moments in
+silence.
+
+"It suggests--" began Gregson.
+
+"What?"
+
+"That there may be a bigger scheme behind this affair than we
+imagine. In fact, it suggests to me that the northerners are being
+stirred up against you and your men for some other and more
+powerful reason than to make you get out of the country and compel
+the government to withdraw your license. So help me God, I believe
+there's more behind it!"
+
+"So do I," said Philip, quietly.
+
+"Have you any suspicions of what might be the more powerful
+motive?"
+
+"None. I know that British capital is heavily interested in
+mineral lands east of the surveyed line. But there is none at
+Churchill. All operations have been carried on from Montreal and
+Toronto."
+
+"Have you written to Brokaw about this letter?"
+
+"You are the first to whom I have revealed its contents," said
+Philip. "I have neglected to tell you that Brokaw is so worked up
+over the affair that he is joining me in the north. The Hudson's
+Bay Company's ship, which comes over twice a year, touches at
+Halifax, and if Brokaw followed out his intentions he took passage
+there. The ship should be in within a week or ten days. And, by
+the way"--Philip stood up and thrust his hands deep in his pockets
+as he spoke, half smiling at Gregson--"it gives me pleasure to
+hand you a bit of cheerful information along with that," he added.
+"Miss Brokaw is coming with him. She is very beautiful."
+
+Gregson held a lighted match until it burnt his finger-tips.
+
+"The deuce you say! I've heard--"
+
+"Yes, you have heard of her beauty, no doubt. I am not a special
+enthusiast in your line, Greggy, but I will confirm your opinion
+of Miss Brokaw. You will say that she is the most beautiful girl
+you have ever seen, and you will want to make heads of her for
+BURKE'S. I suppose you wonder why she is coming up here? So do I."
+
+There was a look of perplexity in Philip's eyes which Gregson
+might have noticed if he had not gone to the door to look out into
+the night.
+
+"What makes the stars so big and bright up in this country, Phil?"
+he asked.
+
+"Because of the clearness of the atmosphere through which you are
+looking," replied Philip, wondering what was passing through the
+other's mind. "This air--compared with ours--is just like a piece
+of glass that has been cleaned of a year's accumulation of dirt."
+
+Gregson whistled softly for a few moments. Then he said, without
+turning:
+
+"She's got to go some if she beats the girl I saw this evening,
+Phil." He turned at Philip's silence, and laughed. "I beg your
+pardon, old man, I didn't mean to speak of her as if she were a
+horse. I mean Miss Brokaw."
+
+"And I don't particularly like the idea of betting on the merits
+of a pretty girl," replied Philip, "but I'll break the rule for
+once, and wager you the best hat in New York that she does beat
+her."
+
+"Done!" said Gregson. "A little gentle excitement of this sort
+will relieve the tension of the other thing, Phil. I've heard
+enough of business for to-night. I'm going to finish a sketch that
+I have begun of her before I forget the fine points. Any
+objection?"
+
+"None at all," said Philip. "Meanwhile I'll go out to breathe a
+spell."
+
+He put on his coat and took down his cap from a peg in the wall.
+Gregson had seated himself under the lamp and was sharpening a
+pencil. As Philip went to go out Gregson drew an envelope from his
+pocket and tossed it on the table.
+
+"If you should happen to see any one that looks like--her," he
+said, nodding toward the envelope, "kindly put in a word for me,
+will you? I did that in a hurry. It's not half flattering."
+
+Philip laughed as he picked up the envelope.
+
+"The most beau--" he began.
+
+He caught himself with a jerk. Gregson, looking up from his
+pencil-sharpening, saw the smile leave his lips and a quick flush
+leap into his bronzed cheeks. He stared at the face on the
+envelope for a half a minute, then gazed speechlessly at Gregson.
+
+It was Gregson who laughed, softly and without suspicion.
+
+"How does your wager look now?" he taunted.
+
+"She--is--beautiful," murmured Philip, dropping the envelope and
+turning to the door, "Don't wait for me, Greggy. Go to bed."
+
+He heard Gregson laugh behind him, and he wondered, as he went
+out, what Gregson would say if he told him that he had drawn on
+the back of the old envelope the beautiful face of Eileen Brokaw!
+
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+A dozen steps beyond the door Philip paused in the shadow of a
+dense spruce, half persuaded to return. From where he stood he
+could see Gregson bending over the table, already at work on the
+picture. He confessed that the sketch had startled him. He knew
+that it had sent the hot blood rushing to his face, and that only
+through a fortunate circumstance had Gregson ascribed its effect
+upon him to something that was wide of the truth. Miss Brokaw was
+a thousand or more miles away. At this moment she was somewhere in
+the North Atlantic, if their ship had left Halifax. She had never
+been in the north. More than that, he knew that Gregson had never
+seen Miss Brokaw, and had heard of her only through himself and
+the society columns of the newspapers. How could he explain his
+possession of the sketch?
+
+He drew a step or two nearer to the open door, and stopped again.
+If he returned to question Gregson it would draw him perilously
+near to explanations which he did not care to make, to the one
+secret which he wished to guard from his friend's knowledge. After
+all, the picture was only a resemblance. It could be nothing but a
+resemblance, even though it was so striking and unusual that it
+had thrown him off his guard at first. When he returned later and
+looked at it again he would no doubt be able to see his error.
+
+He walked on through the spruce shadows and up a narrow trail that
+led to the bald knob of the ridge, feeling his way with his right
+hand before him when the denseness of the forest shut out the
+light of the stars and the moon, until at last he stood out strong
+and clear under the glow of the skies, with the world sweeping out
+in black and gray mystery around him. To the north was the Bay,
+reaching away like a vast black plain. Half a mile distant two or
+three lights were burning over Fort Churchill, red eyes peering up
+out of the deep pool of darkness; to the south and west there
+swept the gray, starlit distances which lay between him and
+civilization.
+
+He leaned against a great rock, resting his elbows in a carpet of
+moss, and his eyes turned into the mystery of those distances. The
+sea of spruce-tops that rose out of the ragged valley at his feet
+whispered softly in the night wind; from out of their depths
+trembled the low hoot of an owl; over the vaster desolation beyond
+hovered a weird and unbroken silence. More than once the spirit of
+this world had come to him in the night and had roused him from
+his slumber to sit alone out under the stars, imagining all that
+it might tell him if he could read the voice of it in the
+whispering of the trees, if he could but understand it as he
+longed to understand it, and could find in it the peace which he
+knew that it all but held for him. The spirit of it had never been
+nearer to him than to-night. He felt it close to him, so near that
+it seemed like the warm, vibrant touch of a presence at his side,
+something which had come to him in a voiceless loneliness as great
+as his own, watching and listening with him beside the rock. It
+seemed nearer to him since he had seen and talked with Gregson. It
+was much nearer to him since a few minutes ago, when he had looked
+upon what he had first thought to be the face of Eileen Brokaw.
+
+And this was the world--the spirit--that had changed him. He
+wondered if Gregson had seen the change which he tried so hard to
+conceal. He wondered if Miss Brokaw would see it when she came,
+and if her soft, gray eyes would read to the bottom of him as they
+had fathomed him once before upon a time which seemed years and
+years ago. Thoughts like these troubled him. Twice that day he had
+found stealing over him a feeling that was almost physical pain,
+and yet he knew that this pain was but the gnawing of a great
+loneliness in his heart. In these moments he had been sorry that
+he had brought Gregson back into his life. And with Gregson he was
+bringing back Eileen Brokaw. He was more than sorry for that. The
+thought of it made him grow warm and uncomfortable, though the
+night air from off the Bay was filled with the chill tang of the
+northern icebergs. Again his thoughts brought him face to face
+with the old pictures, the old life. With them came haunting
+memories of a Philip Whittemore who had once lived, and who had
+died; and with these ghosts of the past there surged upon him the
+loneliness which seemed to crush and stifle him. Like one in a
+dream he was swept back. Over the black spruce at his feet, far
+into the gray, misty distances beyond, over forests and mountains
+and the vast, grim silences his vision reached out until he saw
+life as it had begun for him, and as he had lived it for a time.
+It had opened fair. It had given promise. It had filled him with
+hope and ambition. And then it had changed.
+
+Unconsciously he clenched his hands as he thought of what had
+followed, of the black days of ruin, of death, of the dissolution
+of all that he had hoped and dreamed for. He had fought, because
+he was born a fighter. He had risen again and again, only to find
+misfortune still at his face. At first he had laughed, and had
+called it bad luck. But the bad luck had followed him, dogging him
+with a persistence which developed in him a new perspective of
+things. He dropped away from his clubs. He began to measure men
+and women as he had not measured them before, and there grew in
+him slowly a revulsion for what those measurements revealed. The
+spirit that was growing in him called out for bigger things, for
+the wild freedom which he had tasted for a time with Gregson--for
+a life which was not warped by the gilded amenities of the crowded
+ballroom to-night, by the frenzied dollar-fight to-morrow. No one
+could understand that change in him. He could find no spirit in
+sympathy with him, no chord in another breast that he could reach
+out and touch and thrill with understanding. Once he had hoped--
+and tried--
+
+A deep breath, almost a sigh, fell from his lips as he thought of
+that last night, at the Brokaw ball. He heard again the laughter
+and chatter of men and women, the soft rustle of skirts--and then
+the break, the silence, as the low, sweet music of his favorite
+waltz began, while he stood screened behind a bank of palms
+looking down into the clear gray eyes of Eileen Brokaw. He saw
+himself as he had stood then, leaning over her slim white
+shoulders, intoxicated by her beauty, his face pale with the fear
+of what he was about to say; and he saw the girl, with her
+beautiful head thrown a little back, so that her golden hair
+almost touched his lips, waiting for him to speak. For months he
+had fought against the fascination of her beauty. Again and again
+he had almost surrendered to it, only to pull himself back in
+time. He had seen this girl, as pure-looking as an angel, strike
+deeply at the hearts of other men; he had heard her laugh and talk
+lightly of the wounds she had made. Behind the eyes which gazed up
+at him, dear and sweet as pools of sunlit water, he knew there lay
+the consuming passion for power, for admiration, for the froth-
+like pleasures of the life that was swirling about them. Sincerity
+was but their mask. He knew that the beautiful gray eyes lied to
+him when he saw in them all that he held glorious in womanhood.
+
+He laughed softly to himself as the picture grew in his mind, and
+he saw Ransom come blundering in through the palms, mopping his
+red face and chattering inane things to little Miss Meesen. Ransom
+was always blundering. This time his blunder saved Philip. The
+passionate words died on his lips; and when Ransom and Miss Meesen
+turned about in a giggling flutter, he spoke no words of love, but
+opened up his heart to this girl whom he would have loved if she
+had been like her eyes. It was his last hope--that she would
+understand him, see with him the emptiness of his life, sympathize
+with him.
+
+And she had laughed at him!
+
+She had risen to her feet; there had come for an instant a flash
+like that of fire in her eyes; her voice trembled a little when
+she spoke. There was resentment in the poise of her white
+shoulders as Ransom's voice came to them in a loud laugh from
+behind the palms; her red lips showed disdain and anger. She hated
+Ransom for breaking in; she despised Philip for allowing the
+interruption to tear away her triumph. Her own betrayal of herself
+was like tonic to Philip. He laughed joyously when he was alone
+out in the cool night air. Ransom never knew why Philip hunted him
+out and shook his fat hand so warmly at parting.
+
+Philip again felt himself in the fever of that night as he turned
+from the rock and began picking his way down the side of the ridge
+toward the Bay. He found himself wondering what had become of
+good-natured, dense-headed Ransom, who had all he could do to
+spend his father's allowance. From Ransom his thoughts turned to
+little Harry Dell, Roscoe, big Dan Philips, and three or four
+others who had sacrificed their hearts at Miss Brokaw's feet. He
+grimaced as he thought of young Dell, who had worshiped the ground
+she walked on, and who had gone straight to the devil when she
+threw him over. He wondered, too, where Roscoe was. He knew that
+Roscoe would have won out if it had not been for the financial
+crash which took his brokerage firm off its feet and left him a
+pauper. He had heard that Roscoe had gone up into British Columbia
+to recuperate his fortune in Douglas fir. As for big Dan--
+
+Philip stumbled over a rock, and rose with a bruised knee. The
+shock brought him back to realities, and a few moments later he
+stood upon the narrow boulder-strewn beach, rubbing his knee and
+calling himself a fool for allowing the old thoughts to stir him
+up. Out there, somewhere, Brokaw and his daughter were coming.
+That Miss Brokaw was with her father was a circumstance which was
+of no importance to him. At least he told himself so, and set his
+face toward Churchill.
+
+To-night the stars and the moon seemed to be more than usually
+brilliant. About him the great masses of rock, the tumbling surf,
+the edge of the forest, and the Bay itself were illumined as if by
+the light of a softly radiant day. He looked at his watch and
+found that it was past midnight. He had been up since dawn, and
+yet he felt no touch of fatigue, no need of sleep. He took off his
+cap and walked bareheaded in the mellow light, his moccasined feet
+falling lightly, his eyes alert to all that this wonderful night
+world might hold for him. Ahead of him rose a giant mass of rock,
+worn smooth and slippery by the water dashed against it in the
+crashing storms of countless centuries, and this he climbed,
+panting when he reached the top. His eyes turned to where he saw
+Fort Churchill sleeping along the edge of the Bay.
+
+In that same spot, a great pool of night-glow between two forest-
+crowned ridges, it had lain for hundreds of years. He passed the
+ancient landing-place of rocks, built a hundred and fifty years
+ago for the first ships that came over the strange sea; he stood
+upon the tumbled foundations of the Fort, that was still older,
+and saw the starlight glinting on one of the brass cannon that lay
+where it had fallen amid the debris, untouched and unmoved since
+the days, ages-gone, when it had last thundered its welcome or its
+defiance through the solitudes; he walked slowly along the shore
+where the sea had lashed wearily for many a year, to reach the
+wilderness dead, and where now, triumphant, the frothing surf
+bared gun-case coffins and tumbled the bones of men down into its
+sullen depths. And such men! Men who had lived and died when the
+world was unborn in a half of its knowledge and science, when red
+blood was the great capital, strong hearts the winners of life.
+And there were women, too, women who had come with these men, and
+died with them, in the opening-up of a new world. It was such men
+as these, and such women as these, that Philip loved, and he
+walked with bared head and swiftly beating heart over the unmarked
+jungle of the dead.
+
+And then he came to other things, the first low log buildings of
+Churchill, to the silence of sleeping life. New buildings loomed
+up--working quarters of men who were grubbing for dollars, the new
+wharves, the skeletons of elevators, sullen, windowless
+warehouses, the office-buildings of men who were already fighting
+and quarreling and gripping at one another's throats in the
+struggle for supremacy, for the biggest and ripest plums in this
+new land of opportunity. The dollar-fight had begun, and the
+things that already marked its presence loomed monstrous and
+grotesque to Philip, as if jeering at the forgotten efforts of
+those whom the sea was washing away. And suddenly it struck Philip
+that the sea, working ceaselessly, digging away at its dead, was
+not the enemy of the nameless creatures in the gun-case coffins,
+but that it was a friend, stanch through centuries, rescuing them
+now from the desecration that was to come; and for a moment he was
+resistless to the spirit that moved him about and made him face
+that sea with something that was almost a prayer in his heart.
+
+As he turned he saw that a light had appeared in one of the low
+log buildings which contained the two offices of the Keewatin
+Mines and Lands Company. The light, and the bulky shadow of old
+Pearce, which appeared for a moment on one of the drawn curtains,
+aroused Philip to other thoughts. Since his arrival at Churchill
+he had made the acquaintance of Pearce, and it struck him now that
+just such a man as this might be Lord Fitzhugh Lee. The Keewatin
+Mines and Lands Company had no mines and few lands, and yet Pearce
+had told him that they were doing a hustling business down south,
+selling stock on mineral claims that couldn't be worked for years.
+After all, was he any better than Pearce?
+
+The old bitterness rose in him. He was no better than Pearce, no
+better than this Lord Fitzhugh himself, and it was fate--fate and
+people, that had made him so. He walked swiftly now, following
+close along the shore in the hard stretch kept bare by the tides,
+until he came to the red coals of half a dozen Indian fires on the
+edge of the forest beyond the company's buildings. A dog scented
+him and howled. He heard a guttural voice break in a word of
+command from one of the tepees, and there was silence again.
+
+He turned to the right, burying himself deeper and deeper into the
+great silence of the north, his quick steps keeping pace with the
+thoughts that were passing through his brain. Fate, bad luck,
+circumstance--they had been against him. He had told himself this
+a hundred times, had laughed at them with the confidence of one
+who knew that some day he would rise above these things in
+triumph. And yet what were these elements of fortune, as he had
+called them, but people? A feeling of personal resentment began to
+oppress him. People had downed him, and not circumstance and bad
+luck. Men and women had made a failure of him, and not fate. For
+the first time it occurred to him that the very men and women whom
+Brokaw and his associates had duped, whom Pearce was duping, would
+play the game in the same way if they had the opportunity. What if
+he had played on the winning side, if he had enlisted his fighting
+energies with men like Brokaw and Pearce, fought for money and
+power in place of this other thing, which seemed to count so
+little? Other men would have given much to have been in his favor
+with Eileen Brokaw. He might have been in the front of this other
+fight, the winning fight, the possessor of fortune, a beautiful
+woman--
+
+He stopped suddenly. It seemed to him that he had heard a voice.
+He had climbed from out of the shadow of the forest until he stood
+now on a gray cliff of rock that reached out into the Bay, like
+the point of a great knife guarding Churchill. A block of
+sandstone rose in his path, and he passed quietly around it. In
+another instant he had flattened himself against it.
+
+A dozen feet away, full in the moonlight, three figures sat on the
+edge of the cliff, as motionless as though hewn out of rock.
+Instinctively Philip's hand slipped to his revolver holster, but
+he drew it back when he saw that one of the three figures was that
+of a woman. Beside her crouched a huge wolf-dog; on the other side
+of the dog sat a man. The man was resting in the attitude of an
+Indian, with his elbows on his knees, his chin in the palms of his
+hands, gazing steadily and silently out over the Bay toward
+Churchill.
+
+It was his companion that held Philip motionless against the face
+of the rock. She, too, was leaning forward, gazing in that same
+steady, silent way toward Churchill. She was bareheaded. Her hair
+fell loose over her shoulders and streamed down her back until it
+piled itself upon the rock, shining dark and lustrous in the light
+of the moon. Philip knew that she was not an Indian.
+
+Suddenly the girl sat erect, and then sprang to her feet, partly
+facing him, the breeze rippling her hair about her face and
+shoulders, her eyes turned to the vast gray depths of the world
+beyond the forests. For an instant she turned so that the light of
+the moon fell full upon her, and in that moment Philip thought
+that her eyes had searched him out in the shadow of the rock and
+were looking straight into his own. Never had he seen such a
+beautiful face among the forest people. He had dreamed of such
+faces beside camp-fires, in the deep loneliness of long nights in
+the forests, when he had awakened to bring before him visions of
+what Eileen Brokaw might have been to him if he had found her one
+of these people. He drew himself closer to the rock. The girl
+turned again to the edge of the cliff, her slender form
+silhouetted against the starlit sky. She leaned over the dog, and
+he heard her voice, soft and caressing, but he could not
+understand her words. The man lifted his head, and he recognized
+the swarthy, clear-cut features of a French half-breed. He moved
+away as quietly as he had come.
+
+The girl's voice stopped him.
+
+"And that is Churchill, Pierre--the Churchill you have told me of,
+where the ships come in?"
+
+"Yes, that is Churchill, Jeanne."
+
+For a moment there was silence. Then, clear and low, with a wild,
+sobbing note in her voice that thrilled Philip, the girl cried:
+
+"And I hate it, Pierre. I hate it--hate it--hate it!"
+
+Philip stepped out boldly from the rock.
+
+"And I hate it, too," he said.
+
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+
+Scarce had he spoken when he would have given much to have
+recalled his words, wrung from his lips by that sobbing note of
+loneliness, of defiance, of half pain in the girl's voice. It was
+the same note, the same spirit crying out against his world that
+he had listened to in the moaning of the surf as it labored to
+carry away the dead, and in the wind that sighed in the spruce-
+tops below the mountain, only now it was the spirit speaking
+through a human voice. Every fiber in his body vibrated in
+response to it, and he stood with bared head, filled with a wild
+desire to make these people understand, and yet startled at the
+effect which his appearance had produced.
+
+The girl faced him, her eyes shining with sudden fear. Quicker
+than her own was the movement of the half-breed. In a flash he was
+upon his feet, his dark face tense with action, his right hand
+gripping at something in his belt as he bent toward the figure in
+the center of the rock. His posture was that of an animal ready to
+spring. Close beside him gleamed the white fangs of the wolf-dog.
+The girl leaned over and twisted her fingers in the tawny hair
+that bristled on the dog's neck. Philip heard her speak, but she
+did not move her eyes from his face. It was the tableau of a
+moment, tense, breathless. The only thing that moved was the
+shimmer of steel. Philip caught the gleam of it under the half-
+breed's hand.
+
+"Don't do that, M'sieur," he said, pointing at the other's belt.
+"I am sorry that I disturbed you. Sometimes I come up here--alone
+--to smoke my pipe and listen to the sea down there. I heard you
+say that you hate Churchill, and I hate it. That is why I spoke."
+
+He turned to the girl.
+
+"I am sorry. I beg your pardon."
+
+He looked at her with new wonderment. She had tossed back her
+loose hair, and stood tall and straight in the moonlight, her dark
+eyes gazing at him now calmly and without affright. She was
+dressed in rich yellow buckskin, as soft as chamois. Her throat
+was bare. A deep collar of lace fell over her shoulders. One hand,
+raised to her breast, revealed a wide gauntlet cuff of red or
+purple plush, of a fashion two centuries old. Her lips were
+parted, and he saw the faintest gleam of her white teeth, the
+quick rising and falling of her bosom. He had spoken directly to
+her, yet she gave no sign of having heard him.
+
+"You startled us, that is all, M'sieur," said Pierre, quietly. His
+English was excellent, and as he spoke he bowed low to Philip. "It
+is I whom you must pardon, M'sieur--for betraying so much
+caution."
+
+Philip held out his hand.
+
+"My name is Whittemore--Philip Whittemore," he said. "I'm staying
+at Churchill until the ship comes in and--and I hope you'll let me
+sit here on the rock."
+
+For an instant Pierre's fingers gripped his hand, and he bowed low
+again like a courtier. Philip saw that he, too, wore the same big,
+old-fashioned cuffs, and that it was not a knife that hung at his
+belt, but a short rapier.
+
+"And I am Pierre--Pierre Couchee," he said. "And this--is my
+sister--Jeanne. We do not belong to Fort Churchill, but come from
+Fort o' God. Good night, M'sieur!"
+
+The girl had taken a step back, and now she swept him a courtesy
+so low that her fallen hair streamed over her shoulders. She spoke
+no word, but passed quickly with Pierre up the rock, and while
+Philip stood stunned and speechless they disappeared swiftly into
+the white gloom of the night.
+
+Mutely he gazed after them. For a long time he stood staring
+beyond the rocks, marveling at the strangeness of this thing that
+had happened. An hour before he had stood with bared head over the
+ancient dead at Churchill, and now, on the rock, he had seen the
+resurrection of what he had dreamed those dead to be in life. He
+had never seen people like Pierre and Jeanne. Their strange dress,
+the rapier at Pierre's side, his courtly bow, the low, graceful
+courtesy that the girl had made him, all carried him back to the
+days of the old pictures that hung in the factor's room at
+Churchill, when high-blooded gallants came into the wilderness
+with their swords at their sides, wearing the favors of court
+ladies next their hearts. Pierre, standing there on the rock, with
+his hand on his rapier, might have been Grosellier himself, the
+prince's favorite, and Jeanne--
+
+Something white on the rock near where the girl had been sitting
+caught Philip's eyes. In a moment he held in his fingers a small
+handkerchief and a broad ribbon of finely knit lace. In her haste
+to get away she had forgotten these things. He was about to run to
+the crest of the cliff and call loudly for Pierre Couchee when he
+held the handkerchief and the lace close to his face and the
+delicate perfume of heliotrope stopped him. There was something
+familiar about it, something that held him wondering and
+mystified, until he knew that he had lost the opportunity to
+recall Pierre and his companion. He looked at the handkerchief
+more, closely. It was a dainty fabric, so soft that it gave barely
+the sensation of touch when he crushed it in the palm of his hand.
+For a few moments he was puzzled to account for the filmy strip of
+lace. Then the truth came to him. Jeanne had used it to bind her
+hair!
+
+He laughed softly, joyously, as he wound the bit of fabric about
+his fingers and retraced his steps toward Churchill. Again and
+again he pressed the tiny handkerchief to his face, breathing of
+its sweetness; and the action suddenly stirred his memory to the
+solution of its mystery. It was this same sweetness that had come
+to him on the night that he had looked down into the beautiful
+face of Eileen Brokaw at the Brokaw ball. He remembered now that
+Eileen Brokaw loved heliotrope, and that she always wore a purple
+heliotrope at her white throat or in the gold of her hair. For a
+moment it struck him as singular that so many things had happened
+this day to remind him of Brokaw's daughter. The thought hastened
+his steps. He was anxious to look at the picture again, to
+convince himself that he had been mistaken. Gregson was asleep
+when he re-entered the cabin. The light was burning low, and
+Philip turned up the wick. On the table was the picture as Gregson
+had left it. This time there was no doubt. He had drawn the face
+of Eileen Brokaw. In a spirit of jest he had written under it,
+"The Wife of Lord Fitzhugh."
+
+In spite of their absurdity the words affected Philip curiously.
+Was it possible that Miss Brokaw had reached Fort Churchill in
+some other way than by ship? And, if not, was it possible that in
+this remote corner of the earth there was another woman who
+resembled her so closely? Philip took a step toward Gregson, half
+determined to awaken him. And yet, on second thought, he knew that
+Gregson could not explain. Even if the artist had learned of his
+affair with Miss Brokaw and had secured a picture of her in some
+way, he would not presume to go this far. He was convinced that
+Gregson had drawn the picture of a face that he had seen that day.
+Again he read the words at the bottom of the sketch, and once more
+he experienced their curious effect upon him--an effect which it
+was impossible for him to analyze even in his own mind.
+
+He replaced the picture upon the table and drew the handkerchief
+and bit of lace from his pocket. In the light of the lamp he saw
+that both were as unusual as had been the picturesque dress of the
+girl and her companion. Even to his inexperienced eyes and touch
+they gave evidence of a richness that puzzled him, of a fashion
+that he had never seen. They were of exquisite workmanship. The
+lace was of a delicate ivory color, faintly tinted with yellow.
+The handkerchief was in the shape of a heart, and in one corner of
+it, so finely wrought that he could barely make out the silken
+letters, was the word "Camille."
+
+The scent of heliotrope rose more strongly in the closed room, and
+from the handkerchief Philip's eyes turned to the face of Eileen
+Brokaw looking at him from out of Gregson's sketch. It was a
+curious coincidence. He reached over and placed the picture face
+down. Then he loaded his pipe, and sat smoking, his vision
+traveling beyond the table, beyond the closed door to the lonely
+black rock where he had come upon Jeanne and Pierre. Clouds of
+smoke rose about him, and he half closed his eyes. He saw the girl
+again, as she stood there; he saw the moonlight shining in her
+hair, the dark, startled beauty of her eyes as she turned upon
+him; he heard again the low sobbing note in her voice as she cried
+out her hatred against Churchill. He forgot Eileen Brokaw now,
+forgot in these moments all that he and Gregson had talked of that
+day. His schemes, his fears, his feverish eagerness to begin the
+fight against his enemies died away in thoughts of the beautiful
+girl who had come into his life this night. It seemed to him now
+that he had known her for a long time, that she had been a part of
+him always, and that it was her spirit that he had been groping
+and searching for, and could never find. For the space of those
+few moments on the cliff she had driven out the emptiness and the
+loneliness from his heart, and there filled him a wild desire to
+make her understand, to talk with her, to stand shoulder to
+shoulder with Pierre out there in the night, a comrade.
+
+Suddenly his fingers closed tightly over the handkerchief. He
+turned and looked steadily at Gregson. His friend was sleeping,
+with his face to the wall.
+
+Would not Pierre return to the rock in search of these articles
+which his sister had left behind? The thought set his blood
+tingling. He would go back--and wait for Pierre. But if Pierre did
+not return--until to-morrow?
+
+He laughed softly to himself as he drew paper toward him and
+picked up the pencil which Gregson had used. For many minutes he
+wrote steadily. When he had done, he folded what he had written
+and tied it in the handkerchief. The strip of lace with which
+Jeanne had bound her hair he folded gently and placed in his
+breast pocket. There was a guilty flush in his face as he stole
+silently to the door. What would Gregson say if he knew that he--
+Phil Whittemore, the man whom he had once idealized as "The
+Fighter," and whom he believed to be proof against all love of
+woman--was doing this thing? He opened and closed the door softly.
+
+At least he would send his message to these strange people of the
+wilderness. They would know that he was not a part of that
+Churchill which they hated, that in his heart he had ceased to be
+a thing of its breed. He apologized again for his sudden
+appearance on the rock, but the apology was only an excuse for
+other things which he wrote, in which for a few brief moments he
+bared himself to those whom he knew would understand, and asked
+that their acquaintance might be continued. He felt that there was
+something almost boyish in what he was doing; and yet, as he
+hurried over the ridge and down into Churchill again, he was
+thrilled as no other adventure had ever thrilled him before. As he
+approached the cliff he began to fear that the half-breed would
+not return for the things which Jeanne had left, or that he had
+already re-visited the rock. The latter thought urged him on until
+he was half running. The crest of the cliff was bare when he
+reached it. He looked at his watch. He had been gone an hour.
+
+Where the moonlight seemed to fall brightest he dropped the
+handkerchief, and then slipped back into the rocky trail that led
+to the edge of the Bay. He had scarcely reached the strip of level
+beach that lay between him and Churchill when from far behind him
+there came the long howl of a dog. It was the wolf-dog. He knew it
+by the slow, dismal rising of the cry and the infinite sadness
+with which it as slowly died away until lost in the whisperings of
+the forest and the gentle wash of the sea. Pierre was returning.
+He was coming back through the forest. Perhaps Jeanne would be
+with him.
+
+For the third time Philip climbed back to the great moonlit rock
+at the top of the cliff. Eagerly he faced the north, whence the
+wailing cry of the wolf-dog had come. Then he turned to the spot
+where he had dropped the handkerchief, and his heart gave a sudden
+jump.
+
+There was nothing on the rock. The handkerchief was gone!
+
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+Philip stood undecided, his ears strained to catch the slightest
+sound. Ten minutes had not elapsed since he had dropped the
+handkerchief. Pierre could not have gone far among the rocks. It
+was possible that he was concealed somewhere near him now. Softly
+he called his name.
+
+"Pierre--ho, Pierre Couchee!"
+
+There was no answer, and in the next breath he was sorry that he
+had called. He went silently down the trail. He had come to the
+edge of Churchill when once more he heard the howl of the dog far
+back in the forest. He stopped to locate as nearly as he could the
+point whence the sound came, for he was certain now that the dog
+had not returned with Pierre, but had remained with Jeanne, and
+was howling from their camp.
+
+Gregson was awake and sitting on the edge of his bunk when Philip
+entered the cabin.
+
+"Where the deuce have you been?" he demanded. "I was just trying
+to make up my mind to go out and hunt for you. Stolen--lost--or
+something like that?"
+
+"I've been thinking," said Philip, truthfully.
+
+"So have I," said Gregson. "Ever since you came back, wrote that
+letter, and went out again--"
+
+"You were asleep," corrected Philip. "I looked at you."
+
+"Perhaps I was--when you looked. But I have a hazy recollection of
+you sitting there at the table, writing like a fiend. Anyway, I've
+been thinking ever since you went out of the door, and--I'd like
+to read that Lord Fitzhugh letter again."
+
+Philip handed him the letter. He was quite sure from his friend's
+manner of speaking that he had seen nothing of the handkerchief
+and the lace.
+
+Gregson seized the paper lazily, yawned, and slipped it under the
+blanket which he had doubled up for a pillow.
+
+"Do you mind if I keep it for a few days. Phil?" he asked.
+
+"Not in the least, if you'll tell me why you want it," said
+Philip.
+
+"I will--when I discover a reason myself," replied his friend,
+coolly, stretching himself out again in the bunk. "Remember when I
+dreamed that Carabobo planter was sticking a knife into you,
+Phil?--and the next day he tried it? Well, I've had a funny dream,
+I want to sleep on this letter. I may want to sleep on it for a
+week. Better turn in if you expect to get a wink between now and
+morning."
+
+For half an hour after he had undressed and extinguished the light
+Philip lay awake reviewing the incidents of his night's adventure.
+He was certain that his letter was in the hands of Pierre and
+Jeanne, but he was not so sure that they would respond to it. He
+half expected that they would not, and yet he felt a deep sense of
+satisfaction in what he had done. If he met them again he would
+not be quite a stranger. And that he would meet them he was not
+only confident, but determined. If they did not appear in Fort
+Churchill he would hunt out their camp.
+
+He found himself asking a dozen questions, none of which he could
+answer. Who was this girl who had come like a queen from out of
+the wilderness, and this man who bore with him the manner of a
+courtier? Was it possible, after all, that they were of the
+forests? And where was Fort o' God? He had never heard of it
+before, and as he thought of Jeanne's strange, rich dress, of the
+heliotrope-scented handkerchief, of the old-fashioned rapier at
+Pierre's side, and of the exquisite grace with which the girl had
+left him he wondered if such a place as this Fort o' God must be
+could exist in the heart of the desolate northland. Pierre had
+said that they had come from Fort o' God. But were they a part of
+it?
+
+He fell asleep, the resolution formed in his mind to investigate
+as soon as he found the opportunity. There would surely be those
+at Churchill who would know these people; if not, they would know
+of Fort o' God.
+
+Philip found Gregson awake and dressed when he rolled out of his
+bunk a few hours later. Gregson had breakfast ready.
+
+"You're a good one to have company," growled the artist. "When you
+go out mooning again please take me along, will you? Chuck your
+head in that pail of water and let's eat. I'm starved."
+
+Philip noticed that his companion had tacked the sketch against
+one of the logs above the table.
+
+"Pretty good for imagination, Greggy," he said, nodding. "Burke
+will jump at that if you do it in colors."
+
+"Burke won't get it," replied Gregson, soberly, seating himself at
+the table. "It won't be for sale."
+
+"Why?"
+
+Gregson waited until Philip had seated himself before he answered.
+
+"Look here, old man--get ready to laugh. Split your sides, if you
+want to. But it's God's truth that the girl I saw yesterday is the
+only girl I've ever seen that I'd be willing to die for!"
+
+"To be sure," agreed Philip. "I understand."
+
+Gregson stared at him in surprise. "Why don't you laugh?" he
+asked.
+
+"It is not a laughing matter," said Philip. "I say that I
+understand. And I do."
+
+Gregson looked from Philip's face to the picture.
+
+"Does it--does it hit you that way, Phil?"
+
+"She is very beautiful."
+
+"She is more than that," declared Gregson, warmly. "If I ever
+looked into an angel's face it was yesterday, Phil. For just a
+moment I met her eyes--"
+
+"And they were--"
+
+"Wonderful!"
+
+"I mean--the color," said Philip, engaging himself with the food.
+
+"They were blue or gray. It is the first time I ever looked into a
+woman's eyes without being sure of the color of them. It was her
+hair, Phil--not this tinsel sort of gold that makes you wonder if
+it's real, but the kind you dream about. You may think me a loon,
+but I'm going to find out who she is and where she is as soon as I
+have done with this breakfast."
+
+"And Lord Fitzhugh?"
+
+A shadow passed over Gregson's face. For a few moments he ate in
+silence. Then he said:
+
+"That's what kept me awake after you had gone--thinking of Lord
+Fitzhugh and this girl. See here, Phil. She isn't one of the kind
+up here. There was breeding and blood in every inch of her, and
+what I am wondering is if these two could be associated in any
+way. I don't want it to be so. But--it's possible. Beautiful young
+women like her don't come, traveling up to this knob-end of the
+earth alone, do they?"
+
+Philip did not pursue the subject. A quarter of an hour later the
+two young men left the cabin, crossed the ridge, and walked
+together down into Churchill. Gregson went to the Company's store,
+while Philip entered the building occupied by Pearce. Pearce was
+at his desk. He looked up with tired, puffy eyes, and his fat
+hands lay limply before him. Philip knew that he had not been to
+bed. His oily face strove to put on an appearance of animation and
+business as Philip entered.
+
+Philip produced a couple of cigars and took a chair opposite him.
+
+"You look bushed, Pearce," he began. "Business must be rushing. I
+saw a light in your window after midnight, and I came within an
+ace of calling. Thought you wouldn't like to be interrupted, so I
+put off my business until this morning."
+
+"Insomnia," said Pearce, huskily. "I can't sleep. Suppose you saw
+me at work through the window?" There was almost an eager haste in
+his question.
+
+"Saw nothing but the light," replied Philip, carelessly. "You know
+this country pretty well, don't you, Pearce?"
+
+"Been 'squatting' on prospects for eight years, waiting for this
+damned railroad," said Pearce, interlacing his thick fingers. "I
+guess I know it!"
+
+"Then you can undoubtedly tell me the location of Fort o' God?"
+
+"Fort o' What?"
+
+"Fort o' God."
+
+Pearce looked blank.
+
+"It's a new one on me," he said, finally. "Never heard of it." He
+rose from his chair and went over to a big map hanging against the
+wall. Studiously he went over it with the point of his stubby
+forefinger. "This is the latest from the government," he
+continued, with his back to Philip, "but it ain't here. There's a
+God's Lake down south of Nelson House, but that's the only thing
+with a God about it north of fifty-three."
+
+"It's not so far south as that," said Philip, rising.
+
+Pearce's little eyes were fixed on him shrewdly.
+
+"Never heard of it," he repeated. "What sort of a place is it, a
+post--"
+
+"I have no idea," replied Philip. "I came for information more out
+of curiosity than anything else. Perhaps I misunderstood the name.
+I'm much obliged."
+
+He left Pearce in his chair and went directly to the factor's
+quarters. Bludsoe, chief factor of the Hudson's Bay Company in the
+far north, could give him no more information than had Pearce. He
+had never heard of Fort o' God. He could not remember the name of
+Couchee. During the next two hours Philip talked with French,
+Indian, and half-breed trappers, and questioned the mail runner,
+who had come in that morning from the south. No one could tell him
+of Fort o' God.
+
+Had Pierre lied to him? His face flushed with anger as this
+thought came to him. In the next breath he assured himself that
+Pierre was not a man who would lie. He had measured him as a man
+who would fight, and not one who would lie. Besides, he had
+voluntarily given the information that he and Jeanne were from
+Fort o' God. There had been no excuse for falsehood.
+
+He purposely directed his movements so that he would not come into
+contact with Gregson, little dreaming that his artist friend was
+working under the same formula. He lunched with the factor, and a
+little later went boldly back to the cliff where he had met Jeanne
+and Pierre the preceding night. Although he had now come to expect
+no response to what he had written, he carefully examined the
+rocks about him. Then he set out through the forest in the
+direction from which had come the howling of the wolf-dog.
+
+He searched until late in the afternoon, but found no signs of a
+recent camp. For several miles he followed the main trail that led
+northward from Fort Churchill. He crossed three times through the
+country between this trail and the edge of the Bay, searching for
+smoke from the top of every ridge that he climbed, listening for
+any sound that might give him a clue. He visited the shack of an
+old half-breed deep in the forest beyond the cliff, but its aged
+tenant could give him no information. He had not seen Pierre and
+Jeanne, nor had he heard the howling of their dog.
+
+Tired and disappointed, Philip returned to Churchill. He went
+directly to his cabin and found Gregson waiting for him. There was
+a curious look in the artist's face as he gazed questioningly at
+his friend. His immaculate appearance was gone. He looked like one
+who had passed through an uncomfortable hour or two. Perspiration
+had dried in dirty streaks on his face, and his hands were buried
+dejectedly in his trousers pockets. He rose to his feet and stood
+before his companion.
+
+"Look at me, Phil--take a good long look," he urged.
+
+Philip stared.
+
+"Am I awake?" demanded the artist. "Do I look like a man in his
+right senses? Eh, tell me!"
+
+He turned and pointed to the sketch hanging against the wall.
+
+"Did I see that girl, or didn't I?" he went on, not waiting for
+Philip to answer. "Did I dream of seeing her? Eh? By thunder,
+Phil--" He whirled upon his companion, a glow of excitement taking
+the place of the fatigue in his eyes. "I couldn't find her to-day.
+I've hunted in every shack and brush heap in and around Churchill.
+I've hunted until I'm so tired I can hardly stand up. And the
+devil of it is, I can find no one else who got more than a glimpse
+of her, and then they did not see her as I did. She had nothing on
+her head when I saw her, but I remember now that something like a
+heavy veil fell about her shoulders, and that she was lifting it
+when she passed. Anyway, no one saw her like--that." He pointed to
+the sketch. "And she's gone--gone as completely as though she came
+in a flying-machine and went away in one. She's gone--unless--"
+
+"What?"
+
+"Unless she is in concealment right here in Churchill. She's gone
+--or hiding."
+
+"You have reason to suspect that she would be hiding," said
+Philip, concealing the effect of the other's words upon him.
+
+Gregson was uneasy. He lighted a cigarette, puffed at it once or
+twice, and tossed it through the open door. Suddenly he reached in
+his coat pocket and pulled out an envelope.
+
+"Deuce take it, if I know whether I have or not!" he cried. "But--
+look here, Phil. I saw the mail come in to-day, and I walked up as
+bold as you please and asked if there was anything for Lord
+Fitzhugh. I showed the other letter, and said I was Fitzhugh's
+agent. It went. And I got--this!"
+
+Philip snatched at the letter which Gregson held out to him. His
+fingers trembled as he unfolded the single sheet of paper which he
+drew forth. Across it was written a single line:
+
+Don't lose an hour. Strike now.
+
+There was nothing more, except a large ink blot under the words.
+The envelope was addressed in the same hand as the one he had
+previously received. The men stared into each other's face.
+
+"It's singular, that's all," pursued Gregson. "Those words are
+important. The writer expects that they will reach Lord Fitzhugh
+immediately, and as soon as he gets them you can look for war.
+Isn't that their significance? I repeat that it is singular this
+girl should come here so mysteriously, and disappear still more
+so, just at this psychological moment; and it is still more
+puzzling when you take into consideration the fact that two hours
+before the runner came in from the south another person inquired
+for Lord Fitzhugh's mail!"
+
+Philip started.
+
+"And they told you this?"
+
+"Yes. It was a man who asked--a stranger. He gave no name and left
+no word. Now, if it should happen to be the man who was with the
+girl when I saw her--and we can find him--we've as good as got
+this Lord Fitzhugh. If we don't find him--and mighty soon--it's up
+to us to start for your camps and put them into fighting shape.
+See the point?"
+
+"But we've got the letter," said Philip. "Fitzhugh won't receive
+the final word, and that will delay whatever plot he has ready to
+spring."
+
+"My dear Phil," said Gregson, softly. "I always said that you were
+the fighter and I the diplomat, yours the brawn and mine the
+brain. Don't you see what this means? I'll gamble my right hand
+that these very words have been sent to Lord Fitzhugh at two or
+three different points, so that they would be sure of reaching
+him. I'm just as positive that he has already received a copy of
+the letter which we have. Mark my words, it's catch Lord Fitzhugh
+within the next few days--or fight!"
+
+Philip sat down, breathing heavily.
+
+"I'll send word to MacDougall," he said. "But I--I must wait for
+the ship!"
+
+"Why not leave word for Brokaw and join MacDougall?"
+
+"Because when the ship comes in I believe that a large part of
+this mystery will be cleared up," replied Philip. "It is necessary
+that I remain here. That will give us a few days in which to make
+a further search for these people."
+
+Gregson did not urge the point, but replaced the second letter in
+his pocket with the first. During the evening he remained at the
+cabin. Philip returned to Churchill. For an hour he sat among the
+ruins of the old fort, striving to bring some sort of order out of
+the chaos of events that had occurred during the past few days. He
+was almost convinced that he ought to reveal all that he knew to
+Gregson, and yet several reasons kept him from doing so. If Miss
+Brokaw was on the London ship when it arrived at Churchill, there
+would be no necessity of disclosing that part of his own history
+which he was keeping secret within himself. If Eileen was not on
+the ship her absence would be sufficient proof to him that she was
+in or near Churchill, and in this event he knew that it would be
+impossible for him to keep from associating with her movements not
+only those of Lord Fitzhugh, but also those of Jeanne and Pierre
+and of Brokaw himself. He could see but two things to do at
+present, wait and watch. If Miss Brokaw was not with her father,
+he would take Gregson fully into his confidence.
+
+The next morning he despatched a messenger with a letter for
+MacDougall, at Blind Indian Lake, warning him to be on his guard
+and to prepare the long line of sub-stations for possible attack.
+All this day Gregson remained in the cabin.
+
+"It won't do for me to make myself too evident," he explained.
+"I've called for Lord Fitzhugh's mail, and I'd better lie as low
+as possible until the corn begins to pop."
+
+Philip again searched the forests to the north and west with the
+hope of finding some trace of Pierre and Jeanne. The forest people
+were beginning to come into Churchill from all directions to be
+present at the big event of the year--the arrival of the London
+ship--and Philip made inquiries on every trail. No one had seen
+those whom he described. The fourth and fifth days passed without
+any developments. So far as he could discover there was no Fort o'
+God, no Jeanne and Pierre Couchee. He was completely baffled. The
+sixth day he spent in the cabin with Gregson. On the morning of
+the seventh there came from far out over the Bay the hollow
+booming of a cannon.
+
+It was the signal which for two hundred years the ships from over
+the sea had given to the people of Churchill.
+
+By the time the two young men had finished their breakfasts and
+climbed to the top of the ridge overlooking the Bay, the vessel
+had dropped anchor half a mile off shore, where she rode safe from
+the rocks at low tide. Along the shore below them, where Churchill
+lay, the forest people were gathered in silent, waiting groups.
+Philip pointed to the factor's big York boat, already two-thirds
+of the way to the ship.
+
+"We should have gone with Bludsoe," he said. "Brokaw will think
+this a shabby reception on our part, and Miss Brokaw won't be half
+flattered. We'll go down and get a good position on the pier."
+
+Fifteen minutes later they were thrusting themselves through the
+crowd of men, women, children, and dogs congregated at the foot of
+the long stone pier alongside which the ship would lie for two or
+three hours at each high tide. Philip stopped among a number of
+Crees and half-breeds, and laid a detaining hand upon Gregson's
+arm.
+
+"This is near enough, if you don't want to make yourself
+conspicuous," he said.
+
+The York boat was returning. Philip pulled a cigar from his pocket
+and lighted it. He felt his heart throbbing excitedly as the boat
+drew nearer. He looked at Gregson. The artist was taking short,
+quick puffs on his cigarette, and Philip wondered at the evident
+eagerness with which he was watching the approaching craft.
+
+Until the boat ran close up under the pier its sail hid the
+occupants. While the canvas still fluttered in the light wind
+Bludsoe sprang from the bow out upon the rocks with a rope. Three
+or four of his men followed. With a rattle of blocks and rings the
+sheet dropped like a huge white curtain, and Philip took a step
+forward, scarce restraining the exclamation that forced itself to
+his lips at the picture which it revealed. Standing on the broad
+rail, her slender form poised for the quick upward step, one hand
+extended to Bludsoe, was Eileen Brokaw! In another instant she was
+upon the pier, facing the strange people before her, while her
+father clambered out of the boat behind. There was a smile of
+expectancy on her lips as she scanned the dark, silent faces of
+the forest people. Philip knew that she was looking for him. His
+pulse quickened. He turned for a moment to see the effect of the
+girl's appearance upon Gregson.
+
+The artist's two hands had gripped his arm. They closed now until
+his fingers were like cords of steel. His face was white, his lips
+set into thin lines. For a breath he stood thus, while Miss
+Brokaw's scrutiny traveled nearer to them. Then, suddenly, he
+released his hold and darted back among the half-breeds and
+Indians, his face turning to Philip's in one quick, warning
+appeal.
+
+He was not a moment too soon, for scarce had he gone when Miss
+Brokaw caught sight of Philip's tall form at the foot of the pier.
+Philip did not see the signal which she gave him. He was staring
+at the line of faces ahead of him. Two people had worked their way
+through that line, and suddenly every muscle in his body became
+tense with excitement and joy. They were Pierre and Jeanne!
+
+He caught his breath at what happened then. He saw Jeanne falter
+for a moment. He noticed that she was now dressed like the others
+about her, and that Pierre, who stood at her shoulder, was no
+longer the fine gentleman of the rock. The half-breed bent over
+her, as if whispering to her, and then Jeanne ran out from those
+about her to Eileen, her beautiful face flushed with joy and
+welcome as she reached out her arms to the other woman. Philip saw
+a sudden startled look leap into Miss Brokaw's face, but it was
+gone as quickly as it appeared. She stared at the forest girl,
+drew herself haughtily erect, and, with a word which he could not
+hear, turned to Bludsoe and her father. For an instant Jeanne
+stood as if some one had struck her a blow. Then, slowly, she
+turned. The flush was gone from her face. Her beautiful mouth was
+quivering, and Philip fancied that he could hear the low sobbing
+of her breath. With a cry in which he uttered no name, but which
+was meant for her, he sprang forward into the clear space of the
+pier. She saw him, and darted back among her people. He would have
+followed, but Miss Brokaw was coming to him now, her hand held out
+to him, and a step behind were Brokaw and the factor.
+
+"Philip!" she cried.
+
+He spoke no word as he crushed her hand. The hot grip of his
+fingers, the deep flush in his face, was interpreted by her as a
+welcome which it did not require speech to strengthen. He shook
+hands with Brokaw, and as the three followed after the factor his
+eyes sought vainly for Pierre and Jeanne.
+
+They were gone, and he felt suddenly a thrill of repugnance at the
+gentle pressure of Eileen Brokaw's hand upon his arm.
+
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+
+Philip did not see the hundred staring eyes that followed in
+wonderment the tall, beautiful girl who walked at his side. He
+knew that Miss Brokaw was talking and laughing, and that he was
+nodding his head and answering her, while his brain raged for an
+idea that would give him an excuse for leaving her to follow
+Jeanne and Pierre. The facts that Gregson had left him so
+strangely, that Eileen had come with her father, and that, instead
+of clearing up the mystery in which they were so deeply involved,
+the arrival of the London ship had even more hopelessly entangled
+them, were forgotten for the moment in the desire to intercept
+Jeanne and Pierre before they could leave Churchill. Miss Brokaw
+herself unconsciously gave him the opportunity for which he was
+seeking.
+
+"You don't look very happy, Philip," she exclaimed, in a chiding
+voice, meant only for his ears. "I thought--perhaps--my coming
+would make you glad."
+
+Philip caught eagerly at the half question in her voice.
+
+"I feared you would notice it," he said, quickly. "I was afraid
+you would think me indifferent because I did not go out to meet
+you in the boat, and because I stood hidden at the end of the pier
+when you landed. But I was looking for a man. I have been hunting
+for him for a long time. And I saw his face just as we came
+through the crowd. That is why I am--am rattled," he laughed.
+"Will you excuse me if I go back? Can you find some excuse for the
+others? I will return in a few minutes, and then you will not say
+that I am unhappy."
+
+Miss Brokaw drew her hand from his arm.
+
+"Surely I will excuse you," she cried. "Hurry, or you may lose
+him. I would like to go with you if it is going to be exciting."
+
+Philip turned to Brokaw and the factor, who were close behind
+them.
+
+"I am compelled to leave you here," he explained. "I have excused
+myself to Miss Brokaw, and will rejoin you almost immediately."
+
+He lost no time in hurrying back to the shore of the Bay. As he
+had expected, Jeanne and her companion were no longer in sight.
+There was only one direction in which they could have disappeared
+so quickly, and this was toward the cliff. Once hidden by the
+fringe of forest, he hastened his steps until he was almost
+running. He had reached the base of the huge mass of rock that
+rose up from the sea, when down the narrow trail that led to the
+cliff there came a figure to meet him. It was an Indian boy, and
+he advanced to question him. If Jeanne and Pierre had passed that
+way the boy must surely have seen them.
+
+Before he had spoken the lad ran toward him, holding out something
+in his hand. The question on Philip's lips changed to an
+exclamation of joy when he recognized the handkerchief which he
+had dropped upon the rock a few nights before, or one so near like
+it that he could not have told them apart. It was tied into a
+knot, and he felt the crumpling of paper under the pressure of his
+fingers. He almost tore the bit of lace and linen in his eagerness
+to rescue the paper, which a moment later he held in his fingers.
+Three short lines, written in a fine, old-fashioned hand, were all
+that it held for him. But they were sufficient to set his heart,
+beating wildly.
+
+ Will Monsieur come to the top of the rock to-night, some time
+between the hours of nine and ten.
+
+ There was no signature to the note, but Philip knew that only
+Jeanne could have written it, for the letters were almost of
+miscroscopic smallness, as delicate as the bit of lace in which
+they had been delivered, and of a quaintness of style which added
+still more to the bewildering mystery which already surrounded
+these people. He read the lines half a dozen times, and then
+turned to find that the Indian boy was slipping sway through the
+rocks.
+
+"Here--you," he commanded, in English. "Come back!"
+
+The boy's white teeth gleamed in a laugh as he waved his hand and
+leaped farther away. From Philip his eyes shifted in a quick,
+searching glance to the top of the cliff. In a flash Philip
+followed its direction. He understood the meaning of the look.
+From the cliff Jeanne and Pierre had seen his approach, and their
+meeting with the Indian boy had made it possible for them to
+intercept him in this manner. They were probably looking down upon
+him now, and in the gladness of the moment Philip laughed up at
+the bare rocks and waved his cap above his head as a signal of his
+acceptance of the strange invitation he had received.
+
+Vaguely he wondered why they had set the meeting for that night,
+when in three or four minutes he could have joined them up there
+in broad day. But the central tangle of the mystery that had grown
+up about him during the past few days was too perplexing to
+embroider with such a minor detail as this, and he turned back
+toward Churchill with the feeling that everything was working in
+his favor. During the next few hours he would clear up the tangle,
+and in addition to that he would meet Jeanne and Pierre. It was
+the thought of Jeanne, and not of the surprises which he was about
+to explain, that stirred his blood as he hurried back to the Fort.
+
+It was his intention to return to Eileen and her father. But he
+changed this. He would first hunt up Gregson and begin his work
+there. He knew that the artist would be expecting him, and he went
+directly to the cabin, escaping notice by following along the
+fringe of the forest.
+
+Gregson was pacing back and forth across the cabin floor when
+Philip arrived. His steps were quick and excited. His hands were
+thrust deep in his trousers pockets. The butts of innumerable
+half-smoked cigarettes lay scattered under his feet. He ceased his
+restless movement upon his companion's interruption, and for a
+moment or two gazed at Philip in blank silence.
+
+"Well," he said, at last, "have you got anything to say?"
+
+"Nothing," said Philip. "It's beyond me, Greggy. For Heaven's sake
+give me an explanation!"
+
+There was nothing womanish in the hard lines of Gregson's face
+now. He spoke with the suggestion of a sneer.
+
+"You knew--all the time," he said, coldly. "You knew that Miss
+Brokaw and the girl whom I drew were one and the same person. What
+was the object of your little sensation?"
+
+Philip ignored his question. He stepped quickly up to Gregson and
+seized him by the arm.
+
+"It is impossible!" he cried, in a low voice. "They cannot be the
+same person. That ship out there has not touched land since she
+left Halifax. Until she hove in sight off Churchill she hasn't
+been within two hundred miles of a coast this side of Hudson's
+Strait. Miss Brokaw is as new to this country as you. It is beyond
+all reason to suppose anything else."
+
+"Nevertheless," said Gregson, quietly, "it was Miss Brokaw whom I
+saw the other day, and that is Miss Brokaw's picture."
+
+He pointed to the sketch, and freed his arm to light another
+cigarette. There was a peculiar tone of finality in his voice
+which warned Philip that no amount of logic or arguing on his part
+would change his friend's belief. Gregson looked at him over his
+lighted match.
+
+"It was Miss Brokaw," he said again. "Perhaps it is within reason
+to suppose that she came to Churchill in a balloon, dropped into
+town for luncheon, and departed in a balloon, descending by some
+miraculous chance aboard the ship that was bringing her father.
+However it may have happened, she was in Churchill a few days ago.
+On that hypothesis I am going to work, and as a consequence I am
+going to ask you for the indefinite loan of the Lord Fitzhugh
+letter. Will you give me your word to say nothing of that letter--
+for a few days?"
+
+"It is almost necessary to show it to Brokaw," hesitated Philip.
+
+"Almost--but not quite," Gregson caught him up. "Brokaw knows the
+seriousness of the situation without that letter. See here, Phil--
+you go out and fight, and let me handle this end of the business.
+Don't reveal me to the Brokaws. I don't want to meet--her--yet,
+though God knows if it wasn't for my confounded friendship for you
+I'd go over there with you this minute. She was even more
+beautiful than when I saw her--before."
+
+"Then there is a difference," laughed Philip, meaningly.
+
+"Not a difference, but a little better view," corrected the
+artist.
+
+"Now, if we could only find the other girl, what a mess you'd be
+in, Greggy! By George, but this is beginning to have its humorous
+as well as its tragic side. I'd give a thousand dollars to have
+this other golden-haired beauty appear upon the scene!"
+
+"I'll give a thousand if you produce her," retorted Gregson.
+
+"Good!" laughed Philip, holding out a hand. "I'll report again
+this afternoon or to-night."
+
+Inwardly he felt himself in no humorous mood as he retraced his
+steps to Churchill. He had thought to begin his work of clearing
+up the puzzling situation with Gregson, and Gregson had failed him
+completely by his persistence in the belief that Miss Brokaw was
+the girl whose face he had seen more than a week before. Was it
+possible, after all, that the ship had touched at some point up
+the coast? The supposition was preposterous. Yet before rejoining
+the Brokaws he sought out the captain and found that the company's
+vessel had come directly from Halifax without a change or stop in
+her regular course. The word of the company's captain cleared up
+his doubts in one direction; it mystified him more than ever in
+another. He was convinced that Gregson had not seen Miss Brokaw
+until that morning. But who was Eileen's double? Where was she at
+this moment? What peculiar combination of circumstance had drawn
+them both to Churchill at this particularly significant time? It
+was impossible for him not to associate the girl whom Gregson had
+encountered, and who so closely resembled Eileen, with Lord
+Fitzhugh and the plot against his company. And it struck him with
+a certain feeling of dread that, if his suspicions were true,
+Jeanne and Pierre must also be mixed up in the affair. For had not
+Jeanne, in her error, greeted Eileen as though she were a dear
+friend?
+
+He went directly to the factor's house, and knocked at the door
+opening into the rooms occupied by Brokaw and his daughter. Brokaw
+admitted him, and at Philip's searching glance about the room he
+nodded toward a closed inner door and said:
+
+"Eileen is resting. It's been a hard trip on her, Phil, and she
+hasn't slept for two consecutive nights since we left Halifax."
+
+Philip's keen glance told him that Brokaw himself had not slept
+much. The promoter's eyes were heavy, with little puffy bags under
+them. But otherwise he betrayed no signs of unrest or lack of
+rest. He motioned Philip to a chair close to a huge fireplace in
+which a pile of birch was leaping into flame, offered him a cigar,
+and plunged immediately into business.
+
+"It's hell, Philip," he said, in a hard, quiet voice, as though he
+were restraining an outburst of passion with effort. "In another
+three months we'd have been on a working basis, earning dividends.
+I've even gone to the point of making contracts that show us five
+hundred per cent, profit. And now--this!"
+
+He dashed his half-burned cigar into the fire, and viciously bit
+the end from another.
+
+Philip was lighting his own, and there was a moment's silence,
+broken sharply by the financier.
+
+"Are your men prepared to fight?"
+
+"If it's necessary," replied Philip. "We can at least depend upon
+a part of them, especially the men at Blind Indian Lake. But--this
+fighting--Why do you think it will come to that? If there is
+fighting we are ruined."
+
+"If the people rise against us in a body--yes, we are ruined. That
+is what we must not permit. It is our one chance. I have done
+everything in my power to beat this movement against us down
+south, and have failed. Our enemies are completely masked. They
+have won popular sentiment through the newspapers. Their next move
+is to strike directly at us. Whatever is to happen will happen
+soon. The plan is to attack us, to destroy our property, and the
+movement is to be advertised as a retaliation for heinous outrages
+perpetrated by our men. It is possible that the attack will not be
+by northerners alone, but by men brought in for the purpose. The
+result will be the same--if it succeeds. The attack is planned to
+be a surprise. Our one chance is to meet it, to completely
+frustrate it--to strike an overwhelming blow, and to capture
+enough of our assailants to give us the evidence we must have."
+
+Brokaw was excited. He emphasized his words with angry sweeps of
+his arms. He clenched his fists, and his face grew red. He was not
+like the old, shrewd, indomitable Brokaw, completely master of
+himself, never revealing himself beyond the unruffled veil of his
+self-possession, and Philip was surprised. He had expected that
+Brokaw's wily brain would bring with it half a dozen schemes for
+the quiet undoing of their enemies. And now here was Brokaw, the
+man who always hedged himself in with legal breast-works--who
+never revealed himself to the shot of his enemies--enlisting
+himself for a fight in the open! Philip had told Gregson that
+there would be a fight. He was firmly convinced that there would
+be a fight. But he had never believed that Brokaw would come to
+join in it. He leaned toward the financier, his face flushed a
+little by the warmth of the fire and by the knowledge that Brokaw
+was relinquishing the situation entirely into his hands. If it
+came to fighting, he would win. He was confident of himself there.
+But--
+
+"What will be the result if we win?" he asked.
+
+"If we secure those who will give the evidence we need--evidence
+that the movement against us is a plot to destroy our company, the
+government will stand by us," replied Brokaw. "I have sounded the
+situation there. I have filed a formal declaration to the effect
+that such a movement is on foot, and have received a promise that
+the commissioner of police will investigate the matter. But before
+that happens our enemies will strike. There is no time for red
+tape or investigations. We must achieve our own salvation. And to
+achieve that we must fight."
+
+"And if we lose?"
+
+Brokaw lifted his hands and shoulders with a significant gesture.
+
+"The moral effect will be tremendous," he said. "It will be shown
+that the entire north is inimical to our company, and the
+government will withdraw our option. We will be ruined. Our
+stockholders will lose every cent invested."
+
+In moments of mental energy Philip was restless. He rose from his
+chair now and moved softly back and forth across the carpeted
+floor of the big room, shrouded in tobacco smoke. Should he break
+his word to Gregson and tell Brokaw of Lord Fitzhugh? But, on
+second thought, what good would come of it? Brokaw was already
+aware of the seriousness of the situation. In some one of his
+unaccountable ways he had learned that their enemies were to
+strike almost immediately, and his own revelation of the Fitzhugh
+letters would but strengthen this evidence. He would keep his
+faith with Gregson for the promised day or two. For an hour the
+two men were alone in the room. At the end of that time their
+plans were settled. The next morning Philip would leave for Blind
+Indian Lake and prepare for war. Brokaw would follow two or three
+days later.
+
+A heavy weight seemed lifted from Philip's shoulders when he left
+Brokaw. After months of worry and weeks of physical inaction he
+saw his way clear for the first time. And for the first time, too,
+something seemed to have come into his life that filled him with a
+strange exhilaration, and made him forgetful of the gloom that had
+settled over him during these last months. That night he would see
+Jeanne. His body thrilled at the thought, until for a time he
+forgot that he would also see and talk with Eileen. A few days
+before he had told Gregson that it would be suicidal to fight the
+northerners; now he was eager for action, eager to begin and end
+the affair--to win or lose. If he had stopped to analyze the
+change in himself he would have found that the beautiful girl whom
+he had first seen on the moonlit rock was at the bottom of it. And
+yet Jeanne was a northerner, one of those against whom his actions
+must be directed. But he had confidence in himself, confidence in
+what that night would bring forth. He was like one freed from a
+bondage that had oppressed him for a long time, and the fact that
+he might be compelled to fight Jeanne's own people did not destroy
+his hopefulness, the new joy and excitement that he had found in
+life. As he hurried back to his cabin he told himself that both
+Jeanne and Pierre had read what he had sent to them in the
+handkerchief; their response was a proof that they understood him,
+and deep down a voice kept telling him that if it came to fighting
+they three, Pierre, Jeanne, and himself, would rise or fall
+together. A few hours had transformed him into Gregson's old
+appreciation of the fighting man. Long and tedious months of
+diplomacy, of political intrigue, of bribery and dishonest
+financiering, in which he had played but the part of a helpless
+machine, were gone. Now he held the whip-hand; Brokaw had
+acknowledged his own surrender. He was to fight--a clean, fair
+fight on his part, and his blood leaped in every vein like
+marshaling armies. That nights on the rock, he would reveal
+himself frankly to Pierre and Jeanne. He would tell them of the
+plot to disrupt the company, and of the work ahead of him. And
+after that--
+
+He thrust open the door of his cabin, eager to enlist Gregson in
+his enthusiasm. The artist was not in. Philip noticed that the
+cartridge-belt and the revolver which usually hung over Gregson's
+bunk were gone. He never entered the cabin without looking at the
+sketch of Eileen Brokaw. Something about it seemed to fascinate
+him, to challenge his presence. Now it was missing from the wall.
+
+He threw off his coat and hat, filled his pipe, and began
+gathering up his few possessions, ready for packing. It was noon
+before he was through, and Gregson had not returned. He boiled
+himself some coffee and sat down to wait. At five o'clock he was
+to eat supper with the Brokaws and the factor; Eileen, through her
+father, had asked him to join her an hour or two earlier in the
+big room. He waited until four, and then left a brief note for
+Gregson upon the table.
+
+It was growing dusk in the forest. From the top of the ridge
+Philip caught the last red glow of the sun, sinking far to the
+south and west. A faint radiance of it still swept over his head
+and mingled with the thickening gray gloom of the northern sea.
+Across the dip in the Bay the huge, white-capped cliff seemed to
+loom nearer and more gigantic in the whimsical light. For a few
+moments a red bar shot across it, and as the golden fire faded and
+died away Philip could not but think it was like a torch beckoning
+to him. A few hours more, and where that light had been he would
+see Jeanne. And now, down there, Eileen was waiting for him.
+
+His pulse quickened as he passed beyond the ancient fort, over the
+burial-place of the dead, and into Churchill. He met no one at the
+factor's, and the door leading into Miss Brokaw's room was partly
+ajar. A great fire was burning in the fireplace, and he saw Eileen
+seated in the rich glow of it, smiling at him as he entered. He
+closed the door, and when he turned she had risen and was holding
+out her hands to him. She had dressed for him, almost as on that
+night of the Brokaw ball. In the flashing play of the fire her
+exquisite arms and shoulders shone with dazzling beauty; her eyes
+laughed at him; her hair rippled in a golden flood. Faintly there
+came to him, filling the room slowly, tingling his nerves, the
+sweet scent of heliotrope--the perfume that had filled his
+nostrils on that other night, a long time ago, the sweet scent
+that had come to him in the handkerchief dropped on the rock, the
+breath of the bit of lace that had bound Jeanne's hair!
+
+Eileen moved toward him. "Philip," she said, "now are you glad to
+see me?"
+
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+
+Her voice broke the spell that had held him for a moment.
+
+"I am glad to see you," he cried, quickly, seizing both her hands.
+"Only I haven't quite yet awakened from my dream. It seems too
+wonderful, almost unreal. Are you the old Eileen who used to
+shudder when I told you of a bit of jungle and wild beasts, and
+who laughed at me because I loved to sleep out-of-doors and tramp
+mountains, instead of decently behaving myself at home? I demand
+an explanation. It must be a wonderful change--"
+
+"There has been a change," she interrupted him. "Sit down, Philip
+--there!" She nestled herself on a stool, close to his feet, and
+looked up at him, her hands clasped under her chin, radiantly
+lovely. "You told me once that girls like me simply fluttered over
+the top of life like butterflies; that we couldn't understand
+life, or live it, until somewhere--at some time--we came into
+touch with nature. Do you remember? I was consumed with rage then
+--at your frankness, at what I considered your impertinence. I
+couldn't get what you said out of my mind. And I'm trying it."
+
+"And you like it?" He put the question almost eagerly.
+
+"Yes." She was looking at him steadily, her beautiful gray eyes
+meeting his own in a silence that stirred him deeply. He had never
+seen her more beautiful. Was it the firelight on her face, the
+crimson leapings of the flames, that gave her skin a richer hue?
+Was it the mingling of fire and shadow that darkened her cheeks?
+An impulse made him utter the words which passed through his mind.
+
+"You have already tried it," he said. "I can see the effects of it
+in your face. It would take weeks in the forests to do that."
+
+The gray eyes faltered; the flush deepened.
+
+"Yes, I have tried it. I spent a half of the summer at our cottage
+on the lake."
+
+"But it is not tan," he persisted, thrilled for a moment by the
+discoveries he was making. "It is the wind; it is the open; it is
+the smoke of camp-fires; it is the elixir of balsam and cedar and
+pine. That is what I see in your face--unless it is the fire."
+
+"It is the fire, partly," she said. "And the rest is the wind and
+the open of the seas we have come across, and the sting of
+icebergs. Ugh: my face feels like nettles!"
+
+She rubbed her cheeks with her two hands, and then held up one
+hand to Philip.
+
+"Look," she said. "It's as rough as sand-paper. Isn't that a
+change? I didn't even wear gloves on the ship. I'm an enthusiast.
+I'm going down there with you, and I'm going to fight. Now have
+you got anything to say against me, Mr. Philip?"
+
+There was a lightness in her words, and yet not in her voice. In
+her manner was an uneasiness, mingled with an almost childish
+eagerness for him to answer, which Philip could not understand. He
+fancied that once or twice he had caught the faintest sign of a
+break in her voice.
+
+"You really mean to hazard this adventure?" he cried, softly, in
+his astonishment. "You, whom wild horses couldn't drag into the
+wilderness, as you once told me!"
+
+"Yes," she affirmed, drawing her stool back out of the increasing
+heat of the fire. Her face was almost entirely in shadow now, and
+she did not look at Philip. "I am beginning to--to love
+adventure," she went on, in an even voice. "It was an adventure
+coming up. And when we landed down there something curious
+happened. Did you see a girl who thought that she knew me--"
+
+She stopped, and a sudden flash of the fire lit up her eyes, fixed
+on him intently from between her shielding hands.
+
+"I saw her run out and speak to you," said Philip, his heart
+beating at double-quick. He leaned over so that he was looking
+squarely into Miss Brokaw's face.
+
+"Did you know her?" she asked.
+
+"I have seen her only twice--once before she spoke to you."
+
+"If I meet her again I shall apologize," said Eileen. "It was her
+mistake, and she startled me. When she ran out to me like that,
+and held out her hands I--I thought of beggars."
+
+"Beggars!" almost shouted Philip. "A beggar!" He caught himself
+with a laugh, and to cover his sudden emotion turned to lay a
+fresh piece of birch on the fire. "We don't have beggars up here."
+
+The door opened behind them and Brokaw entered. Philip's face was
+red when he greeted him. For half an hour after that he cursed
+himself for not being as clever as Gregson. He knew that there was
+a change in Eileen Brokaw, a change which nature had not worked
+alone, as she wished him to believe. Then, and at supper, he tried
+to fathom her. At times he detected the metallic ring of what was
+unreal and make-believe in what she said; at other times she
+seemed stirred by emotions which added immeasurably to the
+sweetness and truthfulness of her voice. She was nervous. He found
+her eyes frequently seeking her father's face, and more than once
+they were filled with a mysterious questioning, as if within
+Brokaw's brain there lurked hidden things which were new to her,
+and which she was struggling to understand. She no longer held the
+old fascination for Philip, and yet he conceded that she was more
+beautiful than ever. Until to-night he had never seen the shadow
+of sadness in her eyes; he had never seen them darken as they
+darkened now, when she listened with almost feverish interest to
+the words which passed between himself and Brokaw. He was certain
+that it was not a whim that had brought her into the north. It was
+impossible for him to believe that he had piqued at her vanity
+until she had leaped into action, as she had suggested to him
+while they were sitting before the fire. Could it be that she had
+accompanied her father because he--Philip Whittemore--was in the
+north?
+
+The thought drew a slow flush into his face, and his uneasiness
+increased when he knew that she was looking at him. He was glad
+when it came time for cigars, and Eileen excused herself. He
+opened the door for her, and told her that he probably would not
+see her again until morning, as he had an important engagement for
+the evening. She gave him her hand, and for a moment he felt the
+clinging of her fingers about his own.
+
+"Good night," she whispered.
+
+"Good night."
+
+She drew her hand half away, and then, suddenly, raised her eyes
+straight to his own. They were calm, quiet, beautiful, and yet
+there came a quick little catch in her throat as she leaned so
+close to him that she touched his breast, and said:
+
+"It will be best--best for everything--everybody--if you can
+influence father to stay at Fort Churchill."
+
+She did not wait for him to reply, but hurried toward her room.
+For a moment Philip stared after her in amazement. Then he took a
+step as if to follow her, to call her back. The impulse left him
+as quickly as it came, and he rejoined Brokaw and the factor.
+
+He looked at his watch. It was seven o'clock. At half-past seven
+he shook hands with the two men, lighted a fresh cigar, and passed
+out into the night. It was early for his meeting with Pierre and
+Jeanne, but he went down to the shore and walked slowly in the
+direction of the cliff. He was still an hour early when he arrived
+at the great rock, and sat down, with his face turned to the sea.
+
+It was a white, radiant night, such as he had seen in the tropics.
+Only here, in the north, his vision reached to greater distances.
+Churchill lay lifeless in its pool of light; the ship hung like a
+black silhouette in the distance, with a cloud of jet-black smoke
+rising straight up from its funnels, and spreading out high up
+against the sky, a huge, ebon monster that cast its shadow for
+half a mile over the Bay. The shadow held Philip's eyes. Now it
+was like a gigantic face, now like a monster beast--now it reached
+out in the form of a great threatening hand, as though somewhere
+in the mystery of the north it sought a spirit-victim as potent as
+itself.
+
+Then the spell of it was broken. From the end of the shadow, which
+reached almost to the base of the cliff on which Philip sat, there
+came a sound. It was a clear, metallic sound that left the
+vibration of steel in the air, and Philip leaned over the edge of
+the rock. Below him the shadow was broken into a pool of rippling
+starlight. He heard the faint dip of paddles, and suddenly a canoe
+shot from the shadow out into the clear light of the moon and
+stars.
+
+It was a large canoe. In it he could make out four figures. Three
+of them were paddling; the fourth sat motionless in the bow. They
+passed under him swiftly, guiding their canoe so that it was soon
+hidden in the shelter of the cliff. By the faint reflections cast
+by the disturbed water, Philip saw that the occupants of the canoe
+had made an effort to conceal themselves by following the course
+of the dense shadow. Only the chance sound had led him to observe
+them.
+
+Under ordinary circumstances the passing of a strange canoe at
+night would have had no significance for him. But at the present
+time it troubled him. The manner of its approach through the
+shadow, the strange quiet of its occupants, the stealth with which
+they had shot the canoe under the cliff, were all unusual. Could
+the incident have anything to do with Jeanne and Pierre?
+
+He waited until he heard the tiny bell in his watch tinkle the
+half-hour, and then he set out slowly over the moonlit rocks to
+the north. Jeanne and Pierre would surely come from that
+direction. It was impossible to miss them. He walked without sound
+in his moccasins, keeping close to the edge of the cliff so that
+he could look out over the Bay. Two or three hundred yards beyond
+the big rock the sea-wall swung in sharply, disclosing the open
+water, like a still, silvery sheet, for a mile or more. Philip
+scanned it for the canoe, but as far as he could see there was not
+a shadow.
+
+For a quarter of a mile he walked over the rocks, then returned.
+It was nine o'clock. The moment had arrived for the appearance of
+Jeanne and Pierre. He resumed his patrol of the cliff, and with
+each moment his nervousness increased. What if Jeanne failed him?
+What if she did not come to the rock? The mere thought made his
+heart sink with a sudden painful throb. Until now the fear that
+Jeanne might disappoint him, that she might not keep the tryst,
+had not entered his head. His faith in this girl, whom he had seen
+but twice, was supreme.
+
+A second and a third time he patrolled the quarter mile of cliff.
+Again his watch tinkled the half-hour, and he knew that the last
+minutes of the appointed time had come.
+
+The third and last time he went beyond the quarter-mile limit,
+searching in the white distances beyond. A low wind was rising
+from the Bay; it rustled in the spruce and balsam tops of the
+forest that reached up to the barren whiteness of the rock plateau
+on which he stood; under him he heard, growing more and more
+distinct, the moaning wash of the swelling tide. A moment of
+despair possessed him, and he felt that he had lost.
+
+Suddenly the wind brought to him a different sound--a shout far
+down the cliff, a second cry, and then the scream of a woman,
+deadened by the wash of the sea and the increasing sweep of the
+wind among the trees.
+
+He stood for a moment powerless, listening. The wind lulled, and
+the woman's cry now came to him again--a voice that was filled
+with terror rising in a wild appeal for help. With an answering
+shout he ran like a swift-footed animal along the cliff. It was
+Jeanne who was calling! Who else but Jeanne would be out there in
+the gray night--Jeanne and Pierre? He listened as he ran, but
+there came no other sound. At last he stopped, and drew in a great
+breath, to send out a shout that would reach their ears.
+
+Above the fierce beating of his heart, the throbbing intake of his
+breath, he heard sounds which were not of the wind or the sea. He
+ran on, and suddenly the cliff dropped from under his feet, and he
+found himself on the edge of a great rift in the wall of rock,
+looking across upon a strange scene. In the brilliant moonlight,
+with his back against a rock, stood Pierre, his glistening rapier
+in his hand, his thin, lithe body bent for the attack of three men
+who faced him. It was but a moment's tableau. The men rushed in.
+Muffled cries, blows, a single clash of steel, and Pierre's voice
+rose above the sound of conflict. "For the love of God, give me
+help, M'sieur!" He had seen Philip rush up to the edge of the
+break in the cliff, and as he fought he cried out again.
+
+"Shoot, M'sieur! In a moment it will be too late!"
+
+Philip had drawn his heavy revolver. He watched for an
+opportunity. The men were fighting now so that Pierre had been
+forced between his assailants and the breach in the wall. There
+was no chance to fire without hitting him.
+
+"Run, Pierre!" shouted Philip. "Run--"
+
+He fired once, over the heads of the fighters, and as Pierre
+suddenly darted to one side in obedience to his command there came
+for the first time a shot from the other side. The bullet whistled
+close to his ears. A second shot, and Pierre fell down like one
+dead among the rocks. Again Philip fired--a third and a fourth
+time, and one of the three who were disappearing in the white
+gloom stumbled over a rock, and fell as Pierre had fallen. His
+companions stopped, picked him up, and staggered on with him.
+Philip's last shot missed, and before he could reload they were
+lost among the upheaved masses of the cliff.
+
+"Pierre!" he called. "Ho! Pierre Couchee!"
+
+There was no answer from the other side.
+
+He ran along the edge of the break, and in the direction of the
+forest he found a place where he could descend. In his haste he
+fell; his hands were scratched, blood flowed from a cut in his
+forehead when he dragged himself up to the face of the cliff
+again. He tried to shout when he saw a figure drag itself up from
+among the rocks, but his almost superhuman exertions had left him
+voiceless. His wind whistled from between his parted lips when he
+came to Pierre.
+
+Pierre was supporting himself against a rock. His face was
+streaming with blood. In his hand he held what remained of the
+rapier, which had broken off close to the hilt. His eyes were
+blazing like a madman's, and his face was twisted with an agony
+that sent a thrill of horror through Philip.
+
+"My hurt is nothing--nothing-M'sieur!" he gasped, understanding
+the look in Philip's face. "It is Jeanne! They have gone--gone
+with Jeanne!" The rapier slipped from his hand and he slid weakly
+down against the rock. Philip dropped upon his knees, and with his
+handkerchief began wiping the blood from the half-breed's face.
+For a few moments Pierre's head hung limp against his shoulder.
+
+"What is it, Pierre?" he urged. "Tell me--quick! They have gone
+with Jeanne!"
+
+Pierre's body grew rigid. With one great effort he seemed to
+marshal all of his strength, and straightened himself.
+
+"Listen, M'sieur," he said, speaking calmly. "They set upon us as
+we were going to meet you at the rock. There were four. One of
+them is dead--back there. The others--with Jeanne--have gone in
+the canoe. It is death--worse than death--for her--"
+
+His body writhed. In a passion he strove to rise to his feet. Then
+with a groan he sank back, and for a moment Philip thought he was
+dying.
+
+"I will go, Pierre," he cried. "I will bring her back. I swear
+it."
+
+Pierre's hand detained him as he went to rise.
+
+"You swear--"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"At the next break--there is a canoe. They have gone for the
+Churchill--"
+
+Pierre's voice was growing weaker. In a spasm of sudden fear at
+the dizziness which was turning the night black for him he
+clutched at Philip's arm.
+
+"If you save her, M'sieur, do not bring her back," he whispered,
+hoarsely. "Take her to Fort o' God. Lose not an hour--not a
+minute. Trust no one. Hide yourselves. Fight--kill--but take her
+to Fort o' God! You will do this--M'sieur--you promise--"
+
+He fell back limp. Philip lowered him gently, holding his head so
+that he could look into the staring eyes that were still open and
+understanding.
+
+"I will go, Pierre," he said. "I will take her to Fort o' God. And
+you--"
+
+A shadow was creeping over Pierre's eyes. He was still fighting to
+understand, fighting to hold for another breath or two the
+consciousness that was fast slipping from him.
+
+"Listen," cried Philip, striving to rouse him. "You will not die.
+The bullet grazed your head, and the wound has already stopped
+bleeding. To-morrow you must go to Churchill and hunt up a man
+named Gregson--the man I was with when you and Jeanne came to see
+the ship. Tell him that an important thing has happened, and that
+he must tell the others I have gone to the camps. He will
+understand. Tell him--tell him--"
+
+He struggled to find some final word for Gregson. Pierre still
+looked at him, his eyes half closed now.
+
+Philip bent close down.
+
+"Tell him," he said, "that I am on the trail of Lord Fitzhugh!"
+
+Scarcely had he uttered the name when Pierre's closing eyes shot
+open. A groaning cry burst from his lips, and, as if that name had
+aroused the last spark of life and strength within him into
+action, he wrenched himself from Philip's arms, striving to speak.
+A trickle of fresh blood ran over his face. Incoherent sounds
+rattled in his throat, and then, overcome by his effort, he
+dropped back unconscious. Philip wound his handkerchief about the
+wounded man's head and straightened out his limbs. Then he rose to
+his feet and reloaded his revolver. His hands were steady now. His
+brain was clear; the enervating thrill of excitement had gone from
+his body. Only his heart beat like a racing engine.
+
+He turned and ran in the direction which Pierre's assailants had
+taken, his head lowered, his revolver held in front of him, on a
+level with his breast. He had not gone a hundred yards when
+something stopped him. In his path, with its face turned straight
+up to the moonlit sky, lay the body of a man. For an instant
+Philip bent over it. The broken blade of Pierre's rapier glistened
+under the man's throat. One lifeless hand clutched at it, as
+though in the last moment of life he had tried to draw it forth.
+The face was distorted, the eyes were still open, the lips parted.
+Death had come with terrible suddenness.
+
+Philip bent lower, and stared into the face of the dead man. Where
+had he seen that face before?
+
+Suddenly he remembered. He drew back, and a cold sweat seemed to
+break out all at once over his face and body. This man who lay
+with the broken blade of Pierre Couchee's rapier in his breast had
+come ashore from the London ship that day in company with Eileen
+and her father!
+
+For a space he was overwhelmed by the discovery. Everything that
+had happened--the scene upon the rock when he first met Jeanne,
+the arrival of the ship, the moment's tableau on the pier when
+Jeanne and Eileen stood face to face--rushed upon him now as he
+gazed down into the staring eyes at his feet. What did it all
+mean? Why had Lord Fitzhugh's name been sufficient to drag the
+half-breed back from the brink of unconsciousness? What
+significance was there in this strange combination of
+circumstances that persisted in drawing Pierre and Jeanne into the
+plot that threatened himself? Had there been truth, after all, in
+those last words that he impressed upon the fainting senses of
+Pierre Couchee's message to Gregson?
+
+He waited to answer none of the questions that leaped through his
+brain. To-morrow some one would find Pierre, or Pierre would crawl
+down into Churchill. And then there would be the dead man to
+account for. He shuddered as he returned his revolver into his
+holster and braced his limbs. It was an unpleasant task, but he
+knew that it must be done--to save Pierre. He lifted the body
+clear of the rocks, and bending under its weight carried it to the
+edge of the cliff. Far below sounded the wash of the sea. He
+shoved his burden over the edge, and listened. After a moment
+there came a dull splash.
+
+Then he hastened on, as Pierre had guided him.
+
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+
+Soon Philip slackened his pace, and looked anxiously ahead of him.
+From where he stood the cliff sloped down to a white strip of
+beach that reached out into the night as far as he could see,
+hemmed close in by the black gloom of the forest. Half-way down
+the slope the moonlight was cut by a dark streak, and he found
+this to be the second break. He had no difficulty in descending.
+Its sides were smooth, as though worn by water. At the bottom
+white, dry sand slipped under his feet. He made his way between
+the walls, and darkness shut him in. The trail grew rougher. Near
+the shore he stumbled blindly among huge rocks and piles of
+crumbling slate, wondering why Jeanne and Pierre had come this way
+when they might have taken a smoother road. Close to the stony
+beach, where the light was a little better, he made out the canoe
+which Pierre had drawn into the shadows.
+
+Not until he had dragged it into the moonlight at the edge of the
+water did he see that it was equipped as if for a long journey.
+Close to the stern was a bulging pack, with a rifle strapped
+across it. Two or three smaller caribou-skin bags lay in the
+center of the canoe. In the bow was a thick nest of bearskin, and
+he knew that this was for Jeanne.
+
+Cautiously Philip launched himself, and with silent sweeps of the
+paddle that made scarcely the sound of a ripple in the water set
+out in the direction of Churchill. Jeanne's captors had a
+considerable start of him, but he felt confident of his ability to
+overtake them shortly if Pierre had spoken with truth when he said
+that they would head for the Churchill River. He had observed the
+caution with which Pierre's assailants had approached the cliff,
+and he was sure that they would double that caution in their
+return, especially as their attack had been interrupted at the
+last moment. For this reason he paddled without great haste,
+keeping well within the concealment of the precipitous shore, with
+his ears and eyes keenly alive to discover a sign of those who
+were ahead of him.
+
+Opposite the rock where Pierre and Jeanne were to have met him he
+stopped and stood up in the canoe. The wind had dispelled the
+smoke shadow. Between him and the distant ship lay an unclouded
+sea. Two-thirds of the distance to the vessel he made out the
+larger canoe, rising and falling with the smooth undulations of
+the tide. He sank upon his knees again and unstrapped Pierre's
+rifle. There was a cartridge in the chamber. He made sure that the
+magazine was loaded, and resumed his paddling.
+
+His mind worked rapidly. Within half an hour, if he desired, he
+could overtake the other canoe. And what then? There were three to
+one, if it came to a fight--and how could he rescue Jeanne without
+a fight? His blood was pounding eagerly, almost with pleasure at
+the promise of what was ahead of him, and he laughed softly to
+himself as he thought of the odds.
+
+The ship loomed nearer; the canoe vanished behind it. A brief
+stop, a dozen words of explanation, and Philip knew that he could
+secure assistance from the vessel. After all, would that not be
+the wisest course for him to pursue? For a moment he hesitated,
+and paddled more slowly. If others joined with him in the rescue
+of Jeanne what excuse could he offer for not bringing her back to
+Churchill? What would happen if he returned with her? Why had
+Pierre roused himself from something that was almost death to
+entreat him to take Jeanne to Fort o' God?
+
+At the thought of Fort o' God a new strength leaped into his arms
+and body, urging him on to cope with the situation single-handed.
+If he rescued Jeanne alone, and went on with her as he had
+promised Pierre, many things that were puzzling him would be
+explained. It occurred to him again that Jeanne and Pierre might
+be the key to the mysterious plot that promised to crash out the
+life of the enterprise he had founded in the north. He found
+reasons for this belief. Why had Lord Fitzhugh's name had such a
+startling effect upon Pierre? Why was one of his assailants a man
+fresh from the London ship that had borne Eileen Brokaw and her
+father as passengers? He felt that Jeanne could explain these
+things, as well as her brother. She could explain the strange
+scene on the pier, when for a moment she had stood crushed and
+startled before Eileen. She could clear up the mystery of
+Gregson's sketch, for if there were two Eileen Brokaws, Jeanne
+would know. With these arguments he convinced himself that he
+should go on alone. Yet, behind them there was another and more
+powerful motive. He confessed to himself that he would willingly
+accept double the chances against him to achieve Jeanne's rescue
+without assistance and to accompany her to Fort o' God. The
+thought of their being together, of the girl's companionship--
+perhaps for days--thrilled him with exquisite anticipation. An
+hour or so ago he had been satisfied in the assurance that he
+would see her for a few minutes on the cliff. Since then fate had
+played his way. Jeanne was his own, to save, to defend, to carry
+on to Fort o' God.
+
+Not for a moment did he hesitate at the danger ahead of him, and
+yet his pursuit was filled with caution. Gregson, the diplomat,
+would have seen the necessity of halting at the ship for help;
+Philip was confident in himself. He knew that he would have at
+least three against him, for he was satisfied that the man whom he
+had wounded on the cliff was still in fighting trim. There might
+be others whom he had not taken into account.
+
+He passed so close under the stern of the ship that his canoe
+scraped against her side. For a few minutes the vessel had
+obstructed his view, but now he saw again, a quarter of a mile
+distant, the craft which he was pursuing. Jeanne's captors were
+heading straight for the river, and as the canoe was now partly
+broadside to him he could easily make out the figures in her, but
+not distinctly enough to make sure of their number. He shoved out
+boldly into the moonlight, and, instead of following in his former
+course, he turned at a sharp angle in the direction of the shore.
+If the others saw him, which was probable, they would think that
+he was making a landing from the ship. Once he was in the deep
+fringe of shadow along the shore he could redouble his exertions
+and draw nearer to them without being observed.
+
+No sooner had he readied the sheltering gloom than he bent to his
+paddle and the light birch-bark fairly hissed through the water.
+Not until he found himself abreast of the pursued did it occur to
+him that he could beat them out to the mouth of the Churchill and
+lie in wait for them. Every stroke of his paddle widened the
+distant between him and the larger canoe. Fifteen minutes later he
+reached the edge of the huge delta of wild rice and reeds through
+which the sluggish volume of the river emptied into the Bay. The
+chances were that the approaching canoe would take the nearest
+channel into the main stream, and Philip concealed himself so that
+it would have to pass within twenty yards of him.
+
+From his ambuscade he looked out upon the approaching canoe. He
+was puzzled by the slowness of its progress. At times it seemed to
+stand still, and he could distinguish no movement at all among its
+occupants. At first he thought they were undecided as to which
+course to pursue, but a few minutes more sufficed to show that
+this was not the reason for their desultory advance. The canoe was
+headed for the first channel. The solution came when a low but
+clear whistle signaled over the water. Almost instantly there came
+a responsive whistle from up the channel.
+
+Philip drew a quick breath, and a new sensation brought his teeth
+together in sudden perplexity. It looked as though he had a bigger
+fight before him than he had anticipated.
+
+At the signal from up-stream he heard the quick dip of paddles,
+and the canoe cut swiftly toward him. He drew back the hammer of
+Pierre's rule, and cleared a little space through the reeds and
+grass so that his view into the channel was unobstructed. Three or
+four well-directed shots, a quick dash out into the stream, and
+he would possess Jeanne. This was his first thought. It was
+followed by others, rapid as lightning, that restrained his
+eagerness. The night-glow was treacherous to shoot by. What if he
+should miss, or hit Jeanne--or in the sudden commotion and
+destruction of his shots the canoe should be overturned? A single
+error, the slightest mishap to himself, would mean the
+annihilation of his hopes. Even if he succeeded in directing his
+shots with accuracy, both himself and Jeanne would almost
+immediately be under fire from those above.
+
+He dropped back again behind the screen of reeds. The canoe drew
+nearer. A moment more and it was almost abreast of him, and his
+heart pounded like a swiftly beating hammer when he saw Jeanne in
+the stern. She was leaning back as though unconscious. He could
+see nothing of her face, but as the canoe passed within ten yards
+of his hiding-place he saw the dark glow of her disheveled hair,
+which fell thickly over the object against which she was resting.
+It was but a moment's view, and they were gone. He had not looked
+at the three men in the canoe. His whole being was centered upon
+Jeanne. He had seen no sign of life--no movement in her body, not
+the flutter of a hand, and all his fears leaped like brands of
+burning fire into his brain. He thought of the inhuman plot which
+Lord Fitzhugh's letter had revealed; in the same breath Pierre
+Couchee's words rang in his ears--"It is death--worse than death
+--for her--"
+
+Was Jeanne the first victim of that diabolical scheme to awaken
+the wrath of the northland? In the madness which possessed him now
+Philip shoved out his canoe while there was still danger of
+discovery. Fortunately none of the pursued glanced back, and a
+turn in the channel soon hid them from view. Philip had recovered
+his self-possession by the time he reached the turn. He assured
+himself that Jeanne was unharmed as yet, and that when he saw her
+she had probably fainted from excitement and terror. Her fate
+still lay before her, somewhere in the deep and undisturbed
+forests up the Churchill. His one hope was to remain undiscovered
+and to rescue her at the last moment when she was taken ashore by
+her captors.
+
+He followed, close up against the reeds, never trusting himself
+out of the shadows. After a little he heard voices, and a second
+canoe appeared. There was a short pause, and the two canoes
+continued side by side up the channel. A quarter of an hour
+brought both the pursuers and the pursued into the main stream,
+which lay in black gloom between forest walls that cut out all
+light but the shimmer of the stars.
+
+No longer could Philip see those ahead of him, but he guided
+himself by occasional voices and the dip of paddles. At times,
+when the stream narrowed and the forest walls gave him deeper
+shelter, he drew perilously near with the hope of overhearing what
+was said, but he caught only an occasional word or two. He
+listened in vain for Jeanne's voice. Once he heard her name
+spoken, and it was followed by a low laugh from some one in the
+canoe that had waited at the mouth of the Churchill. A dozen times
+during the first half-hour after they entered the main stream
+Philip heard this same laughing voice.
+
+After a time there fell a silence upon those ahead. No sound rose
+above the steady dip of paddles, and the speed of the two canoes
+increased. Suddenly, from far up the river, there came a voice,
+faintly at first, but growing steadily louder, singing one of the
+wild half-breed songs of the forest. The voice broke the silence
+of those in the canoes. They ceased paddling, and Philip stopped.
+He heard low words, and after a few moments the paddling was
+resumed, and the canoes turned in toward the shore. Philip
+followed their movement, dropping fifty yards farther down the
+stream, and thrust big birch-bark alongside a thick balsam that
+had fallen into the river.
+
+The singing voice approached rapidly. Five minutes later a long
+company canoe floated down out of the gloom. It passed so near
+that Philip could see the picturesque figure in the stern paddling
+and singing. In the bow kneeled an Indian working in stoic
+silence. Between them, in the body of the canoe, sat two men whom
+he knew at a glance were white men. The strangers and their craft
+slipped by with the quickness of a shadow.
+
+Again Philip heard movements above him, and once more he took up
+the pursuit. He wondered why Jeanne had not called for help when
+the company canoe passed. If she was not hurt or unconscious, her
+captors had been forced to hold a handkerchief or a brutal hand
+over her mouth, perhaps at her throat! His blood grew hot with
+rage at the thought.
+
+For three-quarters of an hour longer the swift paddling up-stream
+continued without interruption. Then the river widened into a
+small lake, and Philip was compelled to hold back until the two
+canoes, which he could see clearly now, had passed over the
+exposed area.
+
+By the time he dared to follow, Jeanne's captors were a quarter of
+a mile ahead of him. He no longer heard their paddles when he
+entered the stream at the upper end of the lake, and he bent to
+his work with greater energy and less caution. Five minutes--ten
+minutes passed, and he saw nothing, heard nothing. His strokes
+grew more powerful and the canoe shot through the water with the
+swift cleavage of a knife. A perspiration began to gather on his
+face, and a sudden chilling fear entered him. Another five minutes
+and he stopped. The river swept out ahead of him, broad and clear,
+for a quarter of a mile. There was no sign of the canoes!
+
+For a few moments he remained motionless, drifting back with the
+slow current of the stream, stunned by the thought that he had
+allowed Jeanne's captors to escape him. Had they heard him and
+dropped in to shore to let him pass? He swung his canoe about and
+headed down-stream. In that case he could not miss them, if he
+used caution. But if they had turned into some creek hidden in the
+gloom--were even now picking their way through a secret channel
+that led back from the river--
+
+A groan burst from his lips as he thought of Jeanne. In that half
+mile of river he could surely find where the canoes had gone, but
+it might be too late. He went down in mid-stream, searching the
+shadows of both shores. His heart sank like lead when he came to
+the lake. There was but one thing to do now, and he ran his canoe
+close along the right-hand shore, looking for an opening. His
+progress was slow. A dozen times he entangled himself in masses of
+reeds and rice, or thrust himself under over-hanging tree-tops
+and vines to investigate the deeper gloom beyond. He had returned
+two-thirds of the distance to the straight-water where he had
+given up the pursuit when the bow of his canoe ran upon a smooth,
+sandy bar that shelved out thirty or forty feet from the shore.
+Scarcely had he felt the grate of sand when with a powerful shove
+he sent his canoe back, and almost in the same instant Pierre's
+rifle leveled menacingly shoreward. Drawn up high and dry on the
+sand-bar were the two canoes.
+
+For a space Philip expected that his appearance would be the
+signal for some movement ashore; but as he drifted slowly away,
+his rifle still leveled, he was filled more and more with the
+belief that he had not been discovered. He allowed himself to
+drift until he knew that he was hidden in the shadows, and then
+quietly worked himself in to shore. Making no sound, he pulled
+himself up the bank and crept among the trees toward the bar.
+There was no one guarding the canoes. He heard no sound of voice,
+no crackling of brush or movement of reeds. For a full minute he
+crouched and listened. Then he crept nearer and found where both
+reeds and brush were trampled down into a path that led away from
+the river.
+
+His heart gave a bound of joy, and he darted along the path,
+holding his rifle ready for instant use. The trail wound through
+the tall grass of a dry swamp meadow and, two hundred yards beyond
+the river, plunged into a forest. He had barely entered this when
+he saw the glow of a fire. It was only a short distance ahead,
+hidden in a deep hollow that completely concealed its existence
+from the keenest eyes that might pass along the river. Stealing
+cautiously to the crest of the little knoll between him and the
+light, Philip found himself within fifty feet of a camp.
+
+A big canvas tent was the first thing to come within his vision.
+The fire was built against this face of a rock in front of this,
+and over the fire hovered a man dragging out beds of coals with a
+forked stick. Almost at the same moment a second man appeared from
+the tent, bearing two huge skillets in one hand and a big pot in
+the other. At a glance Philip knew that they were preparing to
+cook a meal, and that it was for many instead of two. Wildly he
+searched the firelit spaces and the shadows for a sign of Jeanne.
+He saw nothing. She was not in the camp. The five or six men who
+had fled up the river with her were not there. His fingers dug
+deep in the earth under him at the discovery, and once more
+appalling fears overwhelmed him. Perhaps she had already met her
+fate a little deeper in the forest.
+
+He crept over the edge of the knoll and worked himself down
+through the low bush on the opposite side, which would bring him
+within a dozen feet of the man over the fire. There he would have
+them at his mercy, and at the point of his revolver would compel
+them to tell him where Jeanne had been taken. The advantage was
+all in his favor. It would not be difficult to make them prisoners
+and leave them secured while he followed after their companions.
+
+He was intent only upon his plan, and did not take his eyes from
+the men over the fire. He came to the end of the bush, and
+crouched with head and shoulders exposed, his revolver in his
+hand. Suddenly a sound close to the tent startled him. It was a
+low cough. The men over the fire made no movement to look behind
+them, but Philip turned.
+
+In the shadow of a tree, which had concealed her until now, sat
+Jeanne. She was tense and straight. Her white face was turned to
+him. Her beautiful eyes glowed like stars. Her lips were parted;
+he could see her quick, excited breathing. She saw him! She knew
+him! He could see the joy of hope in her face and that she was
+crushing back an impulse to cry out to him, even as he was
+restraining his own mad desire to shout out his defiance and joy.
+And there in the firelight, his face illumined, and oblivious for
+the moment of the presence of the two men, Philip straightened
+himself and held out his arms with a glad smile to Jeanne.
+
+Hardly had he turned to the men, ready to spring out upon them,
+when there came a terrific interruption. There was a sudden crash
+in the brush behind him, a menacing snarl, and a huge wolfish
+brute launched itself at his throat. The swift instinct of self-
+preservation turned the weapon intended for the men over the fire
+upon this unexpected assailant. The snarling fangs of the husky
+were gleaming in his face and the animal's body was against the
+muzzle of his revolver when Philip fired. Though he escaped the
+fangs, he could not ward off the impact of the dog's body, and in
+another moment he was sprawling upon his back in the light of the
+camp. Before Philip could recover himself Jeanne's startled guards
+were upon him. Flung back, he still possessed his pistol, and
+pulled the trigger blindly. The report was muffled and sickening.
+At the same moment a heavy blow fell upon his head, and a furious
+weight crushed him back to the ground. He dropped his revolver.
+His brain reeled; his muscles relaxed. He felt his assailant's
+fingers at his throat, and their menace brought back every ounce
+of fighting strength in his body. For a moment he lay still, his
+eyes closed, the warm blood flowing over his face. He had worked
+this game once before, years ago. He even thought of that time
+now, as he lay upon his back. It had worked then, and it worked
+now. The choking fingers at his throat loosened; the weight lifted
+itself a little from his chest. The lone guard thought that he was
+unconscious, and Jeanne, who had staggered to her feet, thought
+that he was dead.
+
+It was her cry, terrible, filled with agony and despair, that
+urged him into action an instant too soon. His foe was still
+partly on his guard, rising with a caution born of more than one
+wilderness episode, when with a quick movement Philip closed with
+him. Locked in a deadly grip, they rolled upon the ground; and,
+with a feeling of despair which had never entered into his soul
+before, the terrible truth came to Philip that the old strength
+was gone from his arms and that with each added exertion he was
+growing weaker. For a moment he saw Jeanne. She stood almost above
+them, her hands clutched at her breast. And as he looked, she
+suddenly turned and ran to the fire. An instant more and she was
+back, a red-hot brand in her hand. Philip saw it flash close to
+his eyes, felt the heat of it; and then a scream, animal-like in
+its ferocity and pain, burst from the lips of his antagonist. The
+man reeled backward, clutching at his thick neck, where Jeanne had
+thrust the burning stick. Philip rose to his knees. His fist shot
+out like lightning against the other's jaw, and the second guard
+fell back in a limp heap.
+
+Even as the blow fell, a loud shout came from close back in the
+forest, followed by the crashing of many feet tearing through the
+underbrush.
+
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+
+Philip and Jeanne stood face to face in the firelight.
+
+"Quick!" he cried. "We must hurry!"
+
+He bent over to pick up his revolver from the ground. His movement
+was followed by a low sob of pain. Jeanne was swaying as though
+about to faint. She fell in a crumpled heap before he could reach
+her side.
+
+"You are hurt!" he exclaimed. "Jeanne! Jeanne!"
+
+He was upon his knees beside her, crying out her name, half
+holding her in his arms.
+
+"No, no! I am not hurt--much," she replied, trying to recover
+herself. "It is my ankle. I sprained it--on the cliff. Now--"
+
+She became heavier against his arm. Her eyes were limpid with
+pain.
+
+Rising, Philip caught her in his arms. The crashing of brush was
+within pistol-shot distance of them, but in that moment he felt no
+fear. Life leaped back into his veins. He wanted to shout back his
+defiance as he ran with Jeanne along the path to the river. He
+could feel her pulsing against him. His lips were in her hair. Her
+heart was beating wildly against his own. One of her arms was
+about his shoulder, her hand against his neck. Life, love, the joy
+of possession swept through him in burning floods, and it seemed
+in these first moments of his contact with Jeanne, in the first
+sound of her voice speaking to him, that the passionate language
+of his soul must escape through his lips. For this moment he had
+risked his life, had taken a hundred chances; he had anticipated,
+and yet he had not dreamed beyond a hundredth part of what it
+would mean for him. He looked down into the white face of the girl
+as he ran. Her beautiful eyes were open to him. Her lips were
+parted; her cheek lay against his breast. He did not realize how
+close he was holding her until, at last, he stopped where he had
+hidden the canoe. Then he felt her beating and throbbing against
+him, as he had felt the quivering life of a frightened bird
+imprisoned in his hands. She drew a deep breath when he opened his
+arms, and lifted her head. Her loose hair swept over his breast
+and hands.
+
+He spoke no word as he placed her in the canoe. Not a whisper
+passed between them as the canoe sped swiftly from the shore. A
+hundred yards down the stream Philip headed straight across the
+river and plunged into the shadows along the opposite bank.
+
+Jeanne was close to him. He could hear her breathing. Suddenly he
+felt the touch of her hand.
+
+"M'sieur, I must ask--about Pierre!"
+
+There was the thrill of fear in the low words. She leaned back,
+her face a pale shadow in the deep gloom; and Philip bent over
+until he felt her breath, and the sweetness of her hair filled his
+nostrils. Quickly he whispered what had happened. He told her that
+Pierre was hurt, but not badly, and that he had promised to take
+her on to Fort o' God.
+
+"It is up the Churchill?" he questioned.
+
+"Yes," she whispered.
+
+They heard voices now, and almost opposite them they saw shadowy
+figures running out to the canoes upon the sand-bar.
+
+"They will think that we are escaping toward Churchill," said
+Philip, gloatingly. "It is the nearest refuge. See--"
+
+One of the canoes was launched, and shot swiftly down the river. A
+moment later the second followed. The dip of paddles died away,
+and Philip laughed softly and joyously.
+
+"They will hunt for us from now until morning between here and the
+Bay. And then they will look for you again in Churchill."
+
+Philip was conscious, almost without seeing, that Jeanne had bowed
+her head in her arms and that she was giving way now to the
+terrific strain which she had been under. Not until he heard a low
+sob, which she strove hard to choke back in her throat, did he
+dare to lean over again and touch her. Whatever was throbbing in
+his heart, he knew that he must hide it now.
+
+"You read the letter?" he asked, softly.
+
+"Yes, M'sieur."
+
+"Then you know--that you are safe with me!"
+
+There was pride and strength, the ring of triumph in his voice. It
+was the voice of a man thrilled by his own strength, by the warmth
+of a great love, by the knowledge that he was the protector of a
+creature dearer to him than all else on earth. The truth of it set
+Jeanne quivering. She reached out until in the darkness her two
+hands found one of Philip's, and for a moment she held his paddle
+motionless in midair.
+
+"Thank you, M'sieur," she whispered. "I trust you, as I would
+trust Pierre."
+
+All the words that women had ever spoken to him were as nothing to
+those few that fell softly from Jeanne's lips; in the clinging
+pressure of her fingers as she uttered them were the concentrated
+joys of all that he had dreamed of in the touch of women. He knelt
+silent, motionless, until her hands left his own.
+
+"I am to take you to Fort o' God," he said, fighting to keep the
+tremble of joy out of his voice. "And you--you must guide me."
+
+"It is far up the Churchill," she replied, understanding the
+question he intended. "It is two hundred miles from the Bay."
+
+He put his strength into his paddle for ten minutes, and then ran
+the canoe into shore fully half a mile above the sand-bar. He
+stepped out into water up to his knees.
+
+"We must risk a little time here to attend to your injured ankle,"
+he explained. "Then you can arrange yourself comfortably among
+these robes in the bow. Shall I carry you?"
+
+"You can--help," said Jeanne. She gave him her hand and made an
+effort to rise. Instantly she sank back with a sob of pain.
+
+It was strange that her pain should fill him with a wonderful joy.
+He knew that she was suffering, that she could not walk or stand
+alone. And yet, back at the camp, she had risen in her torture and
+had come to his rescue. She could not bear her own weight now, but
+then she had run to him and had fought for him. The knowledge that
+she had done this, and for him, filled him with an exquisite
+sensation.
+
+"I must carry you," he said, speaking to her with the calm
+decision that he might have voiced to a little child. His tone
+reassured her, and she made no remonstrance when he lifted her in
+his arms. For a brief moment she lay against him again, and when
+he lowered her upon the bank his hand accidentally touched the
+soft warmth of her face.
+
+"My specialty is sprains," he said, speaking a little lightly to
+raise her spirits for the instant's ordeal through which she must
+pass. "I have doctored half a dozen during the last three months.
+You must take off your moccasin and your stocking, and I will make
+a bandage."
+
+He drew a big handkerchief from his pocket and dipped it in the
+water. Then he searched along the shore for a dozen paces, until
+he found an Indian willow. With his knife he scraped off a handful
+of bark, soaked it in water, crushed it between his hands, and
+returned to her. Jeanne's little foot lay naked in the starlight.
+
+"It will hurt just a moment," he said, gently. "But it is the only
+cure. To-morrow it will be strong enough for you to stand upon.
+Can you bear a little hurt?"
+
+He knelt before her and looked up, scarce daring to touch her foot
+before she spoke.
+
+"I may cry," she said.
+
+Her voice fluttered, but it gave him permission. He folded the wet
+handkerchief in the form of a bandage, with the willow bark spread
+over it. Then, very gently, he seized her foot in one hand and her
+ankle in the other.
+
+"It will hurt just a little," he soothed. "Only a moment."
+
+His fingers tightened. He put into them the whole strength of his
+grip, pulling downward on the foot and upward on the ankle until,
+with a low cry, Jeanne flung her hands over his.
+
+"There, it is done," he laughed, nervously. He wrapped the bandage
+around so tightly that Jeanne could not move her foot, and tied it
+with strips of cloth. Then he turned to the canoe while she drew
+on her stocking and moccasin.
+
+He was trembling. A maddening joy pounded in his brain. Jeanne's
+voice came to him sweetly, with a shyness in it that made him feel
+like a boy. He was glad that the night concealed his face. He
+would have given worlds to have seen Jeanne's.
+
+"I am ready," she said.
+
+He carried her to the bow of the canoe and fixed her among the
+robes, arranging a place for her head so that she might sleep if
+she wished. For the first time the light was so that he could see
+her plainly as she nestled back in the place made for her. Their
+eyes met for a moment.
+
+"You must sleep," he urged. "I shall paddle all night."
+
+"You are sure that Pierre is not badly hurt?" she asked,
+tremulously. "You--you would not--keep the truth from me?"
+
+"He was not more than stunned," assured Philip. "It is impossible
+that his wound should prove serious. Only there was no time to
+lose, and I came without him. He will follow us soon."
+
+He took his position in the stern, and Jeanne lay back among the
+bearskins. For a long time after that Philip paddled in silence.
+He had hoped that Jeanne would give him an opportunity to continue
+their conversation, in spite of his advice to her to secure what
+rest she could. But there came no promise from the bow of the
+canoe. After half an hour he guessed that Jeanne had taken him at
+his word, and was asleep.
+
+It was disappointing, and yet there came a pleasurable throb with
+his disappointment. Jeanne trusted him. She was sleeping under his
+protection as sweetly as a child. Fear of her enemies no longer
+kept her awake or filled her with terror. This night, under these
+stars, with the wilderness all about them, she had given herself
+into his keeping. His cheeks burned. He dipped his paddle
+noiselessly, so that he might not interrupt her slumber. Each
+moment added to the fullness of his joy, and he wished that he
+might only see her face, hidden in the darkness of her hair and
+the bear-robes.
+
+The silence no longer seemed a silence to him. It was filled with
+the beating of his heart, the singing of his love, a gentle sigh
+now and then that came like a deeper breath between Jeanne's sweet
+lips. It was a silence that pulsated with a voiceless and
+intoxicating life for him, and he was happy. In these moments,
+when even their voices were stilled, Jeanne belonged to him, and
+to him alone. He could feel the warmth of her presence. He felt
+still the thrill of her breast against his own, the touch of her
+hair upon his lips, the gentle clinging of her arms. The spirit of
+her moved, and sat awake, and talked with him, just as the old
+spirit of his dreams had communed with him a thousand times in his
+loneliness. Dreams were at an end. Now had come reality.
+
+He looked up into the sky. The moon had dropped below the
+southwestern forests, and there were only the stars above him,
+filling a gray-blue vault in which there was not even the
+lingering mist of a cloud. It was a beautifully clear night, and
+he wondered how the light fell so that it did not reveal Jeanne in
+her nest. The thought that came to him then set his heart tingling
+and made his face radiant. Even the stars were guarding Jeanne,
+and refused to disclose the mystery of her slumber. He laughed
+within himself. His being throbbed, and suddenly a voice seemed to
+cry softly, trembling in its joy:
+
+"Jeanne! Jeanne! My beloved Jeanne!"
+
+With horror Philip caught himself too late. He had spoken the
+words aloud. For an instant reality had transformed itself into
+the old dream, and his dream-spirit had called to its mate for the
+first time in words. Appalled at what he had said, Philip bent
+over and listened. He heard Jeanne's breathing. It was deeper than
+before. She was surely asleep!
+
+He straightened himself and resumed his paddling. He was glad now
+that he had spoken. Jeanne seemed nearer to him after those words.
+
+Before this night he never realized how beautiful the wilderness
+was, how complete it could be. It had offered him visions of new
+life, but these visions had never quite shut out the memories of
+old pain. He watched and listened. The water rippled behind his
+canoe; it trickled in a soothing cadence after each dip of his
+paddle; he heard the gentle murmur of it among the reeds and
+grasses, and now and then the gurgling laughter of it, like the
+faintest tinkling of dainty bells. He had never understood it
+before; he had never joined in its happiness. The night sounds
+came to him with a different meaning, filled him with different
+sensations. As he slipped quietly around a bend in the river he
+heard a splashing ahead of him, and knew that a moose was feeding,
+belly-deep, in the water. At other times the sound would have set
+his fingers itching for a rifle, but now it was a part of the
+music of the night. Later he heard the crashing of a heavy body
+along the shore and in the distance the lonely howl of a wolf. He
+listened to the sounds with a quiet pleasure instead of creeping
+thrills which they once sent through him. Every sound spoke of
+Jeanne--of Jeanne and her world, into which each stroke of his
+paddle carried them a little deeper.
+
+And yet the truth could not but come to him that Jeanne was but a
+stranger. She was a creature of mystery, as she lay there asleep
+in the bow of the canoe; he loved her, and yet he did not know
+her. He confessed to himself, as the night lengthened, that he
+would be glad when morning came. Jeanne would clear up a half of
+his perplexities then, perhaps all of them. He would at least
+learn more about herself and the reason for the attack at Fort
+Churchill.
+
+He paddled for another hour, and then looked at his watch by the
+light of a match. It was three o'clock.
+
+Jeanne had not moved, but as the match burned out between his
+fingers she startled him by speaking.
+
+"Is it nearly morning, M'sieur?"
+
+"An hour until dawn," said Philip. "You have been sleeping a long
+time--" Her name was on his lips, but he found it a little more
+difficult to speak now. And yet there was a gentleness in Jeanne's
+"M'SIEUR" which encouraged him. "Are you getting hungry?" he
+asked.
+
+"Pierre and my father always ask me that when THEY are starving,"
+replied Jeanne, sitting erect in her nest so that Philip saw her
+face and the shimmer of her hair. "There is everything to eat in
+the pack, M'sieur Philip, even to a bottle of olives."
+
+"Good!" cried Philip, delighted, "But won't you please cut out
+that 'm'sieur?' My greatest weakness is a desire to be called by
+my first name. Will you?"
+
+"If it pleases you," said Jeanne. "There is everything there to
+eat, and I will make you a cup of coffee, M'sieur--"
+
+"What?"
+
+"Philip."
+
+There was a ripple of laughter in the girl's voice. Philip fairly
+trembled.
+
+"You were prepared for this journey," he said. "You were going to
+leave after you saw me on the rock. I have been wondering why--why
+you took enough interest in me--"
+
+He knew that he was blundering, and in the darkness his face
+turned red. Jeanne's tact was delightful.
+
+"We were curious about you," she said, with bewitching candor.
+"Pierre is the most inquisitive creature in the world, and I
+wanted to thank you for returning my handkerchief. I'm sorry you
+didn't find a bit of lace which I lost at the same time!"
+
+"I did!" exclaimed Philip.
+
+He bit his tongue, and cursed himself at this fresh break. Jeanne
+was silent. After a moment she said:
+
+"Shall I make you some coffee?"
+
+"Will you be able to do it? Your foot--"
+
+"I had forgotten that," she said. "It doesn't hurt any more. But I
+can show you how."
+
+Her unaffected ingenuousness, the sweetness of her voice, the
+simplicity and ease of her manner delighted Philip, and at the
+same time filled him with amazement. He had never met a forest
+girl like Jeanne. Her beauty, her queen-like bearing, when she had
+stood with Pierre on the rock, had puzzled him and filled him with
+admiration. But now her voice, the music of her words, her
+quickness of perception added tenfold to those impressions. It
+might have been Miss Brokaw who was sitting there in the bow
+talking to him, only Jeanne's voice was sweeter than Miss
+Brokaw's; and even in the lightest of the words she had spoken
+there was a tone of sincerity and truth. It flashed upon Philip
+that Jeanne might have stepped from a convent school, where gentle
+voices had taught her and language was formed in the ripe fullness
+of music. In a moment he believed that something like this had
+happened.
+
+"We will go ashore," he said, searching for an open space. "This
+must be tedious to you, if you are not accustomed to it."
+
+"Accustomed to it, M'sieur--Philip!" exclaimed Jeanne, catching
+herself. "I was born here!"
+
+"In the wilderness?"
+
+"At Fort o' God."
+
+"You have not always lived there?"
+
+For a brief space Jeanne was silent.
+
+"Yes, always, M'sieur. I am eighteen years old, and this is the
+first time that I have ever seen what you people call
+civilization. It is my first visit to Fort Churchill. It is the
+first time I have ever been away from Fort o' God."
+
+Jeanne's voice was low and subdued. It rang with truth. In it
+there was something that was almost tragedy. For a breath or two
+Philip's heart seemed to stop its beating, and he leaned far over,
+looking straight and questioningly into the beautiful face that
+met his own. In that moment the world had opened and engulfed him
+in a wonder which at first his mind could not comprehend.
+
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+
+The canoe ran among the reeds, with its bow to the shore. Philip's
+astonishment still held him motionless.
+
+"A little while ago you asked me if I would tell you anything but
+--but--the truth," he stammered, trying to find words to express
+himself, "and this--"
+
+"Is the truth," interrupted Jeanne, a little coolly. "Why should I
+tell you an untruth, M'sieur?"
+
+Philip had asked himself that same question shortly after their
+first meeting on the cliff. And now in the girl's question there
+was sounded a warning for him to be more discreet.
+
+"I did not mean that," he cried, quickly. "Please forgive me.
+Only--it is so wonderful, so almost IMPOSSIBLE to believe. Do you
+know what I thought of for three-quarters of the night after I
+left you and Pierre on the rock? It was of years--centuries ago. I
+put you and Pierre back there. It seemed as though you had come to
+me from out of another world, that you had strayed from the
+chivalry and beauty of some royal court, that a queen's painter
+might have known and made a picture of you, as I saw you there,
+but that to me you were only the vision of a dream. And now you
+say that you have always lived here!"
+
+He saw Jeanne's eyes glowing. She had lifted herself from among
+the bearskins and was leaning toward him. Her face was quivering
+with emotion; her whole being seemed concentrated on his words.
+
+"M'sieur--Philip--did we seem--like that?" she asked, tremulously.
+
+"Yes, or I would not have written the letter," replied Philip. He
+leaned forward over the pack, and his face was close to Jeanne's.
+"I had just passed over the place where men and women of a century
+or two ago were buried, and when I saw you and Pierre I thought of
+them; of Mademoiselle D'Arcon, who left a prince to follow her
+lover to a grave back there at Churchill, and I wondered if
+Grosellier--"
+
+"Grosellier!" cried the girl.
+
+She was breathing quickly, excitedly. Suddenly she drew back with
+a little, nervous laugh.
+
+"I am glad you thought of us like THAT," she added. "It was
+Grosellier, le grand chevalier, who first lived at Fort o' God!"
+
+Philip could no longer restrain himself. He forgot that the canoe
+was lying motionless among the reeds and that they were to go
+ashore. In a voice that trembled with his eagerness to be
+understood, to win her confidence, he told her fully of what had
+happened that night on the cliff. He repeated Pierre's
+instructions to him, described his terrible fear for her, and in
+it all withheld but one thing--the name of Lord Fitzhugh Lee.
+Jeanne listened to him without a word. She sat as erect as one of
+the slender reeds among which the canoe was hidden. Her dark eyes
+never left his face. They seemed to have grown darker when he
+finished.
+
+"May the great God reward you for what you have done," she said,
+in a low voice, quivering with a suppressed passion. "You are
+brave, M'sieur Philip--as brave as I have dreamed of men being."
+
+Philip's heart throbbed with delight, and yet he said quickly:
+
+"It isn't THAT. I have done nothing--nothing more than Pierre
+would have done for me. But don't you understand? If there is to
+be a reward for the little I have given--I could ask for nothing
+greater than your confidence and Pierre's. There are reasons, and
+perhaps if I told you those you would understand."
+
+"I do understand, without further explanation," answered Jeanne,
+in the same low, strained voice. "You fought for Pierre on the
+cliff, and you have saved--me. We owe you everything, even our
+lives. I understand, M'sieur Philip," she said, more softly,
+leaning still nearer to him; "but I can tell you nothing."
+
+"You prefer to leave that to Pierre," he said a little hurt. "I
+beg your pardon."
+
+"No, no! I don't mean that!" she cried, quickly. "You
+misunderstand me. I mean that you know as much of this whole
+affair as I do, that you know what I know, and perhaps more."
+
+The emotion which she had suppressed burst forth now in a choking
+sob. She recovered herself in an instant, her eyes still upon
+Philip.
+
+"It was only a whim of mine that took us to Churchill," she went
+on, before he could find words to say. "It is Pierre's secret why
+we lived in our own camp and went down into Churchill but once--
+when the ship came in. I do not know the reason for the attack. I
+can only guess--"
+
+"And your guess--"
+
+Jeanne drew back. For a moment she did not speak. Then she said,
+without a note of harshness in her voice, but with the finality of
+a queen:
+
+"Father may tell you that when we reach Fort o' God!"
+
+And then she suddenly leaned toward him again and held out both
+her hands.
+
+"If you only could know how I thank you!" she exclaimed,
+impulsively.
+
+For a moment Philip held her hands. He felt them trembling. In
+Jeanne's eyes he saw the glisten of tears.
+
+"Circumstances have come about so strangely," he said, his heart
+palpitating at the warm pressure of her fingers, "that I half
+believed you and Pierre could help me in--in an affair of my own.
+I would give a great deal to find a certain person, and after the
+attack on the cliff, and what Pierre said, I thought--"
+
+He hesitated, and Jeanne gently drew her hands from him.
+
+"I thought that you might know him," he finished. "His name is
+Lord Fitzhugh Lee."
+
+Jeanne gave no sign that she had heard the name before. The
+question in her eyes remained unchanged.
+
+"We have never heard of him at Fort o' God," she said.
+
+Philip shoved the canoe more firmly upon the shore and stepped
+over the side.
+
+"This Fort o' God must be a wonderful place," he said, as he bent
+over to help her. "You have aroused something in me I never
+thought I possessed before--a tremendous curiosity."
+
+"It is a wonderful place, M'sieur Philip," replied the girl,
+holding up her hands to him. "But why should you guess it?"
+
+"Because of you," laughed Philip. "I am half convinced that you
+take a wicked delight in bewildering me."
+
+He found Jeanne a comfortable spot on the bank, brought her one of
+the bearskins, and began collecting a pile of dry reeds and wood.
+
+"I am sure of it," he went on. He struck a match, and the reeds
+flared into flame, lighting up his face,
+
+Jeanne gave a startled cry.
+
+"You are hurt!" she exclaimed. "Your face is red with blood."
+
+Philip jumped back.
+
+"I had forgotten that. I'll wash my face."
+
+He waded into the edge of the water and began scrubbing himself.
+When he returned, Jeanne looked at him closely. The fire illumined
+her pale face. She had gathered her beautiful hair in a thick
+braid, which fell over her shoulder. She appeared lovelier to him
+now than when he had first seen her in the night-glow on the
+cliff. She was dressed the same. He observed that the filmy bit of
+lace about her slender throat was torn, and that one side of her
+short buckskin skirt was covered with half-dried splashes of mud.
+His blood rose at these signs of the rough treatment of those who
+had attacked her. It reached fever-heat when, coming nearer, he
+saw a livid bruise on her forehead close up under her hair.
+
+"They struck you?" he demanded.
+
+He stood with his hands clenched. She smiled up at him.
+
+"It was my fault," she explained. "I'm afraid I gave them a good
+deal of trouble on the cliff."
+
+She laughed outright at the fierceness in Philip's face, and so
+sweet was the sound of it to him that his hands relaxed and he
+laughed with her.
+
+"So help me, you're a brick!" he cried.
+
+"There are pots and kettles and coffee and things to eat in the
+pack, M'sieur Philip," reminded Jeanne, softly, as he still
+remained staring down upon her.
+
+Philip turned to the canoe, with a laugh that was like a boy's. He
+threw the pack at Jeanne's feet and unstrapped it. Together they
+sorted out the things they wanted, and Philip cut crotched sticks
+on which he suspended two pots of water over the fire. He found
+himself whistling as he gathered an armful of wood along the
+shore. When he came back Jeanne had opened a bottle of olives and
+was nibbling at one, while she held out another to him on the end
+of a fork.
+
+"I love olives," she said. "Won't you have one?"
+
+He accepted the thing, and ate it joyously, though he hated
+olives.
+
+"Where did you acquire the taste?" he asked. "I thought it took a
+course at college to make one like 'em."
+
+"I've been to college," answered Jeanne, quietly. There was a glow
+in her cheeks now, a swift flash of tantalizing fun in her eyes,
+as she fished after another olive. "I have been a student--a
+TENERIS ANNIS," she added, and he stood stupefied.
+
+"That's Latin!" he gasped.
+
+"Oui, M'sieur. Wollen Sie noch eine Olive haben?"
+
+Laughter rippled in her throat. She held out another olive to him,
+her face aglow. Firelight danced in her hair, flooding its darker
+shadows with lights of red and gold.
+
+"I was sure of it," he exclaimed, convinced. "That's post-graduate
+Latin and senior German, or I'm as mad as a March hare! Where--
+where did you go to school?"
+
+"At Fort o' God. Quick, M'sieur Philip, the water is boiling
+over!"
+
+Philip sprang to the fire. Jeanne handed him coffee, and set out
+cold meat and bread. For the first time that night he pulled out
+his pipe and filled it with tobacco.
+
+"You don't mind if I smoke, do you, Miss Jeanne?" he groaned.
+"Under some circumstances tobacco is the only thing that will hold
+me up. Do you know that you are shaking my confidence in you?"
+
+"I have told you nothing but the truth," retorted Jeanne,
+innocently. She was still busying herself over the pack, but
+Philip caught the slightest gleam of her laughing teeth.
+
+"You are making fun of me," he remonstrated. "Tell me--where is
+this Fort o' God, and what is it?"
+
+"It is far up the Churchill, M'sieur Philip. It is a log chateau,
+built hundreds and hundreds of years ago, I guess. My father,
+Pierre, and I, with one other, live there alone among the savages.
+I have never been so far away from home before."
+
+"I suppose," said Philip, "that the savages up your way converse
+in Latin, Greek, and German--"
+
+"Latin, FRENCH, and German," corrected Jeanne. "We haven't added a
+Greek course yet."
+
+"I know of a girl," mused Philip, as though speaking to himself,
+"who spent five years in a girls' college, and she can talk
+nothing but light English. Her name is Eileen Brokaw."
+
+Jeanne looked up, but only to point to the coffee.
+
+"It is done," she advised, "unless you like it bitter."
+
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+
+Philip knew that Jeanne was watching him as he lifted the coffee
+from the fire and placed the pot on the ground to cool. His mind
+was in a hopeless tangle--a riot of things he would like to say,
+throbbing with a hundred questions he would like to ask, one after
+another. And yet Jeanne seemed bewitchingly unconscious of his
+uneasiness. Not one of his references to names and events so vital
+to himself had in any way produced a change in her. Was she, after
+all, innocent of all knowledge in the things he wished to know?
+Was it possible that she was entirely ignorant as to the identity
+of the men who had attacked Pierre and herself on the cliff? Was
+it true that she did not know Eileen Brokaw, that she had never
+heard of Lord Fitzhugh Lee, and that she had always lived among
+the wild people of the north? By what miracle performed here in
+the heart of a savage world could this girl talk to him in German
+and Latin? Was she making fun of him? He turned to look at her and
+found her dark, clear eyes upon him. She smiled at him in a tired
+little way, and he saw nothing but sweetness and truth in her
+face. In an instant every suspicion was swept away. He felt like a
+criminal for having doubted her; and for a moment he was on the
+point of confessing to her what had been in his thoughts. He
+restrained himself, and went to the river to wash the pot-black
+from his hands. Jeanne was a mystery to him, a mystery that
+delighted him and filled him each moment with a deeper love. He
+saw the life and freedom of the forests in her every movement--in
+the gesture of her hands, the bird-like poise of her pretty head,
+the lithe grace of her slender body. She breathed the forests. It
+glowed in her eyes, in the rich red of her lips, and revealed its
+beauty and strength in the unconfined wealth of her gold-brown
+hair. In a dozen ways he could see her primitiveness, her kinship
+to the wilderness. She had told him the truth. Her eyes smiled
+truth at him as he came up the bank. No other woman's eyes had
+ever looked at him like hers; none had he seen so beautiful. And
+yet in them he saw nothing that she would not have expressed in
+words--companionship, trust, thankfulness that he was there to
+care for her. Such eyes as those belonged only to the wilderness,
+brimming with the flawless beauty of an undefiled nature. He had
+seen them, but not so beautiful, in Cree women. He thought of
+Eileen Brokaw's eyes as he looked at Jeanne's. They were very
+beautiful, but they were DIFFERENT. Jeanne's could not lie.
+
+On a white napkin Jeanne had spread out cold meat, bread, pickles,
+and cheese, and Philip brought her the coffee. He noticed that she
+was resting a little of her weight upon her injured ankle.
+
+"Better?" he asked, indicating the bandaged ankle with a nod of
+his head.
+
+"Much," replied Jeanne, as tersely. "I'm going to try standing
+upon it in a few minutes. But not now. I'm starved."
+
+She gave him his coffee and began eating with a relish that made
+him want to sit back and watch her. Instead, he joined her; and
+they ate like two hungry children. It was when she turned him out
+a second cup of coffee that Philip noticed her hand tremble a
+little.
+
+"If Pierre was here we would be quite happy, M'sieur Philip," she
+said, uneasily. "I can't understand why he asked you to run away
+with me to Fort o' God. If he is not badly hurt, as you have told
+me, why do we not hide and wait for him? He would overtake us
+to-morrow."
+
+"There--there was no time to talk over plans," answered Philip,
+inwardly embarrassed for a moment by the unexpectedness of
+Jeanne's question. A vision of Pierre, bleeding and unconscious on
+the cliff, leaped into his mind, and the thought that he had lied
+to Jeanne and must still make her believe what was half false
+sickened him. There was, after all, a chance that Pierre would
+never again come up the Churchill. "Perhaps Pierre thought we
+would be hotly pursued," he went on, seeing no escape from the
+demand in the girl's eyes. "In that event it would be best for me
+to get you to Fort o' God as quickly as possible. You must
+remember that Pierre was thinking of you. He can care for himself.
+It may take him two or three days to get back the strength of--of
+his arm," he finished, blindly.
+
+"He was wounded in the arm?"
+
+"And on the head," said Philip. "It was only a scalp wound,
+however--nothing at all, except that it dazed him a little at the
+time."
+
+Jeanne pointed to the reflection of the fire on the river.
+
+"If we should be pursued?" she suggested.
+
+"There is no danger," assured Philip, though he had left the flap
+of his revolver holster unbuttoned. "They will search for us
+between their camp and Churchill."
+
+"Citius venit periculum cum contemnitur," remonstrated Jeanne,
+half smiling.
+
+She was pale, but Philip saw that she was making a tremendous
+effort to appear brave and cheerful.
+
+"Perhaps you are right," laughed Philip, "but I swear that I don't
+know what you mean. I suppose you picked that lingo up among the
+Indians."
+
+He caught the faintest gleam of Jeanne's white teeth again as she
+bent her head.
+
+"I have a tutor at home," she explained, softly. "You shall meet
+him when we reach Fort o' God. He is the most wonderful man in the
+world."
+
+Her words sent a strange chill through Philip. They were filled
+with an exquisite tenderness, a pride that sent her eyes back to
+his, glowing. The questions that he had meant to ask died and
+faded away. He thought of her words of a few minutes before, when
+he had asked about Fort o' God. She had said, "My father, Pierre,
+and I, WITH ONE OTHER, live there alone." The OTHER was the tutor,
+the man who had come from civilization to teach this beautiful
+girl those things which had amazed him, and this man was THE MOST
+WONDERFUL MAN IN THE WORLD. He had no excuse for the feelings
+which were aroused in him. Only he knew, as he rose to his feet,
+that a part of his old burden seemed suddenly to have returned to
+his shoulders, and the old loneliness was beating at the door of
+his heart. He rearranged the pack in silence, and the strength and
+joy of life were gone from his arms when he helped Jeanne back to
+her place among the bear-skins. He did not notice that her eyes
+were watching him curiously, or that her lips trembled once or
+twice, as if about to speak words which never came. Jeanne, as
+well as he, seemed to have discovered something which neither
+dared to reveal in that last five minutes on the shore.
+
+"There is one thing that I must know," said Philip, when they were
+about to start, "and that is where to find Fort o' God? Is it on
+the Churchill?"
+
+"It is on the Little Churchill, M'sieur, near Waskiaowaka Lake."
+
+Darkness concealed the effect of her words upon Philip. For a
+moment he stared like one struck dumb. He stifled the exclamation
+that rose to his lips. He felt himself trembling. He knew that if
+he spoke his voice would betray him.
+
+NEAR WASKIAOWAKA LAKE! And Waskiaowaka was within thirty miles of
+his own camp on the Blind Indian! If a bomb had burst under his
+feet he could not have been more amazed than at this information,
+given to him in Jeanne's quiet voice. Fort o' God--within thirty
+miles of the scene where very soon he was to fight the great
+battle of his life! He dug his paddle into the water and sent the
+canoe hissing up the river. His blood pounded like that of a
+racehorse on the home-stretch. Of all the things that had
+happened, of all he had learned, this was the most significant.
+Every thought ran like a separate powder-flash to a single idea,
+to one great, overpowering question. Were Fort o' God and its
+people the key to the plot against himself and his company? Was it
+the rendezvous of those who were striving to work his ruin? Doubt,
+suspicion, almost belief came to him in those few moments, in
+spite of himself.
+
+He looked at Jeanne. The gray dawn was breaking, and now light
+followed swiftly and dissolved the last mist. In the chill of
+early morning, when with the approach of the sun a cold,
+uncomfortable sweat rises heavily from the earth and water, Jeanne
+had drawn one of the bearskins closely about her. Her head was
+bare. Her hair, glistening with damp, clung in heavy masses about
+her face. There was a bewitching childishness about her, a
+pathetic appeal to him in the forlorn little picture she made--so
+helpless, and yet so confident in him. Every energy in him leaped
+up in defiance of the revolution which for a few moments had
+stirred within him. And Jeanne, as though she had read the working
+of his mind, looked straight at him and smiled, with a little
+purring note in her throat that took the place of a thousand
+words. It was such a smile, and yet not one of love, which puts
+the strength of ten men in one man's arms; and Philip laughed back
+at her, every chord in his body responding in joyous vibration to
+the delicate note that had come with it. No matter what events
+might find their birth at Fort o' God, Jeanne was innocent of all
+knowledge of plot or wrong-doing. Once for all Philip convinced
+himself of this.
+
+The thought that came to him, as he looked at Jeanne, found voice
+through his lips.
+
+"Do you know," he said, "if I never saw you again I would always
+have three pictures of you in my memory. I would never forget how
+you looked when I first saw you on the cliff--or as I see you now,
+wrapped in your bearskins. Only--I would think of you--as you
+smiled."
+
+"And the third picture?" questioned Jeanne, little guessing what
+was in his mind. "Would that be at the fire, when I burned the bad
+man's neck--or--or when--"
+
+She stopped herself, and pouted her mouth in sudden vexation,
+while a flush which Philip could easily see rose in her cheeks.
+
+"When I doctored your foot?" he finished, rather unchivalrously,
+chuckling in his delight at her pretty discomfiture. "No, that
+wouldn't be the third, Miss Jeanne. The other scene which I shall
+never forget was that on the stone pier at Churchill, when you met
+a beautiful girl who was coming off the ship."
+
+The blood leaped to Jeanne's face. Her soft lips tightened. A
+sudden movement, and the bearskin slipped from her shoulders,
+leaving her leaning a little forward, her eyes blazing. A dozen
+words had transformed her from the child he had fancied her to a
+woman quivering with some powerful emotion, her beautiful head
+proud and erect, her nostrils dilating with the quickness of her
+breath.
+
+"That was a mistake," she said. There was no sign of passion in
+her voice. It trembled a little, but that was all. "It was a
+mistake, M'sieur Philip. I thought that I knew her, and--and I
+was wrong. You--you must not remember THAT!"
+
+"I am no better than a wild beast," groaned Philip, hating
+himself. "I'm the biggest idiot in the world when it comes to
+saying the wrong thing, I never miss a chance. I didn't mean to
+say anything--that would hurt--"
+
+"You haven't," interrupted the girl, quickly, seeing the distress
+in his face. "You haven't said a thing that's wrong. Only I don't
+want you to remember THAT picture. I want you to think of me as--
+as--I burned the bad man's neck."
+
+She was laughing now, though her breast was rising and falling a
+little excitedly and the deep color was still in her cheeks.
+
+"Will you?" she entreated.
+
+"Until I die," he exclaimed.
+
+She was fumbling under the luggage, and dragged forth a second
+paddle.
+
+"I've had an easy time with you, M'sieur Philip," she said,
+turning so that she was kneeling with her back to him. "Pierre
+makes me work. Always I kneel here, in the bow, and paddle. I am
+ashamed of myself. You have worked all night."
+
+"And I feel as fresh as though I had slept for a week," declared
+Philip, his eyes devouring the slim figure a paddle's length in
+front of him.
+
+For an hour they continued up the river, with scarcely a word
+between them to break the silence. Their paddles rose and fell
+with a rhythmic motion; the water rippled like low music under
+their canoe; the spell of the silent shores, of voiceless beauty,
+of the wilderness awakening into day appealed to them both and
+held them quiet. The sun broke faintly through the drawn mists
+behind. Its first rays lighted up Jeanne's rumpled hair, so that
+her heavy braid, partly undone and falling upon the luggage behind
+her, shone in rich and changing colors that fascinated Philip. He
+had thought that Jeanne's hair was very dark, but he saw now that
+it was filled with the rare life of a Titian head, running from
+red to gold and dark brown, with changing shadows and flashes of
+light. It was beautiful. And Jeanne, as he looked at her, he
+thought to be the most beautiful thing on earth. The movement of
+her arms, the graceful, sinuous twists of her slender body as she
+put her strength upon the paddle, the poise of her head, the
+piquant tilt to her chin whenever she turned so that he caught a
+half profile of her flushed, eager face all filled his cup of
+admiration to overflowing. And he found himself wondering,
+suddenly, how this girl could be a sister to Pierre Couchee. He
+saw in her no sign of French or half-breed blood. Her hair was
+fine and soft, and waved about her ears and where it fell loose
+upon the back. The color in her cheeks was as delicate as the
+tints of the bakneesh flower. She had rolled up her broad cuffs to
+give her greater freedom in paddling, and her arms shone white and
+firm, glistening with the wet drip of the paddle. He was marveling
+at her relationship to Pierre when she looked back at him, her
+face aglow with exercise and the spice of the morning, and he saw
+the sunlight as blue as the sky above him in her eyes. If he had
+not known, he would have sworn that there was not a drop of
+Pierre's blood in her veins.
+
+"We are coming to the first rapids, M'sieur Philip," she
+announced. "It is just beyond that ugly mountain of rock ahead of
+us, and we will have a quarter-mile portage. It is filled with
+great stones and so swift that Pierre and I nearly wrecked
+ourselves coming down."
+
+It was the most that had been said since the beginning of that
+wonderful hour that had come before the first gleam of sunrise,
+and Philip, laying his paddle athwart the canoe, stretched himself
+and yawned, as though he had just awakened.
+
+"Poor boy," said Jeanne; and it struck him that her words were
+strangely like those which Eileen might have spoken had she been
+there, only an artless comradeship replaced what would have been
+Miss Brokaw's tone of intimacy. She added, with genuine sympathy
+in her face and voice: "You must be exhausted, M'sieur Philip. If
+you were Pierre I should insist upon going ashore for a number of
+hours. Pierre obeys me when we are together. He calls me his
+captain. Won't you let me command you?"
+
+"If you will let me call you--my captain," replied Philip. "Only
+there is one thing--one reservation. We must go on. Command me in
+everything else, but we must go on--for a time. To-night I will
+sleep. I will sleep like the dead. So, My Captain," he laughed,
+"may I have your permission to work to-day?"
+
+Jeanne was turning the bow shoreward. Her back was turned to him
+again.
+
+"You have no pity on me," she pouted. "Pierre would be good to me,
+and we would fish all day in that pretty pool over there. I'll bet
+it's full of trout."
+
+Her words, her manner of speaking them, was a new revelation to
+Philip. She was delightful. He laughed, and his voice rang out in
+the clear morning like a school-boy's. Jeanne pretended that she
+saw nothing to laugh at, and no sooner had the canoe touched shore
+than she sprang lightly out, not waiting for his assistance. With
+a laughing cry, she stumbled and fell. Philip was at her side in
+an instant.
+
+"You shouldn't have done that," he objected. "I am your doctor,
+and I insist that your foot is not well."
+
+"But it is!" cried Jeanne, and he saw that there was laughter
+instead of pain in her eyes. "It's the bandage. My right foot
+feels like that of a Chinese debutante. Ugh! I'm going to undo
+it."
+
+"You've been to China, too," mused Philip, half to himself.
+
+"I know that it's filled with yellow girls, and that they squeeze
+their feet like this," said Jeanne, unlacing her moccasin. "My
+tutor and I have just finished a delightful trip along the Great
+Wall. We'd go to Peking, in an automobile, if I wasn't afraid."
+
+Philip's groan was audible. He went to the canoe, and Jeanne's red
+lips curled in a merriment which it was hard for her too suppress.
+Philip did not see. When he had unloaded the canoe and turned,
+Jeanne was walking slowly back and forth, limping a little.
+
+"It's all right," she said, answering the question on his lips. "I
+don't feel any pain at all, but my foot's asleep. Won't you please
+unstrap the small pack? I'm going to make my toilet while you are
+gone with the canoe."
+
+Half an hour later Philip unshouldered the canoe at the upper end
+of the rapids. His own toilet articles were back in the cabin with
+Gregson, but he took a wash in the river and combed his hair with
+his fingers. When he returned, there was a transformation in
+Jeanne. Her beautiful hair was done up in shining coils. She had
+changed her bedraggled skirt for another of soft, yellow buckskin.
+At her throat she wore a fluffy mass of crimson stuff which seemed
+to reflect a richer rose-flush in her cheeks. A curious thought
+came to Philip as he looked at her. Like a flash the memory of a
+certain night came to him--when it had taken Miss Brokaw and her
+maid two hours to make a toilet for a ball. And Jeanne, in the
+heart of a wilderness, had made herself more beautiful than
+Eileen. He imagined, as she stood before him, a little embarrassed
+by the admiration in his eyes, the sensation Jeanne would create
+in a ballroom at home. And then he laughed--laughed joyously at
+thoughts which he could not reveal to Jeanne, and which she, by
+some quick intuition, knew that she should not ask him to express.
+
+Twice again Philip made the portage, accompanied the second time
+by Jeanne, who insisted on carrying a small pack and two paddles.
+In spite of his determination and splendid physique, Philip began
+to feel the effects of the tremendous strain which he had been
+under for so long. He counted back and found that he had slept but
+six hours in the last forty-eight. There was a warning ache in his
+shoulders and a gnawing pain in the bones of his forearms. But he
+knew that he had not yet made sufficient headway up the Churchill.
+It would not be difficult for him to make a camp far enough back
+in the bush to avoid discovery; but, at the same time, if he and
+Jeanne were pursued, the stop would give their enemies a chance to
+get ahead of them. This danger he wished to escape.
+
+He flattered himself that Jeanne saw no signs of his weakening. He
+did not know that Jeanne put more and more effort into her paddle,
+until her arms and body ached, because she saw the truth.
+
+The Churchill narrowed and its current became swifter as they
+progressed. Five portages were made between sunrise and eleven
+o'clock. They ate dinner at the fifth, and rested for two hours.
+Then the journey was resumed. It was three o'clock when Jeanne
+dropped her paddle and turned to Philip. There were deep lines in
+his face. He smiled, but there was more of haggard misery than
+cheer in the smile. There was an unnatural flush in his cheeks,
+and he began to feel a burning pain where the blow had fallen upon
+his head before. For a full half-minute Jeanne looked at him
+without speaking. "Philip," she said--and it was the first time
+she had spoken his name in this way, "I insist upon going ashore
+immediately. If you do not land--now--in that opening ahead, I
+shall jump out, and you can go on alone."
+
+"As you say--my Captain Jeanne," surrendered Philip, a little
+dizzily.
+
+Jeanne guided the canoe to the shore, and was the first to spring
+out, while Philip steadied the light craft with his paddle. She
+pointed to the luggage.
+
+"We will want the tent--everything," she said, "because we are
+going to camp here until to-morrow."
+
+Once on shore, Philip's dizziness left him. He pulled the canoe
+high up on the bank, and then Jeanne and he set off, side by side,
+to explore the high, wooded ground back from the river. They
+followed a well-worn moose trail, and two or three hundred yards
+from the stream came upon a small opening cluttered by great rocks
+and surrounded by clumps of birch, spruce, and banskian pine. The
+moose trail crossed this rough open space; and, following it to
+the opposite side, Philip and Jeanne came upon a clear, rippling
+little stream, scarcely two yards in width, hidden in places under
+thick caribou moss and jungles of seedling pines. It was an ideal
+camping spot, and Jeanne gave a little cry of delight when they
+found the cold water of the creek.
+
+Philip then returned to the river, concealed the canoe, covered up
+all traces of their landing, and began to carry the camping outfit
+back to the open. The small silk tent for Jeanne's use he set up
+in a little grassy corner of the clearing, and built their fire a
+dozen paces from it. With a sort of thrilling pleasure he began
+cutting balsam boughs for Jeanne's bed. He cut armful after
+armful, and it was growing dusk in the forest by the time he was
+done. In the glow and the heat of the fire Jeanne's cheeks were as
+pink as an apple. She had turned a big flat rock into a table, and
+as she busied herself about this she burst suddenly into a soft
+ripple of song; then, remembering that it was not Pierre who was
+near her, she stopped. Philip, with his last armful of bedding,
+was directly behind her, and he laughed happily at her over the
+green mass of balsam when she turned and saw him looking at her.
+
+"You like this?" he asked.
+
+"It is glorious!" cried Jeanne, her eyes flashing. She seemed to
+grow taller before him, and stood with her head thrown back, lips
+parted, gazing upon the wilderness about her. "It is glorious!"
+she repeated, breathing deeply. "There is nothing in the whole
+world that could make me give this up, M'sieur Philip. I was born
+in it. I want to die in it. Only--"
+
+Her face clouded for a moment as her eyes rested upon his.
+
+"Your civilization is coming north to spoil it all," she added,
+and turned to the rock table.
+
+Philip dropped his load.
+
+"Supper is ready," she said, and the cloud had passed.
+
+It was Jeanne's first reference to his own people, to the invasion
+of civilization into the north, and there recurred to Philip the
+words in which she had cried out her hatred against Churchill. But
+Jeanne did not betray herself again. She was quiet while they were
+eating, and Philip saw that she was very tired. When they had
+finished, they sat for a few minutes watching the lowering flames
+of the fire. Darkness had gathered about them. Their faces and the
+rock were illumined more and more faintly as the embers died down.
+A silence fell upon them. In the banskians close behind them an
+owl hooted softly, a cautious, drumming note, as though the night-
+bird possessed still a fear of the newly dead day. The brush gave
+out sound--voices infinitesimally small, strange quiverings,
+rustlings that might have been made by wind, by breath, by
+shadows, almost. Overhead the tips of the spruce and tall pines
+whispered among themselves, as they never commune by day. Spirits
+seemed to move among them, sending down to Jeanne's and Philip's
+listening ears a restful, sleepy murmur. Farther back there
+sounded a deep sniff, where a moose, traveling the well-worn
+trail, stopped in sudden fear and wonder at the strange man-scent
+which came to its nostrils. And still farther, from some little
+lake nameless and undiscovered in the black depths of the forest
+to the south, a great northern loon sent out its cowardly cry of
+defiance to all night things, and then plunged deep under water,
+as though frightened into the depths by its own mad jargon. The
+fire died lower. Philip moved a little nearer to the girl, whose
+breathing he could hear.
+
+"Jeanne," he said, softly, fighting to keep himself from touching
+her hand, "I know what you mean--I understand. Two years ago I
+gave up civilization for this. I am glad that I wrote to you as I
+did, for now you will believe me and know that I understand. I
+love this world up here as you love it. I am never going back
+again."
+
+Jeanne was silent.
+
+"But there is one thing, at least one--which I cannot understand
+in you," he went on, nerving himself for what might come a moment
+later. "You are of this world--you hate civilization--and yet you
+have brought a man into the north to teach you its ways. I mean
+this man who you say is the most wonderful man in the world."
+
+He waited, trembling. It seemed an eternity before Jeanne
+answered. And then she said:
+
+"He is my father, M'sieur Philip."
+
+Philip could not speak. Darkness hid him from Jeanne. She did not
+see that which leaped into his face, and that for a moment he was
+on the point of flinging himself at her feet.
+
+"You spoke of yourself, of Pierre, of your father, and of one
+other at Fort o' God," said Philip. "I thought that he--the other
+--was your tutor."
+
+"No, it is Pierre's sister," replied Jeanne.
+
+"Your sister! You have a sister?"
+
+He could hear Jeanne catch her breath.
+
+"Listen, M'sieur,'" she said, after a moment. "I must tell you a
+little about Pierre, a story of something that happened a long,
+long time ago. It was in the middle of a terrible winter, and
+Pierre was then a boy. One day he was out hunting and he came upon
+a trail--the trail of a woman who had dragged herself through the
+snow in her moccasined feet. It was far out upon a barren, where
+there was no life, and he followed. He found her, M'sieur, and she
+was dead. She had died from cold and starvation. An hour sooner he
+might have saved her, for, wrapped up close against her breast, he
+found a little child--a baby girl, and she was alive. He brought
+her to Fort o' God, M'sieur--to a noble man who lived there almost
+alone; and there, through all these years, she has lived and grown
+up. And no one knows who her mother was, or who her father was,
+and so it happens that Pierre, who found her, is her brother, and
+the man who has loved her and cared for her is her father."
+
+"And she is the other at Fort o' God--Pierre's sister," said
+Philip.
+
+Jeanne rose from the rock and moved toward the tent, glimmering
+indistinctly in the night. Her voice came back chokingly.
+
+"No, M'sieur. Pierre's real sister is at Fort o' God. I am the one
+whom he found out on the barren."
+
+To the night sounds there was added a heart-broken sob, and Jeanne
+disappeared in the tent.
+
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+
+Philip sat where Jeanne had left him. He was powerless to move or
+to say a word that might have recalled her. Her own grief,
+quivering in that one piteous sob, overwhelmed him. It held him
+mute and listening, with the hope that each instant the tent-flap
+might open and Jeanne reappear. And yet if she came he had no
+words to say. Unwittingly he had probed deep into one of those
+wounds that never heal, and he realized that to ask forgiveness
+would be but another blunder. He almost groaned as he thought of
+what he had done. In his desire to understand, to know more about
+Jeanne, he had driven her into a corner. What he had forced from
+her he might have learned a little later from Pierre or from the
+father at Fort o' God. He thought that Jeanne must despise him
+now, for he had taken advantage of her helplessness and his own
+position. He had saved her from her enemies; and in return she had
+opened her heart, naked and bleeding, to his eyes. What she had
+told him was not a voluntary confidence; it was a confession wrung
+from her by the rack of his questionings--the confession that she
+was a waif-child, that Pierre was not her brother, and that the
+man at Fort o' God was not her father. He had gone to the very
+depths of that which was sacred to herself and those whom she
+loved.
+
+He rose and stirred the fire, and stray ends of birch leaped into
+flame, lighting his pale face. He wanted to go to the tent, kneel
+there where Jeanne could hear him, and tell her that it was all a
+mistake. Yet he knew that this could not be, neither the next day
+nor the next, for to plead extenuation for himself would be to
+reveal his love. Two or three times he had been on the point of
+revealing that love. Only now, after what had happened, did it
+occur to him that to disclose his heart to Jeanne would be the
+greatest crime he could commit. She was alone with him in the
+heart of a wilderness, dependent upon him, upon his honor. He
+shivered when he thought how narrow had been his escape, how short
+a time he had known her, and how in that brief spell he had given
+himself up to an almost insane hope. To him Jeanne was not a
+stranger. She was the embodiment, in flesh and blood, of the
+spirit which had been his companion for so long. He loved her more
+than ever now, for Jeanne the lost child of the snows was more the
+earthly revelation of his beloved spirit than Jeanne the sister of
+Pierre. But--what was he to Jeanne?
+
+He left the fire and went to the pile of balsam which he had
+spread out between two rocks for his bed. He lay down and pulled
+Pierre's blanket over him, but his fatigue and his desire for
+sleep seemed to have left him, and it was a long time before
+slumber finally drove from him the thought of what he had done.
+After that he did not move. He heard none of the sounds of the
+night. A little owl, the devil-witch, screamed horribly overhead
+and awakened Jeanne, who sat up for a few moments in her balsam
+bed, white-faced and shivering. But Philip slept. Long afterward
+something warm awakened him, and he opened his eyes, thinking that
+it was the glow of the fire in his face. It was the sun. He heard
+a sound which brought him quickly into consciousness of day. It
+was Jeanne singing softly over beyond the rocks.
+
+He had dreaded the coming of morning, when he would have to face
+Jeanne. His guilt hung heavily upon him. But the sound of her
+voice, low and sweet, filled with the carroling happiness of a
+bird, brought a glad smile to his lips. After all, Jeanne had
+understood him. She had forgiven him, if she had not forgotten.
+
+For the first time he noticed the height of the sun, and he sat
+bolt upright. Jeanne saw his head and shoulders pop over the top
+of the rocks, and she laughed at him from their stone table.
+
+"I've been keeping breakfast for over an hour, M'sieur Philip,"
+she cried. "Hurry down to the creek and wash yourself, or I shall
+eat all alone!"
+
+Philip rose stupidly and looked at his watch.
+
+"Eight o'clock!" he gasped. "We should have been ten miles on the
+way by this time!"
+
+Jeanne was still laughing at him. Like sunlight she dispelled his
+gloom of the night before. A glance around the camp showed him
+that she must have been awake for at least two hours. The packs
+were filled and strapped. The silken tent was down and folded. She
+had gathered wood, built the fire, and cooked breakfast while he
+slept. And now she stood a dozen paces from him, blushing a little
+at his amazed stare, waiting for him.
+
+"It's deuced good of you, Miss Jeanne!" he exclaimed. "I don't
+deserve such kindness from you."
+
+"Oh!" said Jeanne, and that was all. She bent over the fire, and
+Philip went to the creek.
+
+He was determined now to maintain a more certain hold upon
+himself. As he doused his face in the cold water his resolutions
+formed themselves. For the next few days he would forget
+everything but the one fact that Jeanne was in his care; he would
+not hurt her again or compel her confidence.
+
+It was after nine o'clock before they were upon the river. They
+paddled without a rest until twelve. After lunch Philip
+confiscated Jeanne's paddle and made her sit facing him in the
+canoe.
+
+The afternoon passed like a dream to Philip, He did not refer
+again to Fort o' God or the people there; he did not speak again
+of Eileen Brokaw, of Lord Fitzhugh, or of Pierre. He talked of
+himself and of those things which had once been his life. He told
+of his mother and his father, who had died, and of the little
+sister, whom he had worshiped, but who had gone with the others.
+He bared his loneliness to her as he would have told them to the
+sister, had she lived; and Jeanne's soft blue eyes were filled
+with tenderness and sympathy. And then he talked of Gregson's
+world. Within himself he called it no longer his own.
+
+It was Jeanne who questioned now. She asked about cities and great
+people, about books and WOMEN. Her knowledge amazed Philip. She
+might have visited the Louvre. One would have guessed that she had
+walked in the streets of Paris, Berlin, and London. She spoke of
+Johnson, of Dickens, and of Balzac as though they had died but
+yesterday. She was like one who had been everywhere and yet saw
+everything through a veil that bewildered her. In her simplicity
+she unfolded herself to Philip, leaf by leaf, petal by petal, like
+the morning apios that surrenders its mysteries to the sun. She
+knew the world which he had come from, its people, its cities, its
+greatness; and yet her knowledge was like that of the blind. She
+knew, but she had never seen; and in her wistfulness to see as HE
+could see there was a sweetness and a pathos which made every
+fiber in his body sing with a quiet and thrilling joy. He knew,
+now, that the man who was at Fort o' God must, indeed, be the most
+wonderful man in the world. For out of a child of the snows, of
+the forest, of a savage desolation, he had made Jeanne. And Jeanne
+was glorious!
+
+The afternoon passed, and they made thirty miles before they
+camped for the night. They traveled the next day, and the one that
+followed. On the afternoon of the fourth they were approaching Big
+Thunder Rapids, close to the influx of the Little Churchill, sixty
+miles from Fort o' God.
+
+These days, too, passed for Philip with joyous swiftness; swiftly
+because they were too short for him. His life, now, was Jeanne.
+Each day she became a more vital part of him. She crept into his
+soul until there was no longer left room for any other thought
+than of her. And yet his happiness was tampered by a thing which,
+if not grief, depressed and saddened him at times. Two days more
+and they would be at Fort o' God, and there Jeanne would be no
+longer his own, as she was now. Even the wilderness has its
+conventionality, and at Fort o' God their comradeship would end. A
+day of rest, two at the most, and he would leave for the camp on
+Blind Indian Lake. As the time drew nearer when they would be but
+friends and no longer comrades, Philip could not always hide the
+signs of gloom which weighed upon him. He revealed nothing in
+words; but now and then Jeanne had caught him when the fears at
+his heart betrayed themselves in his face. Jeanne became happier
+as their journey approached its end. She was alive every moment,
+joyous, expectant, looking ahead to Fort o' God; and this in
+itself was a bitterness to Philip, though he knew that he was a
+fool for allowing it to be so. He reasoned, with dull, masculine
+wit, that if Jeanne cared for him at all she would not be so
+anxious for their comradeship to end. But these moods, when they
+came, passed quickly. And on this afternoon of the fourth day they
+passed away entirely, for in an instant there came a solution to
+it all. They had known each other but four days, yet that brief
+time had encompassed what might not have been in as many years.
+Life, smooth, uneventful, develops friendship slowly; an hour of
+the unusual may lay bare a soul. Philip thought of Eileen Brokaw,
+whose heart was still a closed mystery to him; who was a stranger,
+in spite of the years he had known her. In four days he had known
+Jeanne a lifetime; in those four days Jeanne had learned more of
+him than Eileen Brokaw could ever know. So he arrived at the
+resolution which made him, too, look eagerly ahead to the end of
+the journey. At Fort o' God he would tell Jeanne of his love.
+
+Jeanne was looking at him when the determination came. She saw the
+gloom pass, a flush mount into his face; and when he saw her eyes
+upon him he laughed, without knowing why.
+
+"If it is so funny," she said, "please tell me."
+
+It was a temptation, but he resisted it.
+
+"It is a secret," he said, "which I shall keep until we reach Fort
+o' God."
+
+Jeanne turned her face up-stream to listen. A dozen times she had
+done this during the last half-hour, and Philip had listened with
+her. At first they had heard a distant murmur, rising as they
+advanced, like an autumn wind that grows stronger each moment in
+the tree-tops. The murmur was steady now, without the variations
+of a wind. It was the distant roaring of the rocks and rushing
+floods of Big Thunder Rapids. It grew steadily from a murmur to a
+moan, from a moan to rumbling thunder. The current became so swift
+that Philip was compelled to use all his strength to force the
+canoe ahead. A few moments later he turned into shore.
+
+From where they landed, a worn trail led up to one of the
+precipitous walls of rock and shut in the Big Thunder Rapids.
+Everything about them was rock. The trail was over rock, worn
+smooth by the countless feet of centuries--clawed feet, naked
+feet, moccasined feet, the feet of white men. It was the Great
+Portage, for animal as well as man. Philip went up with the pack,
+and Jeanne followed behind him. The thunder increased. It roared
+in their ears until they could no longer hear their own voices.
+Directly above the rapids the trail was narrow, scarcely eight
+feet in width, shut in on the land side by a mountain wall, on the
+other by the precipice. Philip looked behind, and saw Jeanne
+hugging close to the wall. Her face was white, her eyes shone with
+terror and awe. He spoke to her, but she saw only the movement of
+his lips. Then he put down his pack and went close to the edge of
+the precipice.
+
+Sixty feet below him was the Big Thunder, a chaos of lashing foam,
+of slippery, black-capped rocks bobbing and grimacing amid the
+rushing torrents like monsters playing at hide-and-seek. Now one
+rose high, as though thrust up out of chaos by giant hands; then
+it sank back, and milk-white foam swirled softly over the place
+where it had been. There seemed to be life in the chaos--a grim,
+terrible life whose voice was a thunder that never died. For a few
+moments Philip stood fascinated by the scene below him. Then he
+felt a touch upon his arm. It was Jeanne. She stood beside him
+quivering, dead-white, Almost daring to take the final step.
+Philip caught her hands firmly in his own, and Jeanne looked over.
+Then she darted back and hovered, shuddering, near the wall.
+
+The portage was a short one, scarce two hundred yards in length,
+and at the upper end was a small green meadow in which river
+voyagers camped. It still lacked two hours of dusk when Philip
+carried over the last of the luggage.
+
+"We will not camp here," he said to Jeanne pointing to the remains
+of numerous fires and remembering Pierre's exhortation. "It is too
+public, as you might say. Besides, that noise makes me deaf."
+
+Jeanne shuddered.
+
+"Let us hurry," she said. "I'm--I'm afraid of THAT!"
+
+Philip carried the canoe down to the river, and Jeanne followed
+with the bearskins. The current was soft and sluggish, with tiny
+maelstroms gurgling up here and there, like air-bubbles in boiling
+syrup. He only half launched the canoe, and Jeanne remained while
+he went for another load. The dip, kept green by the water of a
+spring, was a pistol-shot from the river. Philip looked back from
+the crest and saw Jeanne leaning over the canoe. Then he descended
+into the meadow, whistling. He had reached the packs when to his
+ears there seemed to come a sound that rose faintly above the roar
+of the water in the chasm. He straightened himself and listened.
+
+"Philip! Philip!"
+
+The cry came twice--his own name, piercing, agonizing, rising
+above the thunder of the floods. He heard no more, but raced up
+the slope of the dip. From the crest he stared down to where
+Jeanne had been. She was gone. The canoe was gone. A terrible fear
+swept upon him, and for an instant he turned faint. Jeanne's cry
+came to him again.
+
+"Philip! Philip!"
+
+Like a madman he dashed up the rocky trail to the chasm, calling
+to Jeanne, shrieking to her, telling her that he was coming. He
+reached the edge of the precipice and looked down. Below him was
+the canoe and Jeanne. She was fighting futilely against the
+resistless flood; he saw her paddle wrenched suddenly from her
+hands, and as it went swirling beyond her reach she cried out his
+name again. Philip shouted, and the girl's white face was turned
+up to him. Fifty yards ahead of her were the first of the rocks.
+In another minute, even less, Jeanne would be dashed to pieces
+before his eyes. Thoughts, swifter than light, flashed through his
+mind. He could do nothing for her, for it seemed impossible that
+any living creature could exist amid the maelstroms and rocks
+ahead. And yet she was calling to him. She was reaching up her
+arms to him. She had faith in him, even in the face of death.
+
+"Philip! Philip!"
+
+There was no M'SIEUR to that cry now, only a moaning, sobbing
+prayer filled with his name.
+
+"I'm coming, Jeanne!" he shouted. "I'm coming! Hold fast to the
+canoe!"
+
+He ran ahead, stripping off his coat. A little below the first
+rocks a stunted banskian grew out of an earthy fissure in the
+cliff, with its lower branches dipping within a dozen feet of the
+stream. He climbed out on this with the quickness of a squirrel,
+and hung to a limb with both hands, ready to drop alongside the
+canoe. There was one chance, and only one, of saving Jeanne. It
+was a chance out of a thousand--ten thousand. If he could drop at
+the right moment, seize the stern of the canoe, and make a rudder
+of himself, he could keep the craft from turning broadside and
+might possibly guide it between the rocks below. This one hope was
+destroyed as quickly as it was born. The canoe crashed against the
+first rock. A smother of foam rose about it and he saw Jeanne
+suddenly engulfed and lost. Then she reappeared, almost under him,
+and he launched himself downward, clutching at her dress with his
+hands. By a supreme effort he caught her around the waist with his
+left arm, so that his right was free.
+
+Ahead of them was a boiling sea of white, even more terrible than
+when they had looked down upon it from above. The rocks were
+hidden by mist and foam; their roar was deafening. Between Philip
+and the awful maelstrom of death there was a quieter space of
+water, black, sullen, and swift--the power itself, rushing on to
+whip itself into ribbons among the taunting rocks that barred its
+way to the sea. In that space Philip looked at Jeanne. Her face
+was against his breast. Her eyes met his own, and In that last
+moment, face to face with death, love leaped above all fear. They
+were about to die, and Jeanne would die in his arms. She was his
+now--forever. His hold tightened. Her face came nearer. He wanted
+to shout, to let her know what he had meant to say at Fort o' God.
+But his voice would have been like a whisper in a hurricane. Could
+Jeanne understand? The wall of foam was almost in their faces.
+Suddenly he bent down, crushed his face to hers, and kissed her
+again and again. Then, as the maelstrom engulfed them, he swung
+his own body to take the brunt of the shock.
+
+He no longer reasoned beyond one thing. He must keep his body
+between Jeanne and the rocks. He would be crushed, beaten to
+pieces, made unrecognizable, but Jeanne would be only drowned. He
+fought to keep himself half under her, with his head and shoulders
+in advance. When he felt the floods sucking him under, he thrust
+her upward. He fought, and did not know what happened. Only there
+was the crashing of a thousand cannon in his ears, and he seemed
+to live through an eternity. They thundered about him, against
+him, ahead of him, and then more and more behind. He felt no pain,
+no shock. It was the SOUND that he seemed to be fighting; in the
+buffeting of his body against the rocks there was the painlessness
+of a knife-thrust delivered amid the roar of battle. And the sound
+receded. It was thundering in retreat, and a curious thought came
+to him. Providence had delivered him through the maelstrom. He had
+not struck the rocks. He was saved. And in his arms he held
+Jeanne.
+
+It was day when he began the fight, broad day. And now it was
+night. He felt earth, under his feet, and he knew that he had
+brought Jeanne ashore. He heard her voice speaking his name; and
+he was so glad that he laughed and sobbed like a babbling idiot.
+It was dark, and he was tired. He sank down, and he could feel
+Jeanne's arms striving to hold him up, and he could still hear her
+voice. But nothing could keep him from sleeping. And during that
+sleep he had visions. Now it was day, and he saw Jeanne's face
+over him; again it was night, and he heard only the roaring of the
+flood. Again he heard voices, Jeanne's voice and a man's, and he
+wondered who the man could be. It was a strange sleep filled with
+strange dreams. But at last the dreams seemed to go. He lost
+himself. He awoke, and the night had turned into day. He was in a
+tent, and the sun was gleaming on the outside. It had been a
+curious dream, and he sat up astonished.
+
+There was a man sitting beside him. It was Pierre.
+
+"Thank God, M'sieur!" he heard. "We have been waiting for this.
+You are saved!"
+
+"Pierre!" he gasped.
+
+Memory returned to him. He was awake. He felt weak, but he knew
+that what he saw was not the vision of a dream.
+
+"I came the day after you went through the rapids," explained
+Pierre, seeing his amazement. "You saved Jeanne. She was not hurt.
+But you were badly bruised, M'sieur, and you have been in a
+fever."
+
+"Jeanne--was not--hurt?"
+
+"No. She cared for you until I came. She is sleeping now."
+
+"I have not been this way--very long, have I, Pierre?"
+
+"I came yesterday," said Pierre. He bent over Philip, and added:
+"You must remain quiet for a little longer, M'sieur. I have
+brought you a letter from M'sieur Gregson, and when you read that
+I will have some broth made for you."
+
+Philip took the letter and opened it as Pierre went quietly out of
+the tent. Gregson had written him but a few lines. He wrote:
+
+MY DEAR PHIL,--I hope you'll forgive me. But I'm tired of this
+mess. I was never cut out for the woods, and so I'm going to
+dismiss myself, leaving all best wishes behind for you. Go in and
+fight. You're a devil for fighting, and will surely win. I'll only
+be in the way. So I'm going back with the ship, which leaves in
+three or four days. Was going to tell you this on the night you
+disappeared. Am sorry I couldn't shake hands with you before I
+left. Write and let me know how things come out. As ever,
+
+TOM.
+
+Stunned, Philip dropped the letter. He lifted his eyes, and a
+strange cry burst from his lips. Nothing that Gregson had written
+could have wrung that cry from him. It was Jeanne. She stood in
+the open door of the tent. But it was not the Jeanne he had known.
+A terrible grief was written in her face. Her lips were bloodless,
+her eyes lusterless; deep suffering seemed to have put hollows in
+her cheeks. In a moment she had fallen upon her knees beside him
+and clasped one of his hands in both of her own.
+
+"I am so glad," she whispered, chokingly.
+
+For an instant she pressed his hands to her face.
+
+"I am so glad--"
+
+She rose to her feet, swaying slightly. She turned to the door,
+and Philip could hear her sobbing as she left him.
+
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+
+Not until the silken flap of the tent had fallen behind Jeanne did
+power of movement and speech return to Philip. He called her name
+and straggled to a sitting posture. Then he staggered to his feet.
+He could scarcely stand. Shooting pains passed like flashes of
+electricity through his body. His right arm was numb and stiff,
+and he found that it was thickly bandaged. His head ached, his
+legs could hardly support him. He went to raise his left hand to
+his head, but stopped it in front of him, while a slow smile of
+understanding crept over his face. It was swollen and covered with
+livid bruises. He wondered if his body looked that way, and sank
+down exhausted upon his balsam bed. A minute later Pierre returned
+with a cup of broth in his hand.
+
+Philip looked at him with less feverish eyes now. There was an
+unaccountable change in the half-breed's appearance, as there had
+been in Jeanne's. His face seemed thinner. There was a deep gloom
+in his eyes, a dejected droop to his shoulders. Philip accepted
+the broth, and drank it slowly, without speaking. He felt
+strengthened. Then he looked steadily at Pierre. The old pride had
+fallen from Pierre like a mask. His eyes dropped under Philip's
+gaze.
+
+Philip held up a hand.
+
+"Pierre!"
+
+The half-breed grasped it and waited. His lips tightened.
+
+"What is the matter?" demanded Philip. "What has happened to
+Jeanne? You say she was not hurt--"
+
+"By the rocks, M'sieur," interrupted Pierre, quickly, kneeling
+beside Philip. "Listen. It is best that I tell you. You are a man,
+you will understand, without being told all. From Churchill I
+brought news which it was necessary for me to tell Jeanne. It was
+terrible news, and she is distressed under its weight. Your honor
+will not allow you to inquire further, M'sieur. I can tell you no
+more than this--that it is a grief which belongs to but one person
+on earth--herself. I ask you to help me. Be blind to her
+unhappiness, M'sieur. Believe that it is the distress of the peril
+through which she has passed. A little later I will tell you all,
+and you will understand. But it is impossible now. I confide this
+much in you--I ask you this--because--"
+
+Pierre's eyes were half closed, and he looked as though unseeing
+over Philip's head.
+
+"I ask you this," he repeated, softly, "because I have guessed--
+that you love her."
+
+A cry of joy burst from Philip's lips.
+
+"I do, Pierre--I do--I do--"
+
+"I have guessed it," said Pierre. "You will help me--to save her!"
+
+"Until death!"
+
+"Then you will go with us to Fort o' God, and from there you will
+go at once to your camp on Blind Indian Lake."
+
+Philip felt the sweat breaking out over his face. He was still
+weak. His voice was unnatural, and trembled.
+
+"You know--" he gasped.
+
+"Yes, I know, M'sieur," replied Pierre. "I know that you are in
+charge there, and Jeanne knows. We knew who you were before we
+appointed to meet you on the cliff. You must return to your men."
+
+Philip was silent. For the moment every hope was crushed within
+him.
+
+He looked at Pierre. The half-breed's eyes were glowing, his
+haggard cheeks were flushed.
+
+"And this is necessary?"
+
+"It is absolutely necessary, M'sieur."
+
+"Then I will go. But first, Pierre, I must know a little more. I
+cannot go entirely blind. Do they fear my men--at Fort o' God?"
+
+"No, M'sieur."
+
+"One more question, Pierre. Who is Lord Fitzhugh Lee?"
+
+For an instant Pierre's eyes widened. They grew black, and burned
+with a strange, threatening fire. He rose slowly to his feet, and
+placed both hands upon Philip's shoulders. For a full minute the
+two men stared into each other's face. Then Pierre spoke. His
+voice was soft and low, scarcely above a murmur, but it was filled
+with something that struck a chill to Philip's heart.
+
+"I would kill you before I would answer that question, M'sieur,"
+he said. "No other person has ever done for Jeanne and I what you
+have done. We owe you more than we can ever repay. Yet if you
+insist upon an answer to that question you make of me an enemy; if
+you breathe that name to Jeanne, you turn her away from you
+forever."
+
+Without another word he left the tent.
+
+For many minutes Philip sat motionless where Pierre had left him.
+The earth seemed suddenly to have dropped from under his feet,
+leaving him in an illimitable chaos of mind. Gregson had deserted
+him, with almost no word of explanation, and he would have staked
+his life upon Gregson's loyalty. Under other circumstances his
+unaccountable action would have been a serious blow. But now it
+was overshadowed by the mysterious change that had come over
+Jeanne. A few hours before she had been happy, laughing and
+singing as they drew nearer to Fort o' God; each hour had added to
+the brightness of her eyes, the gladness in her voice. The change
+had come with Pierre. and at the bottom of it all was Lord
+Fitzhugh Lee. Pierre had warned him not to mention Lord Fitzhugh's
+name to Jeanne, and yet only a short time before he had spoken the
+name boldly before Jeanne, and she had betrayed no sign of
+recognition or of fear. More than that, she had assured him that
+she had never heard the name before, that it was not known at Fort
+o' God.
+
+Philip bowed his head in his hands, and his fingers clutched in
+his hair. What did it all mean? He went back to the scene on the
+cliff, when Pierre had roused himself at the sound of the name; he
+thought of all that had happened since Gregson had come to
+Churchill, and the result was a delirium of thought that made his
+temples throb. He was sure--now--of but few things. He loved
+Jeanne--loved her more than he had ever dreamed that he could love
+a woman, and he believed that it would be impossible for her to
+tell him a falsehood. He was confident that she had never heard of
+Lord Fitzhugh until Pierre overtook them in their flight from
+Churchill. He could see but one thing to do, and that was to
+follow Pierre's advice, accepting his promise that in the end
+everything would come out right. He had faith in Pierre.
+
+He rose to his feet and went to the tent-flap. An embarrassing
+thought came to him, and he stopped, a flush of feverish color
+suddenly mounting into his pale cheeks. He had kissed Jeanne in
+the chasm, when death thundered in their faces. He had kissed her
+again and again, and in those kisses he had declared his love. He
+was glad, and yet sorry; the knowledge that she must know of his
+love filled him with happiness, and yet with it there was the
+feeling that it would place a distance between him and Jeanne.
+
+Jeanne was the first to see him when he came out of the tent. She
+was sitting beside a small balsam shelter, and Pierre was busy
+over a fire, with his back turned to them. For a moment the two
+looked at each other in silence, and then Jeanne came toward him,
+holding out one of her hands. He saw that she was making a strong
+effort to appear natural, but there was something in his own face
+that made her attempt a poor one. The hand that she gave him
+trembled. Her lips quivered. For the first time her eyes failed to
+meet his own in their limpid frankness.
+
+"Pierre has told you what happened," she said. "It was a miracle,
+and I owe you my life. I have had my punishment for being so
+careless." She tried to laugh at him now, and drew her hand away.
+"I wasn't beaten against the rocks, like you, but--"
+
+"It was terrible," interrupted Philip, remembering Pierre's words,
+and eager to put her at ease. "You have stood up under it
+beautifully. I am afraid of after effects. You must not collapse
+under the strain now."
+
+Pierre heard his last words and a smile flashed over his dark face
+as he encountered Philip's glance.
+
+"It is true, M'sieur," he said. "I know of no other woman who
+would have stood up under such a thing as Jeanne has done. MON
+DIEU, when I found a part of the canoe wreckage far below I
+thought that both of you were dead!"
+
+Philip began to feel that he had foolishly overestimated his
+strength. There was a weakness in his limbs that surprised him,
+and a sudden chill replaced the fever in his blood. Jeanne placed
+her hand upon his arm and thrust him gently toward the tent.
+
+"You must not exert yourself," she said, watching the pallor in
+his face. "You must be quiet, until after dinner."
+
+He obeyed the pressure of her hand. Pierre followed into the tent,
+and for a moment he was compelled to lean heavily upon the half-
+breed.
+
+"It is the reaction, M'sieur," said Pierre. "You are weak after
+the fever. If you could sleep--"
+
+"I can," murmured Philip, dizzily, dropping upon his balsam. "But,
+Pierre--"
+
+"Yes, M'sieur."
+
+"I have something--to say to you--no questions--"
+
+"Not now, M'sieur."
+
+Philip heard the rustling of the flap, and Pierre was gone. He
+felt more comfortable lying down. Dizziness and nausea left him,
+and he slept. It was the deep, refreshing sleep that always
+follows the awakening from fever. When he awoke he felt like his
+old self, and went outside. Pierre was alone; a blanket was drawn
+across the front of the balsam shelter, and the half-breed nodded
+toward it in response to Philip's inquiring glance.
+
+Philip ate lightly of the food which Pierre had ready for him.
+When he had finished he leaned close to him, and said:
+
+"You have warned me to ask no questions, and I am going to ask
+none. But you have not forbidden me to tell you things which I
+know. I am going to talk to you about Lord Fitzhugh Lee."
+
+Pierre's dark eyes flashed.
+
+"M'sieur--"
+
+"Listen!" demanded Philip. "I seek your confidence no further. But
+I shall tell you what I know of Lord Fitzhugh Lee, if it makes us
+fight. Do you understand? I insist upon this because you have as
+good as told me that this man is your enemy, and that he is at the
+bottom of Jeanne's trouble. He is also my enemy. And after I have
+told you why--you may change your determination to keep me a
+stranger to your trouble. If not--well, you can hold your tongue
+then as well as now."
+
+Quickly, without moving his eyes from Pierre's face, Philip told
+his own story of Lord Fitzhugh Lee. And as he continued a strange
+change came over the half-breed. When he came to the letters
+revealing the plot to turn the northerners against his company a
+low cry escaped Pierre's lips. His eyes seemed starting from his
+head. Drops of sweat burst out upon his face. His fingers worked
+convulsively, something rose in his throat and choked him. When
+Philip had done he buried his face in his hands. For a few moments
+he remained thus, and then suddenly looked up. Livid spots burned
+in his cheeks, and he fairly hissed at Philip.
+
+"M'sieur, if this is not the truth--if this is a lie--"
+
+He stopped. Something in Philip's eyes told him to go no further.
+He was fearless, and he saw more than fearlessness in Philip's
+face. Such men believe, when they come together.
+
+"It is the truth," said Philip.
+
+With a low, strained laugh Pierre held out his hand as a pledge of
+his faith.
+
+"I believe in you, M'sieur," he said, and it seemed an effort for
+him to speak. "Do you know what I would have thought, if you had
+told this to Jeanne before I came?"
+
+"No."
+
+"I would have thought, M'sieur, that she threw herself purposely
+into the death of the Big Thunder rocks."
+
+"My God, you mean--"
+
+"That is all, M'sieur. I can say no more. Ah, there is Jeanne!" he
+cried, more loudly. "Now we will take down the tent, and go."
+
+Jeanne stood a dozen steps behind them when Philip turned. She
+greeted him with a smile, and hastened to assist Pierre in
+gathering up the things about the camp. Philip was not blind to
+her efforts to evade him. He could see that it was a relief to her
+when they were at last in Pierre's canoe, and headed up the river.
+They traveled till late in the evening, and set up Jeanne's tent
+by starlight. The journey was continued at dawn. Late the
+following afternoon the Little Churchill swept through a low,
+woodless country, called the White Fox Barren. It was a narrow
+barren and across it lay the forest and the ridge mountains.
+Behind these mountains and the forest the sun was setting. Above
+all else there rose out of the gathering gloom of evening a single
+ridge, a towering mass of rock which caught the last glow of the
+sun, and blazed like a signal-fire.
+
+The canoe stopped. Jeanne and Pierre both gazed toward the great
+rock.
+
+Then Jeanne, who was in the bow, turned her face to Philip, and
+the glow of the rock itself suffused her cheeks as she pointed
+over the barren.
+
+"M'sieur Philip," she said, "there is Fort o' God!"
+
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+
+There was a low tremble in Jeanne's voice. The canoe swung
+broadside to the slow current, and Philip looked in astonishment
+at the change in Pierre. The tired half-breed had uncovered his
+head, and knelt with his face turned to that last crimson glow in
+the sky, like one in prayer. But his eyes were open, there was a
+smile on his lips, and he was breathing quickly. Pride and joy
+came where there had been the lines of grief and exhaustion. His
+shoulders were thrown back, his head erect, and the fire of the
+distant rock reflected itself in his eyes. From him Philip turned,
+so that he could look into Jeanne's face. The girl, too, had
+changed. Again these two were the Pierre and Jeanne whom he had
+seen that first night on the moonlit cliff. Pierre seemed no
+longer the half-breed, but the prince of the rapier and broad
+cuffs; and Jeanne, smiling proudly at Philip, made him an
+exquisite little courtesy from her cramped seat in the bow, and
+said:
+
+"M'sieur Philip, welcome to Fort o' God!"
+
+"Thank you," he said, and stared toward the sun-capped rock.
+
+He could see nothing but the rock, the black forests, and the
+desolate barren stretching between. Fort o' God, unless it was the
+rock itself, was still a mystery hidden in the gathering gloom.
+The canoe began moving slowly onward, and Jeanne turned so that
+her eyes searched the stream ahead. A thick wall of stunted forest
+shut out the barren from their view; the stream grew narrower, and
+on the opposite side a barren ridge, threatening them with torn
+and upheaved masses of rock, flung the heavy shadows of evening
+down upon them. No one spoke. Philip could hear Pierre breathing
+behind him: something in the intense quiet--in the awesome effect
+which their approach to Fort o' God had upon these two--sent
+strange little thrills shooting through his body. He listened, and
+heard nothing, not even the howl of a dog. The stillness was
+oppressive, and the darkness thickened about them. For half an
+hour they continued, and then Pierre headed the canoe into a
+narrow creek, thrusting it through a thick growth of wild rice and
+reeds,
+
+Balsam and cedar and swamp hazel shut them in. Overhead the tall
+cedars interlaced, and hid the pale light of the sky. Philip could
+just make out Jeanne ahead of him.
+
+And then, suddenly, there came a wonderful change. They shot out
+of the darkness, as if from a tunnel, but so quietly that one a
+dozen feet away could not have heard the ripple of Pierre's
+paddle. Almost in their faces rose a huge black bulk, and in that
+blackness three or four yellow lights gleamed like mellow stars.
+The canoe touched noiselessly upon sand. Pierre sprang out, still
+without sound. Jeanne followed, with a whispered word. Philip was
+last.
+
+Pierre pulled the canoe up, and Jeanne came to Philip. She held
+out her two hands. Her face shone white in the gloom, and there
+was a look in her beautiful eyes, as she stood for a moment almost
+touching him, that set his heart jumping. She let her hands lie in
+his while she spoke.
+
+"We have not even alarmed the dogs, M'sieur Philip," she
+whispered. "Is not that splendid? I am going to surprise father,
+and you will go with Pierre. I will see you a little later, and--"
+
+She rose on tiptoe, and her face was dangerously close to his own.
+
+"And you are very, very welcome to Fort o' God, M'sieur."
+
+She slipped away into the darkness, and Pierre stood beside
+Philip. His white teeth were gleaming strangely, and he said in a
+soft voice:
+
+"M'sieur, that is the first time that I have ever heard those
+words spoken at Fort o' God. We welcome no man here who has your
+blood and your civilization in his veins. You are greater than a
+king!"
+
+With a sudden exclamation Philip turned upon Pierre.
+
+"And that is the reason for Jeanne's surprise?" he said. "She
+wishes to pave a way for me. I begin to understand!"
+
+"It is true that you might not have received that welcome which
+you are certain to receive now from the master of Fort o' God,"
+replied Pierre, frankly. "So we will go in quietly, and make no
+disturbance, while your way is being paved, as you call it."
+
+He walked ahead, with Philip following so closely that he could
+have touched him. He made out more distinctly now the lines of the
+huge black edifice from which the lights shone. It was a massive
+structure of logs, two stories high, a half of it almost
+completely hidden in the impenetrable shadow of a great wall of
+rock. Philip's eyes traveled up this wall, and he was convinced
+that he stood under the rock upon whose towering crest he had seen
+the last reflection of the evening sun. About him there were no
+signs of life or of other habitation. Pierre moved swiftly. They
+passed under a small lighted window that was a foot above Philip's
+head, and turned around the corner of the building. Here all was
+blackness.
+
+Pierre went straight to a door, and uttered at low word of
+satisfaction when he found that it was not barred. He opened it,
+and reached out a guiding hand to Philip's arm. Philip entered,
+and the door closed softly behind him. He felt the flow of warm
+air in his face, and his moccasined feet trod upon something soft
+and velvety. Faintly, as though coming from a great distance, he
+heard a voice singing. It was a woman's voice, but he knew that it
+was not Jeanne's.
+
+In spite of himself his heart was beating excitedly. The mystery
+of Fort o' God was about him, warm and subtle, like a strange
+spirit, sending through him the thrill of anticipation, a hundred
+fancies, little fears. Pierre advanced, still guiding him; then he
+stopped, and chuckled softly in the darkness. The distant voice
+had stopped singing, and there came in place of it the loud
+barking of a dog, an unintelligible sound of a voice, and then
+quiet. Jeanne had sprung her surprise.
+
+Pierre led the way to another room.
+
+"This is to be your room, M'sieur," he explained. "Make yourself
+comfortable. I have no doubt that the master of Fort o' God will
+wish to see you very soon."
+
+He struck a match as he spoke, and lighted a lamp. A moment more
+and he was gone.
+
+Philip looked about him. He was in a room fully twenty feet
+square, furnished in a manner that drew from him an audible gasp
+of astonishment. At one end of the room was a massive mahogany
+bed, screened by heavy curtains which were looped back by silken
+cords. Near the bed was an old-fashioned mahogany dresser, with a
+diamond-shaped mirror, and in front of it a straight-backed chair
+adorned with the grotesque carving of an ancient and long-dead
+fashion. About him, everywhere, were the evidences of luxury and
+of age. The big lamp, which gave a brilliant light, was of
+hammered brass; the base of its square pedestal was partly hidden
+in the rumples of a heavy damask spread which covered the table on
+which it rested. The table itself was old, spindle-legged, glowing
+with the mellow luster endowed by many passing generations--a
+relic of the days when the originator of its fashion became the
+favorite of a capricious and beautiful queen. Soft rugs were upon
+the floor; from the walls, papered and hung with odd bits of
+tapestry, strange faces looked down upon Philip from out of heavy
+gilded frames; faces grim, pale, shadowed; men with plaited
+ruffles and curls; women with powdered hair, who gazed down upon
+him haughtily, as if they wondered at his intrusion.
+
+One picture was turned with its face to the wall.
+
+Philip sank into a huge arm-chair, cushioned with velvet, and
+dropped his cap upon the floor. And this was Fort o' God! He
+scarcely breathed. He was back two centuries, and he stared, as if
+each moment he expected some manifestation of life in what he saw.
+He had dreamed his dream over the dead at Churchill; here it was
+reality--almost; it lacked but a breath, a movement, a flutter of
+life in the dead faces that looked down upon him. He gazed up at
+them again, and laughed a little nervously. Then he fixed his eyes
+on the opposite wall. One of the pictures was moving. The thought
+in his brain had given birth to the movement he had imagined. It
+was a woman's face in the picture, young and beautiful, and it
+nodded to him, one moment radiant with light, the next caught in
+shadows that cast over it a gloom. He jumped from his chair and
+went so that he stood directly under it.
+
+A current of warm air shot up into his face from the floor. It was
+this air that was causing movement in the picture, and he looked
+down. What he discovered broke the spell he was under. About him
+were the relics of age, of a life long dead. Rubens might have sat
+in that room, and mourned over his handiwork, lost in a
+wilderness. The stingy Louis might have recognized in the spindle-
+legged table a bit of his predecessor's extravagance, which he had
+sold for the good of the exchequer of France; a Gobelin might have
+reclaimed one of the woven landscapes on the wall, a Grosellier
+himself have issued from behind the curtained bed. Philip himself,
+in that environment, was the stranger. It was the current of warm
+air which brought him back from the eighteenth to the twentieth
+century. Under his feet was a furnace!
+
+Even the master of Fort o' God, stern and forbidding as Philip
+began to imagine him, might have laughed at the look which came
+into his face. Grosellier, the cavalier, had he appeared, Philip
+would have accepted with the same confidence that he had accepted
+Jeanne and Pierre. But--a furnace! He thrust his hands deep in his
+pockets, a trick which was always the last convincing evidence of
+his perplexity, and walked slowly around the room. There were two
+books on the table. One, bound in faded red vellum, was a Greek
+Anthology, the other Drummond's Ascent of Man. There were other
+books on a quaintly carved shelf, under the picture which had been
+turned to the wall. He ran over the titles. There were a number of
+French novels, Ely's Socialism, Sir Thomas More's Utopia, St.
+Pierre's Paul and Virginia, and a dozen other volumes; there were
+Balzac and Hugo, and Dante's Divine Comedy. Amid this array, like
+a black sheep lost among the angels, was a finger-worn and faded
+little volume bearing the name Camille. Something about this one
+book, so strangely out of place in its present company, aroused
+Philip's curiosity. It bore the name, too, which he had found
+worked in the corner of Jeanne's handkerchief. In a way, the
+presence of this book gave him a sort of shock, and he took it in
+his hands, and opened the cover. Under his fingers were pages
+yellow and frayed with age, and in an ancient type, once black,
+the title, The Meaning of God. In a large masculine hand some one
+had written under this title the accompanying words; "A black skin
+often contains a white soul; a woman's beauty, hell."
+
+Philip replaced the book with a feeling of awe. Something in those
+words, brutal in their truth--something in the strange whim that
+had placed a pearl of purity within the faded and worn mask of the
+condemned, seemed to speak to him of a tragedy that might be a key
+to the mystery of Fort o' God. From the books he looked up at the
+picture which had been turned to the wall. The temptation to see
+what was hidden overcame him, and he turned the frame over. Then
+he stepped back with a low cry of pleasure.
+
+From out of the proscribed canvas there smiled down upon him a
+face of bewildering beauty. It was the face of a young woman, a
+stranger among its companions, because it was of the present.
+Philip stepped to one side, so that the light from the lamp shone
+from behind him, and he wondered if the picture had been condemned
+to hang with its face to the wall because it typified the existent
+rather than the past. He looked more closely, and drew back step
+by step, until he was in the proper focus to bring out every
+expression in the lovely face. In the picture he saw each moment a
+greater resemblance to Jeanne. The eyes, the hair, the sweetness
+of the mouth, the smile, brought to him a vision of Jeanne
+herself. The woman in the picture was older than Jeanne, and his
+first thought was that it must be a sister, or her mother. It came
+to him in the next breath that this would be impossible, for
+Jeanne had been found by Pierre in the deep snows, on her dead
+mother's breast. And this was a painting of life, of youth, of
+beauty, and not of death and starvation.
+
+He returned the forbidden picture to the position in which he had
+found it against the wall, half ashamed of the act and thoughts
+into which his curiosity had led him. And yet, after all, it was
+not curiosity. He told himself that as he washed himself and
+groomed his disheveled clothes.
+
+An hour had passed when he heard a low tap at the door, and Pierre
+came in. In that time the half-breed had undergone a
+transformation. He was dressed in an exquisite coat of yellow
+buckskin, with the same old-fashioned cuffs he had worn when
+Philip first saw him, trousers of the same material, buckled below
+the knees, and boot-moccasins with flaring tops. He wore a new
+rapier at his waist, and his glossy black hair was brushed
+smoothly back, and fell loose upon his shoulders. It was the
+courtier, and not Pierre the half-breed, who bowed to Philip.
+
+"M'sieur, are you ready?" he asked.
+
+"Yes," replied Philip.
+
+"Then we will go to M'sieur d'Arcambal, the master of Fort o'
+God."
+
+They passed out into the hall, which was faintly illumined now, so
+that Philip caught glimpses of deep shadows and massive doors as
+he followed behind Pierre. They turned into a second hall, at the
+end of which was an open door through which came a flood of light.
+At this door Pierre stopped, and with a bow allowed his companion
+to pass in ahead of him. The next moment Philip stood in a room
+twice as large as the one he had left. It was brilliantly lighted
+by three or four lamps; he had only an instant's vision of
+numberless shelves loaded with books, of walls covered with
+pictures, of a ponderous table in front of him, and then he heard
+a voice.
+
+A man stepped out from beside the door, and he stood face to face
+with the master of Fort o' God.
+
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+
+He was an old man. Beard and hair were white. He was as tall as
+Philip; his shoulders were broader; his chest massive; and as he
+stood under the light of one of the hanging lamps, his face
+shining with a pale glow, one hand upon his breast, the other
+extended, it seemed to Philip that all of the greatness and past
+glory of Fort o' God, whatever they may have been, were
+personified in the man he beheld. He was dressed in soft buckskin,
+like Pierre. His hair and beard grew in wild disorder, and from
+under shaggy eyebrows there burned a pair of deep-set eyes of the
+color of blue steel. He was a man to inspire awe; old, and yet
+young; white-haired, gray-faced, and yet a giant. One might have
+expected from between his bearded lips a voice as thrilling as his
+appearance; a rumbling voice, deep-chested, sonorous--and it would
+have caused no surprise. It was the voice that surprised Philip
+more than the man. It was low, and trembling with an agitation
+which even strength and pride could not control.
+
+"Philip Whittemore, I am Henry d'Arcambal. May God bless you for
+what you have done!"
+
+A hand of iron gripped his own. And then, before Philip had found
+words to say, the master of Fort o' God suddenly placed his arms
+about his shoulders and embraced him. Their shoulders touched.
+Their faces were close. The two men who loved Jeanne d'Arcambal
+above all else on earth gazed for a silent moment into each
+other's eyes.
+
+"They have told me," said D'Arcambal, softly. "You have brought my
+Jeanne home through death. Accept a father's blessing, and with
+it--this!"
+
+He stepped back, and swept his arms about the great room.
+
+"Everything--everything--would have gone with her," he said. "If
+you had let her die, I should have died. My God, what peril she
+was in! In saving her you saved me. So you are welcome here, as a
+son. For the first time since my Jeanne was a babe Fort o' God
+offers itself to a man who is a stranger and its hospitality is
+yours so long as its walls hang together. And as they have done
+this for upward of two hundred years, M'sieur Philip, we may
+conclude that our friendship is to be without end."
+
+He clasped Philip's hands again, and two tears coursed down his
+gray cheeks. It was difficult for Philip to restrain the joy his
+words produced, which, coming from the lips of Jeanne's father,
+lifted him suddenly into a paradise of hope. For many reasons he
+had come to expect a none too warm reception at Fort o' God; he
+had looked ahead to the place with a grim sort of fear, scarcely
+definable; and here Jeanne's father was opening his arms to him.
+Pierre was unapproachable; Jeanne herself was a mystery, filling
+him alternately with hope and despair; D'Arcambal had accepted him
+as a son. He could find no words adequate to his emotion; none
+that could describe his own happiness, unless it was in a bold
+avowal of his love for the girl he had saved. And this his good
+sense told him not to make, at the present moment.
+
+"Any man would have done as much for your daughter," he said at
+last, "and I am happy that I was the fortunate one to render her
+assistance."
+
+"You are wrong," said D'Arcambal, taking him by the arm. "You are
+one out of a thousand. It takes a MAN to go through the Big
+Thunder and come out at the other end alive. I know of only one
+other who has done that in the last twenty years, and that other
+is Henry d'Arcambal himself. We three, you, Jeanne, and I, have
+alone triumphed over those monsters of death. All others have
+died. It seems like a strange pointing of the hand of God."
+
+Philip trembled.
+
+"We three!" he exclaimed.
+
+"We three," said the old man, "and for that reason you are a part
+of Fort o' God."
+
+He led Philip deeper into the great room, and Philip saw that
+almost all the space along the walls of the huge room was occupied
+by shelves upon shelves of books, masses of papers, piles of
+magazines shoulder-high, scores of maps and paintings. The massive
+table was covered with books; there were piles on smaller tables;
+chairs, and the floor itself, covered with the skins of a score of
+wild beasts, were littered with them. At the far end of the room
+he saw deeper and darker shelves, where gleamed faintly in the
+lamplight row upon row of vials and bottles and strange
+instruments of steel and glass. A scientist in the wilderness--a
+student exiled in a desolation! These were the thoughts that
+leaped into his mind, and he knew that in this room Jeanne had
+been created; that here, between these centuries-old walls, amid
+an environment of strange silence, of whispering age, her visions
+of the world had come. Here, separated from all her kind, God,
+Nature, and a father had made her of their handiwork.
+
+The old man pointed Philip to a chair near the large table, and
+sat down close to him. At his feet was a stool covered with
+silvery lynx-skin, and D'Arcambal looked at this, his strong, grim
+face relaxing into a gentle smile of happiness.
+
+"There is where Jeanne sits--at my feet," he said. "It has been
+her place for many years. When she is not there I am lost. Life
+ceases. This room has been our world. To-night you are in Fort o'
+God; to-morrow you will see D'Arcambal House. You have heard of
+that, perhaps, but never of Fort o' God. That belongs to Jeanne
+and me, to Pierre--and you. Fort o' God is the heart, the soul,
+the life's blood of D'Arcambal House. It is this room and two or
+three others. D'Arcambal House is our barrier. When strangers
+come, they see D'Arcambal House; plain rooms, of rough wood;
+quarters such as you have seen at posts and stations; the mask
+which gives no hint of what is hidden within. It is there that we
+live to the world; it is here that we live to ourselves. Jeanne
+has my permission to tell you whatever she wishes, a little later.
+But I am curious, and being an old man must be humored first. I am
+still trembling. You must tell me what happened to Jeanne."
+
+For an hour they talked, and Philip went over one by one the
+events as they had occurred since the fight on the cliff, omitting
+only such things as he thought that Jeanne and Pierre might wish
+to keep secret to themselves. At the end of that hour he was
+certain that D'Arcambal was unaware of the dark cloud that had
+suddenly come into Jeanne's life. The old man's brow was knitted
+with deep lines, and his powerful jaws were set hard, as Philip
+told of the ambush, of the wounding of Pierre, and the flight of
+his assailants with his daughter. It was to get money, the old man
+thought. The half-breed had suggested that, and Jeanne herself had
+given it as her opinion. Why else should they have been attacked
+at Churchill? Such things had occurred before, he told Philip. The
+little daughter of the factor at Nelson House had been stolen, and
+held for ransom. With a hundred questions he wrung from Philip
+every detail of the second fight and of the struggle for life in
+the rapids. He betrayed no physical excitement, even in those
+moments of Philip's description when Jeanne hung between life and
+death; but in his eyes there was the glow of red-hot fires. At
+last there came to interrupt them the low, musical tinkling of a
+bell under the table.
+
+D'Arcambal's face lighted up suddenly.
+
+"Ah, I had forgotten," he exclaimed. "Pardon me, Philip. Dinner
+has been awaiting us this last half-hour; and besides--"
+
+He reached out and touched a tiny button, which Philip had not
+observed before.
+
+"I am selfish."
+
+He had hardly ceased speaking when footsteps sounded in the hall,
+and in spite of every resolution he had made to guard himself
+against any betrayal of the emotions burning in his breast, Philip
+sprang to his feet. Jeanne had come in under the glow of the lamps
+and stood now a dozen feet from him, a vision so exquisitely
+lovely that he saw nothing of those who entered behind her, nor
+heard D'Arcambal's low, happy laugh at his side. It seemed to him
+for a moment as if there had suddenly appeared before him the face
+of the picture that was turned against the wall, only more
+beautiful now, radiant with the glow of living flesh and blood.
+But there was something even more startling than this resemblance.
+In this moment Jeanne was the fulfilment of his dream; she had
+come to him from out of another world. She was dressed in an old-
+fashioned gown of pure white, a fabric so delicate that it seemed
+to float about her slender form, responsive to every breath she
+drew. Her white shoulders revealed themselves above masses of
+filmy lace that fell upon her bosom; her slender arms, girlish
+rather than womanly in their beauty, were bare. Her hair was bound
+up in shining coils about her head, with a single flower nestling
+amid a little cluster of curls that fell upon her neck. After his
+first movement, Philip recovered himself by a strong effort. He
+bowed low to conceal the flush in his face. Jeanne swept him a
+little courtesy, and then ran past him, with the eagerness of any
+modern child, into the outstretched arms of her father.
+
+Laughter and joy rumbled in the beard of the master of Fort o' God
+as he looked over Jeanne's head at Philip.
+
+"And this is what you have saved for me," he said.
+
+Then he looked beyond, and for the first time Philip realized
+there were others in the room. One was Pierre; the other a pretty,
+dark-faced girl, with hair that glistened like a raven's wing in
+the lamp-glow.
+
+Jeanne left her father's arms and gave her hand to Philip.
+
+"M'sieur Philip, this is my sister, Mademoiselle Couchee," she
+cried.
+
+Pierre's sister gave Philip her hand, and behind them D'Arcambal
+laughed softly in his beard again, and said:
+
+"To-morrow, in D'Arcambal House, you may call her Otille, Philip.
+But to-night we are in Fort o' God. Oh, Jeanne, Jeanne, what a
+witch you are!"
+
+"An angel!" breathed Philip, but no one heard him.
+
+"And this witch," added the old man, "you are to take in to
+supper, M'sieur Philip. To night I suppose that I must call you
+m'sieur, but to-morrow, when I have on my leather leggings and my
+skin cap, I will call you Phil, or Tom, Dick, or Harry, just as I
+please. This is the first time, sir, that my Jeanne has ever gone
+in to dinner on another arm than mine or Pierre's. And so I may be
+a little jealous. Proceed."
+
+As Jeanne's hand rested in his arm, and they went into the hall,
+Philip could not restrain himself from whispering:
+
+"I am glad--of that."
+
+"And the dress, M'sieur Philip!" exclaimed D'Arcambal behind them,
+in the voice of a happy boy. "It is an honor to escort that, to
+say nothing of the silly girl that's in it. That dress, sir,
+belonged to a beautiful lady who was called Camille, and who died
+over a century ago."
+
+"Father, please do be good!" protested Jeanne. "Remember!"
+
+"Ah, so I will," said her father. "I had forgotten that you were
+to tell M'sieur Philip these things."
+
+They entered another room illuminated by a single huge lamp
+suspended above a table spread with silver and fine linen. The
+room was as great a surprise as the other two had been. It
+contained no chairs. What Philip mentally designated as benches,
+with deep cushion seats of greenish leather, were arranged about
+the table. These same curious seats furnished other parts of the
+room. From the pictures on the walls to the ancient helmet and
+cuirass that stood up like a legless sentinel in one corner, this
+room, like the others, breathed of extreme age. Over a big open
+fireplace, in which half a dozen birch logs were burning, hung a
+number of old-fashioned weapons; a flintlock, a pair of obsolete
+French dueling pistols, a short rapier similar to that which
+Pierre wore, and two long swords. Philip noticed that about each
+of the dueling pistols was tied a bow of ribbon, dull and faded,
+as though the passing of generations had robbed them of beauty and
+color, to be replaced by the somberness of age.
+
+During the meal Philip could not but observe that Jeanne was
+laboring under some mysterious strain. Her cheeks were brilliantly
+flushed, and her eyes were filled with a lustrous brightness that
+he had never seen in them before. Their beauty was almost
+feverish. Several times he caught a strange little tremor of her
+white shoulders, as though a sudden chill had passed through her.
+He discovered, too, that Pierre was observing these things, and
+that there was something forced in the half-breed's cheerfulness.
+But D'Arcambal and Otille seemed completely oblivious of any
+change. Their happiness overflowed. Philip thought of his last
+supper at Churchill, with Eileen Brokaw and her father. Miss
+Brokaw had acted strangely then, and had struggled to hide some
+secret grief or excitement, as Jeanne was struggling now.
+
+He was glad when the meal was finished, and the master of Fort o'
+God rose from his seat. At D'Arcambal's movement his eyes caught
+Jeanne's, and then he saw that Pierre was looking sharply at him.
+
+"Jeanne owes you an apology--and an explanation, M'sieur Philip,"
+said D'Arcambal, resting a hand upon Jeanne's head. "We are going
+to retire, and she will initiate you into the fold of Fort o'
+God."
+
+Pierre and Otille followed him from the room. For the first time
+in an hour Jeanne laughed frankly at Philip.
+
+"There isn't much to explain, M'sieur Philip," she said, rising
+from her seat. "You know pretty nearly all there is to know about
+Fort o' God now. Only I am sure that I did not appear to value
+your confidence very much--a little while ago. It must have seemed
+ungrateful in me, indeed, to have told you so little about myself
+and my home, after what you did for Pierre and me. But I have
+father's permission now. It is the second time that he has ever
+given it to me."
+
+"And I don't want to hear," exclaimed Philip, bluntly. "I have
+been more or less of a brute, Miss Jeanne. I know enough about
+Fort o' God. It is a glorious place. You owe me nothing, and for
+that reason--"
+
+"But I insist," interrupted the girl. "Do you mean to say that you
+do not care to listen, when this is the second time in my life
+that I have had the opportunity of talking about my home? And the
+first--didn't give me any pleasure. This will."
+
+A shadow came into Jeanne's eyes. She motioned him to a seat
+beside her in front of the fire. Her nearness, the touch of her
+dress, the sweet perfume of her presence, thrilled him. He felt
+that the moment was near when the whole world as he knew it was to
+slip away from him, leaving him in a paradise, or a chaos of
+despair. Jeanne looked up at the dueling pistols. The firelight
+trembled in the soft folds of lace over her bosom; it glistened in
+her hair, and lighted her face with a gentle glow.
+
+"There isn't much to explain," she said again, in a voice so low
+that it was hardly more than a whisper. "But what little there is
+I want you to know, so that when you go away you will understand.
+More than two hundred years ago a band of gentlemen adventurers
+were sent over into this country by Prince Rupert to form the
+Hudson's Bay Company. That is history, and you know more of it,
+probably, than I. One of these men was Le Chevalier Grosellier.
+One summer he came up the Churchill, and stopped at the great rock
+on which we saw the sun setting to-night, and which was called the
+Sun Rock by the Indians. He was struck by the beauty of the place,
+and when he went back to France it was with the plan of returning
+to build himself a chateau in the wilderness. Two or three years
+later he did this, and called the place Fort o' God. For more than
+a century, M'sieur, Fort o' God was a place of revel and pleasure
+in the heart of this desolation. Early in the nineteenth century
+it passed into the hands of a man by the name of D'Arcy, and it is
+said that at one time it housed twenty gentlemen and as many
+ladies of France for one whole season. Its history is obscure, and
+mostly lost. But for a long time after D'Arcy came it was a place
+of adventure, of pleasure, and of mystery, very little of which
+remains to-day. Those are his pistols above the fire. He was
+killed by one of them out there beside the big rock, in a quarrel
+with one of his guests over a woman. We think--here--from letters
+that we have found, that her name was Camille. There is a chest in
+my room filled with linen that bears her name. This dress came
+from that chest. I have to be careful of them, as they tear very
+easily. After D'Arcy the place was almost forgotten and remained
+so until nearly forty years ago when my father came into
+possession of it. That, M'sieur, is the very simple story of Fort
+o' God. Its old name is forgotten. It lives only with us. Others
+know it as D'Arcambal House."
+
+"Yes, I have heard of that," said Philip.
+
+He waited for Jeanne, and saw that her fingers were nervously
+twisting a bit of ribbon in her lap.
+
+"Of course, that is uninteresting," she continued. "You can almost
+guess the rest. We have lived here--alone. Not one of us has ever
+felt the desire to leave this little world of ours. It is curious
+--you may scarcely believe what I say--but it is true that we look
+out upon your big world and laugh at it and dislike it. I guess--
+that I have been taught to hate it--since I can remember."
+
+There was a little tremble in Jeanne's voice, an instant's
+quivering of her chin. Philip looked from her face into the fire,
+and stared hard, choking back words which were ready to burst from
+his lips. In place of them he said, with a touch of bitterness in
+his voice:
+
+"And I have grown to hate my world, Jeanne. It has compelled me to
+hate it. That is why I spoke to you that night on the cliff at
+Churchill."
+
+"I have sometimes thought that I have been very wrong," said the
+girl. "I have never seen this other world. I know nothing of it,
+except as I have been taught. I have no right to hate it, and yet
+I do. I have never wanted to see it. I have never cared to know
+the people who lived in it. I wish that I could understand, but I
+cannot; except that father has made for us, for Pierre and Otille
+and me, this little world at Fort o' God, and has taught us to
+fear the other. I know that there is no other man in the whole
+world like my father, and that what he has done must be best. It
+is his pride that we bring your world to our doors, but that we
+never go to it; he says that we know more about that world than
+the people who live there, which of course cannot be so. And so we
+have grown up amid the old memories, the pictures, and the dead
+romances of Fort o' God. We have taken pleasure in living as we
+do--in making for ourselves our own little social codes, our
+childish aristocracy, our make-believe world. It is the spirit of
+Fort o' God that lives with us, and makes us content; the shadow-
+faces of men and women who once filled these rooms with life and
+pleasure, and whose memory seems to have passed into our keeping
+alone. I know them all; many of their names, all of their faces. I
+have a daguerreotype of Camille Poitiers, and she must have been
+very beautiful. There are the tiniest slippers in the world in her
+chest, and ribbons like those which are tied about the pistols.
+There is a painting of D'Arcy in your room. It is the picture next
+to the one that has its face turned to the wall."
+
+She rose to her feet, and Philip stood beside her. There was a
+mist in her eyes as she held out her hand to him.
+
+"I--I--would like to have you--see that picture," she whispered.
+
+Philip could not speak. He held the hand Jeanne had given him as
+they passed through the long, dimly lighted halls. At the open
+door to his room they stopped, and he could feel Jeanne trembling.
+
+"You will tell me--the truth?" she begged, like a child. "You will
+tell me what you think--of the picture?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+She went in ahead of him and turned the frame so that the face in
+the picture smiled down upon them in all of its luring loveliness.
+There was something pathetic in the girl's attitude now. She stood
+under the picture, facing Philip, and there was a tense eagerness
+in her eyes, a light that was almost supplication, a crying out of
+her soul to him in a breathless moment that seemed hovering
+between pain and joy. It was Jeanne, an older Jeanne, that looked
+from out of the picture, smiling, inviting admiration, bewildering
+hi her beauty; it was Jeanne, the child, waiting for him in flesh
+and blood to speak, her eyes big and dark, her breath coming
+quickly, her hands buried in the deep lace on her bosom. A low
+word came to Philip's lips, and then he laughed softly. It was a
+laugh, almost under his breath, which sweeps up now and then from
+a soul in a joy--an emotion--which is unutterable in words. But to
+Jeanne it was different. Her dark eyes grew hurt and wounded, two
+great tears ran down her paling cheeks, and suddenly she buried
+her face in her hands and with a sobbing cry turned from him, with
+her head bowed under the smiling face above.
+
+"And you--you hate it, too!" she sobbed. "They all hate it--
+Pierre--father--all--all hate it. It must--it must be bad. They
+hate her--every one--but me. And--I love her so!"
+
+Her slender form shook with sobs. For a moment Philip stood like
+one struck dumb. Then he sprang to her and caught her close in his
+arms.
+
+"Jeanne--Jeanne--listen," he cried. "To-night I looked at that
+picture before I went to see your father, and I loved it because
+it is like you. Jeanne, my darling, I love you--I love you--"
+
+She was panting against his breast. He covered her face with
+kisses. Her sweet lips were not turned from him, and there filled
+her eyes a sudden light that made him almost sob in his happiness.
+
+"I love you, I love you," he repeated, again and again, and he
+could find no other words than those.
+
+For an instant her arms clung about his shoulders, and then,
+suddenly, they strained against him, and she tore herself free,
+and, with a cry so pathetic that it seemed as though her heart had
+broken in that moment, she fled from him, and out of the room.
+
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+
+Philip stood where Jeanne had left him, his arms half reaching out
+to the vacant door through which she had fled, his lips parted as
+if to call her name, and yet motionless, dumb. A moment before he
+was intoxicated by a joy that was almost madness. He had held
+Jeanne in his arms; he had looked into her eyes, filled with
+surrender under his caresses and his avowal of love. For a moment
+he had possessed her, and now he was alone. The cry that had wrung
+itself from her lips, breaking in upon his happiness like a blow,
+still rang in his ears, and there was something in the exquisite
+pain of it that left him in torment. Heart and soul, every drop of
+blood in him, had leaped in the joy of that glorious moment, when
+Jeanne's eyes and sweet lips had accepted his love, and her arms
+had clung about his shoulders. Now these things had been struck
+dead within him. He felt again the fierce pressure of Jeanne's
+arms as she had thrust him away, he saw the fright and torture
+that had leaped into her eyes as she sprang from him, as though
+his touch had suddenly become a sacrilege. He lowered his arms
+slowly, and went to the hall. It was empty. He heard no sound, and
+closed the door.
+
+It was so still that he could hear the excited throbbing of his
+own heart. He looked at the picture again, and a strange fancy
+impressed him with the idea that it was no longer smiling at him,
+but that its eyes were turned to the door through which Jeanne had
+disappeared. He moved his position, and the illusion was gone. It
+was Jeanne looking down upon him again, an older and happier
+Jeanne than the one whom he loved. For the first time he examined
+it closely. In one corner of the canvas he found the artist's
+name, Bourret, and after it the date, 1888. Could it be the
+picture of Jeanne's mother? He told himself that it was
+impossible, for Jeanne's mother had been found dead in the snow,
+five years later than the date of the canvas, and Pierre, the
+half-breed, had buried her somewhere out on the barren, so that
+she was a mystery to all but him. Even the master of Fort o' God,
+to whom he had brought the child, had never seen the woman upon
+whose cold breast Pierre had found the little Jeanne.
+
+With nervous hands he replaced the picture with its face to the
+wall, and began to pace up and down the room, wondering if
+D'Arcambal would send for him. He had hope of seeing Jeanne again
+that night. He felt sure that she had gone to her room, and that
+even D'Arcambal might not know that he was alone. In that event he
+had a long night ahead of him, filled with hours of sleeplessness
+and torment. He waited for three-quarters of an hour, and then the
+idea came to him that he might discover some plausible excuse for
+seeking out his host. He was about to act upon this mental
+suggestion when he heard a low rustling in the hall, followed by a
+distinct and yet timid knock. It was not a man's knock, and filled
+with the hope that Jeanne had returned, Philip hastened to the
+door and opened it.
+
+He heard soft footsteps retreating rapidly down the hall, but the
+lights were out, and he could see nothing. Something had fallen at
+his feet, and he bent down to pick it up. The object was a small,
+square envelope; and re-entering his room he saw his own name
+written across it in Jeanne's delicate hand. His heart beat with
+hope as he opened the note. What he read brought a gray pallor
+into his face:
+
+MONSIEUR PHILIP,--If you cannot forget what I have done, please at
+least try to forgive me. No woman in the world could value your
+love more than I, for circumstances have proven to me the strength
+and honor of the man who gives it. And yet it is as impossible for
+me to accept it as it would be for me to give up Fort o' God, my
+father, or my life, though I cannot tell you why. And this, I
+know, you will not ask. After what has happened to-night it will
+be impossible for me to see you again, and I must ask you, as one
+who values your friendship among the highest things in my life, to
+leave Fort o' God. No one must know what has passed between us.
+You will go--in the morning. And with you there will always be my
+prayers.
+
+JEANNE.
+
+The paper dropped from between Philip's fingers and fell to the
+floor. Three or four times in his life Philip had received blows
+that had made him sick--physical blows. He felt now as though one
+of these blows had descended upon him, turning things black before
+his eyes. He staggered to the big chair and dropped into it,
+staring at the bit of white paper on the floor. If one had spoken
+to him he would not have heard. Gregson, in these moments, might
+have laughed a little nervously, smoked innumerable cigarettes,
+and laid plans for a continuance of the battle to-morrow. But
+Philip was a fighter of men, and not of women. He had declared his
+love, he had laid open his soul to Jeanne, and to a heart like his
+own, simple in its language, boundless in its sincerity, this was
+all that could be done. Jeanne's refusal of his love was the end--
+for him. He accepted his fate without argument. In an instant he
+would have fought ten men--a hundred, naked-handed, if such a
+fight would have given him a chance of winning Jeanne; he would
+have died, laughing, happy, if it had been in a struggle for her.
+But Jeanne herself had dealt him the blow.
+
+For a long time he sat motionless in the chair facing the picture
+on the wall. Then he rose to his feet, picked up the note, and
+went to one of the little square windows that looked out into the
+night. The moon had risen, and the sky was full of stars. He knew
+that he was looking into the north, for the pale shimmer of the
+aurora was in his face. He saw the black edge of the spruce
+forest; the barren stretched out, pale and ghostly, into the night
+shadows.
+
+He made an effort to open the window, but it was wedged tightly in
+its heavy sill. He crossed the room, opened the door, and went
+silently down the hall to the door through which Pierre had led
+him a few hours before. It was not locked, and he passed out into
+the night. The fresh air was like a tonic, and he walked swiftly
+out into the moonlit spaces, until he found himself in the deep
+shadow of the Sun Rock that towered like a sentinel giant above
+his head. He made his way around its huge base, and then stopped,
+close to where they had landed in the canoe. There was another
+canoe drawn up beside Pierre's, and two figures stood out clear in
+the moonlight.
+
+One of these was a man, the other a woman, and as Philip stopped,
+wondering at the scene, the man advanced to the woman and caught
+her in his embrace. He heard a voice, low and expostulating, which
+sounded like Otille's, and in spite of his own misery Philip
+smiled at this other love which had found its way to Fort o' God.
+He turned back softly, leaving the lovers as he had found them;
+but he had scarce taken half a dozen steps when he heard other
+steps, and saw that the girl had left her companion and was
+hurrying toward him. He drew back close into the shadow of the
+rock to avoid possible discovery, and the girl passed through the
+moonlight almost within arm's reach of him. At that moment his
+heart ceased to beat. He choked back the groaning cry that rose to
+his lips. It was not Otille who passed him. It was Jeanne.
+
+In another moment she was gone. The man had shoved his canoe into
+the narrow stream, and was already lost in the gloom. Then, and
+not until then, did the cry of torture fall from Philip. And as if
+in echo to it he heard the sobbing break of another voice, and
+stepping out into the moonlight he stood face to face with Pierre
+Couchee.
+
+It was Pierre who spoke first.
+
+"I am sorry, M'sieur," he whispered, hoarsely. "I know that it has
+broken your heart. And mine, too, is crushed."
+
+Something in the half-breed's face, in the choking utterance of
+his voice, struck Philip as new and strange. He had seen the eyes
+of dying animals filled with the wild pain that glowed in
+Pierre's, and suddenly he reached out and gripped the other's
+hand, and they stood staring into each other's face. In that look,
+the cold grip of their hands, the strife in their eyes, the bare
+truth revealed itself.
+
+"And you, too--you love her, Pierre," said Philip.
+
+"Yes, I love her, M'sieur," replied Pierre, softly. "I love her,
+not as a brother, but as a man whose heart is broken."
+
+"Now--I understand," said Philip.
+
+He dropped Pierre's hand, and his voice was cold and lifeless.
+
+"I received a note--from her, asking me to leave Fort o' God in
+the morning," he went on, looking from Pierre out beyond the rock
+into the white barren. "I will go to-night."
+
+"It is best," said Pierre.
+
+"I have left nothing in Fort o' God, so there is no need of even
+returning to my room," continued Philip. "Jeanne will understand,
+but you must tell her father that a messenger came suddenly from
+Blind Indian Lake, and that I thought it best to leave without
+awakening him. "Will you guide me for a part of the distance,
+Pierre?"
+
+"I will go with you the whole way, M'sieur. It is only twenty
+miles, ten by canoe, ten by land."
+
+They said no more, but both went to the canoe, and were quickly
+lost in the gloom into which the other canoe had disappeared a few
+minutes ahead of them. They saw nothing of this canoe, and when
+they came to the Churchill Pierre headed the birch-bark down-
+stream. For two hours not a word passed between them. At the end
+of that time the half-breed turned in to shore.
+
+"We take the trail here, M'sieur," he explained.
+
+He went on ahead, walking swiftly, and now and then when Philip
+caught a glimpse of his face he saw in it a despair as great as
+his own. The trail led along the backbone of a huge ridge, and
+then twisted down into a broad plain; and across this they
+traveled, one after the other, two moving, silent shadows in a
+desolation that seemed without end. Beyond the plain there rose
+another ridge, and half an hour after they had struck the top of
+it Pierre halted, and pointed off into the ghostly world of light
+and shadow that lay at their feet.
+
+"Your camp is on the other side of this plain, M'sieur," he said.
+"Do you recognize the country?"
+
+"I have hunted along this ridge," replied Philip. "It is only
+three miles from here, and I will strike a beaten trail half a
+mile out yonder. A thousand thanks, Pierre."
+
+He held out his hand.
+
+"Good-by, M'sieur."
+
+"Good-by, Pierre."
+
+Their voices trembled. Their hands gripped hard. A choking lump
+rose in Philip's throat, and Pierre turned away. He disappeared
+slowly in the gray gloom, and Philip went down the side of the
+mountain. From the plain below he looked back. For an instant he
+saw Pierre drawn like a silhouette against the sky.
+
+"Good-by, Pierre," he shouted.
+
+"Good-by, M'sieur" came back faintly.
+
+Light and silence dropped about them.
+
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+
+To be alone, even after the painful parting with Pierre, was in
+one way a relief to Philip, for with the disappearance of the
+lonely half-breed over the mountain there had gone from him the
+last physical association that bound him to Jeanne and her people.
+With Pierre at his side, Jeanne was still with him; but now that
+Pierre was gone there came a change in him--one of those
+unaccountable transmutations of the mind which make the passing of
+yesterdays more like a short dream than a long and full reality.
+He walked slowly over the plain, and, when he came to the trail
+beaten by the hoofs of his own teams he followed it mechanically.
+In his measurement of things now, it seemed only a few hours since
+he had traveled over this trail on his way to Fort Churchill; it
+might, have been that morning, or the morning before. The weeks of
+his absence had passed with marvelous swiftness, now that he
+looked back upon them. They seemed short and trivial. And yet he
+knew that in those weeks he had lived more of his life than he had
+ever lived before, or would ever live again. For a brief spell
+life had been, filled with joy and hope--a promise of happiness
+which a single moment in the shadow of the Sun Rock had destroyed
+forever. He had seen Jeanne in another man's arms; he had read the
+confirmation of his fears in Pierre's grief-distorted face, in the
+strange tremble of his voice, in the words that he had spoken. He
+was sorry for Pierre. He would have been glad if that other man
+had been the lovable half-breed; if Jeanne, in the poetry of life
+and love, had given herself to the one who had saved the spark of
+life in her chilled little body years and years ago. And yet in
+his own grief he unconsciously rejoiced that it was a man like
+Pierre who suffered with him.
+
+This thought of Pierre strengthened him, and he walked faster, and
+breathed more deeply of the clear night air. He had lost in the
+fight for Jeanne as he had lost in many other fights; but, after
+all, there was another and bigger fight ahead of him, which he
+would begin to-morrow. Thoughts of his men, of his camps, and of
+this struggle through which he must pass to achieve success raised
+him above his depression, and stirred his blood with a growing
+exhilaration. And Jeanne--was she hopelessly lost to him? He dared
+to ask himself the question half an hour after he had separated
+from Pierre, and his mind flew back to the portrait-room where he
+had told Jeanne of his love, and where for a moment he had seen in
+her eyes and face the sweet surrender that had given him a glimpse
+of his paradise. But what did the sudden change mean? And after
+that--the scene in the starlight?
+
+A quickening of his pulse was the answer to these questions.
+Jeanne had told him there were only two men at Fort o' God, Pierre
+and her father. Then who could be this third? A lover, whom she
+met clandestinely? He shivered, and began loading his pipe as he
+walked. He was certain that the master of Fort o' God did not know
+of the tryst beyond the rock, and he was equally certain that the
+girl was unaware of Pierre's knowledge of the meeting. Pierre had
+remained hidden, like himself, and he had given Philip to
+understand that it was not the first time he had looked upon the
+meetings of Jeanne and the man they had seen from the shadow of
+the rock. And yet, in spite of all evidence, he could not lose
+faith in Jeanne.
+
+Suddenly he saw something ahead of him which changed for a moment
+the uncomfortable trend of his thoughts. It was a pale streak,
+rising above the level of the trail, and stretching diagonally
+across the plain to the east. With an exclamation of surprise
+Philip hastened his steps, and a moment later stood among the
+fresh workings of his men. When he had left for Churchill this
+streak, which was the last stretch of road-bed between them and
+the surveyed line of the Hudson's Bay Railway, had ended two miles
+to the south and west. In a little over a month MacDougall had
+pushed it on the trail, and well across it in the direction of
+Gray Beaver Lake. In that time he had accomplished a work which
+Philip had not thought possible to achieve that autumn. He had
+figured that the heavy snows of winter would cut them off at the
+trail. And MacDougall was beyond the trail, with three weeks to
+spare!
+
+Something rose up in his blood, warming him with an elation which
+sent him walking swiftly toward the end of the road-bed. A quarter
+of a mile out on the plain he came to the working end. About him
+were scattered half a dozen big scoop shovels and piles of working
+tools. The embers of a huge log fire still glowed where dinner had
+been cooked for the men. Philip stood for a few moments, looking
+off into the distance. Another mile and a half out there was the
+Gray Beaver, and from the Gray Beaver there lay the unbroken
+waterway to the point of their conjunction with the railway coming
+up from the south. A sudden idea occurred to Philip. If MacDougall
+had built two and a quarter miles of road-bed in five weeks they
+could surely complete this other mile and a half before winter
+stopped them. In that event, they would have fifteen miles of
+road, linking seven lakes, which would give them a splendid winter
+trail for men, teams, and dogs to the Gray Beaver. And from the
+Gray Beaver they would have smooth ice for twenty miles, to the
+new road. He had not planned to begin fishing operations until
+spring, but he could see no reason now why they should not
+commence that winter, setting their nets through the ice. At
+Lobstick Creek, where the new road would reach them sometime in
+April or May, they could freeze their fish and keep them in
+storage. Five hundred tons in stock, and perhaps a thousand, would
+not be a bad beginning. It would mean from forty to eighty
+thousand dollars, a half of which could be paid out in dividends.
+
+He turned back, whistling softly. There was new life in him,
+burning for action. He was eager to see MacDougall, and he hoped
+that Brokaw would not be long in reaching Blind Indian Lake.
+Before he reached the trail he was planning the accommodation
+stations, where men and animals could find shelter. There would be
+one on the shore of the Gray Beaver, and from there he would build
+them at regular intervals of five miles on the ice.
+
+He had come to the trail, and was about to turn in the direction
+of the camp, when he saw a shadowy figure making its way slowly
+across the plain which he had traversed half an hour before. The
+manner in which this person was following in his footsteps,
+apparently with extreme caution, caused Philip to move quickly
+behind the embankment of the road-bed. Two or three minutes later
+a man crossed into view. Philip could not see his face distinctly,
+but by the tired droop of the stranger's shoulders and his
+shuffling walk he guessed that what he had first taken for caution
+was in reality the tedious progress of a man nearing exhaustion.
+He wondered how he had missed him in his own journey over the
+trail from the ridge mountains, for he had made twice the progress
+of the stranger, and must surely have passed him somewhere within
+the last mile or so. The fact that the man had come from the
+direction of Fort o' God, that he was exhausted, and that he had
+evidently concealed himself a little way back to avoid discovery,
+led Philip to cut out diagonally across the plain so that he could
+follow him and keep him in sight without being observed. Twice in
+the next mile the nocturnal traveler stopped to rest, but no
+sooner had he reached the first scattered shacks of the camp than
+he quickened his steps, darting quickly among the shadows, and
+then stopped at last before the door of a small log cabin within a
+pistol-shot of Philip's own headquarters. The cabin was newly
+built, and Philip gave a low whistle of surprise as he noted its
+location. He had, to a certain degree, isolated his own camp home,
+building it a couple of hundred yards back from the shore of the
+lake, where most of the other cabins were erected. This new cabin
+was still a hundred yards farther back, half hidden in a growth of
+spruce. He heard the click of a key in a lock and the opening and
+closing of a door. A moment later a light flared dimly against a
+curtained window.
+
+Philip hurried across the open to the cabin occupied by himself
+and MacDougall, the engineer. He tried the door, but it was
+barred. Then he knocked loudly, and continued knocking until a
+light appeared within. He heard the Scotchman's voice, close to
+the door.
+
+"Who's there?" it demanded.
+
+"None of your business!" retorted Philip, falling into the error
+of a joke at the welcome sound of MacDougall's voice. "Open up!"
+
+A bar slipped within. The door opened slowly. Philip thrust
+himself against it and entered. In the pale light of the lamp he
+was confronted by the red face of MacDougall, and a pair of little
+eyes that gleamed menacingly. And on a line with MacDougall's face
+was an ugly-looking revolver.
+
+Philip stopped with a sudden uncomfortable thrill. MacDougall
+lowered his gun.
+
+"Lord preserve us, but that's the time you almost drew a
+perforation!" he exclaimed. "It isn't safe to cut-up in these
+diggings any more--not with Sandy MacDougall!"
+
+He held out a hand with a relieved laugh, and the two men shook in
+a grip that made their fingers ache.
+
+"Is this the way you welcome all of your friends, Mac?"
+
+MacDougall shrugged his shoulders and laid his gun on a table in
+the center of the room.
+
+"Can't say that I've got a friend left in camp," he said, with a
+curious grimace. "What in thunder do you mean, Phil? I've tried to
+reason something out of it, but I can't!"
+
+Philip was hanging up his cap and coat on one of a number of
+wooden pegs driven into the long wall. He turned quickly.
+
+"Reason something out of what?" he said.
+
+"Your instructions from Churchill," replied MacDougall, picking up
+a big, black-bowled pipe from the table.
+
+Philip sat down with a restful sigh, crossed his legs, loaded his
+pipe, and lighted it.
+
+"Thought I made myself lucid enough, even for a Scotchman, Sandy,"
+he said. "I learned at Churchill that the big fight is going to be
+pulled off mighty soon. It's about time for the fireworks. So I
+told you to put the sub-camps in fighting shape, and arm every
+responsible man in this camp. There's going to be a whole lot of
+gun-work before you're many days older. Great Scott, man, don't
+you understand NOW? What's the matter?"
+
+MacDougall was staring at him as if struck dumb.
+
+"You told me--to arm--the camps?" he gasped.
+
+"Yes, I sent you full instructions two weeks ago."
+
+"MacDougall tapped his forehead suspiciously with a stubby
+forefinger.
+
+"You're mad--or trying to pull off a poor brand of joke!" he
+exclaimed. "If you're dreaming, come out of it. Look here, Phil,"
+he cried, a little heatedly, "I've been having a hell of a time
+since you left the camp, and I want to talk seriously."
+
+It was Philip who stared now. He fairly thrust himself upon the
+engineer.
+
+"Do you mean to say you didn't get my letter telling you to put
+the camps in fighting shape?"
+
+"No, I didn't get it," said MacDougall. "But I got the other."
+
+"There was no other!"
+
+MacDougall jumped to his feet, darted to his bunk, and came back a
+moment later with a letter. He thrust it almost fiercely into
+Philip's hands. A sweat broke out upon his face as he saw its
+effect upon his companion. Philip's face was deadly pale when he
+looked up from the letter.
+
+"My God! you haven't done this?" he gasped.
+
+"What else could I do?" demanded MacDougall. "It's down there in
+black and white, isn't it? It charges me to outfit six prospecting
+parties of ten men each, arm every man with a rifle and revolver,
+victual them for two months, and send them to the points named
+there. That letter came ten days ago, and the last party, under
+Tom Billinger, has been gone a week. You told me to send your very
+best men, and I have. It has fairly stripped the camp of the men
+we depended upon, and there are hardly enough guns left to kill
+meat with."
+
+"I didn't write this letter," said Philip, looking hard at
+MacDougall. "The signature is a fraud. The letter which I sent to
+you, revealing my discoveries at Churchill, has been intercepted
+and replaced by this. Do you know what it means?"
+
+MacDougall was speechless. His square jaw was set like an iron
+clamp, his heavy hands doubled into knots on his knees.
+
+"It means--fight," continued Philip. "To-night--to-morrow--at any
+moment now. I can't guess why the blow hasn't fallen before this."
+
+He quickly related to MacDougall the chief facts he had gathered
+at Fort Churchill. When he had finished, the young Scotchman
+reached over to the table, seized his revolver, and held the butt
+end of it out to Philip.
+
+"Pump me full of lead--for God's sake, do, Phil," he pleaded.
+
+Philip laughed, and gripped his hand.
+
+"Not while I need a few fighters like yourself, Sandy," he
+objected. "We're on to the game in time. By to-morrow morning
+we'll be prepared for the war. We haven't an hour--perhaps not a
+minute--to lose. How many men can you get hold of to-night whom we
+can depend upon to fight?"
+
+"Ten or a dozen, no more. The road gang that we were expecting up
+from the Grand Trunk Pacific came three days after you started for
+Churchill--twenty-eight of 'em. They're a tough-looking outfit,
+but devilish good workers. I believe you could HIRE that gang to
+do anything. They won't take a word from me. It's all up to
+Thorpe, the foreman who brought 'em up, and they won't obey an
+order unless it comes through him. Thorpe could get them to fight,
+but they haven't anything to fight with, except a few knives. I've
+got eight guns left, and I can scrape up eight men who'll handle
+them for the glory of it. Thorpe's gang would be mighty handy in
+close quarters, if it came to that."
+
+MacDougall moved restlessly, and ran a hand through his tawny
+hair.
+
+"I almost wish we hadn't invited that bunch up here," he added.
+"They look to me like a lot of dollar thugs, but they work like
+horses. Never saw such men with the shovel and pick. And fight?
+They've cleaned up on a half of the men in camp. If we can get
+Thorpe--"
+
+"We'll see him to-night," interrupted Philip. "Or to be correct,
+this morning. It's one o'clock. How long will it take to round up
+our best men?"
+
+"Half an hour," said MacDougall, promptly, jumping to his feet.
+"There are Roberts, Henshaw, Tom Cassidy, Lecault, the Frenchman,
+and the two St. Pierre brothers. They're all crack gun-men. Give
+'em each an automatic and they're worth twenty ordinary men."
+
+A few moments later MacDougall extinguished the light, and the two
+men left the cabin. Philip drew his companion's attention to the
+dimly lighted window of the cabin to which he had followed the
+stranger a short time before,
+
+"That's Thorpe's," said the young engineer. "I haven't seen him
+since morning. Guess he must be up."
+
+"We'll sound him first," said Philip, starting off.
+
+At MacDougall's knock there was a moment's silence inside, then
+heavy footsteps, and the door was flung open. Sandy entered,
+followed by Philip. Thorpe stepped back. He was of medium height,
+yet so athletically built that he gave the impression of being two
+inches taller than he actually was. He was smooth-shaven, and his
+hair and eyes were black. His whole appearance was that of a
+person infinitely superior to what Philip had expected to find in
+the gang-foreman. His first words, and the manner in which they
+were spoken, added to this impression.
+
+"Good evening, gentlemen."
+
+"Good morning," replied MacDougall, nodding toward Philip. "This
+is Mr. Whittemore, Thorpe. We saw your light, and thought you
+wouldn't mind a call."
+
+Philip and Thorpe shook hands.
+
+"Just in time to have a cup of coffee," invited Thorpe,
+pleasantly, motioning toward a steaming pot on the stove. "I just
+got in from a long hike out over the new road-bed. Been looking
+the ground over along the north shore of the Gray Beaver, and was
+so interested that I didn't start for home until dark. Won't you
+draw up, gentlemen? There are mighty few who can beat me at making
+coffee."
+
+MacDougall had noted a sudden change in Philip's face, and as
+Thorpe hastened to lift the over-boiling pot from the stove he saw
+his chief make a quick movement toward a small table, and pick up
+an object which looked like a bit of cloth. In an instant Philip
+had hidden it in the palm of his hand. A flush leaped into his
+cheeks. A strange fire burned in his eyes when Thorpe turned.
+
+"I'm afraid we can't accept your hospitality," he said. "I'm
+tired, and want to get to bed. In passing, however, I couldn't
+refrain from dropping in to compliment you on the remarkable work
+your men are doing out on the plain. It's splendid."
+
+"They're good men," said Thorpe, quietly. "Pretty wild, but good
+workers."
+
+He followed them to the door. Outside, Philip's voice trembled
+when he spoke to MacDougall.
+
+"You go for the others, and bring them to the office, Sandy," he
+said. "I said nothing to Thorpe because I have no confidence in
+liars, and Thorpe is a liar. He was not out to the Gray Beaver to-
+day; for I saw him when he came in--from the opposite direction.
+He is a liar, and he will bear watching. Mind that, Sandy. Keep
+your eyes on this man Thorpe. And keep your eyes on his gang.
+Hustle the others over to the office as soon as you can."
+
+They separated, and Philip returned to the cabin which they had
+left a few minutes before. He relighted the lamp, and with a sharp
+gasp in his breath held out before his eyes the object which he
+had taken from Thorpe's table. He knew now why Thorpe had come
+from over the mountains that night, why he was exhausted, and why
+he had lied. He clasped his head between his hands, scarcely
+believing the evidence of his eyes. A deeper breath, almost a
+moan, fell from his twisted lips. For he had discovered that
+Thorpe, the gang-foreman, was Jeanne's lover. In his hand he held
+the dainty handkerchief, embroidered in blue, which he had seen in
+Jeanne's possession earlier that evening--crumpled and discolored,
+still damp with her tears!
+
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+
+For many minutes Philip did not move, or look from the bit of damp
+fabric which be held between his fingers. His heart was chilled.
+He felt sick. Each moment added to the emotion which was growing
+in him, an emotion which was a composite of disgust and of
+anguish. Jeanne--Thorpe! An eternity of difference seemed to lie
+between those two--Jeanne, with her tender beauty, her sweet life,
+her idyllic dreams, and Thorpe, the gang-driver! In his own soul
+he had made a shrine for Jeanne, and from his knees he had looked
+up at her, filled with the knowledge of his own unworthiness. He
+had worshiped her, as Dante might have worshiped Beatrice. To him
+she was the culmination of all that was sweet and lovable in
+woman, transcendently above him. And from this love, this worship
+of his, she had gone that very night to Thorpe, the gang-man. He
+shivered. Going to the stove he thrust in a handful of paper,
+dropped the handkerchief in with it, and set the whole on fire.
+
+A few moments later the door opened and MacDougall came in. He was
+followed by the two swarthy-faced St. Pierres, the camp huntsmen.
+Philip shook hands with them, and they passed after the engineer
+through a narrow door leading into a room which was known as the
+camp office, Cassidy, Henshaw, and the others followed within the
+next ten minutes. There was not a man among them whose eyes
+faltered when Philip put up his proposition to them. As briefly as
+possible he told them a part of what he had previously revealed to
+MacDougall, and frankly conceded that the preservation of property
+and life in the camp depended almost entirely upon them.
+
+"You're not the sort of men to demand pay in a pinch like this,"
+he finished, "and that's just the reason I've confidence enough in
+you to ask for your support. There are fifty men in camp whom we
+could hire to fight, but I don't want hired fighters. I don't want
+men who will run at the crack of a few rifles, but men who are
+willing to die with their boots on. I won't offer you money for
+this, because I know you too well. But from this hour on you're
+going to be a part of the Great Northern Fish and Development
+Company, and as soon as the certificates can be signed I'm going
+to turn over a hundred shares of stock to each of you. Remember
+that this isn't pay. It's simply a selfish scheme of mine to make
+you a part of the company. There are eight of us. Give us each an
+automatic and I'll wager that there isn't a combination in this
+neck of the woods strong enough to do us up."
+
+In the pale light of the two oil-lamps the men's faces glowed with
+enthusiasm. Cassidy was the first to grip Philip's hand in a
+pledge of fealty.
+
+"When hell freezes over, we're licked," he said. "Where's me
+automatic?"
+
+MacDougall brought in the guns and ammunition.
+
+"In the morning we will begin the erection of a new building close
+to this one," said Philip. "There is no reason for the building,
+but that will give me an excuse for keeping you men together on
+one job, within fifty feet of your guns, which we can keep in this
+room. Only four men need work at a shift, and I'll put Cassidy in
+charge of the operations, if that is satisfactory to the others.
+We'll have a couple of new bunks put in here so that four men can
+stay with MacDougall and me every night. The other four, who are
+not on the working shift, can hunt not far from the camp, and keep
+their eyes peeled. Does that look good?"
+
+"Can't be beat," said Henshaw, throwing open the breech of his
+gun. "Shall we load?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+The room became ominous with the metallic click of loaded
+cartridge clips and the hard snap of released chambers.
+
+Five minutes later Philip stood alone with MacDougall. The loaded
+rifles, each with a filled cartridge belt hanging over the muzzle,
+were arranged in a row along one of the walls.
+
+"I'll stake everything I've got on those men," he exclaimed. "Mac,
+did it ever strike you that when you want REAL men you ought to
+come north for them? Every one of those fellows is a northerner,
+except Cassidy, and he's a fighter by birth. They'll die before
+they go back on their word."
+
+MacDougall rubbed his hands and laughed softly.
+
+"What next, Phil?"
+
+"We must send the swiftest man you've got in camp after Billinger,
+and get word to the other parties you sent out as quickly as we
+can. They'll probably get in too late. Billinger may arrive in
+time."
+
+"He's been gone a week. It's doubtful if we can get him back
+within three," said MacDougall. "I'll send St. Pierre's cousin,
+that young Crow Feather, after him as soon as he can get a pack
+ready. You'd better go to bed, Phil. You look like a dead man."
+
+Philip was not sure that he could sleep, notwithstanding the
+physical strain he had been under during the past twenty-four
+hours. He was filled with a nervous desire for continued action.
+Only action kept him from thinking of Jeanne and Thorpe. After
+MacDougall had gone to stir up young Crow Feather he undressed and
+stretched out in his bunk, hoping that the Scotchman would soon
+return. Not until he closed his eyes did he realize how tired he
+was. MacDougall came in an hour later, and Philip was asleep. It
+was nine o'clock when he awoke. He went to the cook's shanty, ate
+a hot breakfast of griddle-cakes and bacon, drank a pint of strong
+coffee, and hunted up MacDougall. Sandy was just coming from
+Thorpe's house.
+
+"He's a queer guinea, that Thorpe," said the engineer, after their
+first greeting. "He doesn't pretend to do a pound's work. Notice
+his hands when you see him again, Phil. They look as though he had
+been drumming a piano all his life. But love o' mighty, how he
+does make the OTHERS work. You want to go over and see his gang
+throw dirt."
+
+"That's where I'm going," said Philip. "Is Thorpe at home?"
+
+"Just leaving. There he is now!"
+
+At MacDougall's whistle Thorpe turned and waited for Philip.
+
+"Goin' over?" he asked, pleasantly, when Philip came up.
+
+"Yes. I want to see how your men work without a leader," replied
+Philip. He paused for a moment to light his pipe, and pointed to a
+group of men down on the lake shore. "See that gang?" he asked.
+"They're building a scow. Take away their foreman and they
+wouldn't be worth their grub. They're men we brought up from
+Winnipeg."
+
+Thorpe was rolling a cigarette. Under his arm he held a pair of
+light gloves.
+
+"Mine are different," he laughed, quietly.
+
+"I know that," rejoined Philip, watching the skill of his long
+white fingers. "That's why I want to see them in action, when
+you're away."
+
+"My policy is to know to a cubic foot what a certain number of men
+are capable of doing in a certain time," explained Thorpe, as they
+walked toward the plain. "My next move is to secure the men who
+will achieve the result, whether I am present or not. That done,
+my work is done. Simple, isn't it?"
+
+There was something likable about Thorpe. Even in his present mood
+Philip could not but concede that. He was surprised in Thorpe, in
+more ways than one. His voice was low, and filled with a certain
+companionable quality that gave one confidence in him immediately.
+He was apparently a man of education and of some little culture,
+in spite of his vocation, which usually possesses a vocabulary of
+its own as hard as rock. But Philip's greatest surprise came when
+he regarded Thorpe's personal appearance. He judged that he was
+past forty, perhaps forty-five, and the thought made him shudder
+inwardly. He was twice--almost three times--as old as Jeanne. And
+yet there was about him something irresistibly attractive, a
+fascination which had its influence upon Philip himself. His nails
+dug into tie flesh of his hands when he thought of this man--and
+Jeanne.
+
+Thorpe's gang was hard at work when they came to the end of the
+rock-bed. Scarcely a man seemed to take notice when he appeared.
+There was one exception, a wiry, red-faced little man who raised a
+hand to his cap when he saw the foreman.
+
+"That's the sub-foreman," explained Thorpe. "He answers to me."
+The little man had given a signal, and Thorpe added, "Excuse me
+for a moment. He's got something on his mind."
+
+He drew a few steps aside, and Philip walked along the line of
+laboring-men. He grinned and nodded to them, one after another.
+MacDougall was right. They were the toughest lot of men he had
+ever seen in one gang.
+
+Loud voices turned him about, and he saw that Thorpe and the sub-
+foreman had approached a huge, heavy-shouldered man, with whom
+they seemed to be in serious altercation. Two or three of the
+workmen had drawn near, and Thorpe's voice rang out clear and
+vibrant.
+
+"You'll do that, Blake, or you'll shoulder your kit back home. And
+what goes with you goes with your clique. I know your kind, and
+you can't worry me. Take that pick and dig--or hike. There's no
+two ways about it."
+
+Philip could not hear what the big man said, but suddenly Thorpe's
+fist shot out and struck him fairly on the jaw. In another instant
+Thorpe had jumped back, and was facing half a dozen angry,
+threatening men. He had drawn a revolver, and his white teeth
+gleamed in a cool and menacing smile.
+
+"Think it over, boys," he said, quietly. "And if you're not
+satisfied come in and draw your pay this noon. We'll furnish you
+with outfits and plenty of grub if you don't like the work up
+here. I don't care to hold men like you to your contracts."
+
+He came to meet Philip, as though nothing unusual had happened.
+
+"That will delay the completion of our work for a week at least,"
+he said, as he thrust his revolver into a holster hidden under his
+coat. "I've been expecting trouble with Blake and four or five of
+his pals for some time. I'm glad it's over. Blake threatens a
+strike unless I give him a sub-foremanship and increase the men's
+wages from six to ten dollars a day. Think of it. A strike--up
+here! It would be the beginning of history, wouldn't it?"
+
+He laughed softly, and Philip laughed from sheer admiration of the
+man's courage.
+
+"You think they'll go?" he asked, anxiously.
+
+"I'm sure of it," replied Thorpe. "It's the best thing that can
+happen."
+
+An hour later Philip was back in camp. He did not see Thorpe again
+until after dinner, and then the gang-foreman hunted him up. His
+face wore a worried look.
+
+"It's a little worse than I expected," he said. "Blake and eight
+others came in for their pay and outfits this noon. I didn't think
+that more than three or four would have the nerve to quit."
+
+"I'll furnish you with men to take their places," said Philip.
+
+"There's the hitch," replied Thorpe, rolling a cigarette. "I want
+my men to work by themselves. Put half a dozen of your amateur
+road-men among them and it will mean twenty per cent. less work
+done, and perhaps trouble. They're a tough lot. I concede that.
+I've thought of a way to offset the loss of Blake and the others.
+We can set a gang of your men at work over at Gray Beaver Lake,
+and they can build up to meet us."
+
+Philip saw MacDougall soon after his short talk with Thorpe. The
+engineer did not disguise his pleasure at the turn which affairs
+had taken.
+
+"I'm glad they're going," he declared. "If there's to be trouble
+I'll feel easier with that bunch out of camp. I'd give my next
+month's salary if Thorpe would take his whole outfit back where
+they came from. They're doing business with the road-bed all
+right, but I don't like the idea of having 'em around when there
+are throats to be cut, one side or t'other."
+
+Philip did not see Thorpe again that day. He selected his men for
+the Gray Beaver work, and in the afternoon despatched a messenger
+over the Fort Churchill route to meet Brokaw. He was confident
+that Brokaw and his daughter would show up during the next few
+days, but at the same time he instructed the messenger to go to
+Churchill if he should not meet them on the way. Other men he sent
+to recall the prospecting parties outfitted by MacDougall. Early
+in the evening the St. Pierres, Lecault, and Henshaw joined him
+for a few minutes in the office. During the day the four had done
+scout work five miles on all sides of the camp. Lecault had shot a
+moose three miles to the south, and had hung up the meat. One of
+the St. Pierres saw Blake and his gang on the way to the
+Churchill. Beyond these two incidents they brought in no news. A
+little later MacDougall brought in two other men whom he could
+trust, and armed them with muzzle-loaders. They were the two last
+guns in the camp.
+
+With ten men constantly prepared for attack, Philip began to feel
+that he had the situation well in hand. It would be practically
+impossible for his enemies to surprise the camp, and after their
+first day's scout duty the men on the trail would always be within
+sound of rifle-shots, even if they did not discover the advance of
+an attacking force in time to beat them to camp. In the event of
+one making such a discovery he was to signal the others by a
+series of shots, such as one might fire at a running moose.
+
+Philip found it almost impossible to fight back his thoughts of
+Jeanne. During the two or three days that followed the departure
+of Blake he did not allow himself an hour's rest from early dawn
+until late at night. Each night he went to bed exhausted, with the
+hope that sleep would bury his grief. The struggle wore upon him,
+and the faithful MacDougall began to note the change in his
+comrade's face. The fourth day Thorpe disappeared and did not show
+up again until the following morning. Every hour of his absence
+was like the stab of a knife in Philip's heart, for he knew that
+the gang-foreman had gone to see Jeanne. Three days later the
+visit was repeated, and that night MacDougall found Philip in a
+fever.
+
+"You're overdoing," he told him. "You're not in bed five hours out
+of the twenty-four. Cut it out, or you'll be in the hospital
+instead of in the fighting line when the big show comes to town."
+
+Days of mental agony and of physical pain followed. Neither Philip
+nor MacDougall could understand the mysterious lack of
+developments. They had expected attack before this, and yet
+ceaseless scout work brought in no evidence of an approaching
+crisis. Neither could they understand the growing disaffection
+among Thorpe's men. The numerical strength of the gang dwindled
+from nineteen down to fifteen, from fifteen to twelve. At last
+Thorpe voluntarily asked Philip to cut his salary in two, because
+he could not hold his men. On that same day the little sub-foreman
+and two others left him, leaving only nine men at work. The delay
+in Brokaw's arrival was another puzzle to Philip. Two weeks
+passed, and in that time Thorpe left camp three times. On the
+fifteenth day the Fort Churchill messenger returned. He was
+astounded when he found that Brokaw was not in camp, and brought
+amazing news. Brokaw and his daughter had departed from Fort
+Churchill two days after Pierre had followed Jeanne and Philip.
+They had gone in two canoes, up the Churchill. He had seen no
+signs of them anywhere along the route.
+
+No sooner had he received the news than Philip sent the messenger
+after MacDougall. The Scotchman's red face stared at him blankly
+when he told him what had happened.
+
+"That's their first move in the real fight," said Philip, with a
+hard ring in his voice. "They've got Brokaw. Keep your men close
+from this hour on, Sandy. Hereafter let five of them sleep in our
+bunks during the day, and keep them awake during the night."
+
+Five days passed without a sign of an enemy.
+
+About eight o'clock on the night of the sixth MacDougall came into
+the office, where Philip was alone. The young Scotchman's usually
+florid face was white. He dropped a curse as he grasped the back
+of a chair with both hands. It was the third or fourth time that
+Philip had heard MacDougall swear.
+
+"Damn that Thorpe!" he cried, in a low voice.
+
+"What's up?" asked Philip, his muscles tightening.
+
+MacDougall viciously beat the ash from the bowl of his pipe.
+
+"I didn't want to worry you about Thorpe, so I've kept quiet about
+some things," he growled. "Thorpe brought up a load of whisky with
+him. I knew it was against the law you've set down for this camp,
+but I figured you were having trouble enough without getting you
+into a mix-up with him, so I didn't say anything. But this other--
+is damnable! Twice he's had a woman sneak in to visit him. She's
+there again to-night!"
+
+A choking, gripping sensation rose in Philip's throat. MacDougall
+was not looking, and did not see the convulsive twitching of the
+other's face, or the terrible light that shot for an instant into
+his eyes.
+
+"A woman--Mac--"
+
+"A YOUNG woman," said MacDougall, with emphasis. "I don't know who
+she is, but I do know that she hasn't a right there or she
+wouldn't sneak in like a thief. I'm going to be blunt--damned
+blunt. I think she's one of the other men's wives. There are half
+a dozen in camp."
+
+"Haven't you ever looked--to see if you could recognize her?"
+
+"Haven't had the chance," said MacDougall. "She's been wrapped up
+both times, and as it was none of my business I didn't lay in
+wait. But now--it's up to you!"
+
+Philip rose slowly. He felt cold. He put on his coat and cap, and
+buckled on his revolver. His face was deadly white when he turned
+to MacDougall.
+
+"She is over there to-night?"
+
+"Sneaked in not half an hour ago, I saw her come out of the edge
+of the spruce."
+
+"From the trail that leads out over the plain?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+Philip walked to the door.
+
+"I'm going over to call on Thorpe," he said, quietly. "I may not
+be back for some time, Sandy."
+
+In the deep shadows outside he stood gazing at the light in
+Thorpe's cabin. Then he walked slowly toward the spruce. He did
+not go to the door, but leaned with his back against the building,
+near one of the windows. The first shuddering sickness had gone
+from him. His temples throbbed. At the sound of a voice inside
+which was Thorpe's the chill in his blood turned to fire. The
+terrible fear that had fallen upon him at MacDougall's words held
+him motionless, and his brain worked upon but one idea--one
+determination. If it was Jeanne who came in this way, he would
+kill Thorpe. If it was another woman, he would give Thorpe that
+night to get out of the country. He waited. He heard the gang-
+man's voice frequently, once in a loud, half-mocking laugh. Twice
+he heard a lower voice--a woman's. For an hour he watched. He
+walked back and forth in the gloom of the spruce, and waited
+another hour. Then the light went out, and he slipped back to the
+corner of the cabin.
+
+After a moment the door opened, and a hooded figure came out, and
+walked rapidly toward the trail that buried itself amid the
+spruce. Philip ran around the cabin and followed. There was a
+little open beyond the first fringe of spruce, and in this he ran
+up silently from behind and overtook the one he was pursuing. As
+his hand fell upon her arm the woman turned upon him with a
+frightened cry. Philip's hand dropped. He took a step back.
+
+"My God! Jeanne--it is you!"
+
+His voice was husky, like a choking man's. For an instant Jeanne's
+white, terrified face met his own. And then, without a word to
+him, she fled swiftly down the trail.
+
+Philip made no effort to follow. For two or three minutes he stood
+like a man turned suddenly into hewn rock, staring with unseeing
+eyes into the gloom where Jeanne had disappeared. Then he walked
+back to the edge of the spruce. There he drew his revolver, and
+cocked it. The starlight revealed a madness in his face as he
+approached Thorpe's cabin. He was smiling, but it was such a smile
+as presages death; a smile as implacable as fate itself.
+
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+
+As Philip approached the cabin he saw a figure stealing away
+through the gloom. His first thought was that he had returned a
+minute too late to wreak his vengeance upon the gang-foreman in
+his own home, and he quickened his steps in pursuit. The man ahead
+of him was cutting direct for the camp supply-house, which was the
+nightly rendezvous of those who wished to play cards or exchange
+camp gossip. The supply-house, aglow with light, was not more than
+two hundred yards from Thorpe's, and Philip saw that if he dealt
+out the justice he contemplated he had not a moment to lose. He
+began to run, so quickly that he approached within a dozen paces
+of the man he was pursuing without being heard. It was not until
+then that he made a discovery which stopped him. The man ahead was
+not Thorpe. Suddenly, looking beyond him, he saw a second figure
+pass slowly through the lighted door of the supply-house. Even at
+that distance he recognized the gang-foreman. He thrust his
+revolver under his coat and fell a little farther behind the man
+he had mistaken for Thorpe so that when the latter passed within
+the small circle of light that came from the supply-house windows
+he was fifty instead of a dozen paces away. Something in the
+other's manner, something strangely and potently familiar in his
+slim, lithe form, in the quick, half-running movement of his body,
+drew a sharp breath from Philip. He was on the point of calling a
+name, but it died on his lips. A moment more and the man passed
+through the door. Philip was certain that it was Pierre Couchee
+who had followed Thorpe.
+
+He was filled with a sudden fear as he ran toward the store. He
+had scarcely crossed the threshold when a glance showed him Thorpe
+leaning upon a narrow counter, and Pierre close beside him. He saw
+that the half-breed was speaking, and Thorpe drew himself erect.
+Then, as quick as a flash, two things happened. Thorpe's hand went
+to his belt, Pierre's sent a lightning gleam of steel back over
+his shoulder. The terrible drive of the knife and the explosion of
+Thorpe's revolver came in the same instant. Thorpe crumpled back
+over the counter, clutching at his breast. Pierre turned about,
+staggering, and saw Philip. His eyes lighted up, and with a
+moaning cry he stretched out his arms as Philip sprang to him.
+Above the sudden tumult of men's feet and excited voices he gasped
+out Jeanne's name. Half a dozen men had crowded about them.
+Through the ring burst MacDougall, a revolver in his hand. Pierce
+had become a dead weight in Philip's arms.
+
+"Help me over to the cabin with him, Mac," he said. He looked
+around among the men. It struck him as curious, even then, that he
+saw none of Thorpe's gang. "Is Thorpe done for?" he asked.
+
+"He's dead," replied some one.
+
+With an effort Pierre opened his eyes.
+
+"Dead!" he breathed, and in that one word there was a tremble of
+joy and triumph.
+
+"Take Thorpe over to his cabin," commanded Philip, as he and
+MacDougall lifted Pierre between them. "I will answer for this
+man."
+
+They could hear Pierre's sobbing breath as they hurried across the
+open. They laid him on Philip's bunk and Pierre opened his eyes
+again. He looked at Philip.
+
+"M'sieur," he whispered, "tell me--quick--if I must die!"
+
+MacDougall had studied medicine and surgery before engineering,
+and took the place of camp physician. Philip drew back while he
+ripped open the half-breed's garments and bared his breast. Then
+he darted to his bunk for the satchel in which he kept his
+bandages and medicines, throwing off his coat as he went. Philip
+bent over Pierre. Blood was oozing slowly from the wounded man's
+right breast. Over his heart Philip noticed a blood-stained
+locket, fastened by a babiche string about his neck.
+
+Pierre's hands groped eagerly for Philip's.
+
+"M'sieur--you will tell me--if I must die?" he pleaded. "There are
+things you must know--about Jeanne--if I go. It will not hurt. I
+am not afraid. You will tell me--"
+
+"Yes," said Philip.
+
+He could scarcely speak, and while MacDougall was at work stood so
+that Pierre could not see his face. There was a sobbing note in
+Pierre's breath, and he knew what it meant. He had heard that same
+sound more than once when he had shot moose and caribou through
+the lungs. Five minutes later MacDougall straightened himself. He
+had done all that he could. Philip followed him to the back part
+of the room. Almost without sound his lips framed the words, "Will
+he die?"
+
+"Yes," said MacDougall. "There is no hope. He may last until
+morning."
+
+Philip took a stool and sat down beside Pierre. There was no fear
+in the wounded man's face. His eyes were clear. His voice was a
+little stronger.
+
+"I will die, M'sieur," he said, calmly.
+
+"I am afraid so, Pierre."
+
+Pierre's damp fingers closed about his own. His eyes shone softly,
+and he smiled.
+
+"It is best," he said, "and I am glad. I feel quite well. I will
+live for some time?"
+
+"Perhaps for a few hours, Pierre."
+
+"God is good to me," breathed Pierre, devoutly. "I thank Him. Are
+we alone?"
+
+"Do you wish to be alone?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+Philip motioned to MacDougall, who went into the little office
+room.
+
+"I will die," whispered Pierre, softly, as though he were
+achieving a triumph. "And everything would die with me, M'sieur,
+if I did not know that you love Jeanne, and that you will care for
+her when I am gone. M'sieur, I have told you that I love her. I
+have worshiped her, next to my God. I die happy, knowing that I am
+dying for her. If I had lived I would have suffered, for I love
+alone. She does not dream that my love is different from hers, for
+I have never told her. It would have given her pain. And you will
+never let her know. As Our Dear Lady is my witness, M'sieur, she
+has loved but one man, and that man is you."
+
+Pierre gave a great breath. A warm flood seemed suddenly to engulf
+Philip. Did he hear right? Could he believe? He fell upon his
+knees beside Pierre and brushed his dark hair back from his face.
+
+"Yes, I love her," he said, softly. "But I did not know that she
+loved me."
+
+"It is not strange," said Pierre, looking straight into his eyes.
+"But you will understand--now--M'sieur. I seem to have strength,
+and I will tell you all--from the beginning. Perhaps I have done
+wrong. You will know--soon. You remember Jeanne told you the story
+of the baby--of the woman frozen in the snow. That was the
+beginning of the long fight--for me. This--what I am about to tell
+you--will be sacred to you, M'sieur?"
+
+"As my life," said Philip.
+
+Pierre was silent for a few moments. He seemed to be gathering his
+thoughts, so that he could tell in few words the tragedy of years.
+Two brilliant spots burned in his cheeks, and the hand which
+Philip held was hot.
+
+"Years ago--twenty, almost--there came a man to Fort o' God," he
+began. "He was very young, and from the south. D'Arcambal was then
+middle-aged, but his wife was young and beautiful. Jeanne says
+that you saw her picture--against the wall. D'Arcambal worshiped
+her. She was his life. You understand what happened. The man from
+the south--the young wife--they went away together."
+
+Pierre coughed. A bit of blood reddened his lips. Philip wiped it
+away gently with his handkerchief, hiding the stain from Pierre's
+eyes.
+
+"Yes," he said, "I understand."
+
+"It broke D'Arcambal's heart," resumed Pierre. "He destroyed
+everything that had belonged to the woman. He turned her picture
+to the wall. His love turned slowly to hate. It was two years
+later that I came over the barrens one night and found Jeanne and
+her dead mother. The woman, M'sieur--Jeanne's mother--was
+D'Arcambal's wife. She was returning to Fort o' God, and God's
+justice overtook her almost at its doors. I carried little Jeanne
+to my Indian mother, and then made ready to carry the woman to her
+husband. It was then that a terrible thought came to me. Jeanne
+was not D'Arcambal's daughter. She was a part of the man who had
+stolen his wife. I worshiped the little Jeanne even then, and for
+her sake my mother and I swore secrecy, and buried the woman. Then
+we took the babe to Fort o' God as a stranger. We saved her. We
+saved D'Arcambal. No one ever knew."
+
+Pierre stopped for breath.
+
+"Was it best?"
+
+"It was glorious," said Philip, trembling.
+
+"It would have come out right--in the end--if the father had not
+returned," said Pierre. "I must hurry, M'sieur, for it hurts me
+now to talk. He came first a year ago, and revealed himself to
+Jeanne. He told her everything. D'Arcambal was rich; Jeanne and I
+both had money. He threatened--we bought him off. We fought to
+keep the terrible thing from D'Arcambal. Our money sent him away
+for a time. Then he returned. It was news of him I brought up the
+river to Jeanne--from Churchill. I offered to kill him--but Jeanne
+would not listen to that. But the Great God willed that I should.
+I killed him to-night--over there!"
+
+A great joy surged above the grief in Philip's heart. He could not
+speak, but pressed Pierre's hand harder, and looked into his
+glistening eyes.
+
+Pierre's next words broke his silence, and wrung a low cry from
+his lips.
+
+"M'sieur, this man Thorpe--Jeanne's father--is the man whom you
+know as Lord Fitzhugh Lee."
+
+He coughed violently, and with sudden fear Philip lifted his head
+so that it rested against his shoulder. After a moment he lowered
+it again. His face was as white as Pierre's after that sudden fit
+of coughing.
+
+"I talked with him--alone--on the afternoon of the fight on the
+rock," continued Pierre, huskily. "He was hiding in the woods near
+Churchill, and left for Fort o' God on that same day. I did not
+tell Jeanne--until after what happened, and I came up with you on
+the river. Thorpe was waiting for us at Fort o' God. It was he
+whom Jeanne saw that night beside the rock, but I could not tell
+you the truth--then. He came often after that--two, three times a
+week. He tortured Jeanne. My God! he taunted her, M'sieur, and
+made her let him kiss her, because he was her father. We gave him
+money--all that we could get; we promised him more, if he would
+leave--five thousand dollars--in three years. He agreed to go--
+after he had finished his work here. And that work--M'sieur--was
+to destroy you. He told Jeanne, because it made her fear him more.
+He compelled her to come to his cabin. He thought she was his
+slave, that she would do anything to be free of him. He told her
+of his plot--how he had fooled you in the sham fight with one of
+his men--how those men were going to attack you a little later,
+and how he had intercepted your letter from Churchill and sent in
+its place the other letter which made your camp defenseless. He
+was not afraid of her. She was in his power, and he laughed at her
+horror, and tortured her as a cat will a bird. But Jeanne--"
+
+A spasm of pain shot over Pierre's face. Fresh blood dyed his
+lips, and a shiver ran through his body.
+
+"My God!--water--something--M'sieur," he gasped. "I must go on!"
+
+Philip raised him again in his arms. He saw MacDougall's head
+appear through the door.
+
+"You will rest easier this way, Pierre," he said.
+
+After a few moments Pierre spoke in a gasping whisper.
+
+"You must understand. I must be quick," he said. "We could not
+warn you of what Jeanne had discovered. That would have revealed
+her father. D'Arcambal would have known--every one. Thorpe plans
+to dress his men--like Indians. They are to attack your camp to-
+morrow night. Ten days ago we went to the camp of old Sachigo, the
+Cree, who loves Jeanne as his own daughter. It was Jeanne's idea--
+to save you. Jeanne told him of Thorpe's plot to destroy you, and
+to lay the blame on Sachigo's people. Sachigo is out there--in the
+mountains--hiding with thirty of his tribe. Two days ago Jeanne
+learned where her father's men were hiding. We had planned
+everything. To-morrow night--when they move to attack--we were to
+start a signal-fire on the big rock mountain at the end of the
+lake. Sachigo starts at the signal, and lays in ambush for the
+others in the ravine between the two mountains. None of Thorpe's
+men will come out alive. Sachigo and his people will destroy them,
+and none will ever know how it happened, for the Crees keep their
+secrets. But now--it is too late--for me. When it happens--I will
+be gone. The signal-pile is built--birch-bark--at the very top of
+the rock. Jeanne will wait for me out on the plain--and I will
+not come. You must fire the signal, M'sieur--as soon as it is
+dark. None will ever know. Jeanne's father is dead. You will keep
+the secret--of her mother--always--"
+
+"Forever," said Philip.
+
+MacDougall came into the room, He brought a glass, partly filled
+with a colored liquid, and placed it to Pierre's lips. Pierre
+swallowed with an effort, and with a significant hunch of his
+shoulders for Philip's eyes alone the engineer returned to the
+little room.
+
+"Mon Dieu, how it burns!" said Pierre, as if to himself. "May I
+lie down again, M'sieur?"
+
+Philip lowered him gently. He made no effort to speak in these
+moments. Pierre's eyes were dark and luminous as they sought his
+own. The draught he had taken gave him a passing strength.
+
+"I saw Thorpe again this afternoon," he said, more calmly.
+"D'Arcambal thought I had taken Jeanne to visit a trapper's wife
+down the Churchill. I saw Thorpe--alone. He had been drinking. He
+laughed at me, and said that Jeanne and I were fools--that he
+would not leave as he had said he would--but that he would remain
+--always. I told Jeanne, and asked her again to let me kill him.
+But she said no--and I had taken my oath to her. Jeanne saw him
+again to-night. I was near the cabin, and saw you. I told him I
+would kill him if he did not go. He laughed again, and struck me.
+When I came to my feet he was half across the open; I followed. I
+forgot my oath. Rage filled my heart. You know what happened. You
+will tell Jeanne--so that she will understand--"
+
+"Can we not send for her?" asked Philip. "She must be near."
+
+"No, M'sieur," he replied, softly. "It would only give her great
+pain to see me--like this. She was to meet me to-night--at twelve
+o'clock--on the trail where the road-bed crosses. You will meet
+her in my place. When she understands all that has happened you
+may bring her here, if she wishes to come. Then--to-morrow night--
+you will go together to fire the signal."
+
+"But Thorpe is dead," said Philip. "Will they attack without him?"
+
+"There is another, besides him," said Pierre. "That is one secret
+which Thorpe has kept from Jeanne--who the other is--the one who
+is paying to have you destroyed. Yes--they will attack."
+
+Philip bent low over Pierre.
+
+"I have known of this plot for a long time, Pierre," he said,
+tensely. "I know that this Thorpe, who for some reason has passed
+as Lord Fitzhugh Lee, is but the agent of a more powerful force
+behind him. Have you told me all, Pierre? Do you know nothing
+more?"
+
+"Nothing, M'sieur."
+
+"Was it Thorpe who attacked you on the cliff at Churchill?"
+
+"No, I am sure that it was not he. If the attack had not failed--
+it would have meant loss--for him. I have laid it to the ruffians
+who wanted to kill me--and secure Jeanne. You understand--"
+
+"Yes, but I do not believe that was the motive for the attack,
+Pierre," said Philip. "Did Thorpe go to see any one in Churchill?"
+
+"I don't know. He was concealing himself in the forest."
+
+A convulsive shudder ran through Pierre's body. He gave a low cry
+of pain, and his hand clutched at the babiche cord which held the
+locket about his neck.
+
+"M'sieur," he whispered, quickly, "this locket--was on the little
+Jeanne--when I found her in the snow. I kept it because it bears
+the woman's initials. I am foolish, M'sieur. I am weak. But I
+would like to have it buried with me--under the old tree--where
+Jeanne's mother lies. And if you could, M'sieur--if you only
+could--place something of Jeanne's in my hand--I would rest
+easier."
+
+Philip bowed his head in silence, while his eyes grew blinding
+hot. Pierre pressed his hand.
+
+"She loves you--as I love her," he whispered, so low that Philip
+could scarcely hear. "You will love her--always. If you do not--
+the Great God will let the curse of Pierre Couchee fall upon you!"
+
+Choking back the great sobs that rose in his breast, Philip sank
+upon his knees beside Pierre, and buried his face in his arms like
+a heartbroken boy. For several moments there was a silence,
+punctuated by the rasping breath of the wounded man. Suddenly this
+sound ceased, and Philip felt a cold fear leap through him. He
+listened, neither breathing nor lifting his head. In that interval
+of pulseless quiet a terrible cry came from Pierre's lips, and
+when Philip looked up the dying half-breed had struggled to a
+sitting posture, blood staining his lips again, his eyes blazing,
+his white face damp with the clammy touch of death, and was
+staring through the cabin window. It was the window that looked
+out over the lake, toward the rock mountain half a mile away.
+Philip turned, horrified and wondering. Through the window he saw
+a glow in the sky--the glow of a fire, leaping up in a crimson
+flood from the top of the mountain!
+
+Again that terrible, moaning cry fell from Pierre's lips, and he
+reached out his arms toward the signal that was blazing forth its
+warning in the night.
+
+"Jeanne--Jeanne--" he sobbed. "My Jeanne--"
+
+He swayed, and fell back. His words came in choking gasps.
+
+"The signal!" he struggled, fighting to make Philip understand
+him. "Jeanne--saw--Thorpe--to-night. He--must--changed--plans.
+Attack--to-night. Jeanne--Jeanne--my Jeanne--has lighted--the
+signal--fire!"
+
+A tremor ran through his body, and he lay still. MacDougall ran
+across from the half-open door, and put his head to Pierre's
+breast.
+
+"Is he dead?" asked Philip.
+
+"Not yet."
+
+"Will he become conscious again?"
+
+"Possibly."
+
+Philip gripped MacDougall by the arm.
+
+"The attack is to be made to-night, Mac," he exclaimed. "Warn the
+men. Have them ready. But you--YOU, MacDougall, attend to this
+man, AND KEEP HIM ALIVE!"
+
+Without another word he ran to the door and out into the night.
+The signal-fire was leaping to the sky. It lighted up the black
+cap of the mountain, and sent a thousand aurora fires flashing
+across the lake. And Philip, as he ran swiftly through the camp
+toward the narrow trail that led to that mountain-top, repeated
+over and over again the dying words of Pierre--
+
+"Jeanne--my Jeanne--my Jeanne--"
+
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+
+News of the double tragedy had swept through the camp, and there
+was a crowd in front of the supply-house. Philip passed close to
+Thorpe's house to avoid discovery, ran a hundred yards up the
+trail over which Jeanne had fled a short time before, and then cut
+straight across through the thin timber for the head of the lake.
+He felt no effort in his running. Low bush whipped him in the face
+and left no sting. He was not conscious that he was panting for
+breath when he came out in the black shadow of the mountain. This
+night in itself had been a creation for him, for out of grief and
+pain it had lifted him into a new life, and into a happiness that
+seemed to fill him with the strength and the endurance of five
+men. Jeanne loved him! The wonderful truth cried itself out in his
+soul at every step he took, and he murmured it aloud to himself,
+over and over again, as he ran.
+
+The glow of the signal-fire lighted up the sky above him, and he
+climbed up, higher and higher, scrambling swiftly from rock to
+rock, until he saw the tips of the flames licking up into the sky.
+He had come up the steepest and shortest side of the ridge, and
+when he reached the top he lay upon his face for a moment, his
+breath almost gone.
+
+The fire was built against a huge dead pine, and the pine was
+blazing a hundred feet in the air. He could feel its heat. The
+monster torch illumined the barren cap of the rock from edge to
+edge, and he looked about him for Jeanne. For a moment he did not
+see her, and her name rose to his lips, to be stilled in the same
+breath by what he saw beyond the burning pine. Through the blaze
+of the heat and fire fie beheld Jeanne, standing close to the edge
+of the mountain, gazing into the south and west. He called her
+name. Jeanne turned toward him with a startled cry, and Philip was
+at her side. The girl's face was white and strained. Her lips were
+twisted in pain at sight of him. She spoke no word, but a strange
+sound rose in her throat, a welling-up of the sudden despair which
+the fire-light revealed in her eyes. For one moment they stood
+apart, and Philip tried to speak. And then, suddenly, he reached
+out and drew her quickly into his arms--so quickly that there was
+no time for her to escape, so closely that her sweet face lay
+imprisoned upon his breast, as he had held it once before, under
+the picture at Fort o' God. He felt her straining to free herself;
+he saw the fear in her eyes, and he tried to speak calmly, while
+his heart throbbed with the passion of love which he wished to
+pour into her ears.
+
+"Listen, Jeanne," he said. "Pierre has sent me to you. He has told
+me everything--everything, my sweetheart. There is nothing to
+keep from me now. I know. I understand. And I love you--love you--
+love you--my own sweet Jeanne!"
+
+She trembled at his words. He felt her shuddering in his arms, and
+her eyes gazed at him wonderingly, filled with a strange and
+incredulous look, while her lips quivered and remained speechless.
+He drew her nearer, until his face was against her own, and the
+warmth of her lips, her eyes, and her hair entered into him, and
+near stifled his heart with joy.
+
+"He has told me everything, my little Jeanne," he said again, in a
+whisper that rose just above the crackling of the pine.
+"Everything. He told me because he knew that I loved you, and
+because--"
+
+The words choked in his throat. At this hesitation Jeanne drew her
+head back, and, with her hands pressing against his breast, looked
+into his face. There were in her eyes the same struggling
+emotions, but with them now there came also a sweet faltering, a
+piteous appeal to him, a faith that rose above her terrors, and
+the tremble of her lips was like that of a crying child. He drew
+her face back, and kissed the quivering lips, and suddenly he felt
+the strain against him give way, and Jeanne's head sobbed upon his
+breast. In that moment, looking where the roaring pine sent its
+pinnacles of flame leaping up into the night, a word of thanks, of
+prayer, rose mutely to his lips, and he held Jeanne more closely,
+and whispered over and over again in his happiness, "Jeanne--
+Jeanne--my sweetheart Jeanne."
+
+Jeanne's sobs grew less and less, and Philip strengthened himself
+to tell her the terrible news of Pierre. He knew that in the
+selfishness of his own joy he had already wasted precious minutes,
+and very gently he took Jeanne's wet face between his two hands
+and turned it a little toward his own.
+
+"Pierre has told me everything, Jeanne," he repeated. "Everything
+--from the day he found you many years ago to the day your father
+returned to torture you." He spoke calmly, even as he felt her
+shiver in pain against him. "To-night there was a little trouble
+down in the camp, dear. Pierre is wounded, and wants you to come
+to him. Thorpe--is--dead."
+
+For an instant Philip was frightened at what happened. Jeanne's
+breath ceased. There seemed to be not a quiver of life in her
+body, and she lay in his arms as if dead. And then, suddenly,
+there came from her a terrible cry, and she wrenched herself free,
+and stood a step from him, her face as white as death.
+
+"He--is--dead--"
+
+"Yes, he is dead."
+
+"And Pierre--Pierre killed him?"
+
+Philip held out his arms, but Jeanne did not seem to see them. She
+saw the answer in his face.
+
+"And--Pierre--is--hurt--" she went on, never taking her wide,
+luminous eyes from his face.
+
+Before he answered Philip took her trembling hands in his own, as
+though he would lighten the blow by the warmth and touch of his
+great love.
+
+"Yes, he is hurt, Jeanne," he said. "We must hurry, for I am
+afraid there is no time to lose."
+
+"He is--dying?"
+
+"I fear so, Jeanne."
+
+He turned before the look that came into her face, and led her
+about the circle of fire to the side of the mountain that sloped
+down into the plain. Suddenly Jeanne stopped for an instant. Her
+fingers tightened about his. Her face was turned back into the
+endless desolation of night and forest that lay to the south and
+west. Far out--a mile--two miles--an answering fire was breaking
+the black curtain that hid all things beyond them. Jeanne lifted
+her face to him. Grief and love, pain and joy, shone in her eyes.
+
+"They are there!" she said, chokingly. "It is Sachigo, and they
+are coming--coming--coming--"
+
+Once again before they began the descent of the mountain Philip
+drew her close in his arms, and kissed her. And this time there
+was the sweet surrender to him of all things in the tenderness of
+Jeanne's lips. Silent in their grief, and yet communing in
+sympathy and love in the firm clasp of their hands, they came down
+the mountain, through the thin spruce forest, and to the lighted
+cabin where Pierre lay dying. MacDougall was in the room when they
+entered, and rose softly, tiptoeing into the little office. Philip
+led Jeanne to Pierre's side, and as he bent over him, and spoke
+softly, the half-breed opened his eyes. He saw Jeanne. Into his
+fading eyes there came a wonderful light. His lips moved, and his
+hands strove to lift themselves above the crumpled blanket. Jeanne
+dropped upon her knees beside him, and as she clasped his chilled
+hands to her breast a glorious understanding lighted up her face;
+and then she took Pierre's face between her hands, and bowed her
+own close down to it, so that the two were hidden under the
+beauteous halo of her hair. Philip gripped at his throat to hold
+back a sob. A terrible stillness came into the room, and he dared
+not move. It seemed a long time before Jeanne lifted her head,
+slowly, tenderly, as if fearing to awaken a sleeping child. She
+turned to him, and he read the truth in her face before she had
+spoken. Her voice was low and calm, filled with the sweetness and
+tenderness and strength that come only to a woman in the final
+moment of a great sorrow.
+
+"Leave us, Philip," she said. "Pierre is dead."
+
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+
+For a moment Philip bowed his head, and then he turned and went
+noiselessly from the room, without speaking. As he closed the door
+softly behind him he looked back, and from her attitude beside
+Pierre he knew that Jeanne was whispering a prayer. A vision
+flashed before him, so quick that it had come like a ray of light
+--a vision of another hour, years and years ago, when Pierre had
+knelt beside HER, and when he had lifted up his wild, half-thought
+prayer out in the death-chill of the snowy barrens. And this was
+his reward, to have Jeanne kneel beside him as the soul which had
+loved her so faithfully took its flight.
+
+Philip could not see when he turned his face to the light of the
+office. For the first time the grief which he had choked back
+escaped in a gasping break in his voice, and he wiped his eyes
+with his pocket-handkerchief. He knew that MacDougall was looking
+upon his weakness, but he did not at first see that there was
+another person in the room besides the engineer. This second
+person rose to meet him, while MacDougall remained in his seat,
+and as he came out into the clearer light of the room Philip could
+scarce believe his eyes.
+
+It was Gregson!
+
+"I am sorry that I came in just at this time, Phil," he greeted,
+in a low voice.
+
+Philip stared, still incredulous. He had never seen Gregson as he
+looked now. The artist advanced no farther. He did not hold out
+his hand. There was none of the joy of meeting in his face. His
+eyes shifted to the door that led into the death-chamber, and they
+were filled with the gloom of a condemned man. With a low word
+Philip held out his hand to meet his old comrade's. Gregson drew
+back.
+
+"No--not now," he said. "Wait--until you have heard me."
+
+Something in his cold, passionless voice stopped Philip. He saw
+Gregson glance toward MacDougall, and understood what he meant.
+Going to the engineer, he placed a hand on his shoulder, and spoke
+so that only he could hear.
+
+"She is in there, Mac--with Pierre. She wanted to be alone with
+him for a few minutes. Will you wait for her--outside--at the
+door, and take her over to Cassidy's wife? Tell her that I will
+come to her in a little while."
+
+He followed MacDougall to the door, speaking to him in a low
+voice, and then turned to Gregson. The artist had seated himself
+at one side of the small office table, and Philip sat down
+opposite him, holding out his hand to him again.
+
+"What is the matter, Greggy?"
+
+"This is not a time for long explanations," said the artist, still
+holding back his hand. "They can come later, Phil. But to-night--
+now--you must understand why I cannot shake hands with you. We
+have been friends for a good many years. In a few minutes we will
+be enemies--or you will be mine. One thing, before I go on, I must
+ask of you. I demand it. Whatever passes between us during the
+next ten minutes, say no word against Eileen Brokaw. I will say
+what you might say--that for a time her soul wandered, and was
+almost lost. But it has come back to her, strong and pure. I love
+her. Some strange fate has ordained that she should love me,
+worthless as I am. She is to be my wife."
+
+Philip's hand was still across the table.
+
+"Greggy--Greggy--God bless you!" he cried, softly. "I know what it
+is to love, and to be loved. Why should I be your enemy because
+Eileen Brokaw's heart has turned to gold, and she has given it to
+you? Greggy, shake!"
+
+"Wait," said Gregson, huskily. "Phil, you are breaking my heart.
+Listen. You got my note? But I did not desert you so abominably. I
+made a discovery that last night of yours in Churchill. I went to
+Eileen Brokaw, and to-morrow--some time--if you care I will tell
+you of all that happened. First you must know this. I have found
+the 'power' that is fighting you down below. I have found the man
+who is behind the plot to ruin your company, the man who is
+responsible for Thorpe's crimes, the man who is responsible--for--
+that--in--there."
+
+He leaned across the table and pointed to the closed door.
+
+"And that man--"
+
+For a moment he seemed to choke.
+
+"Is Brokaw, the father of my affianced wife!"
+
+"Good God!" cried Philip. "Gregson, are you mad?"
+
+"I was almost mad, when I first made the discovery," said Gregson,
+as cold as ice. "But I am sane now. His scheme was to have the
+government annul your provisional license. Thorpe and his men were
+to destroy this camp, and kill you. The money on hand from stock,
+over six hundred thousand dollars, would have gone into Brokaw's
+pockets. There is no need of further detail--now--for you can
+understand. He knew Thorpe, and secured him as his agent. It was
+merely a whim of Thorpe's to take the name of Lord Fitzhugh
+instead of something less conspicuous. Three months before Brokaw
+came to Churchill he wished to get detailed instructions to Thorpe
+which he dared not trust to a wilderness mail service. He could
+find no messenger whom he dared trust. So he sent Eileen. She was
+at Fort o' God for a week. Then she came to Churchill, where we
+saw her. The scheme was that Brokaw should bribe the ship's
+captain to run close into Blind Eskimo Point, at night, and signal
+to Thorpe and Eileen, who would be waiting. It worked, and Eileen
+and Thorpe came on with the ship. At the landing--you remember--
+Eileen was met by the girl from Fort o' God. In order not to
+betray herself to you she refused to recognize her. Later she told
+her father, and Thorpe and Brokaw saw in it an opportunity to
+strike a first blow. Brokaw had brought two men whom he could
+trust, and Thorpe had four or five others at Churchill. The attack
+on the cliff followed, the object being to kill the man, but take
+the girl unharmed, A messenger was to take the news of what
+happened to Fort o' God, and lay the crime to men who had run up
+to Churchill from your camp. Chance favored you that night, and
+you spoiled their plan. Chance favored me, and I found Eileen. It
+is useless for me to go into detail as to what happened after
+that, except to say this--that Eileen knew nothing of the proposed
+attack, that she was ignorant of the heinousness of the plot
+against you, and that she was almost as much a tool of her father
+as you. Phil--"
+
+For the first time there came a pleading light into Gregson's eyes
+as he leaned across the table.
+
+"Phil, if it wasn't for Eileen I would not be here. I thought that
+she would kill herself when I told her as much of the story as I
+knew. She told me what she had done; she confessed for her father.
+In that hour of her agony I could not keep back my love. We
+plotted. I forged a letter, and made it possible to accompany
+Brokaw and Eileen up the Churchill. It was not my purpose to join
+you, and so Eileen professed to be taken ill. We camped, back from
+the river, and I sent our two Indians back to Churchill, for
+Eileen and I wished to be alone with Brokaw in the terrible hour
+that was coming. That is all. Everything is revealed. I have come
+to you as quickly as I could, to find that Thorpe is dead. In my
+own selfishness I would have shielded Brokaw, arguing that he
+could pay Thorpe, and work honorably henceforth. You would never
+have known. It is Eileen who makes this confession, not I. Phil,
+her last words to me were these: 'You love me. Then you will tell
+him all this. Only after this, if he shows us a mercy which we do
+not deserve, can I be your wife.'
+
+"There is only one other thing to add. I have shown Brokaw a ray
+of hope. He will hand over to you all his rights in the company
+and the six hundred thousand in the treasury. He will sign over to
+you, as repurchase money for whatever stock you wish to call in,
+practically his whole fortune--five hundred thousand. He will
+disappear, completely and forever. Eileen and I will hunt out our
+own little corner in a new world, and you will never hear of us
+again. This is what we have planned to do, if you show us mercy."
+
+Philip had not spoken during Gregson's terrible recital. He sat
+like one turned to stone. Rage, wonder, and horror burned so
+fiercely in his heart that they consumed all evidence of emotion.
+And to arouse him now there came an interruption that sent the
+blood flushing back into his face--a low knock at the closed door,
+a slow lifting of the latch, the appearance of Jeanne. Through her
+tears she saw only the man she loved, and sobbing aloud now, like
+a child, she stretched out her arms to him; and when he sprang to
+her and caught her to his breast, she whispered his name again and
+again, and stroked his face with her hands. Love, overpowering,
+breathing of heaven, was in her touch, and as she lifted her face
+to him of her own sweet will now, entreating him to kiss her and
+to comfort her for what she had lost, he saw Gregson moving with
+bowed head, like a stricken thing, toward the outer door. In that
+moment the things that had been in his heart melted away, and
+raising a hand above his head, he called, softly:
+
+"Tom Gregson, my old chum, if you have found a love like this,
+thank your God. My own love I would lose if I destroyed yours. Go
+back to Eileen. Tell Brokaw that I accept his offers. And when you
+come back in a few days, bring Eileen. My Jeanne will love her."
+
+And Jeanne, looking from Philip's face, saw Gregson, for the first
+time, as he passed through the door.
+
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+
+Both Philip and Jeanne were silent for some moments after Gregson
+had gone; their only movement was the gentle stroking of Philip's
+hand over the girl's soft hair. Their hearts were full, too full
+for speech. And yet he knew that upon his strength depended
+everything now. The revelations of Gregson, which virtually ended
+the fight against him personally, were but trivial in his thoughts
+compared with the ordeal which was ahead of Jeanne. Both Pierre
+and her father were dead, and, with the exception of Jeanne, no
+one but he knew of the secret that had died with them. He could
+feel against him the throbbing of the storm that was passing in
+the girl's heart, and in answer to it he said nothing in words,
+but held her to him with a gentleness that lifted her face, quiet
+and beautiful, so that her eyes looked steadily and questioningly
+into his own.
+
+"You love me," she said, simply, and yet with a calmness that sent
+a curious thrill through him.
+
+"Beyond all else in the world," he replied.
+
+She still looked at him, without speaking, as though through his
+eyes she was searching to the bottom of his soul.
+
+"And you know," she whispered, after a moment.
+
+He drew her so close she could not move, and crushed his face down
+against her own.
+
+"Jeanne--Jeanne--everything is as it should be," he said. "I am
+glad that you were found out in the snows. I am glad that the
+woman in the picture was your mother. I would have nothing
+different than it is, for if things were different you would not
+be the Jeanne that I know, and I would not love you so. You have
+suffered, sweetheart. And I, too, have had my share of sorrow. God
+has brought us together, and all is right in the end. Jeanne--my
+sweet Jeanne--"
+
+Gregson had left the outer door slightly ajar. A gust of wind
+opened it wider. Through it there came now a sound that
+interrupted the words on Philip's lips, and sent a sudden quiver
+through Jeanne. In an instant both recognized the sound. It was
+the firing of rifles, the shots coming to them faintly from far
+beyond the mountain at the end of the lake. Moved by the same
+impulse, they ran to the door, hand in hand.
+
+"It is Sachigo!" panted Jeanne. She could hardly speak. She seemed
+to struggle to get breath, "I had forgotten. They are fighting--"
+
+MacDougall strode up from his post beside the door, where he had
+been waiting for the appearance of Jeanne.
+
+"Firing--off there," he said. "What does it mean?"
+
+"We must wait and see," replied Philip. "Send two of your men to
+investigate, Mac. I will rejoin you after I have taken Miss
+d'Arcambal over to Cassidy's wife."
+
+He moved away quickly with Jeanne. On a sudden rise of the wind
+from the south the firing came to them more distinctly. Then it
+died away, and ended in three or four intermittent shots. For the
+space of a dozen seconds a strange stillness followed, and then
+over the mountain top, where there was still a faint glow in the
+sky, there came the low, quavering, triumphal cry of the Crees: a
+cry born of the forest itself, mournful even in its joy, only half
+human--almost like a far-away burst of tongue from a wolf pack on
+the hunt trail. And after that there was an unbroken silence.
+
+"It is over," breathed Philip.
+
+He felt Jeanne's fingers tighten about his own.
+
+"No one will ever know," he continued. "Even MacDougall will not
+guess what has happened out there--to-night."
+
+He stopped a dozen paces from Cassidy's cabin. The windows were
+aglow, and they could hear the laughter and play of Cassidy's two
+children within. Gently he drew Jeanne to him.
+
+"You will stay here to-night, dear," he said. "To-morrow we will
+go to Fort o' God."
+
+"You must take me home to-night," whispered Jeanne, looking up
+into his face. "I must go, Philip. Send some one with me, and you
+can come--in the morning--with Pierre--"
+
+She put her hand to his face again, in the sweet touch that told
+more of her love than a thousand words.
+
+"You understand, dear," she went on, seeing the anxiety in his
+eyes. "I have the strength--to-night. I must return to father,
+and he will know everything--when you come to Fort o' God."
+
+"I will send MacDougall with you," said Philip, after a moment.
+"And then I will follow--"
+
+"With Pierre."
+
+"Yes, with Pierre."
+
+For a brief space longer they stood outside of Cassidy's cabin,
+and then Philip, lifting her face, said gently:
+
+"Will you kiss me, dear? It is the first time."
+
+He bent down, and Jeanne's lips reached his own.
+
+"No, it is not the first time," she confessed, in a whisper. "Not
+since that day--when I thought you were dying--after we came
+through the rapids--"
+
+Five minutes later Philip returned to MacDougall. Roberts,
+Henshaw, Cassidy, and Lecault were with the engineer.
+
+"I've sent the St. Pierres to find out about the firing," he said.
+"Look at the crowd over at the store. Every one heard it, and
+they've seen the fire on the mountain. They think the Indians have
+cornered a moose or two and are shooting them by the blaze."
+
+"They're probably right," said Philip. "I want a word with you,
+Mac."
+
+He walked a little aside with the engineer, leaving the others in
+a group, and in a low voice told him as much as he cared to reveal
+about the identity of Thorpe and Gregson's mission in camp. Then
+he spoke of Jeanne.
+
+"I believe that the death of Thorpe practically ends all danger to
+us," he concluded. "I'm going to offer you a pleasanter job than
+fighting, Mac. It is imperative that Miss d'Arcambal should return
+to D'Arcambal House before morning, and I want you to take her, if
+you will. I'm choosing the best man I've got because--well,
+because she's going to be my wife, Mac. I'm the happiest man on
+earth to-night!"
+
+MacDougall did not show surprise.
+
+"Guessed it," he said, shortly, thrusting out a hand and grinning
+broadly into Philip's face "Couldn't help from seeing, Phil. And
+the firing, and Thorpe, and that half-breed in there--"
+
+Understanding was slowly illuminating his face.
+
+"You'll know all about them a little later, Mac," said Philip
+softly. "To-night we must investigate nothing--very far. Miss
+d'Arcambal must be taken home immediately. Will you go?"
+
+"With pleasure."
+
+"She can ride one of the horses as far as the Little Churchill,"
+continued Philip. "And there she will show you a canoe. I will
+follow in the morning with the body of Pierre, the half-breed."
+
+A quarter of an hour later MacDougall and Jeanne set out over the
+river trail, leaving Philip standing behind, watching them until
+they were hidden in the night. It was fully an hour later before
+the St. Pierres returned. Philip was uneasy until the two dark-
+faced hunters came into the little office and leaned their rifles
+against the wall. He had feared that Sachigo might have left some
+trace of his ambush behind. But the St. Pierres had discovered
+nothing, and could give only one reason for the burning pine on
+the summit of the mountain. They agreed that Indians had fired it
+to frighten moose from a thick cover to the south and west, and
+that their hunt had been a failure.
+
+It was midnight before Philip relaxed his caution, which he
+maintained until then in spite of his belief that Thorpe's men,
+under Blake, had met a quick finish at the hands of Sachigo and
+his ambushed braves. His men left for their cabins, with the
+exception of Cassidy, whom he asked to spend the remainder of the
+night in one of the office bunks. Alone he went in to prepare
+Pierre for his last journey to Fort o' God.
+
+A lamp was burning low beside the bunk in which Pierre lay. Philip
+approached and turned the wick higher, and then he gazed in wonder
+upon the transfiguration in the half-breed's face. Pierre had died
+with a smile on his lips; and with a curious thickening in his
+throat Philip thought that those lips, even in death, were craved
+in the act of whispering Jeanne's name. It seemed to him, as he
+stood in silence for many moments, that Pierre was not dead, but
+that he was sleeping a quiet, unbreathing sleep, in which there
+came to him visions of the great love for which he had offered up
+his life and his soul. Jeanne's hands, in his last moments, had
+stilled all pain. Peace slumbered in the pale shadows of his
+closed eyes. The Great God of his faith had come to him in his
+hour of greatest need on earth, and he had passed away into the
+Valley of Silent Men on the sweet breath of Jeanne's prayers. The
+girl had crossed his hands upon his breast. She had brushed back
+his long hair. Philip knew that she had imprinted a kiss upon the
+silent lips before the soul had fled, and in the warmth and
+knowledge of that kiss Pierre had died happy.
+
+And Philip, brokenly, said aloud:
+
+"God bless you, Pierre, old man!"
+
+He lifted the cold hands back, and gently drew the covers which
+had hidden the telltale stains of death from Jeanne's eyes. He
+turned down Pierre's shirt, and in the lamp-glow there glistened
+the golden locket. For the first time he noticed it closely. It
+was half as large as the palm of his hand, and very thin, and he
+saw that it was bent and twisted. A shudder ran through him when
+he understood what had happened. The bullet that had killed Pierre
+had first struck the locket, and had burst it partly open. He took
+it in his hand. And then he saw that through the broken side there
+protruded the end of a bit of paper. For a brief space the
+discovery made him almost forget the presence of death. Pierre had
+never opened the locket, because it was of the old-fashioned kind
+that locked with a key, and the key was gone. And the locket had
+been about Jeanne's neck when he found her out in the snows! Was
+it possible that this bit of paper had something to do with the
+girl he loved?
+
+Carefully, so that it would not tear, he drew it forth. There was
+writing on the paper, as he had expected, and he read it, bent low
+beside the lamp. The date was nearly eighteen years old. The lines
+were faint. The words were these:
+
+MY HUSBAND,--God can never undo what I have done. I have dragged
+myself back, repentant, loving you more than I have ever loved you
+in my life, to leave our little girl with you. She is your
+daughter, and mine. She was born on the eighth day of September,
+the seventh month after I left Fort o' God, She is yours, and so I
+bring her back to you, with the prayer that she will help to fill
+the true and noble heart that I have broken. I cannot ask your
+forgiveness, for I do not deserve it. I cannot let you see me, for
+I should kill myself at your feet. I have lived this long only for
+the baby. I will leave her where you cannot fail to find her, and
+by the time you have read this I will have answered for my sin--
+my madness, if you can have charity regard it so. And if God is
+kind I will hover about you always, and you will know that in
+death the old sweetheart, and the mother, has found what she could
+never again hope for in life.
+
+YOUR WIFE.
+
+Philip rose slowly erect and gazed down into the still, tranquil
+face of Pierre, the half-breed.
+
+"Why didn't you open it?" he whispered. "Why didn't you open it?
+My God, what it would have saved--"
+
+For a full minute he looked down at Pierre, as though he expected
+that the white lips would move and answer him. And then he thought
+of Jeanne hurrying to Fort o' God, and of the terrible things
+which she was to reveal to her father that night. She was
+D'Arcambal's own daughter. What pain--what agony of father and
+child he might have saved if he had examined the locket a little
+sooner! He looked at his watch and found that Jeanne had been gone
+three hours. It would be impossible to overtake MacDougall and the
+girl unless something had occurred to delay them somewhere along
+the trail. He hurried back into the little room, where he had left
+Cassidy. In a few words he explained that it was necessary for him
+to follow Jeanne and the engineer to D'Arcambal House without a
+moment's delay, and he directed Cassidy to take charge of camp
+affairs, and to send Pierre's body with a suitable escort the next
+day.
+
+"It isn't necessary for me to tell you what to do," he finished,
+"You understand."
+
+Cassidy nodded. Six months before he had buried his youngest child
+under a big spruce back of his cabin.
+
+Philip hastened to the stables, and, choosing one of the lighter
+animals, was soon galloping over the trail toward the Little
+Churchill. In his face there blew a cold wind from Hudson's Bay,
+and now and then he felt the sting of fine particles in his eyes.
+They were the presage of storm. A shifting of the wind a little to
+the east and south, and the fine particles would thicken, and turn
+into snow. By morning the world would be white. He came into the
+forests beyond the plain, and in the spruce and the cedar tops the
+wind was half a gale, filling the night with wailing and moaning
+sounds that sent strange shivers through him as he thought of
+Pierre in the cabin. In such a way, he imagined, had the north
+wind swept across the cold barrens on the night that Pierre had
+found the woman and the babe; and now it seemed, in his fancies,
+as though above and about him the great hand that had guided the
+half-breed then was bringing back the old night, as if Pierre, in
+dying, had wished it so. For the wind changed. The fine particles
+thickened, and changed to snow. And then there was no longer the
+wailing and the moaning in the tree-tops, but the soft murmur of a
+white deluge that smothered him in a strange gloom and hid the
+trail. There were two canoes concealed at the end of the trail on
+the Little Churchill, and Philip chose the smallest. He followed
+swiftly after MacDougall and Jeanne. He could no longer see either
+side of the stream, and he was filled with a fear that he might
+pass the little creek that led to Fort o' God. He timed himself by
+his watch, and when he had paddled for two hours he ran in close
+to the west shore, traveling so slowly that he did not progress a
+mile in half an hour. And then suddenly, from close ahead, there
+rose through the snow-gloom the dismal howl of a dog, which told
+him that he was near to Fort o' God. He found the black opening
+that marked the entrance to the creek, and when he ran upon the
+sand-bar a hundred yards beyond he saw lights burning in the great
+room where he had first seen D'Arcambal. He went now where Pierre
+had led him that night, and found the door unlocked. He entered
+silently, and passed down the dark hall until, on the left, he saw
+a glow of light that came from the big room. Something in the
+silence that was ahead of him made his own approach without sound,
+and softly he entered through the door.
+
+In the great chair sat the master of Fort o' God, his gray head
+bent; at his feet knelt Jeanne, and so close were they that
+D'Arcambal's face was hidden in Jeanne's shining, disheveled hair.
+No sooner had Philip entered the room than his presence seemed to
+arouse the older man. He lifted his head slowly, looking toward
+the door, and when he saw who stood there he raised one of his
+arms from about the girl and held it out to Philip.
+
+"My son!" he said.
+
+In a moment Philip was upon his knees beside Jeanne, and one of
+D'Arcambal's heavy hands fell upon his shoulder in a touch that
+told him he had come too late to keep back any part of the
+terrible story which Jeanne had bared to him. The girl did not
+speak when she saw him beside her. It was as if she had expected
+him to come, and her hand found his and nestled in it, as cold as
+ice.
+
+"I have hurried from the camp," he said. "I tried to overtake
+Jeanne. About Pierre's neck I found a locket, and in the locket--
+was this--"
+
+He looked into D'Arcambal's haggard face as he gave him the blood-
+stained note, and he knew that in the moment that was to come the
+master of Fort o' God and his daughter should be alone.
+
+"I will wait in the portrait-room," he said, in a low voice, and
+as he rose to his feet he pressed Jeanne's hand to his lips.
+
+The old room was as he had left it weeks before. The picture of
+Jeanne's mother still hung with its face to the wall. There was
+the same elusive movement of the portrait over the volume of warm
+air that rose from the floor. In this room he seemed to breathe
+again the presence of a warm spirit of life, as he had felt it on
+the first night--a spirit that seemed to him to be a part of
+Jeanne herself, and he thought of the last words of the wife and
+mother--of her promise to remain always near those whom she loved,
+to regain after death the companionship which she could never hope
+for in life. And then there came to him a thought of the vast and
+wonderful mystery of death, and he wondered if it was her spirit
+that had been with him more than one lonely night, when his camp-
+fire was low; if it was her presence that had filled him with
+transcendent dreams of hope and love, coming to him that night
+beside the rock at Churchill, and leading him at last to Jeanne,
+for whom she had given up her life. He heard again the rising of
+the wind outside and the beating of the storm against the window,
+and he went softly to see if his vision could penetrate into the
+white, twisting gloom beyond the glass. For many minutes he stood,
+seeing nothing. And then he heard a sound, and turned to see
+Jeanne and her father standing in the door. Glory was in the face
+of the master of Fort o' God. He seemed not to see Philip--he
+seemed to see nothing but the picture that was turned against the
+wall. He strode across the room, his great shoulders straightened,
+his shaggy head erect, and with the pride of one revealing first
+to human eyes the masterpiece of his soul and life he turned the
+picture so that the radiant face of the wife and mother looked
+down upon him. And was it fancy that for a fleeting moment the
+smile left the beautiful lips, and a light, soft and luminous,
+pleading for love and forgiveness, filled the eyes of Jeanne's
+mother? Philip trembled. Jeanne came across to him silently, and
+crept into his arms. And then, slowly, the master of Fort o' God
+turned toward them and stretched out both of his great arms.
+
+"My children!" he said.
+
+
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+
+All that night the storm came out of the north and east. Hours
+after Jeanne and her father had left him Philip went quietly from
+his room, passed down the hall, and opened the outer door. He
+could hear the gale whistling over the top of the great rock, and
+moaning in the spruce and cedar forest, and he closed the door
+after him, and buried himself in the darkness and wind. He bowed
+his head to the stinging snow, which came like blasts of steeled
+shot, and hurried into the shelter of the Sun Rock, and stood
+there after that listening to the wildness of the storm and the
+strange whistling of the wind cutting itself to pieces far over
+his head. Since man had first beheld that rock such storms as this
+had come and gone for countless generations. Two hundred years and
+more had passed since Grosellier first looked out upon a wondrous
+world from its summit. And yet this storm--to-night--whistling
+and moaning about him, filling all space with its grief, its
+triumph, and its madness, seemed to be for him--and for him alone.
+His heart answered to it. His soul trembled to the marvelous
+meaning of it. To-night this storm was his own. He was a part of a
+world which he would never leave. Here, beside the great Sun Rock
+of the Crees, he had found home, life, happiness, his God. Here,
+henceforth through all time, he would live with his beloved
+Jeanne, dreaming no dreams that went beyond the peace of the
+mountains and the forests. He lifted his face to where the storm
+swept above him, and for an instant he fancied that high up on the
+ragged edge of the rock there might have stood Pierre, with his
+great, gaping, hungry heart, filled with pain and yearning,
+staring off into the face of the Almighty. And he fancied, too,
+that beside him there hovered the wife and mother. And then he
+looked to Fort o' God. The lights were out. Quiet, if not sleep,
+had fallen upon all life within. And it seemed to Philip, as he
+went back again through the storm, that in the moaning tumult of
+the night there was music instead of sadness.
+
+He did not sleep until nearly morning. And when he awoke he found
+that the storm had passed, and that over a world of spotless white
+there had risen a brilliant sun. He looked out from his window,
+and saw the top of the Sun Rock glistening in a golden fire, and
+where the forest trees had twisted and moaned there were now
+unending canopies of snow, so that it seemed as though the storm,
+in passing, had left behind only light, and beauty, and happiness
+for all living things.
+
+Trembling with the joy of this, Philip went to his door, and from
+the door down the hall, and where the light of the sun blazed
+through a window near to the great room where he expected to find
+the master of Fort o' God, there stood Jeanne. And as she heard
+him coming, and turned toward him, all the glory and beauty of the
+wondrous day was in her face and hair. Like an angel she stood
+waiting for him, pale and yet flushing a little, her eyes shining
+and yearning for him, her soul in the tremble of the single word
+on her sweet lips.
+
+"Philip--"
+
+"Jeanne--"
+
+No more--and yet against each other their hearts told what it was
+futile for their lips to attempt. They looked out through the
+window. Beyond that window, as far as the vision could reach,
+swept the barrens, over which Pierre had brought the little
+Jeanne. Something sobbing rose in the girl's throat. She lifted
+her eyes, swimming with love and tears, to Philip, and from his
+breast she reached up both hands gently to his face.
+
+"They will bring Pierre--to-day---" she whispered.
+
+"Yes--to-day."
+
+"We will bury him out yonder," she said, stroking his face, and he
+knew that she meant out in the barren, where the mother lay.
+
+He bowed his face close down against hers to hide the woman's
+weakness that was bringing a misty film into his eyes.
+
+"You love me," she whispered. "You love me--love me--and you will
+never take me away, but will stay with me always. You will stay
+here--dear--in my beautiful world--we two--alone--"
+
+"For ever and for ever," he murmured.
+
+They heard a step, firm and vibrant with the strength of a new
+life, and they knew that it was the master of Fort o' God.
+
+"Always--we two--forever," whispered Philip again.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
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