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-The Project Gutenberg EBook Northern Lights, Complete, by G. Parker
-#19 in our series by Gilbert Parker
-
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-**EBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
-
-*****These EBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers*****
-
-
-Title: Northern Lights, Complete
-
-Author: Gilbert Parker
-
-Release Date: July, 2004 [EBook #6191]
-[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
-[This file was first posted on September 6, 2002]
-
-Edition: 10
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
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-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NORTHERN LIGHTS, ENTIRE, BY PARKER ***
-
-
-
-This eBook was produced by David Widger <widger@cecomet.net>
-
-
-
-[NOTE: There is a short list of bookmarks, or pointers, at the end of the
-file for those who may wish to sample the author's ideas before making an
-entire meal of them. D.W.]
-
-
-
-
-
-NORTHERN LIGHTS, Complete
-
-By Gilbert Parker
-
-Volume 1.
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-Volume 1.
-A LODGE IN THE WILDERNESS
-ONCE AT RED MAN'S RIVER
-THE STROKE OF THE HOUR
-BUCKMASTER'S BOY
-
-Volume 2.
-TO-MORROW
-QU'APPELLE
-THE STAKE AND THE PLUMB-LINE
-
-Volume 3.
-WHEN THE SWALLOWS HOMEWARD FLY
-GEORGE'S WIFE
-MARCILE
-
-Volume 4.
-A MAN, A FAMINE, AND A HEATHEN BOY
-THE HEALING SPRINGS AND THE PIONEERS
-THE LITTLE WIDOW OF JANSEN
-WATCHING THE RISE OF ORION
-
-Volume 5.
-THE ERROR OF THE DAY
-THE WHISPERER
-AS DEEP AS THE SEA
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-This book, Northern Lights, belongs to an epoch which is a generation
-later than that in which Pierre and His People moved. The conditions
-under which Pierre and Shon McGann lived practically ended with the
-advent of the railway. From that time forwards, with the rise of towns
-and cities accompanied by an amazing growth of emigration, the whole life
-lost much of that character of isolation and pathetic loneliness which
-marked the days of Pierre. When, in 1905, I visited the Far West again
-after many years, and saw the strange new life with its modern episode,
-energy, and push, and realised that even the characteristics which marked
-the period just before the advent, and just after the advent, of the
-railway were disappearing, I determined to write a series of stories
-which would catch the fleeting characteristics and hold something of the
-old life, so adventurous, vigorous, and individual, before it passed
-entirely and was forgotten. Therefore, from 1905 to 1909, I kept drawing
-upon all those experiences of others, from the true tales that had been
-told me, upon the reminiscences of Hudson's Bay trappers and hunters, for
-those incidents natural to the West which imagination could make true.
-Something of the old atmosphere had gone, and there was a stir and a
-murmur in all the West which broke that grim yet fascinating loneliness
-of the time of Pierre.
-
-Thus it is that Northern Lights is written in a wholly different style
-from that of Pierre and His People, though here and there, as for
-instance in A Lodge in the Wilderness, Once at Red Man's River, The
-Stroke of the Hour, Qu'appelle, and Marcile, the old note sounds, and
-something of the poignant mystery, solitude, and big primitive incident
-of the earlier stories appears. I believe I did well--at any rate for
-myself and my purposes--in writing this book, and thus making the human
-narrative of the Far West and North continuous from the time of the
-sixties onwards. So have I assured myself of the rightness of my
-intention, that I shall publish a novel presently which will carry on
-this human narrative of the West into still another stage-that of the
-present, when railways are intersecting each other, when mills and
-factories are being added to the great grain elevators in the West, and
-when hundreds and thousands of people every year are moving across the
-plains where, within my own living time, the buffalo ranged in their
-millions, and the red men, uncontrolled, set up their tepees.
-
-
-
-
-NOTE
-
-The tales in this book belong to two different epochs in the life of the
-Far West. The first five are reminiscent of "border days and deeds"--
-of days before the great railway was built which changed a waste into a
-fertile field of civilisation. The remaining stories cover the period
-passed since the Royal North-West Mounted Police and the Pullman car
-first startled the early pioneer, and sent him into the land of the
-farther North, or drew him into the quiet circle of civic routine and
-humdrum occupation.
-
-G. P.
-
-
-
-
-Volume 1.
-
-A LODGE IN THE WILDERNESS
-ONCE AT RED MAN'S RIVER
-THE STROKE OF THE HOUR
-BUCKMASTER'S BOY
-
-
-
-
-A LODGE IN THE WILDERNESS
-
-"Hai--Yai, so bright a day, so clear!" said Mitiahwe as she entered the
-big lodge and laid upon a wide, low couch, covered with soft skins, the
-fur of a grizzly which had fallen to her man's rifle. "Hai-yai, I wish
-it would last for ever--so sweet!" she added, smoothing the fur
-lingeringly, and showing her teeth in a smile.
-
-"There will come a great storm, Mitiahwe. See, the birds go south so
-soon," responded a deep voice from a corner by the doorway.
-
-The young Indian wife turned quickly, and, in a defiant fantastic mood
---or was it the inward cry against an impending fate, the tragic future
-of those who will not see, because to see is to suffer?--she made some
-quaint, odd motions of the body which belonged to a mysterious dance of
-her tribe, and, with flashing eyes, challenged the comely old woman
-seated on a pile of deer-skins.
-
-"It is morning, and the day will last for ever," she said nonchalantly,
-but her eyes suddenly took on a faraway look, half apprehensive, half
-wondering. The birds were indeed going south very soon, yet had there
-ever been so exquisite an autumn as this, had her man ever had so
-wonderful a trade--her man with the brown hair, blue eyes, and fair,
-strong face?
-
-"The birds go south, but the hunters and buffalo still go north,"
-Mitiahwe urged searchingly, looking hard at her mother--Oanita, the Swift
-Wing.
-
-"My dream said that the winter will be dark and lonely, that the ice will
-be thick, the snow deep, and that many hearts will be sick because of the
-black days and the hunger that sickens the heart," answered Swift Wing.
-
-Mitiahwe looked into Swift Wing's dark eyes, and an anger came upon her.
-"The hearts of cowards will freeze," she rejoined, "and to those that
-will not see the sun the world will be dark," she added. Then suddenly
-she remembered to whom she was speaking, and a flood of feeling ran
-through her; for Swift Wing had cherished her like a fledgeling in the
-nest till her young white man came from "down East." Her heart had leapt
-up at sight of him, and she had turned to him from all the young men of
-her tribe, waiting in a kind of mist till he, at last, had spoken to her
-mother, and then one evening, her shawl over her head, she had come along
-to his lodge.
-
-A thousand times as the four years passed by she had thought how good it
-was that she had become his wife--the young white man's wife, rather than
-the wife of Breaking Rock, son of White Buffalo, the chief, who had four
-hundred horses, and a face that would have made winter and sour days for
-her. Now and then Breaking Rock came and stood before the lodge, a
-distance off, and stayed there hour after hour, and once or twice he came
-when her man was with her; but nothing could be done, for earth and air
-and space were common to them all, and there was no offence in Breaking
-Rock gazing at the lodge where Mitiahwe lived. Yet it seemed as though
-Breaking Rock was waiting--waiting and hoping. That was the impression
-made upon all who saw him, and even old White Buffalo, the chief, shook
-his head gloomily when he saw Breaking Rock, his son, staring at the big
-lodge which was so full of happiness, and so full also of many luxuries
-never before seen at a trading post on the Koonce River. The father of
-Mitiahwe had been chief, but because his three sons had been killed in
-battle the chieftainship had come to White Buffalo, who was of the same
-blood and family. There were those who said that Mitiahwe should have
-been chieftainess; but neither she nor her mother would ever listen to
-this, and so White Buffalo, and the tribe loved Mitiahwe because of her
-modesty and goodness. She was even more to White Buffalo than Breaking
-Rock, and he had been glad that Dingan the white man--Long Hand he was
-called--had taken Mitiahwe for his woman. Yet behind this gladness of
-White Buffalo, and that of Swift Wing, and behind the silent watchfulness
-of Breaking Rock, there was a thought which must ever come when a white
-man mates with an Indian maid, without priest or preacher, or writing, or
-book, or bond.
-
-Yet four years had gone; and all the tribe, and all who came and went,
-half-breeds, traders, and other tribes, remarked how happy was the white
-man with his Indian wife. They never saw anything but light in the eyes
-of Mitiahwe, nor did the old women of the tribe who scanned her face as
-she came and went, and watched and waited too for what never came--not
-even after four years.
-
-Mitiahwe had been so happy that she had not really missed what never
-came; though the desire to have something in her arms which was part of
-them both had flushed up in her veins at times, and made her restless
-till her man had come home again. Then she had forgotten the unseen for
-the seen, and was happy that they two were alone together--that was the
-joy of it all, so much alone together; for Swift Wing did not live with
-them, and, like Breaking Rock, she watched her daughter's life, standing
-afar off, since it was the unwritten law of the tribe that the wife's
-mother must not cross the path or enter the home of her daughter's
-husband. But at last Dingan had broken through this custom, and insisted
-that Swift Wing should be with her daughter when he was away from home,
-as now on this wonderful autumn morning, when Mitiahwe had been singing
-to the Sun, to which she prayed for her man and for everlasting days with
-him.
-
-She had spoken angrily but now, because her soul sharply resented the
-challenge to her happiness which her mother had been making. It was her
-own eyes that refused to see the cloud, which the sage and bereaved woman
-had seen and conveyed in images and figures of speech natural to the
-Indian mind.
-
-"Hai-yai," she said now, with a strange touching sigh breathing in the
-words, "you are right, my mother, and a dream is a dream; also, if it be
-dreamt three times, then is it to be followed, and it is true. You have
-lived long, and your dreams are of the Sun and the Spirit." She shook a
-little as she laid her hand on a buckskin coat of her man hanging by the
-lodge-door; then she steadied herself again, and gazed earnestly into her
-mother's eyes. "Have all your dreams come true, my mother?" she asked
-with a hungering heart. "There was the dream that came out of the dark
-five times, when your father went against the Crees, and was wounded, and
-crawled away into the hills, and all our warriors fled--they were but a
-handful, and the Crees like a young forest in number! I went with my
-dream, and found him after many days, and it was after that you were
-born, my youngest and my last. There was also"--her eyes almost closed,
-and the needle and thread she held lay still in her lap--"when two of
-your brothers were killed in the drive of the buffalo. Did I not see it
-all in my dream, and follow after them to take them to my heart? And
-when your sister was carried off, was it not my dream which saw the
-trail, so that we brought her back again to die in peace, her eyes seeing
-the Lodge whither she was going, open to her, and the Sun, the Father,
-giving her light and promise--for she had wounded herself to die that the
-thief who stole her should leave her to herself. Behold, my daughter,
-these dreams have I had, and others; and I have lived long and have seen
-the bright day break into storm, and the herds flee into the far hills
-where none could follow, and hunger come, and--"
-
-"Hai-yo, see, the birds flying south," said the girl with a gesture
-towards the cloudless sky. "Never since I lived have they gone south so
-soon." Again she shuddered slightly, then she spoke slowly: "I also have
-dreamed, and I will follow my dream. I dreamed"--she knelt down beside
-her mother, and rested her hands in her mother's lap--"I dreamed that
-there was a wall of hills dark and heavy and far away, and that whenever
-my eyes looked at them they burned with tears; and yet I looked and
-looked, till my heart was like lead in my breast; and I turned from them
-to the rivers and the plains that I loved. But a voice kept calling to
-me, 'Come, come! Beyond the hills is a happy land. The trail is hard,
-and your feet will bleed, but beyond is the happy land.' And I would not
-go for the voice that spoke, and at last there came an old man in my
-dream and spoke to me kindly, and said, 'Come with me, and I will show
-thee the way over the hills to the Lodge where thou shalt find what thou
-hast lost.' And I said to him, 'I have lost nothing;' and I would not
-go. Twice I dreamed this dream, and twice the old man came, and three
-times I dreamed it; and then I spoke angrily to him, as but now I did to
-thee; and behold he changed before my eyes, and I saw that he was now
-become--"she stopped short, and buried her face in her hands for a
-moment, then recovered herself--"Breaking Rock it was, I saw before me,
-and I cried out and fled. Then I waked with a cry, but my man was beside
-me, and his arm was round my neck; and this dream, is it not a foolish
-dream, my mother?"
-
-The old woman sat silent, clasping the hands of her daughter firmly, and
-looking out of the wide doorway towards the trees that fringed the river;
-and presently, as she looked, her face changed and grew pinched all at
-once, and Mitiahwe, looking at her, turned a startled face towards the
-river also.
-
-"Breaking Rock!" she said in alarm, and got to her feet quickly.
-
-Breaking Rock stood for a moment looking towards the lodge, then came
-slowly forward to them. Never in all the four years had he approached
-this lodge of Mitiahwe, who, the daughter of a chief, should have married
-himself, the son of a chief! Slowly but with long slouching stride
-Breaking Rock came nearer. The two women watched him without speaking.
-Instinctively they knew that he brought news, that something had
-happened; yet Mitiahwe felt at her belt for what no Indian girl would be
-without; and this one was a gift from her man, on the anniversary of the
-day she first came to his lodge.
-
-Breaking Rock was at the door now, his beady eyes fixed on Mitiahwe's,
-his figure jerked to its full height, which made him, even then, two
-inches less than Long Hand. He spoke in a loud voice:
-
-"The last boat this year goes down the river tomorrow. Long Hand, your
-man, is going to his people. He will not come back. He has had enough
-of the Blackfoot woman. You will see him no more." He waved a hand to
-the sky. "The birds are going south. A hard winter is coming quick.
-You will be alone. Breaking Rock is rich. He has five hundred horses.
-Your man is going to his own people. Let him go. He is no man. It is
-four years, and still there are but two in your lodge. How!"
-
-He swung on his heel with a chuckle in his throat, for he thought he had
-said a good thing, and that in truth he was worth twenty white men. His
-quick ear caught a movement behind him, however, and he saw the girl
-spring from the lodge door, something flashing from her belt. But now
-the mother's arms were round her, with cries of protest, and Breaking
-Rock, with another laugh, slipped away swiftly toward the river.
-
-"That is good," he muttered. "She will kill him perhaps, when she goes
-to him. She will go, but he will not stay. I have heard."
-
-As he disappeared among the trees Mitiahwe disengaged herself from her
-mother's arms, went slowly back into the lodge, and sat down on the great
-couch where, for so many moons, she had lain with her man beside her.
-
-Her mother watched her closely, though she moved about doing little
-things. She was trying to think what she would have done if such a thing
-had happened to her, if her man had been going to leave her. She assumed
-that Dingan would leave Mitiahwe, for he would hear the voices of his
-people calling far away, even as the red man who went East into the great
-cities heard the prairies and the mountains and the rivers and his own
-people calling, and came back, and put off the clothes of civilisation,
-and donned his buckskins again, and sat in the Medicine Man's tent, and
-heard the spirits speak to him through the mist and smoke of the sacred
-fire. When Swift Wing first gave her daughter to the white man she
-foresaw the danger now at hand, but this was the tribute of the lower
-race to the higher, and--who could tell! White men had left their Indian
-wives, but had come back again, and for ever renounced the life of their
-own nations, and become great chiefs, teaching useful things to their
-adopted people, bringing up their children as tribesmen--bringing up
-their children! There it was, the thing which called them back, the
-bright-eyed children with the colour of the brown prairie in their faces,
-and their brains so sharp and strong. But here was no child to call
-Dingan back, only the eloquent, brave, sweet face of Mitiahwe. . . .
-If he went! Would he go? Was he going? And now that Mitiahwe had been
-told that he would go, what would she do? In her belt was--but, no, that
-would be worse than all, and she would lose Mitiahwe, her last child, as
-she had lost so many others. What would she herself do if she were in
-Mitiahwe's place? Ah, she would make him stay somehow--by truth or by
-falsehood; by the whispered story in the long night, by her head upon his
-knee before the lodge-fire, and her eyes fixed on his, luring him, as the
-Dream lures the dreamer into the far trail, to find the Sun's hunting-
-ground where the plains are filled with the deer and the buffalo and the
-wild horse; by the smell of the cooking-pot and the favourite spiced
-drink in the morning; by the child that ran to him with his bow and
-arrows and the cry of the hunter--but there was no child; she had
-forgotten. She was always recalling her own happy early life with her
-man, and the clean-faced papooses that crowded round his knee--one wife
-and many children, and the old Harvester of the Years reaping them so
-fast, till the children stood up as tall as their father and chief. That
-was long ago, and she had had her share--twenty-five years of happiness;
-but Mitiahwe had had only four. She looked at Mitiahwe, standing still
-for a moment like one rapt, then suddenly she gave a little cry.
-Something had come into her mind, some solution of the problem,
-and she ran and stooped over the girl and put both hands on her head.
-
-"Mitiahwe, heart's blood of mine," she said, "the birds go south, but
-they return. What matter if they go so soon, if they return soon. If
-the Sun wills that the winter be dark, and he sends the Coldmaker to
-close the rivers and drive the wild ones far from the arrow and the gun,
-yet he may be sorry, and send a second summer--has it not been so, and
-Coldmaker has hurried away--away! The birds go south, but they will
-return, Mitiahwe."
-
-"I heard a cry in the night while my man slept," Mitiahwe answered,
-looking straight before her, "and it was like the cry of a bird-calling,
-calling, calling."
-
-"But he did not hear--he was asleep beside Mitiahwe. If he did not wake,
-surely it was good luck. Thy breath upon his face kept him sleeping.
-Surely it was good luck to Mitiahwe that he did not hear."
-
-She was smiling a little now, for she had thought of a thing which would,
-perhaps, keep the man here in this lodge in the wilderness; but the time
-to speak of it was not yet. She must wait and see.
-
-Suddenly Mitiahwe got to her feet with a spring, and a light in her eyes.
-"Hai-yai!" she said with plaintive smiling, ran to a corner of the
-lodge, and from a leather bag drew forth a horse-shoe and looked at it,
-murmuring to herself.
-
-The old woman gazed at her wonderingly. "What is it, Mitiahwe?" she
-asked.
-
-"It is good-luck. So my man has said. It is the way of his people.
-It is put over the door, and if a dream come it is a good dream; and if a
-bad thing come, it will not enter; and if the heart prays for a thing hid
-from all the world, then it brings good-luck. Hai-yai! I will put it
-over the door, and then--"All at once her hand dropped to her side, as
-though some terrible thought had come to her, and, sinking to the floor,
-she rocked her body backward and forward for a time, sobbing. But
-presently she got to her feet again, and, going to the door of the lodge,
-fastened the horseshoe above it with a great needle and a string of
-buckskin.
-
-"Oh great Sun," she prayed, "have pity on me and save me! I cannot live
-alone. I am only a Blackfoot wife; I am not blood of his blood. Give,
-O great one, blood of his blood, bone of his bone, soul of his soul, that
-he will say, This is mine, body of my body, and he will hear the cry and
-will stay. O great Sun, pity me!" The old woman's heart beat faster as
-she listened. The same thought was in the mind of both. If there were
-but a child, bone of his bone, then perhaps he would not go; or, if he
-went, then surely he would return, when he heard his papoose calling in
-the lodge in the wilderness.
-
-As Mitiahwe turned to her, a strange burning light in her eyes, Swift
-Wing said: "It is good. The white man's Medicine for a white man's wife.
-But if there were the red man's Medicine too--"
-
-"What is the red man's Medicine?" asked the young wife, as she smoothed
-her hair, put a string of bright beads around her neck, and wound a red
-sash round her waist.
-
-The old woman shook her head, a curious half-mystic light in her eyes,
-her body drawn up to its full height, as though waiting for something.
-"It is an old Medicine. It is of winters ago as many as the hairs of the
-head. I have forgotten almost, but it was a great Medicine when there
-were no white men in the land. And so it was that to every woman's
-breast there hung a papoose, and every woman had her man, and the red men
-were like leaves in the forest--but it was a winter of winters ago, and
-the Medicine Men have forgotten; and thou hast no child! When Long Hand
-comes, what will Mitiahwe say to him?"
-
-Mitiahwe's eyes were determined, her face was set, she flushed deeply,
-then the colour fled. "What my mother would say, I will say. Shall the
-white man's Medicine fail? If I wish it, then it will be so: and I will
-say so."
-
-"But if the white man's Medicine fail?"--Swift Wing made a gesture toward
-the door where the horse-shoe hung. "It is Medicine for a white man,
-will it be Medicine for an Indian?"
-
-"Am I not a white man's wife?"
-
-"But if there were the Sun Medicine also, the Medicine of the days long
-ago?"
-
-"Tell me. If you remember--Kai! but you do remember--I see it in your
-face. Tell me, and I will make that Medicine also, my mother."
-
-"To-morrow, if I remember it--I will think, and if I remember it,
-to-morrow I will tell you, my heart's blood. Maybe my dream will come
-to me and tell me. Then, even after all these years, a papoose--"
-
-"But the boat will go at dawn to-morrow, and if he go also--"
-
-"Mitiahwe is young, her body is warm, her eyes are bright, the songs she
-sings, her tongue--if these keep him not, and the Voice calls him still
-to go, then still Mitiahwe shall whisper, and tell him--"
-
-"Hai-yo-hush," said the girl, and trembled a little, and put both hands
-on her mother's mouth.
-
-For a moment she stood so, then with an exclamation suddenly turned and
-ran through the doorway, and sped toward the river, and into the path
-which would take her to the post, where her man traded with the Indians
-and had made much money during the past six years, so that he could have
-had a thousand horses and ten lodges like that she had just left. The
-distance between the lodge and the post was no more than a mile, but
-Mitiahwe made a detour, and approached it from behind, where she could
-not be seen. Darkness was gathering now, and she could see the glimmer
-of the light of lamps through the windows, and as the doors opened and
-shut. No one had seen her approach, and she stole through a door which
-was open at the rear of the warehousing room, and went quickly to another
-door leading into the shop. There was a crack through which she could
-see, and she could hear all that was said. As she came she had seen
-Indians gliding through the woods with their purchases, and now the shop
-was clearing fast, in response to the urging of Dingan and his partner,
-a Scotch half-breed. It was evident that Dingan was at once abstracted
-and excited.
-
-Presently only two visitors were left, a French halfbreed call Lablache,
-a swaggering, vicious fellow, and the captain of the steamer, Ste. Anne,
-which was to make its last trip south in the morning--even now it would
-have to break its way through the young ice. Dingan's partner dropped a
-bar across the door of the shop, and the four men gathered about the
-fire. For a time no one spoke. At last the captain of the Ste. Anne
-said: "It's a great chance, Dingan. You'll be in civilisation again, and
-in a rising town of white people--Groise 'll be a city in five years, and
-you can grow up and grow rich with the place. The Company asked me to
-lay it all before you, and Lablache here will buy out your share of the
-business, at whatever your partner and you prove its worth. You're
-young; you've got everything before you. You've made a name out here for
-being the best trader west of the Great Lakes, and now's your time. It's
-none of my affair, of course, but I like to carry through what I'm set to
-do, and the Company said, 'You bring Dingan back with you. The place is
-waiting for him, and it can't wait longer than the last boat down.'
-You're ready to step in when he steps out, ain't you, Lablache?"
-
-Lablache shook back his long hair, and rolled about in his pride. "I
-give him cash for his share to-night someone is behin' me, share, yes!
-It is worth so much, I pay and step in--I take the place over. I take
-half the business here, and I work with Dingan's partner. I take your
-horses, Dingan, I take you lodge, I take all in your lodge--everyt'ing."
-
-His eyes glistened, and a red spot came to each cheek as he leaned
-forward. At his last word Dingan, who had been standing abstractedly
-listening, as it were, swung round on him with a muttered oath, and the
-skin of his face appeared to tighten. Watching through the crack of the
-door, Mitiahwe saw the look she knew well, though it had never been
-turned on her, and her heart beat faster. It was a look that came into
-Dingan's face whenever Breaking Rock crossed his path, or when one or two
-other names were mentioned in his presence, for they were names of men
-who had spoken of Mitiahwe lightly, and had attempted to be jocular about
-her.
-
-As Mitiahwe looked at him, now unknown to himself, she was conscious of
-what that last word of Lablache's meant. Everyt'ing meant herself.
-Lablache--who had neither the good qualities of the white man nor the
-Indian, but who had the brains of the one and the subtilty of the other,
-and whose only virtue was that he was a successful trader, though he
-looked like a mere woodsman, with rings in his ears, gaily decorated
-buckskin coat and moccasins, and a furtive smile always on his lips!
-Everyt'ing!--Her blood ran cold at the thought of dropping the lodge-
-curtain upon this man and herself alone. For no other man than Dingan
-had her blood run faster, and he had made her life blossom. She had seen
-in many a half-breed's and in many an Indian's face the look which was
-now in that of Lablache, and her fingers gripped softly the thing in her
-belt that had flashed out on Breaking Rock such a short while ago. As
-she looked, it seemed for a moment as though Dingan would open the door
-and throw Lablache out, for in quick reflection his eyes ran from the man
-to the wooden bar across the door.
-
-"You'll talk of the shop, and the shop only, Lablache," Dingan said
-grimly. "I'm not huckstering my home, and I'd choose the buyer if I was
-selling. My lodge ain't to be bought, nor anything in it--not even the
-broom to keep it clean of any half-breeds that'd enter it without leave."
-
-There was malice in the words, but there was greater malice in the tone,
-and Lablache, who was bent on getting the business, swallowed his ugly
-wrath, and determined that, if he got the business, he would get the
-lodge also in due time; for Dingan, if he went, would not take the lodge-
-or the woman with him; and Dingan was not fool enough to stay when he
-could go to Groise to a sure fortune.
-
-The captain of the Ste. Anne again spoke. "There's another thing the
-Company said, Dingan. You needn't go to Groise, not at once. You can
-take a month and visit your folks down East, and lay in a stock of home-
-feelings before you settle down at Groise for good. They was fair when I
-put it to them that you'd mebbe want to do that. 'You tell Dingan,' they
-said, 'that he can have the month glad and grateful, and a free ticket on
-the railway back and forth. He can have it at once,' they said."
-
-Watching, Mitiahwe could see her man's face brighten, and take on a look
-of longing at this suggestion; and it seemed to her that the bird she
-heard in the night was calling in his ears now. Her eyes went blind a
-moment.
-
-"The game is with you, Dingan. All the cards are in your hands; you'll
-never get such another chance again; and you're only thirty," said the
-captain.
-
-"I wish they'd ask me," said Dingan's partner with a sigh, as he looked
-at Lablache. "I want my chance bad, though we've done well here--good
-gosh, yes, all through Dingan."
-
-"The winters, they go queeck in Groise," said Lablache. "It is life all
-the time, trade all the time, plenty to do and see--and a bon fortune to
-make, bagosh!"
-
-"Your old home was in Nove Scotia, wasn't it, Dingan?" asked the captain
-in a low voice. "I kem from Connecticut, and I was East to my village
-las' year. It was good seein' all my old friends again; but I kem back
-content, I kem back full of home-feelin's and content. You'll like the
-trip, Dingan. It'll do you good." Dingan drew himself up with a start.
-"All right. I guess I'll do it. Let's figure up again," he said to his
-partner with a reckless air.
-
-With a smothered cry Mitiahwe turned and fled into the darkness, and back
-to the lodge. The lodge was empty. She threw herself upon the great
-couch in an agony of despair.
-
-A half-hour went by. Then she rose, and began to prepare supper. Her
-face was aflame, her manner was determined, and once or twice her hand
-went to her belt, as though to assure herself of something.
-
-Never had the lodge looked so bright and cheerful; never had she prepared
-so appetising a supper; never had the great couch seemed so soft and rich
-with furs, so homelike and so inviting after a long day's work. Never
-had Mitiahwe seemed so good to look at, so graceful and alert and
-refined--suffering does its work even in the wild woods, with "wild
-people." Never had the lodge such an air of welcome and peace and home
-as to-night; and so Dingan thought as he drew aside the wide curtains of
-deerskin and entered.
-
-Mitiahwe was bending over the fire and appeared not to hear him.
-"Mitiahwe," he said gently.
-
-She was singing to herself to an Indian air the words of a song Dingan
-had taught her:
-
- "Open the door: cold is the night, and my feet are heavy,
- Heap up the fire, scatter upon it the cones and the scented leaves;
- Spread the soft robe on the couch for the chief that returns,
- Bring forth the cup of remembrance--"
-
-It was like a low recitative, and it had a plaintive cadence, as of a
-dove that mourned.
-
-"Mitiahwe," he said in a louder voice, but with a break in it too; for it
-all rushed upon him, all that she had been to him--all that had made the
-great West glow with life, made the air sweeter, the grass greener, the
-trees more companionable and human: who it was that had given the waste
-places a voice. Yet--yet, there were his own people in the East, there
-was another life waiting for him, there was the life of ambition and
-wealth, and, and home--and children.
-
-His eyes were misty as she turned to him with a little cry of surprise,
-how much natural and how much assumed--for she had heard him enter--it
-would have been hard to say. She was a woman, and therefore the daughter
-of pretence even when most real. He caught her by both arms as she shyly
-but eagerly came to him. "Good girl, good little girl," he said. He
-looked round him. "Well, I've never seen our lodge look nicer than it
-does to-night; and the fire, and the pot on the fire, and the smell of
-the pine-cones, and the cedar-boughs, and the skins, and--"
-
-"And everything," she said, with a queer little laugh, as she moved away
-again to turn the steaks on the fire. Everything! He started at the
-word. It was so strange that she should use it by accident, when but a
-little while ago he had been ready to choke the wind out of a man's body
-for using it concerning herself.
-
-It stunned him for a moment, for the West, and the life apart from the
-world of cities, had given him superstition, like that of the Indians,
-whose life he had made his own.
-
-Herself--to leave her here, who had been so much to him? As true as the
-sun she worshipped, her eyes had never lingered on another man since she
-came to his lodge; and, to her mind, she was as truly sacredly married to
-him as though a thousand priests had spoken, or a thousand Medicine Men
-had made their incantations. She was his woman and he was her man. As
-he chatted to her, telling her of much that he had done that day, and
-wondering how he could tell her of all he had done, he kept looking round
-the lodge, his eye resting on this or that; and everything had its own
-personal history, had become part of their lodge-life, because it had a
-use as between him and her, and not a conventional domestic place. Every
-skin, every utensil, every pitcher and bowl and pot and curtain, had been
-with them at one time or another, when it became of importance and
-renowned in the story of their days and deeds.
-
-How could he break it to her--that he was going to visit his own people,
-and that she must be alone with her mother all winter, to await his
-return in the spring? His return? As he watched her sitting beside him,
-helping him to his favourite dish, the close, companionable trust and
-gentleness of her, her exquisite cleanness and grace in his eyes, he
-asked himself if, after all, it was not true that he would return in the
-spring. The years had passed without his seriously thinking of this
-inevitable day. He had put it off and off, content to live each hour as
-it came and take no real thought for the future; and yet, behind all was
-the warning fact that he must go one day, and that Mitiahwe could not go
-with him. Her mother must have known that when she let Mitiahwe come to
-him. Of course; and, after all, she would find another mate, a better
-mate, one of her own people.
-
-But her hand was in his now, and it was small and very warm, and suddenly
-he shook with anger at the thought of one like Breaking Rock taking her
-to his wigwam; or Lablache--this roused him to an inward fury; and
-Mitiahwe saw and guessed the struggle that was going on in him, and she
-leaned her head against his shoulder, and once she raised his hand to her
-lips, and said, "My chief!"
-
-Then his face cleared again, and she got him his pipe and filled it, and
-held a coal to light it; and, as the smoke curled up, and he leaned back
-contentedly for the moment, she went to the door, drew open the curtains,
-and, stepping outside, raised her eyes to the horseshoe. Then she said
-softly to the sky: "O Sun, great Father, have pity on me, for I love him,
-and would keep him. And give me bone of his bone, and one to nurse at my
-breast that is of him. O Sun, pity me this night, and be near me when I
-speak to him, and hear what I say!"
-
-"What are you doing out there, Mitiahwe?" Dingan cried; and when she
-entered again he beckoned her to him. "What was it you were saying? Who
-were you speaking to?" he asked. "I heard your voice."
-
-"I was thanking the Sun for his goodness to me. I was speaking for the
-thing that is in my heart, that is life of my life," she added vaguely.
-
-"Well, I have something to say to you, little girl," he said, with an
-effort.
-
-She remained erect before him waiting for the blow--outwardly calm,
-inwardly crying out in pain. "Do you think you could stand a little
-parting?" he asked, reaching out and touching her shoulder.
-
-"I have been alone before--for five days," she answered quietly.
-
-"But it must be longer this time."
-
-"How long?" she asked, with eyes fixed on his. "If it is more than a
-week I will go too."
-
-"It is longer than a month," he said. "Then I will go."
-
-"I am going to see my people," he faltered.
-
-"By the Ste. Anne?"
-
-He nodded. "It is the last chance this year; but I will come back--
-in the spring."
-
-As he said it he saw her shrink, and his heart smote him. Four years
-such as few men ever spent, and all the luck had been with him, and the
-West had got into his bones! The quiet, starry nights, the wonderful
-days, the hunt, the long journeys, the life free of care, and the warm
-lodge; and, here, the great couch--ah, the cheek pressed to his, the lips
-that whispered at his ear, the smooth arm round his neck. It all rushed
-upon him now. His people? His people in the East, who had thwarted his
-youth, vexed and cramped him, saw only evil in his widening desires, and
-threw him over when he came out West--the scallywag, they called him, who
-had never wronged a man or-or a woman! Never--wronged-a-woman? The
-question sprang to his lips now. Suddenly he saw it all in a new light.
-White or brown or red, this heart and soul and body before him were all
-his, sacred to him; he was in very truth her "Chief."
-
-Untutored as she was, she read him, felt what was going on in him. She
-saw the tears spring to his eyes. Then, coming close to him she said
-softly, slowly: "I must go with you if you go, because you must be with
-me when--oh, hai-yai, my chief, shall we go from here? Here in this
-lodge wilt thou be with thine own people--thine own, thou and I--and
-thine to come." The great passion in her heart made the lie seem very
-truth.
-
-With a cry he got to his feet, and stood staring at her for a moment,
-scarcely comprehending; then suddenly he clasped her in his arms.
-
-"Mitiahwe--Mitiahwe, oh, my little girl!" he cried. "You and me--and
-our own--our own people!" Kissing her, he drew her down beside him on
-the couch. "Tell me again--it is so at last?" he said, and she
-whispered in his ear once more.
-
-In the middle of the night he said to her, "Some day, perhaps, we will
-go East--some day, perhaps."
-
-"But now?" she asked softly.
-
-"Not now--not if I know it," he answered. "I've got my heart nailed to
-the door of this lodge."
-
-As he slept she got quietly out, and, going to the door of the lodge,
-reached up a hand and touched the horse-shoe.
-
-"Be good Medicine to me," she said. Then she prayed. "O Sun, pity me
-that it may be as I have said to him. O pity me, great Father!"
-
-In the days to come Swift Wing said that it was her Medicine; when her
-hand was burned to the wrist in the dark ritual she had performed with
-the Medicine Man the night that Mitiahwe fought for her man--but Mitiahwe
-said it was her Medicine, the horse-shoe, which brought one of Dingan's
-own people to the lodge, a little girl with Mitiahwe's eyes and form and
-her father's face. Truth has many mysteries, and the faith of the woman
-was great; and so it was that, to the long end, Mitiahwe kept her man.
-But truly she was altogether a woman, and had good fortune.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ONCE AT RED MAN'S RIVER
-
-"It's got to be settled to-night, Nance. This game is up here, up for
-ever. The redcoat police from Ottawa are coming, and they'll soon be
-roostin' in this post; the Injuns are goin', the buffaloes are most gone,
-and the fur trade's dead in these parts. D'ye see?"
-
-The woman did not answer the big, broad-shouldered man bending over her,
-but remained looking into the fire with wide, abstracted eyes and a face
-somewhat set.
-
-"You and your brother Bantry's got to go. This store ain't worth a cent
-now. The Hudson's Bay Company'll come along with the redcoats, and
-they'll set up a nice little Sunday-school business here for what they
-call 'agricultural settlers.' There'll be a railway, and the Yankees'll
-send up their marshals to work with the redcoats on the border, and--"
-
-"And the days of smuggling will be over," put in the girl in a low voice.
-"No more bull-wackers and muleskinners 'whooping it up'; no more
-Blackfeet and Piegans drinking alcohol and water, and cutting each
-others' throats. A nice quiet time coming on the border, Abe, eh?"
-
-The man looked at her queerly. She was not prone to sarcasm, she had not
-been given to sentimentalism in the past; she had taken the border-life
-as it was, had looked it straight between the eyes. She had lived up to
-it, or down to it, without any fuss, as good as any man in any phase of
-the life, and the only white woman in this whole West country. It was
-not in the words, but in the tone, that Abe Hawley found something
-unusual and defamatory.
-
-"Why, gol darn it, Nance, what's got into you? You bin a man out West,
-as good a pioneer as ever was on the border. But now you don't sound
-friendly to what's been the game out here, and to all of us that've been
-risking our lives to get a livin'."
-
-"What did I say?" asked the girl, unmoved.
-
-"It ain't what you said, it's the sound o' your voice."
-
-"You don't know my voice, Abe. It ain't always the same. You ain't
-always about; you don't always hear it."
-
-He caught her arm suddenly. "No, but I want to hear it always. I want
-to be always where you are, Nance. That's what's got to be settled
-to-day--to-night."
-
-"Oh, it's got to be settled to-night!" said the girl meditatively,
-kicking nervously at a log on the fire. "It takes two to settle a thing
-like that, and there's only one says it's got to be settled. Maybe it
-takes more than two--or three--to settle a thing like that." Now she
-laughed mirthlessly.
-
-The man started, and his face flushed with anger; then he put a hand on
-himself, drew a step back, and watched her.
-
-"One can settle a thing, if there's a dozen in it. You see, Nance, you
-and Bantry's got to close out. He's fixing it up to-night over at
-Dingan's Drive, and you can't go it alone when you quit this place. Now,
-it's this way: you can go West with Bantry, or you can go North with me.
-Away North there's buffalo and deer, and game aplenty, up along the
-Saskatchewan, and farther up on the Peace River. It's going to be all
-right up there for half a lifetime, and we can have it in our own way
-yet. There'll be no smuggling, but there'll be trading, and land to get;
-and, mebbe, there'd be no need of smuggling, for we can make it, I know
-how--good white whiskey--and we'll still have this free life for our own.
-I can't make up my mind to settle down to a clean collar and going to
-church on Sundays, and all that. And the West's in your bones too. You
-look like the West--"
-
-The girl's face brightened with pleasure, and she gazed at him steadily.
-
-"You got its beauty and its freshness, and you got its heat and cold--"
-
-She saw the tobacco-juice stain at the corners of his mouth, she became
-conscious of the slight odour of spirits in the air, and the light in her
-face lowered in intensity.
-
-"You got the ways of the deer in your walk, the song o' the birds in your
-voice; and you're going North with me, Nance, for I bin talkin' to you
-stiddy four years. It's a long time to wait on the chance, for there's
-always women to be got, same as others have done--men like Dingan with
-Injun girls, and men like Tobey with half-breeds. But I ain't bin
-lookin' that way. I bin lookin' only towards you." He laughed eagerly,
-and lifted a tin cup of whiskey standing on a table near. "I'm lookin'
-towards you now, Nance. Your health and mine together. It's got to be
-settled now. You got to go to the 'Cific Coast with Bantry, or North
-with me."
-
-The girl jerked a shoulder and frowned a little. He seemed so sure of
-himself.
-
-"Or South with Nick Pringle, or East with someone else," she said
-quizzically. "There's always four quarters to the compass, even when Abe
-Hawley thinks he owns the world and has a mortgage on eternity. I'm not
-going West with Bantry, but there's three other points that's open."
-
-With an oath the man caught her by the shoulders, and swung her round to
-face him. He was swelling with anger. "You--Nick Pringle, that trading
-cheat, that gambler! After four years, I--"
-
-"Let go my shoulders," she said quietly. "I'm not your property. Go and
-get some Piegan girl to bully. Keep your hands off. I'm not a bronco
-for you to bit and bridle. You've got no rights. You--" Suddenly she
-relented, seeing the look in his face, and realising that, after all, it
-was a tribute to herself that she could keep him for four years and rouse
-him to such fury--"but yes, Abe," she added, "you have some rights.
-We've been good friends all these years, and you've been all right out
-here. You said some nice things about me just now, and I liked it, even
-if it was as if you learned it out of a book. I've got no po'try in me;
-I'm plain homespun. I'm a sapling, I'm not any prairie-flower, but I
-like when I like, and I like a lot when I like. I'm a bit of hickory,
-I'm not a prairie-flower--"
-
-"Who said you was a prairie-flower? Did I? Who's talking about prairie-
-flowers--"
-
-He stopped suddenly, turned round at the sound of a footstep behind him,
-and saw, standing in a doorway leading to another room, a man who was
-digging his knuckles into his eyes and stifling a yawn. He was a
-refined-looking stripling of not more than twenty-four, not tall, but
-well made, and with an air of breeding, intensified rather than hidden by
-his rough clothes.
-
-"Je-rick-ety! How long have I slept?" he said, blinking at the two
-beside the fire. "How long?" he added, with a flutter of anxiety in his
-tone.
-
-"I said I'd wake you," said the girl, coming forwards. "You needn't have
-worried."
-
-"I don't worry," answered the young man. "I dreamed myself awake, I
-suppose. I got dreaming of redcoats and U. S. marshals, and an ambush in
-the Barfleur Coulee, and--" He saw a secret, warning gesture from the
-girl, and laughed, then turned to Abe and looked him in the face. "Oh, I
-know him! Abe Hawley's all O. K.--I've seen him over at Dingan's Drive.
-Honour among rogues. We're all in it. How goes it--all right?" he added
-carelessly to Hawley, and took a step forwards, as though to shake hands.
-Seeing the forbidding look by which he was met, however, he turned to the
-girl again, as Hawley muttered something they could not hear.
-
-"What time is it?" he asked.
-
-"It's nine o'clock," answered the girl, her eyes watching his every
-movement, her face alive.
-
-"Then the moon's up almost?"
-
-"It'll be up in an hour."
-
-"Jerickety! Then I've got to get ready." He turned to the other room
-again and entered.
-
-"College pup!" said Hawley under his breath savagely. "Why didn't you
-tell me he was here?"
-
-"Was it any of your business, Abe?" she rejoined quietly.
-
-"Hiding him away here--"
-
-"Hiding? Who's been hiding him? He's doing what you've done. He's
-smuggling--the last lot for the traders over by Dingan's Drive. He'll
-get it there by morning. He has as much right here as you. What's got
-into you, Abe?"
-
-"What does he know about the business? Why, he's a college man from the
-East. I've heard o' him. Ain't got no more sense for this life than a
-dicky-bird. White-faced college pup! What's he doing out here? If
-you're a friend o' his, you'd better look after him. He's green."
-
-"He's going East again," she said, "and if I don't go West with Bantry,
-or South over to Montana with Nick Pringle, or North--"
-
-"Nancy--" His eyes burned, his lips quivered.
-
-She looked at him and wondered at the power she had over this bully of
-the border, who had his own way with most people, and was one of the most
-daring fighters, hunters, and smugglers in the country. He was cool,
-hard, and well-in-hand in his daily life, and yet, where she was
-concerned, "went all to pieces," as someone else had said about himself
-to her.
-
-She was not without the wiles and tact of her sex. "You go now, and come
-back, Abe," she said in a soft voice. "Come back in an hour. Come back
-then, and I'll tell you which way I'm going from here."
-
-He was all right again. "It's with you, Nancy," he said eagerly. "I bin
-waiting four years."
-
-As he closed the door behind him the "college pup" entered the room
-again. "Oh, Abe's gone!" he said excitedly. "I hoped you'd get rid of
-the old rip-roarer. I wanted to be alone with you for a while. I don't
-really need to start yet. With the full moon I can do it before
-daylight." Then, with quick warmth, "Ah, Nancy, Nancy, you're a flower--
-the flower of all the prairies," he added, catching her hand and laughing
-into her eyes.
-
-She flushed, and for a moment seemed almost bewildered. His boldness,
-joined to an air of insinuation and understanding, had influenced her
-greatly from the first moment they had met two months ago, as he was
-going South on his smuggling enterprise. The easy way in which he had
-talked to her, the extraordinary sense he seemed to have of what was
-going on in her mind, the confidential meaning in voice and tone and
-words had, somehow, opened up a side of her nature hitherto unexplored.
-She had talked with him freely then, for it was only when he left her
-that he said what he instinctively knew she would remember till they met
-again. His quick comments, his indirect but acute questions, his
-exciting and alluring reminiscences of the East, his subtle yet seemingly
-frank compliments, had only stimulated a new capacity in her, evoked
-comparisons of this delicate-looking, fine-faced gentleman with the men
-of the West by whom she was surrounded. But later he appeared to stumble
-into expressions of admiration for her, as though he was carried off his
-feet and had been stunned by her charm. He had done it all like a
-master. He had not said that she was beautiful--she knew she was not--
-but that she was wonderful, and fascinating, and with "something about
-her" he had never seen in all his life, like her own prairies, thrilling,
-inspiring, and adorable. His first look at her had seemed full of
-amazement. She had noticed that, and thought it meant only that he was
-surprised to find a white girl out here among smugglers, hunters, squaw-
-men, and Indians. But he said that the first look at her had made him
-feel things-feel life and women different from ever before; and he had
-never seen anyone like her, nor a face with so much in it. It was all
-very brilliantly done.
-
-"You make me want to live," he had said, and she, with no knowledge
-of the nuances of language, had taken it literally, and had asked him
-if it had been his wish to die; and he had responded to her mistaken
-interpretation of his meaning, saying that he had had such sorrow he had
-not wanted to live. As he said it his face looked, in truth, overcome by
-some deep inward care; so that there came a sort of feeling she had never
-had so far for any man--that he ought to have someone to look after him.
-This was the first real stirring of the maternal and protective spirit
-in her towards men, though it had shown itself amply enough regarding
-animals and birds. He had said he had not wanted to live, and yet he
-had come out West in order to try and live, to cure the trouble that had
-started in his lungs. The Eastern doctors had told him that the rough
-outdoor life would cure him, or nothing would, and he had vanished from
-the college walls and the pleasant purlieus of learning and fashion into
-the wilds. He had not lied directly to her when he said that he had had
-deep trouble; but he had given the impression that he was suffering from
-wrongs which had broken his spirit and ruined his health. Wrongs there
-certainly had been in his life, by whomever committed.
-
-Two months ago he had left this girl with her mind full of memories of
-what he had said to her, and there was something in the sound of the
-slight cough following his farewell words which had haunted her ever
-since. Her tremendous health and energy, the fire of life burning so
-brightly in her, reached out towards this man living on so narrow a
-margin of force, with no reserve for any extra strain, with just enough
-for each day's use and no more. Four hours before he had come again with
-his team of four mules and an Indian youth, having covered forty miles
-since his last stage. She was at the door and saw him coming while he
-was yet along distance off. Some instinct had told her to watch that
-afternoon, for she knew of his intended return and of his dangerous
-enterprise. The Indians had trailed south and east, the traders had
-disappeared with them, her brother Bantry had gone up and over to
-Dingan's Drive, and, save for a few loiterers and last hangers-on, she
-was alone with what must soon be a deserted post; its walls, its great
-enclosed yard, and its gun-platforms (for it had been fortified) left for
-law and order to enter upon, in the persons of the red-coated watchmen of
-the law.
-
-Out of the South, from over the border, bringing the last great smuggled
-load of whiskey which was to be handed over at Dingan's Drive, and then
-floated on Red Man's River to settlements up North, came the "college
-pup," Kelly Lambton, worn out, dazed with fatigue, but smiling too, for
-a woman's face was ever a tonic to his blood since he was big enough to
-move in life for himself. It needed courage--or recklessness--to run the
-border now; for, as Abe Hawley had said, the American marshals were on
-the pounce, the red-coated mounted police were coming west from Ottawa,
-and word had winged its way along the prairie that these redcoats were
-only a few score miles away, and might be at Fort Fair Desire at any
-moment. The trail to Dingan's Drive lay past it. Through Barfleur
-Coulee, athwart a great open stretch of country, along a wooded belt, and
-then, suddenly, over a ridge, Dingan's Drive and Red Man's River would be
-reached.
-
-The Government had a mind to make an example, if necessary, by killing
-some smugglers in conflict, and the United States marshals had been
-goaded by vanity and anger at one or two escapes "to have something for
-their money," as they said. That, in their language, meant, "to let the
-red run," and Kelly Lambton had none too much blood to lose.
-
-He looked very pale and beaten as he held Nance Machell's hands now, and
-called her a prairie-flower, as he had done when he left her two months
-before. On his arrival but now he had said little, for he saw that she
-was glad to see him, and he was dead for sleep, after thirty-six hours of
-ceaseless travel and watching and danger. Now, with the most perilous
-part of his journey still before him, and worn physically as he was, his
-blood was running faster as he looked into the girl's face, and something
-in her abundant force and bounding life drew him to her. Such vitality
-in a man like Abe Hawley would have angered him almost, as it did a
-little time ago, when Abe was there; but possessed by the girl, it roused
-in him a hunger to draw from the well of her perfect health, from the
-unused vigour of her being, something for himself. The touch of her
-hands warmed him, in the fulness of her life, in the strong eloquence of
-face and form, he forgot she was not beautiful. The lightness passed
-from his words, and his face became eager.
-
-"Flower, yes, the flower of the life of the West--that's what I mean,"
-he said. "You are like an army marching. When I look at you, my blood
-runs faster. I want to march too. When I hold your hand I feel that
-life's worth living--I want to do things."
-
-She drew her hand away rather awkwardly. She had not now that command of
-herself which had ever been easy with the men of the West, except,
-perhaps, with Abe Hawley when--
-
-But with an attempt, only half-meant, to turn the topic, she said: "You
-must be starting if you want to get through to-night. If the redcoats
-catch you this side of Barfleur Coulee, or in the Coulee itself, you'll
-stand no chance. I heard they was only thirty miles north this
-afternoon. Maybe they'll come straight on here to-night, instead of
-camping. If they have news of your coming, they might. You can't tell."
-
-"You're right." He caught her hand again. "I've got to be going now.
-But Nance--Nance--Nancy, I want to stay here, here with you; or to take
-you with me."
-
-She drew back. "What do you mean?" she asked. "Take me with you--me--
-where?"
-
-"East--away down East."
-
-Her brain throbbed, her pulses beat so hard. She scarcely knew what to
-say, did not know what she said. "Why do you do this kind of thing? Why
-do you smuggle?" she asked. "You wasn't brought up to this."
-
-"To get this load of stuff through is life and death to me," he answered.
-"I've made six thousand dollars out here. That's enough to start me
-again in the East, where I lost everything. But I've got to have six
-hundred dollars clear for the travel--railways and things; and I'm having
-this last run to get it. Then I've finished with the West, I guess. My
-health's better; the lung is closed up, I've only got a little cough now
-and again; and I'm off East. I don't want to go alone." He suddenly
-caught her in his arms. "I want you--you, to go with me, Nancy--Nance!"
-
-Her brain swam. To leave the West behind, to go East to a new life
-full of pleasant things, as this man's wife! Her great heart rose, and
-suddenly the mother in her as well as the woman in her was captured by
-his wooing. She had never known what it was to be wooed like this.
-
-She was about to answer, when there came a sharp knock at the door
-leading from the backyard, and Lambton's Indian lad entered. "The
-soldier--he come--many. I go over the ridge; I see. They come quick
-here," he said.
-
-Nance gave a startled cry, and Lambton turned to the other room for his
-pistols, overcoat, and cap, when there was the sound of horses' hoofs,
-the door suddenly opened, and an officer stepped inside.
-
-"You're wanted for smuggling, Lambton," he said brusquely. "Don't stir!"
-In his hand was a revolver.
-
-"Oh, bosh! Prove it," answered the young man, pale and startled, but
-cool in speech and action. "We'll prove it all right. The stuff is
-hereabouts." The girl said something to the officer in the Chinook
-language. She saw he did not understand. Then she spoke quickly to
-Lambton in the same tongue.
-
-"Keep him here a bit," she said. "His men haven't come yet. Your outfit
-is well hid. I'll see if I can get away with it before they find it.
-They'll follow, and bring you with them, that's sure. So if I have luck
-and get through, we'll meet at Dingan's Drive."
-
-Lambton's face brightened. He quickly gave her a few directions in
-Chinook, and told her what to do at Dingan's if she got there first.
-Then she was gone. The officer did not understand what Nance had said,
-but he realised that, whatever she intended to do, she had an advantage
-over him. With an unnecessary courage he had ridden on alone to make his
-capture, and, as it proved, without prudence. He had got his man, but he
-had not got the smuggled whiskey and alcohol he had come to seize. There
-was no time to be lost. The girl had gone before he realised it. What
-had she said to the prisoner? He was foolish enough to ask Lambton, and
-Lambton replied coolly: "She said she'd get you some supper, but she
-guessed it would have to be cold--What's your name? Are you a colonel,
-or a captain, or only a principal private?"
-
-"I am Captain MacFee, Lambton. And you'll now bring me where your outfit
-is. March!"
-
-The pistol was still in his hand, and he had a determined look in
-his eye. Lambton saw it. He was aware of how much power lay in the
-threatening face before him, and how eager that power was to make itself
-felt, and provide "Examples"; but he took his chances.
-
-"I'll march all right," he answered, "but I'll march to where you tell
-me. You can't have it both ways. You can take me, because you've found
-me, and you can take my outfit too when you've found it; but I'm not
-doing your work, not if I know it."
-
-There was a blaze of anger in the eyes of the officer, and it looked for
-an instant as though something of the lawlessness of the border was going
-to mark the first step of the Law in the Wilderness, but he bethought
-himself in time, and said quietly, yet in a voice which Lambton knew he
-must heed:
-
-"Put on your things-quick."
-
-When this was accomplished, and MacFee had secured the smuggler's
-pistols, he said again, "March, Lambton."
-
-Lambton marched through the moonlit night towards the troop of men who
-had come to set up the flag of order in the plains and hills, and as he
-went his keen ear heard his own mules galloping away down towards the
-Barfleur Coulee. His heart thumped in his breast. This girl, this
-prairie-flower, was doing this for him, was risking her life, was
-breaking the law for him. If she got through, and handed over the
-whiskey to those who were waiting for it, and it got bundled into the
-boats going North before the redcoats reached Dingan's Drive, it would
-be as fine a performance as the West had ever seen; and he would be six
-hundred dollars to the good. He listened to the mules galloping, till
-the sounds had died into the distance, but he saw now that his captor
-had heard too, and that the pursuit would be desperate.
-
-A half-hour later it began, with MacFee at the head, and a dozen troopers
-pounding behind, weary, hungry, bad-tempered, ready to exact payment for
-their hardships and discouragement.
-
-They had not gone a dozen miles when a shouting horseman rode furiously
-on them from behind. They turned with carbines cocked, but it was Abe
-Hawley who cursed them, flung his fingers in their faces, and rode on
-harder and harder. Abe had got the news from one of Nancy's half-breeds,
-and, with the devil raging in his heart, had entered on the chase. His
-spirit was up against them all; against the Law represented by the
-troopers camped at Fort Fair Desire, against the troopers and their
-captain speeding after Nancy Machell--his Nonce, who was risking her
-life and freedom for the hated, pale-faced smuggler riding between the
-troopers; and his spirit was up against Nance herself.
-
-Nance had said to him, "Come back in an hour," and he had come back to
-find her gone. She had broken her word. She had deceived him. She had
-thrown the four years of his waiting to the winds, and a savage lust was
-in his heart, which would not be appeased till he had done some evil
-thing to someone.
-
-The girl and the Indian lad were pounding through the night with ears
-strained to listen for hoof-beats coming after, with eyes searching
-forward into the trail for swollen creeks and direful obstructions.
-Through Barfleur Coulee it was a terrible march, for there was no road,
-and again and again they were nearly overturned, while wolves hovered in
-their path, ready to reap a midnight harvest. But once in the open
-again, with the full moonlight on their trail, the girl's spirits rose.
-If she could do this thing for the man who had looked into her eyes as no
-one had ever done, what a finish to her days in the West! For they were
-finished, finished for ever, and she was going--she was going East; not
-West with Bantry, nor South with Nick Pringle, nor North with Abe Hawley,
-ah, Abe Hawley, he had been a good friend, he had a great heart, he was
-the best man of all the western men she had known; but another man had
-come from the East, a man who had roused something in her never felt
-before, a man who had said she was wonderful; and he needed someone to
-take good care of him, to make him love life again. Abe would have been
-all right if Lambton had never come, and she had meant to marry Abe in
-the end; but it was different now, and Abe must get over it. Yet she had
-told Abe to come back in an hour. He was sure to do it; and, when he had
-done it, and found her gone on this errand, what would he do? She knew
-what he would do. He would hurt someone. He would follow too. But at
-Dingan's Drive, if she reached it before the troopers and before Abe,
-and did the thing she had set out to do; and, because no whiskey could
-be found, Lambton must go free; and they all stood there together, what
-would be the end? Abe would be terrible; but she was going East, not
-North, and when the time came she would face it and put things right
-somehow.
-
-The night seemed endless to her fixed and anxious eyes and mind, yet dawn
-came, and there had fallen no sound of hoof-beats on her ear. The ridge
-above Dingan's Drive was reached and covered, but yet there was no sign
-of her pursuers. At Red Man's River she delivered her load of contraband
-to the traders waiting for it, and saw it loaded into the boats and
-disappear beyond the wooded bend above Dingan's.
-
-Then she collapsed into the arms of her brother Bantry, and was carried,
-fainting, into Dingan's Lodge. A half-hour later MacFee and his troopers
-and Lambton came. MacFee grimly searched the post and the shore, but he
-saw by the looks of all that he had been foiled. He had no proof of
-anything, and Lambton must go free.
-
-"You've fooled us," he said to Nance sourly, yet with a kind of
-admiration too. "Through you they got away with it. But I wouldn't
-try it again, if I were you."
-
-"Once is enough," answered the girl laconically, as Lambton, set free,
-caught both her hands in his and whispered in her ear.
-
-MacFee turned to the others. "You'd better drop this kind of thing," he
-said. "I mean business." They saw the troopers by the horses, and
-nodded.
-
-"Well, we was about quit of it anyhow," said Bantry. "We've had all we
-want out here."
-
-A loud laugh went up, and it was still ringing when there burst into the
-group, out of the trail, Abe Hawley, on foot.
-
-He looked round the group savagely till his eyes rested on Nance and
-Lambton. "I'm last in," he said in a hoarse voice. "My horse broke its
-leg cutting across to get here before her--" He waved a hand towards
-Nance. "It's best stickin' to old trails, not tryin' new ones." His
-eyes were full of hate as he looked at Lambton. "I'm keeping to old
-trails. I'm for goin' North, far up, where these two-dollar-a-day and
-hash-and-clothes people ain't come yet." He made a contemptuous gesture
-toward MacFee and his troopers. "I'm goin' North--" He took a step
-forward and fixed his bloodshot eyes on Nance. "I say I'm goin' North.
-You comin' with me, Nance?" He took off his cap to her.
-
-He was haggard, his buckskins were torn, his hair was dishevelled, and
-he limped a little; but he was a massive and striking figure, and MacFee
-watched him closely, for there was that in his eyes which meant trouble.
-"You said, 'Come back in an hour,' Nance, and I come back, as I said I
-would," he went on. "You didn't stand to your word. I've come to git
-it. I'm goin' North, Nance, and I bin waitin' for four years for you to
-go with me. Are you comin'?"
-
-His voice was quiet, but it had a choking kind of sound, and it struck
-strangely in the ears of all. MacFee came nearer.
-
-"Are you comin' with me, Nance, dear?"
-
-She reached a hand towards Lambton, and he took it, but she did not
-speak. Something in Abe's eyes overwhelmed her--something she had never
-seen before, and it seemed to stifle speech in her. Lambton spoke
-instead.
-
-"She's going East with me," he said. "That's settled."
-
-MacFee started. Then he caught Abe's arm. "Wait!" he said
-peremptorily. "Wait one minute." There was something in his voice
-which held Abe back for the instant.
-
-"You say she is going East with you," MacFee said sharply to Lambton.
-"What for?" He fastened Lambton with his eyes, and Lambton quailed.
-"Have you told her you've got a wife--down East? I've got your history,
-Lambton. Have you told her that you've got a wife you married when you
-were at college--and as good a girl as ever lived?"
-
-It had come with terrible suddenness even to Lambton, and he was too
-dazed to make any reply. With a cry of shame and anger Nancy started
-back. Growling with rage and hate, Abe Hawley sprang toward Lambton,
-but the master of the troopers stepped between.
-
-No one could tell who moved first, or who first made the suggestion,
-for the minds of all were the same, and the general purpose was
-instantaneous; but in the fraction of a minute Lambton, under menace,
-was on his hands and knees crawling to the riverside. Watchful, but not
-interfering, the master of the troopers saw him set adrift in a canoe
-without a paddle, while he was pelted with mud from the shore.
-
-The next morning at sunrise Abe Hawley and the girl he had waited for so
-long started on the North trail together, MacFee, master of the troopers
-and justice of the peace, handing over the marriage lines.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE STROBE OF THE HOUR
-
-"They won't come to-night--sure."
-
-The girl looked again towards the west, where, here and there, bare
-poles, or branches of trees, or slips of underbrush marked a road made
-across the plains through the snow. The sun was going down golden red,
-folding up the sky a wide soft curtain of pink and mauve and deep purple
-merging into the fathomless blue, where already the stars were beginning
-to quiver. The house stood on the edge of a little forest, which had
-boldly asserted itself in the wide flatness. At this point in the west
-the prairie merged into an undulating territory, where hill and wood
-rolled away from the banks of the Saskatchewan, making another England in
-beauty. The forest was a sort of advance-post of that land of beauty.
-
-Yet there was beauty too on this prairie, though there was nothing to the
-east but snow and the forest so far as eye could see. Nobility and peace
-and power brooded over the white world.
-
-As the girl looked, it seemed as though the bosom of the land rose and
-fell. She had felt this vibrating life beat beneath the frozen surface.
-Now, as she gazed, she smiled sadly to herself, with drooping eyelids
-looking out from beneath strong brows.
-
-"I know you--I know you," she said aloud. "You've got to take your toll.
-And when you're lying asleep like that, or pretending to, you reach up-
-and kill. And yet you can be kind-ah, but you can be kind and beautiful!
-But you must have your toll one way or t'other." She sighed and paused;
-then, after a moment, looking along the trail--"I don't expect they'll
-come to-night, and mebbe not to-morrow, if--if they stay for THAT."
-
-Her eyes closed, she shivered a little. Her lips drew tight, and her
-face seemed suddenly to get thinner. "But dad wouldn't--no, he couldn't,
-not considerin'--" Again she shut her eyes in pain.
-
-Her face was now turned from the western road by which she had expected
-her travellers, and towards the east, where already the snow was taking
-on a faint bluish tint, a reflection of the sky deepening nightwards in
-that half-circle of the horizon. Distant and a little bleak and
-cheerless the half-circle was looking now.
-
-"No one--not for two weeks," she said, in comment on the eastern trail,
-which was so little frequented in winter, and this year had been less
-travelled than ever. "It would be nice to have a neighbour," she added,
-as she faced the west and the sinking sun again. "I get so lonely--just
-minutes I get lonely. But it's them minutes that seem to count more than
-all the rest when they come. I expect that's it--we don't live in
-months and years, but just in minutes. It doesn't take long for an
-earthquake to do its work--it's seconds then. . . . P'r'aps dad won't
-even come to-morrow," she added, as she laid her hand on the latch. "It
-never seemed so long before, not even when he's been away a week." She
-laughed bitterly. "Even bad company's better than no company at all.
-Sure. And Mickey has been here always when dad's been away past times.
-Mickey was a fool, but he was company; and mebbe he'd have been better
-company if he'd been more of a scamp and less a fool. I dunno, but I
-really think he would. Bad company doesn't put you off so."
-
-There was a scratching at the inside of the door. "My, if I didn't
-forget Shako," she said, "and he dying for a run!"
-
-She opened the door quickly, and out jumped a Russian dog of almost full
-breed, with big, soft eyes like those of his mistress, and with the air
-of the north in every motion--like his mistress also.
-
-"Come, Shako, a run--a run!"
-
-An instant after she was flying off on a path towards the woods, her
-short skirts flying and showing limbs as graceful and shapely as those of
-any woman of that world of social grace which she had never seen; for she
-was a prairie girl through and through, born on the plains and fed on its
-scanty fare--scanty as to variety, at least. Backwards and forwards they
-ran, the girl shouting like a child of ten,--she was twenty-three, her
-eyes flashing, her fine white teeth showing, her hands thrown up in sheer
-excess of animal life, her hair blowing about her face-brown, strong
-hair, wavy and plentiful.
-
-Fine creature as she was, her finest features were her eyes and her
-hands. The eyes might have been found in the most savage places; the
-hands, however, only could have come through breeding. She had got them
-honestly; for her mother was descended from an old family of the French
-province. That was why she had the name of Loisette--and had a touch of
-distinction. It was the strain of the patrician in the full blood of the
-peasant; but it gave her something which made her what she was--what she
-had been since a child, noticeable and besought, sometimes beloved. It
-was too strong a nature to compel love often, but it never failed to
-compel admiration. Not greatly a creature of words, she had become moody
-of late; and even now, alive with light and feeling and animal life, she
-suddenly stopped her romp and run, and called the dog to her.
-
-"Heel, Shako!" she said, and made for the door of the little house,
-which looked so snug and home-like. She paused before she came to the
-door, to watch the smoke curling up from the chimney straight as a
-column, for there was not a breath of air stirring. The sun was almost
-gone and the strong bluish light was settling on everything, giving even
-the green spruce trees a curious burnished tone.
-
-Swish! Thud! She faced the woods quickly. It was only a sound that she
-had heard how many hundreds of times! It was the snow slipping from some
-broad branch of the fir trees to the ground. Yet she started now.
-Something was on her mind, agitating her senses, affecting her self-
-control.
-
-"I'll be jumping out of my boots when the fire snaps, or the frost cracks
-the ice, next," she said aloud contemptuously. "I dunno what's the
-matter with me. I feel as if someone was hiding somewhere ready to pop
-out on me. I haven't never felt like that before."
-
-She had formed the habit of talking to herself, for it had seemed at
-first, as she was left alone when her father went trapping or upon
-journeys for the Government, that by and by she would start at the sound
-of her own voice, if she didn't think aloud. So she was given to
-soliloquy, defying the old belief that people who talked to themselves
-were going mad. She laughed at that. She said that birds sang to
-themselves and didn't go mad, and crickets chirruped, and frogs croaked,
-and owls hooted, and she would talk and not go crazy either. So she
-talked to herself and to Shako when she was alone.
-
-How quiet it was inside when her light supper was eaten, bread and beans
-and pea-soup--she had got this from her French mother. Now she sat, her
-elbows on her knees, her chin on her hands, looking into the fire. Shako
-was at her feet upon the great musk-ox rug, which her father had got on
-one of his hunting trips in the Athabasca country years ago. It belonged
-as she belonged. It breathed of the life of the north-land, for the
-timbers of the hut were hewn cedar; the rough chimney, the seats, and the
-shelves on which a few books made a fair show beside the bright tins and
-the scanty crockery, were of pine; and the horned heads of deer and
-wapiti made pegs for coats and caps, and rests for guns and rifles. It
-was a place of comfort; it had an air of well-to-do thrift, even as the
-girl's dress, though plain, was made of good sound stuff, grey, with a
-touch of dark red to match the auburn of her hair.
-
-A book lay open in her lap, but she had scarcely tried to read it. She
-had put it down after a few moments fixed upon it. It had sent her
-thoughts off into a world where her life had played a part too big for
-books, too deep for the plummet of any save those who had lived through
-the storm of life's trials; and life when it is bitter to the young is
-bitter with an agony the old never know. At last she spoke to herself.
-
-"She knows now. Now she knows what it is, how it feels--your heart like
-red-hot coals, and something in your head that's like a turnscrew, and
-you want to die and can't, for you've got to live and suffer."
-
-Again she was quiet, and only the dog's heavy breathing, the snap of the
-fire, or the crack of a timber in the deadly frost broke the silence.
-Inside it was warm and bright and home-like; outside it was twenty
-degrees below zero, and like some vast tomb where life itself was
-congealed, and only the white stars, low, twinkling, and quizzical,
-lived-a life of sharp corrosion, not of fire.
-
-Suddenly she raised her head and listened. The dog did the same. None
-but those whose lives are lived in lonely places can be so acute, so
-sensitive to sound. It was a feeling delicate and intense, the whole
-nature getting the vibration. You could have heard nothing had you been
-there; none but one who was of the wide spaces could have done so. But
-the dog and the woman felt, and both strained towards the window. Again
-they heard, and started to their feet. It was far, far away, and still
-you could not have heard; but now they heard clearly--a cry in the night,
-a cry of pain and despair. The girl ran to the window and pulled aside
-the bearskin curtain which had completely shut out the light. Then she
-stirred the fire, threw a log upon it, snuffed the candles, hastily put
-on her moccasins, fur coat, wool cap, and gloves, and went to the door
-quickly, the dog at her heels. Opening it, she stepped out into the
-night.
-
-"Qui va la? Who is it? Where?" she called, and strained towards the
-west. She thought it might be her father or Mickey the hired man, or
-both.
-
-The answer came from the east, out of the homeless, neighbourless, empty
-east--a cry, louder now. There were only stars, and the night was dark,
-though not deep dark. She sped along the prairie road as fast as she
-could, once or twice stopping to call aloud. In answer to her calls the
-voice sounded nearer and nearer. Now suddenly she left the trail and
-bore away northward. At last the voice was very near. Presently a
-figure appeared ahead, staggering towards her.
-
-"Qui va la? Who is it?" she asked.
-
-"Ba'tiste Caron," was the reply in English, in a faint voice. She was
-beside him in an instant.
-
-"What has happened? Why are you off the trail?" she said, and supported
-him.
-
-"My Injun stoled my dogs and run off," he replied. "I run after. Then,
-when I am to come to the trail"--he paused to find the English word, and
-could not--"encore to this trail I no can. So. Ah, bon Dieu, it has
-so awful!" He swayed and would have fallen, but she caught him, bore
-him up. She was so strong, and he was as slight as a girl, though tall.
-
-"When was that?" she asked.
-
-"Two nights ago," he answered, and swayed. "Wait," she said, and pulled
-a flask from her pocket. "Drink this-quick."
-
-He raised it to his lips, but her hand was still on it, and she only let
-him take a little. Then she drew it away, though she had almost to use
-force, he was so eager for it. Now she took a biscuit from her pocket.
-
-"Eat; then some more brandy after," she urged. "Come on; it's not far.
-See, there's the light," she added cheerily, raising her head towards the
-hut.
-
-"I saw it just when I have fall down--it safe me. I sit down to die--
-like that! But it safe me, that light--so. Ah, bon Dieu, it was so far,
-and I want eat so!" Already he had swallowed the biscuit.
-
-"When did you eat last?" she asked, as she urged him on.
-
-"Two nights--except for one leetla piece of bread--O--O--I fin' it in my
-pocket. Grace! I have travel so far. Jesu, I think it ees ten thousan'
-miles I go. But I mus' go on, I mus' go--O--certainement."
-
-The light came nearer and nearer. His footsteps quickened, though he
-staggered now and then, and went like a horse that has run its race, but
-is driven upon its course again, going heavily with mouth open and head
-thrown forwards and down.
-
-"But I mus' to get there, an' you-you will to help me, eh?"
-
-Again he swayed, but her strong arm held him up. As they ran on, in a
-kind of dog-trot, her hand firm upon his arm--he seemed not to notice it
---she became conscious, though it was half dark, of what sort of man she
-had saved. He was about her own age, perhaps a year or two older, with
-little, if any, hair upon his face, save a slight moustache. His eyes,
-deep sunken as they were, she made out were black, and the face, though
-drawn and famished, had a handsome look. Presently she gave him another
-sip of brandy, and he quickened his steps, speaking to himself the while.
-
-"I haf to do it--if I lif. It is to go, go, go, till I get."
-
-Now they came to the hut where the firelight flickered on the window-
-pane; the door was flung open, and, as he stumbled on the threshold, she
-helped him into the warm room. She almost pushed him over to the fire.
-
-Divested of his outer coat, muffler, cap, and leggings, he sat on a bench
-before the fire, his eyes wandering from the girl to the flames, and his
-hands clasping and unclasping between his knees. His eyes dilating with
-hunger, he watched her preparations for his supper; and when at last--and
-she had been but a moment--it was placed before him, his head swam, and
-he turned faint with the stress of his longing. He would have swallowed
-a basin of pea-soup at a draught, but she stopped him, holding the basin
-till she thought he might venture again. Then came cold beans, and some
-meat which she toasted at the fire and laid upon his plate. They had not
-spoken since first entering the house, when tears had shone in his eyes,
-and he had said:
-
-"You have safe--ah, you have safe me, and so I will do it yet by help bon
-Dieu--yes."
-
-The meat was done at last, and he sat with a great dish of tea beside
-him, and his pipe alight.
-
-"What time, if please?" he asked. "I t'ink nine hour, but no sure."
-
-"It is near nine," she said. She hastily tidied up the table after his
-meal, and then came and sat in her chair over against the wall of the
-rude fireplace. "Nine--dat is good. The moon rise at 'leven; den I go.
-I go on," he said, "if you show me de queeck way."
-
-"You go on--how can you go on?" she asked, almost sharply.
-
-"Will you not to show me?" he asked. "Show you what?" she asked
-abruptly.
-
-"The queeck way to Askatoon," he said, as though surprised that she
-should ask. "They say me if I get here you will tell me queeck way to
-Askatoon. Time, he go so fas', an' I have loose a day an' a night, an'
-I mus' get Askatoon if I lif--I mus' get dere in time. It is all safe to
-de stroke of de hour, mais, after, it is--bon Dieu--it is hell then. Who
-shall forgif me--no!"
-
-"The stroke of the hour--the stroke of the hour!" It beat into her
-brain. Were they both thinking of the same thing now?
-
-"You will show me queeck way. I mus' be Askatoon in two days, or it is
-all over," he almost moaned. "Is no man here--I forget dat name, my head
-go round like a wheel; but I know dis place, an' de good God He help me
-fin' my way to where I call out, bien sur. Dat man's name I have
-forget."
-
-"My father's name is John Alroyd," she answered absently, for there were
-hammering at her brain the words, "The stroke of the hour."
-
-"Ah, now I get--yes. An' your name, it is Loisette Alroy'--ah, I have it
-in my mind now--Loisette. I not forget dat name, I not forget you--no."
-
-"Why do you want to go the 'quick' way to Askatoon?" she asked.
-
-He puffed a moment at his pipe before he answered her. Presently he
-said, holding out his pipe, "You not like smoke, mebbe?"
-
-She shook her head in negation, making an impatient gesture.
-
-"I forget ask you," he said. "Dat journee make me forget. When Injun
-Jo, he leave me with the dogs, an' I wake up all alone, an' not know my
-way--not like Jo, I think I die, it is so bad, so terrible in my head.
-Not'ing but snow, not'ing. But dere is de sun; it shine. It say to me,
-'Wake up, Ba'tiste; it will be all right bime-bye.' But all time I t'ink
-I go mad, for I mus' get Askatoon before--dat."
-
-She started. Had she not used the same word in thinking of Askatoon.
-"That," she had said.
-
-"Why do you want to go the 'quick' way to Askatoon?" she asked again,
-her face pale, her foot beating the floor impatiently.
-
-"To save him before dat!" he answered, as though she knew of what he was
-speaking and thinking. "What is that?" she asked. She knew now,
-surely, but she must ask it nevertheless.
-
-"Dat hanging--of Haman," he answered. He nodded to himself. Then he
-took to gazing into the fire. His lips moved as though talking to
-himself, and the hand that held the pipe lay forgotten on his knee.
-"What have you to do with Haman?" she asked slowly, her eyes burning.
-
-"I want safe him--I mus' give him free." He tapped his breast. "It is
-hereto mak' him free." He still tapped his breast.
-
-For a moment she stood frozen still, her face thin and drawn and white;
-then suddenly the blood rushed back into her face, and a red storm raged
-in her eyes.
-
-She thought of the sister, younger than herself, whom Rube Haman had
-married and driven to her grave within a year--the sweet Lucy, with the
-name of her father's mother. Lucy had been all English in face and
-tongue, a flower of the west, driven to darkness by this horse-dealing
-brute, who, before he was arrested and tried for murder, was about to
-marry Kate Wimper. Kate Wimper had stolen him from Lucy before Lucy's
-first and only child was born, the child that could not survive the warm
-mother-life withdrawn, and so had gone down the valley whither the
-broken-hearted mother had fled. It was Kate Wimper, who, before that,
-had waylaid the one man for whom she herself had ever cared, and drawn
-him from her side by such attractions as she herself would keep for an
-honest wife, if such she ever chanced to be. An honest wife she would
-have been had Kate Wimper not crossed the straight path of her life. The
-man she had loved was gone to his end also, reckless and hopeless, after
-he had thrown away his chance of a lifetime with Loisette Alroyd. There
-had been left behind this girl, to whom tragedy had come too young, who
-drank humiliation with a heart as proud as ever straightly set its course
-through crooked ways.
-
-It had hurt her, twisted her nature a little, given a fountain of
-bitterness to her soul, which welled up and flooded her life sometimes.
-It had given her face no sourness, but it put a shadow into her eyes.
-
-She had been glad when Haman was condemned for murder, for she believed
-he had committed it, and ten times hanging could not compensate for that
-dear life gone from their sight--Lucy, the pride of her father's heart.
-She was glad when Haman was condemned, because of the woman who had
-stolen him from Lucy, because of that other man, her lover, gone out of
-her own life. The new hardness in her rejoiced that now the woman, if
-she had any heart at all, must have it bowed down by this supreme
-humiliation and wrung by the ugly tragedy of the hempen rope.
-
-And now this man before her, this man with a boy's face, with the dark
-luminous eyes, whom she had saved from the frozen plains, he had that in
-his breast which would free Haman, so he had said. A fury had its birth
-in her at that moment. Something seemed to seize her brain and master
-it, something so big that it held all her faculties in perfect control,
-and she felt herself in an atmosphere where all life moved round her
-mechanically, she herself the only sentient thing, so much greater than
-all she saw, or all that she realised by her subconscious self.
-Everything in the world seemed small. How calm it was even with the fury
-within!
-
-"Tell me," she said quietly--"tell me how you are able to save Haman?"
-
-"He not kill Wakely. It is my brudder Fadette dat kill and get away.
-Haman he is drunk, and everyt'ing seem to say Haman he did it, an'
-everyone know Haman is not friend to Wakely. So the juree say he must be
-hanging. But my brudder he go to die with hawful bad cold queeck, an' he
-send for the priest an' for me, an' tell all. I go to Governor with the
-priest, an' Governor gif me dat writing here." He tapped his breast,
-then took out a wallet and showed the paper to her. "It is life of dat
-Haman, voici! And so I safe him for my brudder. Dat was a bad boy,
-Fadette. He was bad all time since he was a baby, an' I t'ink him pretty
-lucky to die on his bed, an' get absolve, and go to purgatore. If he not
-have luck like dat he go to hell, an' stay there."
-
-He sighed, and put the wallet back in his breast carefully, his eyes
-half-shut with weariness, his handsome face drawn and thin, his limbs lax
-with fatigue.
-
-"If I get Askatoon before de time for dat, I be happy in my heart, for
-dat brudder off mine he get out of purgatore bime-bye, I t'ink."
-
-His eyes were almost shut, but he drew himself together with a great
-effort, and added desperately, "No sleep. If I sleep it is all smash.
-Man say me I can get Askatoon by dat time from here, if I go queeck way
-across lak'--it is all froze now, dat lak'--an' down dat Foxtail Hills.
-Is it so, ma'm'selle?"
-
-"By the 'quick' way if you can make it in time," she said; "but it is no
-way for the stranger to go. There are always bad spots on the ice--it is
-not safe. You could not find your way."
-
-"I mus' get dere in time," he said desperately. "You can't do it--
-alone," she said. "Do you want to risk all and lose?"
-
-He frowned in self-suppression. "Long way, I no can get dere in time?"
-he asked.
-
-She thought a moment. "No; it can't be done by the long way. But there
-is another way--a third trail, the trail the Gover'ment men made a year
-ago when they came to survey. It is a good trail. It is blazed in the
-woods and staked on the plains. You cannot miss. But--but there is so
-little time." She looked at the clock on the wall. "You cannot leave
-here much before sunrise, and--"
-
-"I will leef when de moon rise, at eleven," he interjected.
-
-"You have had no sleep for two nights, and no food. You can't last it
-out," she said calmly.
-
-The deliberate look on his face deepened to stubbornness.
-
-"It is my vow to my brudder--he is in purgatore. An' I mus' do it," he
-rejoined, with an emphasis there was no mistaking. "You can show me dat
-way?"
-
-She went to a drawer and took out a piece of paper. Then, with a point
-of blackened stick, as he watched her and listened, she swiftly drew his
-route for him.
-
-"Yes, I get it in my head," he said. "I go dat way, but I wish--I wish
-it was dat queeck way. I have no fear, not'ing. I go w'en dat moon
-rise--I go, bien sur."
-
-"You must sleep, then, while I get some food for you." She pointed to a
-couch in a corner. "I will wake you when the moon rises."
-
-For the first time he seemed to realise her, for a moment to leave the
-thing which consumed him, and put his mind upon her.
-
-"You not happy--you not like me here?" he asked simply; then added
-quickly, "I am not bad man like me brudder--no."
-
-Her eyes rested on him for a moment as though realising him, while some
-thought was working in her mind behind.
-
-"No, you are not a bad man," she said. "Men and women are equal on the
-plains. You have no fear--I have no fear."
-
-He glanced at the rifles on the walls, then back at her. "My mudder, she
-was good woman. I am glad she did not lif to know what Fadette do." His
-eyes drank her in for a minute, then he said: "I go sleep now, t'ank you
---till moontime."
-
-In a moment his deep breathing filled the room, the only sound save for
-the fire within and the frost outside.
-
-Time went on. The night deepened.
-
- .........................
-
-Loisette sat beside the fire, but her body was half-turned from it
-towards the man on the sofa. She was not agitated outwardly, but within
-there was that fire which burns up life and hope and all the things that
-come between us and great issues. It had burned up everything in her
-except one thought, one powerful motive. She had been deeply wronged,
-and justice had been about to give "an eye for an eye and a tooth for a
-tooth." But the man lying there had come to sweep away the scaffolding
-of justice--he had come for that.
-
-Perhaps he might arrive at Askatoon before the stroke of the hour,
-but still he would be too late, for in her pocket now was the Governor's
-reprieve. The man had slept soundly. His wallet was still in his
-breast; but the reprieve was with her.
-
-If he left without discovering his loss, and got well on his way, and
-discovered it then, it would be too late. If he returned--she only saw
-one step before her, she would wait for that, and deal with it when it
-came. She was thinking of Lucy, of her own lover ruined and gone. She
-was calm in her madness.
-
-At the first light of the moon she roused him. She had put food into his
-fur-coat pocket, and after he had drunk a bowl of hot pea-soup, while she
-told him his course again, she opened the door, and he passed out into
-the night. He started forward without a word, but came back again and
-caught her hand.
-
-"Pardon," he said; "I go forget everyt'ing except dat. But I t'ink what
-you do for me, it is better than all my life. Bien sur, I will come
-again, when I get my mind to myself. Ah, but you are beautibul," he
-said, "an' you not happy. Well, I come again--yes, a Dieu."
-
-He was gone into the night, with the moon silvering the sky, and the
-steely frost eating into the sentient life of this northern world.
-Inside the house, with the bearskin blind dropped at the window again,
-and the fire blazing high, Loisette sat with the Governor's reprieve in
-her hand. Looking at it, she wondered why it had been given to Ba'tiste
-Caron, and not to a police-officer. Ah yes, it was plain--Ba'tiste was a
-woodsman and plainsman, and could go far more safely than a constable,
-and faster. Ba'tiste had reason for going fast, and he would travel
-night and day--he was travelling night and day indeed. And now Ba'tiste
-might get there, but the reprieve would not. He would not be able to
-stop the hanging of Haman--the hanging of Rube Haman.
-
-A change came over her. Her eyes blazed, her breast heaved now. She had
-been so quiet, so cold and still. But life seemed moving in her once
-again. The woman, Kate Wimper, who had helped to send two people to
-their graves, would now drink the dregs of shame, if she was capable of
-shame--would be robbed of her happiness, if so be she loved Rube Haman.
-
-She stood up, as though to put the paper in the fire, but paused suddenly
-at one thought--Rube Haman was innocent of murder.
-
-Even so, he was not innocent of Lucy's misery and death, of the death of
-the little one who only opened its eyes to the light for an instant, and
-then went into the dark again. But truly she was justified! When Haman
-was gone things would go on just the same--and she had been so bitter,
-her heart had been pierced as with a knife these past three years. Again
-she held out her hand to the fire, but suddenly she gave a little cry and
-put her hand to her head. There was Ba'tiste!
-
-What was Ba'tiste to her? Nothing-nothing at all. She had saved his
-life--even if she wronged Ba'tiste, her debt would be paid. No, she
-would not think of Ba'tiste. Yet she did not put the paper in the fire,
-but in the pocket of her dress. Then she went to her room, leaving the
-door open. The bed was opposite the fire, and, as she lay there--she did
-not take off her clothes, she knew not why-she could see the flames. She
-closed her eyes, but could not sleep, and more than once when she opened
-them she thought she saw Ba'tiste sitting there as he had sat hours
-before. Why did Ba'tiste haunt her so? What was it he had said in his
-broken English as he went away?--that he would come back; that she was
-"beautibul."
-
-All at once as she lay still, her head throbbing, her feet and hands icy
-cold, she sat up listening. "Ah-again!" she cried. She sprang from her
-bed, rushed to the door, and strained her eyes into the silver night.
-She called into the icy void, "Qui va la? Who goes?"
-
-She leaned forwards, her hand at her ear, but no sound came in reply.
-Once more she called, but nothing answered. The night was all light and
-frost and silence.
-
-She had only heard, in her own brain, the iteration of Ba'tiste's
-calling. Would he reach Askatoon in time, she wondered, as she shut the
-door? Why had she not gone with him and attempted the shorter way the
-quick way, he had called it? All at once the truth came back upon her,
-stirring her now. It would do no good for Ba'tiste to arrive in time.
-He might plead to them all and tell the truth about the reprieve, but it
-would not avail--Rube Haman would hang. That did not matter--even though
-he was innocent; but Ba'tiste's brother would be so long in purgatory.
-And even that would not matter; but she would hurt Ba'tiste--Ba'tiste--
-Ba'tiste. And Ba'tiste he would know that she--and he had called her
-"beautibul," that she had--
-
-With a cry she suddenly clothed herself for travel. She put some food
-and drink in a leather bag and slung them over her shoulder. Then she
-dropped on a knee and wrote a note to her father, tears falling from her
-eyes. She heaped wood on the fire and moved towards the door. All at
-once she turned to the crucifix on the wall which had belonged to her
-mother, and, though she had followed her father's Protestant religion,
-she kissed the feet of the sacred figure.
-
-"Oh, Christ, have mercy on me, and bring me safe to my journey's end-in
-time," she said breathlessly; then she went softly to the door, leaving
-the dog behind.
-
-It opened, closed, and the night swallowed her. Like a ghost she sped
-the quick way to Askatoon. She was six hours behind Ba'tiste, and, going
-hard all the time, it was doubtful if she could get there before the
-fatal hour.
-
-On the trail Ba'tiste had taken there were two huts where he could rest,
-and he had carried his blanket slung on his shoulder. The way she went
-gave no shelter save the trees and caves which had been used to cache
-buffalo meat and hides in old days. But beyond this there was danger in
-travelling by night, for the springs beneath the ice of the three lakes
-she must, cross made it weak and rotten even in the fiercest weather, and
-what would no doubt have been death to Ba'tiste would be peril at least
-to her. Why had she not gone with him?
-
-"He had in his face what was in Lucy's," she said to herself, as she sped
-on. "She was fine like him, ready to break her heart for those she cared
-for. My, if she had seen him first instead of--"
-
-She stopped short, for the ice gave way to her foot, and she only sprang
-back in time to save herself. But she trotted on, mile after mile, the
-dog-trot of the Indian, head bent forwards, toeing in, breathing steadily
-but sharply.
-
-The morning came, noon, then a fall of snow and a keen wind, and despair
-in her heart; but she had passed the danger-spots, and now, if the storm
-did not overwhelm her, she might get to Askatoon in time. In the midst
-of the storm she came to one of the caves of which she had known. Here
-was wood for a fire, and here she ate, and in weariness unspeakable fell
-asleep. When she waked it was near sun-down, the storm had ceased, and,
-as on the night before, the sky was stained with colour and drowned in
-splendour.
-
-"I will do it--I will do it, Ba'tiste!" she called, and laughed aloud
-into the sunset. She had battled with herself all the way, and she had
-conquered. Right was right, and Rube Haman must not be hung for what he
-did not do. Her heart hardened whenever she thought of the woman, but
-softened again when she thought of Ba'tiste, who had to suffer for the
-deed of a brother in "purgatore." Once again the night and its silence
-and loneliness followed her, the only living thing near the trail till
-long after midnight. After that, as she knew, there were houses here and
-there where she might have rested, but she pushed on unceasing.
-
-At daybreak she fell in with a settler going to Askatoon with his dogs.
-Seeing how exhausted she was, he made her ride a few miles upon his
-sledge; then she sped on ahead again till she came to the borders of
-Askatoon.
-
-People were already in the streets, and all were tending one way. She
-stopped and asked the time. It was within a quarter of an hour of the
-time when Haman was to pay another's penalty. She spurred herself on,
-and came to the jail blind with fatigue. As she neared the jail she saw
-her father and Mickey. In amazement her father hailed her, but she would
-not stop. She was admitted to the prison on explaining that she had a
-reprieve. Entering a room filled with excited people, she heard a cry.
-
-It came from Ba'tiste. He had arrived but ten minutes before, and, in
-the Sheriff's presence had discovered his loss. He had appealed in vain.
-
-But now, as he saw the girl, he gave a shout of joy which pierced the
-hearts of all.
-
-"Ah, you haf it! Say you haf it, or it is no use--he mus' hang. Spik-
-spik! Ah, my brudder--it is to do him right! Ah, Loisette--bon Dieu,
-merci!"
-
-For answer she placed the reprieve in the hands of the Sheriff. Then she
-swayed and fell fainting at the feet of Ba'tiste.
-
-She had come at the stroke of the hour.
-
-When she left for her home again the Sheriff kissed her.
-
-And that was not the only time he kissed her. He did it again six months
-later, at the beginning of the harvest, when she and Ba'tiste Caron
-started off on the long trail of life together. None but Ba'tiste knew
-the truth about the loss of the reprieve, and to him she was "beautibul"
-just the same, and greatly to be desired.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-BUCKMASTER'S BOY
-
-"I bin waitin' for him, an' I'll git him of it takes all winter. I'll
-git him--plumb."
-
-The speaker smoothed the barrel of his rifle with mittened hand, which
-had, however, a trigger-finger free. With black eyebrows twitching over
-sunken grey eyes, he looked doggedly down the frosty valley from the
-ledge of high rock where he sat. The face was rough and weather-beaten,
-with the deep tan got in the open life of a land of much sun and little
-cloud, and he had a beard which, untrimmed and growing wild, made him
-look ten years older than he was.
-
-"I bin waitin' a durn while," the mountain-man added, and got to his feet
-slowly, drawing himself out to six and a half feet of burly manhood. The
-shoulders were, however, a little stooped, and the head was thrust
-forwards with an eager, watchful look--a habit become a physical
-characteristic.
-
-Presently he caught sight of a hawk sailing southward along the peaks of
-the white icebound mountains above, on which the sun shone with such
-sharp insistence, making sky and mountain of a piece in deep purity and
-serene stillness.
-
-"That hawk's seen him, mebbe," he said, after a moment. "I bet it went
-up higher when it got him in its eye. Ef it'd only speak and tell me
-where he is--ef he's a day, or two days, or ten days north."
-
-Suddenly his eyes blazed and his mouth opened in superstitious amazement,
-for the hawk stopped almost directly overhead at a great height, and
-swept round in a circle many times, waveringly, uncertainly. At last it
-resumed its flight southward, sliding down the mountains like a winged
-star.
-
-The mountaineer watched it with a dazed expression for a moment longer,
-then both hands clutched the rifle and half swung it to position
-involuntarily.
-
-"It's seen him, and it stopped to say so. It's seen him, I tell you, an'
-I'll git him. Ef it's an hour, or a day, or a week, it's all the same.
-I'm here watchin', waitin' dead on to him, the poison skunk!"
-
-The person to whom he had been speaking now rose from the pile of cedar
-boughs where he had been sitting, stretched his arms up, then shook
-himself into place, as does a dog after sleep. He stood for a minute
-looking at the mountaineer with a reflective, yet a furtively sardonic,
-look. He was not above five feet nine inches in height, and he was slim
-and neat; and though his buckskin coat and breeches were worn and even
-frayed in spots, he had an air of some distinction and of concentrated
-force. It was a face that men turned to look at twice and shook their
-heads in doubt afterwards--a handsome, worn, secretive face, in as
-perfect control as the strings of an instrument under the bow of a great
-artist. It was the face of a man without purpose in life beyond the
-moment--watchful, careful, remorselessly determined, an adventurer's
-asset, the dial-plate of a hidden machinery.
-
-Now he took the handsome meerschaum pipe from his mouth, from which he
-had been puffing smoke slowly, and said in a cold, yet quiet voice, "How
-long you been waitin', Buck?"
-
-"A month. He's overdue near that. He always comes down to winter at
-Fort o' Comfort, with his string of half-breeds, an' Injuns, an' the
-dogs."
-
-"No chance to get him at the Fort?"
-
-"It ain't so certain. They'd guess what I was doin' there. It's surer
-here. He's got to come down the trail, an' when I spot him by the
-Juniper clump"--he jerked an arm towards a spot almost a mile farther up
-the valley--"I kin scoot up the underbrush a bit and git him--plumb. I
-could do it from here, sure, but I don't want no mistake. Once only,
-jest one shot, that's all I want, Sinnet."
-
-He bit off a small piece of tobacco from a black plug Sinnet offered him,
-and chewed it with nervous fierceness, his eyebrows working, as he looked
-at the other eagerly. Deadly as his purpose was, and grim and unvarying
-as his vigil had been, the loneliness had told on him, and he had grown
-hungry for a human face and human companionship. Why Sinnet had come he
-had not thought to inquire. Why Sinnet should be going north instead of
-south had not occurred to him. He only realised that Sinnet was not the
-man he was waiting for with murder in his heart; and all that mattered to
-him in life was the coming of his victim down the trail. He had welcomed
-Sinnet with a sullen eagerness, and had told him in short, detached
-sentences the dark story of a wrong and a waiting revenge, which brought
-a slight flush to Sinnet's pale face and awakened a curious light in his
-eyes.
-
-"Is that your shack--that where you shake down?" Sinnet said, pointing
-towards a lean-to in the fir trees to the right.
-
-"That's it. I sleep there. It's straight on to the Juniper clump, the
-front door is." He laughed viciously, grimly. "Outside or inside, I'm
-on to the Juniper clump. Walk into the parlour?" he added, and drew
-open a rough-made door, so covered with green cedar boughs that it seemed
-of a piece with the surrounding underbrush and trees. Indeed, the little
-but was so constructed that it could not be distinguished from the woods
-even a short distance away.
-
-"Can't have a fire, I suppose?" Sinnet asked.
-
-"Not daytimes. Smoke 'd give me away if he suspicioned me," answered the
-mountaineer. "I don't take no chances. Never can tell."
-
-"Water?" asked Sinnet, as though interested in the surroundings, while
-all the time he was eyeing the mountaineer furtively--as it were, prying
-to the inner man, or measuring the strength of the outer man. He lighted
-a fresh pipe and seated himself on a rough bench beside the table in the
-middle of the room, and leaned on his elbows, watching.
-
-The mountaineer laughed. It was not a pleasant laugh to hear. "Listen,"
-he said. "You bin a long time out West. You bin in the mountains a good
-while. Listen."
-
-There was silence. Sinnet listened intently. He heard the faint drip,
-drip, drip of water, and looked steadily at the back wall of the room.
-
-"There--rock?" he said, and jerked his head towards the sound.
-
-"You got good ears," answered the other, and drew aside a blanket which
-hung on the back wall of the room. A wooden trough was disclosed hanging
-under a ledge of rock, and water dripped into it softly, slowly.
-
-"Almost providential, that rock," remarked Sinnet. "You've got your well
-at your back door. Food--but you can't go far, and keep your eye on the
-Bend too," he nodded towards the door, beyond which lay the frost-touched
-valley in the early morning light of autumn.
-
-"Plenty of black squirrels and pigeons come here on account of the
-springs like this one, and I get 'em with a bow and arrow. I didn't call
-myself Robin Hood and Daniel Boone not for nothin' when I was knee-high
-to a grasshopper." He drew from a rough cupboard some cold game, and put
-it on the table, with some scones and a pannikin of water. Then he
-brought out a small jug of whiskey and placed it beside his visitor.
-They began to eat.
-
-"How d'ye cook without fire?" asked Sinnet. "Fire's all right at
-nights. He'd never camp 'twixt here an' Juniper Bend at night. The next
-camp's six miles north from here. He'd only come down the valley
-daytimes. I studied it 'all out, and it's a dead sure thing. From
-daylight till dusk I'm on to him. I got the trail in my eye."
-
-He showed his teeth like a wild dog, as his look swept the valley. There
-was something almost revolting in his concentrated ferocity.
-
-Sinnet's eyes half closed as he watched the mountaineer, and the long,
-scraggy hands and whipcord neck seemed to interest him greatly. He
-looked at his own slim brown hands with a half smile, and it was almost
-as cruel as the laugh of the other. Yet it had, too, a knowledge and an
-understanding which gave it humanity.
-
-"You're sure he did it?" Sinnet asked presently, after drinking a very
-small portion of liquor, and tossing some water from the pannikin after
-it. "You're sure Greevy killed your boy, Buck?"
-
-"My name's Buckmaster, ain't it--Jim Buckmaster? Don't I know my own
-name? It's as sure as that. My boy said it was Greevy when he was
-dying. He told Bill Ricketts so, and Bill told me afore he went East.
-Bill didn't want to tell, but he said it was fair I should know, for my
-boy never did nobody any harm--an' Greevy's livin' on. But I'll git him.
-Right's right."
-
-"Wouldn't it be better for the law to hang him, if you've got the proof,
-Buck? A year or so in jail, an' a long time to think over what's going
-round his neck on the scaffold--wouldn't that suit you, if you've got the
-proof?"
-
-A rigid, savage look came into Buckmaster's face.
-
-"I ain't lettin' no judge and jury do my business. I'm for certain sure,
-not for p'r'aps! An' I want to do it myself. Clint was only twenty.
-Like boys we was together. I was eighteen when I married, an' he come
-when she went--jest a year--jest a year. An' ever since then we lived
-together, him an' me, an' shot together, an' trapped together, an' went
-gold-washin' together on the Cariboo, an' eat out of the same dish, an'
-slept under the same blanket, and jawed together nights--ever since he
-was five, when old Mother Lablache had got him into pants, an' he was fit
-to take the trail."
-
-The old man stopped a minute, his whipcord neck swelling, his lips
-twitching. He brought a fist down on the table with a bang. "The
-biggest little rip he was, as full of fun as a squirrel, an' never a
-smile-o-jest his eyes dancin', an' more sense than a judge. He laid hold
-o' me, that cub did--it was like his mother and himself together; an' the
-years flowin' in an' peterin' out, an' him gettin' older, an' always jest
-the same. Always on rock-bottom, always bright as a dollar, an' we
-livin' at Black Nose Lake, layin' up cash agin' the time we was to go
-South, an' set up a house along the railway, an' him to git married. I
-was for his gittin' married same as me, when we had enough cash. I use
-to think of that when he was ten, and when he was eighteen I spoke to him
-about it; but he wouldn't listen--jest laughed at me. You remember how
-Clint used to laugh sort of low and teasin' like--you remember that laugh
-o' Clint's, don't you?"
-
-Sinnet's face was towards the valley and Juniper Bend, but he slowly
-turned his head and looked at Buckmaster strangely out of his half-shut
-eyes. He took the pipe from his mouth slowly.
-
-"I can hear it now," he answered slowly. "I hear it often, Buck."
-
-The old man gripped his arm so suddenly that Sinnet was startled,--in so
-far as anything could startle anyone who had lived a life of chance and
-danger and accident, and his face grew a shade paler; but he did not
-move, and Buckmaster's hand tightened convulsively.
-
-"You liked him, an' he liked you; he first learnt poker off you, Sinnet.
-He thought you was a tough, but he didn't mind that no more than I did.
-It ain't for us to say what we're goin' to be, not always. Things in
-life git stronger than we are. You was a tough, but who's goin' to judge
-you! I ain't; for Clint took to you, Sinnet, an' he never went wrong in
-his thinkin'. God! he was wife an' child to me--an' he's dead--dead--
-dead."
-
-The man's grief was a painful thing to see. His hands gripped the table,
-while his body shook with sobs, though his eyes gave forth no tears. It
-was an inward convulsion, which gave his face the look of unrelieved
-tragedy and suffering--Laocoon struggling with the serpents of sorrow and
-hatred which were strangling him.
-
-"Dead an' gone," he repeated, as he swayed to and fro, and the table
-quivered in his grasp. Presently, however, as though arrested by a
-thought, he peered out of the doorway towards Juniper Bend. "That hawk
-seen him--it seen him. He's comin', I know it, an' I'll git him--plumb."
-He had the mystery and imagination of the mountain-dweller.
-
-The rifle lay against the wall behind him, and he turned and touched it
-almost caressingly. "I ain't let go like this since he was killed,
-Sinnet. It don't do. I got to keep myself stiddy to do the trick when
-the minute comes. At first I usen't to sleep at nights, thinkin' of
-Clint, an' missin' him, an' I got shaky and no good. So I put a cinch on
-myself, an' got to sleepin' again--from the full dusk to dawn, for Greevy
-wouldn't take the trail at night. I've kept stiddy." He held out his
-hand as though to show that it was firm and steady, but it trembled with
-the emotion which had conquered him. He saw it, and shook his head
-angrily.
-
-"It was seein' you, Sinnet. It burst me. I ain't seen no one to speak
-to in a month, an' with you sittin' there, it was like Clint an' me
-cuttin' and comin' again off the loaf an' the knuckle-bone of ven'son."
-
-Sinnet ran a long finger slowly across his lips, and seemed meditating
-what he should say to the mountaineer. At length he spoke, looking into
-Buckmaster's face. "What was the story Ricketts told you? What did your
-boy tell Ricketts? I've heard, too, about it, and that's why I asked you
-if you had proofs that Greevy killed Clint. Of course, Clint should
-know, and if he told Ricketts, that's pretty straight; but I'd like to
-know if what I heard tallies with what Ricketts heard from Clint.
-P'r'aps it'd ease your mind a bit to tell it. I'll watch the Bend--don't
-you trouble about that. You can't do these two things at one time. I'll
-watch for Greevy; you give me Clint's story to Ricketts. I guess you
-know I'm feelin' for you, an' if I was in your place I'd shoot the man
-that killed Clint, if it took ten years. I'd have his heart's blood--all
-of it. Whether Greevy was in the right or in the wrong, I'd have him--
-plumb."
-
-Buckmaster was moved. He gave a fierce exclamation and made a gesture
-of cruelty. "Clint right or wrong? There ain't no question of that.
-My boy wasn't the kind to be in the wrong. What did he ever do but what
-was right? If Clint was in the wrong I'd kill Greevy jest the same, for
-Greevy robbed him of all the years that was before him--only a sapling he
-was, an' all his growin' to do, all his branches to widen an' his roots
-to spread. But that don't enter in it, his bein' in the wrong. It was
-a quarrel, and Clint never did Greevy any harm. It was a quarrel over
-cards, an' Greevy was drunk, an' followed Clint out into the prairie in
-the night and shot him like a coyote. Clint hadn't no chance, an' he
-jest lay there on the ground till morning, when Ricketts and Steve Joicey
-found him. An' Clint told Ricketts who it was."
-
-"Why didn't Ricketts tell it right out at once?" asked Sinnet.
-
-"Greevy was his own cousin--it was in the family, an' he kept thinkin' of
-Greevy's gal, Em'ly. Her--what'll it matter to her! She'll get married,
-an she'll forgit. I know her, a gal that's got no deep feelin' like
-Clint had for me. But because of her Ricketts didn't speak for a year.
-Then he couldn't stand it any longer, an' he told me--seein' how I
-suffered, an' everybody hidin' their suspicions from me, an' me up here
-out o' the way, an' no account. That was the feelin' among 'em--what was
-the good of making things worse! They wasn't thinkin' of the boy or of
-Jim Buckmaster, his father. They was thinkin' of Greevy's gal--to save
-her trouble."
-
-Sinnet's face was turned towards Juniper Bend, and the eyes were fixed,
-as it were, on a still more distant object--a dark, brooding, inscrutable
-look.
-
-"Was that all Ricketts told you, Buck?" The voice was very quiet, but
-it had a suggestive note.
-
-"That's all Clint told Bill before he died. That was enough."
-
-There was a moment's pause, and then, puffing out long clouds of smoke,
-and in a tone of curious detachment, as though he were telling of
-something that he saw now in the far distance, or as a spectator of a
-battle from a far vantage-point might report to a blind man standing
-near, Sinnet said:
-
-"P'r'aps Ricketts didn't know the whole story; p'r'aps Clint didn't know
-it all to tell him; p'r'aps Clint didn't remember it all. P'r'aps he
-didn't remember anything except that he and Greevy quarrelled, and that
-Greevy and he shot at each other in the prairie. He'd only be thinking
-of the thing that mattered most to him--that his life was over, an' that
-a man had put a bullet in him, an'--"
-
-Buckmaster tried to interrupt him, but he waved a hand impatiently, and
-continued: "As I say, maybe he didn't remember everything; he had been
-drinkin' a bit himself, Clint had. He wasn't used to liquor, and
-couldn't stand much. Greevy was drunk, too, and gone off his head with
-rage. He always gets drunk when he first comes South to spend the winter
-with his girl Em'ly." He paused a moment, then went on a little more
-quickly. "Greevy was proud of her--couldn't even bear her being crossed
-in any way; and she has a quick temper, and if she quarrelled with
-anybody Greevy quarrelled too."
-
-"I don't want to know anything about her," broke in Buckmaster roughly.
-"She isn't in this thing. I'm goin' to git Greevy. I bin waitin' for
-him, an' I'll git him."
-
-"You're going to kill the man that killed your boy, if you can, Buck; but
-I'm telling my story in my own way. You told Ricketts's story; I'll tell
-what I've heard. And before you kill Greevy you ought to know all there
-is that anybody else knows--or suspicions about it."
-
-"I know enough. Greevy done it, an' I'm here." With no apparent
-coherence and relevancy Sinnet continued, but his voice was not so even
-as before. "Em'ly was a girl that wasn't twice alike. She was
-changeable. First it was one, then it was another, and she didn't seem
-to be able to fix her mind. But that didn't prevent her leadin' men on.
-She wasn't changeable, though, about her father. She was to him what
-your boy was to you. There she was like you, ready to give everything up
-for her father."
-
-"I tell y' I don't want to hear about her," said Buckmaster, getting
-to his feet and setting his jaws. "You needn't talk to me about her.
-She'll git over it. I'll never git over what Greevy done to me or
-to Clint--jest twenty, jest twenty! I got my work to do."
-
-He took his gun from the wall, slung it into the hollow of his arm, and
-turned to look up the valley through the open doorway.
-
-The morning was sparkling with life--the life and vigour which a touch of
-frost gives to the autumn world in a country where the blood tingles to
-the dry, sweet sting of the air. Beautiful, and spacious, and buoyant,
-and lonely, the valley and the mountains seemed waiting, like a new-born
-world, to be peopled by man. It was as though all had been made ready
-for him--the birds whistling and singing in the trees, the whisk of the
-squirrels leaping from bough to bough, the peremptory sound of the
-woodpecker's beak against the bole of a tree, the rustle of the leaves as
-a wood-hen ran past--a waiting, virgin world.
-
-Its beauty and its wonderful dignity had no appeal to Buckmaster. His
-eyes and mind were fixed on a deed which would stain the virgin wild with
-the ancient crime that sent the first marauder on human life into the
-wilderness.
-
-As Buckmaster's figure darkened the doorway Sinnet seemed to waken as
-from a dream, and he got swiftly to his feet.
-
-"Wait--you wait, Buck. You've got to hear all. You haven't heard my
-story yet. Wait, I tell you." His voice was so sharp and insistent, so
-changed, that Buckmaster turned from the doorway and came back into the
-room.
-
-"What's the use of my hearin'? You want me not to kill Greevy, because
-of that gal. What's she to me?"
-
-"Nothing to you, Buck, but Clint was everything to her."
-
-The mountaineer stood like one petrified.
-
-"What's that--what's that you say? It's a damn lie!"
-
-"It wasn't cards--the quarrel, not the real quarrel. Greevy found Clint
-kissing her. Greevy wanted her to marry Gatineau, the lumber-king. That
-was the quarrel."
-
-A snarl was on the face of Buckmaster. "Then she'll not be sorry when I
-git him. It took Clint from her as well as from me." He turned to the
-door again. "But, wait, Buck, wait one minute and hear--" He was
-interrupted by a low, exultant growl, and he saw Buckmaster's rifle
-clutched as a hunter, stooping, clutches his gun to fire on his prey.
-
-"Quick, the spy-glass!" he flung back at Sinnet. "It's him--but I'll
-make sure."
-
-Sinnet caught the telescope from the nails where it hung, and looked out
-towards Juniper Bend. "It's Greevy--and his girl, and the half-breeds,"
-he said, with a note in his voice that almost seemed agitation, and yet
-few had ever seen Sinnet agitated. "Em'ly must have gone up the trail in
-the night."
-
-"It's my turn now," the mountaineer said hoarsely, and, stooping, slid
-away quickly into the undergrowth. Sinnet followed, keeping near him,
-neither speaking. For a half mile they hastened on, and now and then
-Buckmaster drew aside the bushes, and looked up the valley, to keep
-Greevy and his bois brulees in his eye. Just so had he and his son and
-Sinnet stalked the wapiti and the red deer along these mountains; but
-this was a man that Buckmaster was stalking now, with none of the joy of
-the sport which had been his since a lad; only the malice of the avenger.
-The lust of a mountain feud was on him; he was pursuing the price of
-blood.
-
-At last Buckmaster stopped at a ledge of rock just above the trail.
-Greevy would pass below, within three hundred yards of his rifle. He
-turned to Sinnet with cold and savage eyes. "You go back," he said.
-"It's my business. I don't want you to see. You don't want to see,
-then you won't know, and you won't need to lie. You said that the man
-that killed Clint ought to die. He's going to die, but it's none o' your
-business. I want to be alone. In a minute he'll be where I kin git him
---plumb. You go, Sinnet-right off. It's my business."
-
-There was a strange, desperate look in Sinnet's face; it was as hard as
-stone, but his eyes had a light of battle in them.
-
-"It's my business right enough, Buck," he said, "and you're not going to
-kill Greevy. That girl of his has lost her lover, your boy. It's broke
-her heart almost, and there's no use making her an orphan too. She can't
-stand it. She's had enough. You leave her father alone--you hear me,
-let up!" He stepped between Buckmaster and the ledge of rock from which
-the mountaineer was to take aim.
-
-There was a terrible look in Buckmaster's face. He raised his single-
-barrelled rifle, as though he would shoot Sinnet; but, at the moment, he
-remembered that a shot would warn Greevy, and that he might not have time
-to reload. He laid his rifle against a tree swiftly.
-
-"Git away from here," he said, with a strange rattle in his throat.
-"Git away quick; he'll be down past here in a minute."
-
-Sinnet pulled himself together as he saw Buckmaster snatch at a great
-clasp-knife in his belt. He jumped and caught Buckmaster's wrist in a
-grip like a vice.
-
-"Greevy didn't kill him, Buck," he said. But the mountaineer was gone
-mad, and did not grasp the meaning of the words. He twined his left arm
-round the neck of Sinnet, and the struggle began, he fighting to free
-Sinnet's hand from his wrist, to break Sinnet's neck. He did not realise
-what he was doing. He only knew that this man stood between him and the
-murderer of his boy, and all the ancient forces of barbarism were alive
-in him. Little by little they drew to the edge of the rock, from which
-there was a sheer drop of two hundred feet. Sinnet fought like a panther
-for safety, but no sane man's strength could withstand the demoniacal
-energy that bent and crushed him. Sinnet felt his strength giving. Then
-he said in a hoarse whisper, "Greevy didn't kill him. I killed him,
-and--"
-
-At that moment he was borne to the ground with a hand on his throat, and
-an instant after the knife went home.
-
-Buckmaster got to his feet and looked at his victim for an instant, dazed
-and wild; then he sprang for his gun. As he did so the words that Sinnet
-had said as they struggled rang in his ears, "Greevy didn't kill him; I
-killed him!"
-
-He gave a low cry and turned back towards Sinnet, who lay in a pool of
-blood.
-
-Sinnet was speaking. He went and stooped over him. "Em'ly threw me over
-for Clint," the voice said huskily, "and I followed to have it out with
-Clint. So did Greevy, but Greevy was drunk. I saw them meet. I was
-hid. I saw that Clint would kill Greevy, and I fired. I was off my
-head--I'd never cared for any woman before, and Greevy was her father.
-Clint was off his head too. He had called me names that day--a cardsharp,
-and a liar, and a thief, and a skunk, he called me, and I hated him just
-then. Greevy fired twice wide. He didn't know but what he killed Clint,
-but he didn't. I did. So I tried to stop you, Buck--"
-
-Life was going fast, and speech failed him; but he opened his eyes again
-and whispered, "I didn't want to die, Buck. I am only thirty-five, and
-it's too soon; but it had to be. Don't look that way, Buck. You got the
-man that killed him--plumb. But Em'ly didn't play fair with me--made a
-fool of me, the only time in my life I ever cared for a woman. You leave
-Greevy alone, Buck, and tell Em'ly for me I wouldn't let you kill her
-father."
-
-"You--Sinnet--you, you done it! Why, he'd have fought for you. You--
-done it--to him--to Clint!" Now that the blood-feud had been satisfied,
-a great change came over the mountaineer. He had done his work, and the
-thirst for vengeance was gone. Greevy he had hated, but this man had
-been with him in many a winter's hunt. His brain could hardly grasp the
-tragedy--it had all been too sudden.
-
-Suddenly he stooped down. "Sinnet," he said, "ef there was a woman in
-it, that makes all the difference. Sinnet, of--"
-
-But Sinnet was gone upon a long trail that led into an illimitable
-wilderness. With a moan the old man ran to the ledge of rock. Greevy
-and his girl were below.
-
-"When there's a woman in it--!" he said, in a voice of helplessness and
-misery, and watched Em'ly till she disappeared from view. Then he
-turned, and, lifting up in his arms the man he had killed, carried him
-into the deeper woods.
-
-
-
-
-ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
-
-Even bad company's better than no company at all
-Future of those who will not see, because to see is to suffer
-I like when I like, and I like a lot when I like
-It ain't for us to say what we're goin' to be, not always
-Things in life git stronger than we are
-We don't live in months and years, but just in minutes
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NORTHERN LIGHTS
-
-By Gilbert Parker
-
-Volume 2.
-
-
-TO-MORROW
-QU'APPELLE
-THE STAKE AND THE PLUMB-LINE
-
-
-
-
-TO-MORROW
-
-"My, nothing's the matter with the world to-day! It's so good it almost
-hurts."
-
-She raised her head from the white petticoat she was ironing, and gazed
-out of the doorway and down the valley with a warm light in her eyes and
-a glowing face. The snow-tipped mountains far above and away, the fir-
-covered, cedar-ranged foothills, and, lower down, the wonderful maple and
-ash woods, with their hundred autumn tints, all merging to one soft, red
-tone, the roar of the stream tumbling down the ravine from the heights,
-the air that braced the nerves--it all seemed to be part of her, the
-passion of life corresponding to the passion of living in her.
-
-After watching the scene dreamily for a moment, she turned and laid the
-iron she had been using upon the hot stove near. Taking up another, she
-touched it with a moistened finger to test the heat, and, leaning above
-the table again, passed it over the linen for a few moments, smiling at
-something that was in her mind. Presently she held the petticoat up,
-turned it round, then hung it in front of her, eyeing it with critical
-pleasure.
-
-"To-morrow!" she said, nodding at it. "You won't be seen, I suppose,
-but I'll know you're nice enough for a queen--and that's enough to know."
-
-She blushed a little, as though someone had heard her words and was
-looking at her, then she carefully laid the petticoat over the back of a
-chair. "No queen's got one whiter, if I do say it," she continued,
-tossing her head.
-
-In that, at any rate, she was right, for the water of the mountain
-springs was pure, the air was clear, and the sun was clarifying; and
-little ornamented or frilled as it was, the petticoat was exquisitely
-soft and delicate. It would have appealed to more eyes than a woman's.
-
-"To-morrow!" She nodded at it again and turned again to the bright world
-outside. With arms raised and hands resting against the timbers of the
-doorway, she stood dreaming. A flock of pigeons passed with a whir not
-far away, and skirted the woods making down the valley. She watched
-their flight abstractedly, yet with a subconscious sense of pleasure.
-Life--they were Life, eager, buoyant, belonging to this wild region,
-where still the heart could feel so much at home, where the great world
-was missed so little.
-
-Suddenly, as she gazed, a shot rang out down the valley, and two of the
-pigeons came tumbling to the ground, a stray feather floating after.
-With a startled exclamation she took a step forward. Her brain became
-confused and disturbed. She had looked out on Eden, and it had been
-ravaged before her eyes. She had been thinking of to-morrow, and this
-vast prospect of beauty and serenity had been part of the pageant in
-which it moved. Not the valley alone had been marauded, but that "To-
-morrow," and all it meant to her.
-
-Instantly the valley had become clouded over for her, its glory and its
-grace despoiled. She turned back to the room where the white petticoat
-lay upon the chair, but stopped with a little cry of alarm.
-
-A man was standing in the centre of the room. He had entered stealthily
-by the back door, and had waited for her to turn round. He was haggard
-and travel stained, and there was a feverish light in his eyes. His
-fingers trembled as they adjusted his belt, which seemed too large for
-him. Mechanically he buckled it tighter.
-
-"You're Jenny Long, ain't you?" he asked. "I beg pardon for sneakin'
-in like this, but they're after me, some ranchers and a constable--one
-o' the Riders of the Plains. I've been tryin' to make this house all
-day. You're Jenny Long, ain't you?"
-
-She had plenty of courage, and, after the first instant of shock, she had
-herself in hand. She had quickly observed his condition, had marked the
-candour of the eye and the decision and character of the face, and doubt
-of him found no place in her mind. She had the keen observation of the
-dweller in lonely places, where every traveller has the potentialities of
-a foe, while the door of hospitality is opened to him after the custom of
-the wilds. Year in, year out, since she was a little girl and came to
-live here with her Uncle Sanger when her father died--her mother had gone
-before she could speak--travellers had halted at this door, going North
-or coming South, had had bite and sup, and bed, may be, and had passed
-on, most of them never to be seen again. More than that, too, there had
-been moments of peril, such as when, alone, she had faced two wood-
-thieves with a revolver, as they were taking her mountain-pony with them,
-and herself had made them "hands-up," and had marched them into a
-prospector's camp five miles away.
-
-She had no doubt about the man before her. Whatever he had done, it was
-nothing dirty or mean--of that she was sure.
-
-"Yes, I'm Jenny Long," she answered. "What have you done? What are they
-after you for?"
-
-"Oh! to-morrow," he answered, "to-morrow I got to git to Bindon.
-It's life or death. I come from prospecting two hundred miles up North.
-I done it in two days and a half. My horse dropped dead--I'm near dead
-myself. I tried to borrow another horse up at Clancey's, and at
-Scotton's Drive, but they didn't know me, and they bounced me.
-So I borrowed a horse off Weigall's paddock, to make for here--to you.
-I didn't mean to keep that horse. Hell, I'm no horse-stealer! But I
-couldn't explain to them, except that I had to git to Bindon to save a
-man's life. If people laugh in your face, it's no use explainin'.
-I took a roan from Weigall's, and they got after me. 'Bout six miles
-up they shot at me an' hurt me."
-
-She saw that one arm hung limp at his side and that his wrist was wound
-with a red bandana.
-
-She started forward. "Are you hurt bad? Can I bind it up or wash it for
-you? I've got plenty of hot water here, and it's bad letting a wound get
-stale."
-
-He shook his head. "I washed the hole clean in the creek below. I
-doubled on them. I had to go down past your place here, and then work
-back to be rid of them. But there's no telling when they'll drop on to
-the game, and come back for me. My only chance was to git to you. Even
-if I had a horse, I couldn't make Bindon in time. It's two days round
-the gorge by trail. A horse is no use now--I lost too much time since
-last night. I can't git to Bindon to-morrow in time, if I ride the
-trail."
-
-"The river?" she asked abruptly.
-
-"It's the only way. It cuts off fifty mile. That's why I come to you."
-
-She frowned a little, her face became troubled, and her glance fell on
-his arm nervously. "What've I got to do with it?" she asked almost
-sharply.
-
-"Even if this was all right,"--he touched the wounded arm--" I couldn't
-take the rapids in a canoe. I don't know them, an' it would be sure
-death. That's not the worst, for there's a man at Bindon would lose his
-life--p'r'aps twenty men--I dunno; but one man sure. To-morrow, it's go
-or stay with him. He was good--Lord, but he was good!--to my little gal
-years back. She'd only been married to me a year when he saved her,
-riskin' his own life. No one else had the pluck. My little gal, only
-twenty she was, an' pretty as a picture, an' me fifty miles away when the
-fire broke out in the hotel where she was. He'd have gone down to hell
-for a friend, an' he saved my little gal. I had her for five years after
-that. That's why I got to git to Bindon to-morrow. If I don't, I don't
-want to see to-morrow. I got to go down the river to-night."
-
-She knew what he was going to ask her. She knew he was thinking what all
-the North knew, that she was the first person to take the Dog Nose Rapids
-in a canoe, down the great river scarce a stone's-throw from her door;
-and that she had done it in safety many times. Not in all the West and
-North were there a half-dozen people who could take a canoe to Bindon,
-and they were not here. She knew that he meant to ask her to paddle him
-down the swift stream with its murderous rocks, to Bindon. She glanced
-at the white petticoat on the chair, and her lips tightened. To-morrow-
-tomorrow was as much to her here as it would be to this man before her,
-or the man he would save at Bindon. "What do you want?" she asked,
-hardening her heart. "Can't you see? I want you to hide me here till
-tonight. There's a full moon, an' it would be as plain goin' as by day.
-They told me about you up North, and I said to myself, 'If I git to Jenny
-Long, an' tell her about my friend at Bindon, an' my little gal, she'll
-take me down to Bindon in time.' My little gal would have paid her own
-debt if she'd ever had the chance. She didn't--she's lying up on Mazy
-Mountain. But one woman'll do a lot for the sake of another woman. Say,
-you'll do it, won't you? If I don't git there by to-morrow noon, it's no
-good."
-
-She would not answer. He was asking more than he knew. Why should she
-be sacrificed? Was it her duty to pay the "little gal's debt," to save
-the man at Bindon? To-morrow was to be the great day in her own life.
-The one man in all the world was coming to marry her to-morrow. After
-four years' waiting, after a bitter quarrel in which both had been to
-blame, he was coming from the mining town of Selby to marry her to-
-morrow.
-
-"What will happen? Why will your friend lose his life if you don't get
-to Bindon?"
-
-"By noon to-morrow, by twelve o'clock noon; that's the plot; that's what
-they've schemed. Three days ago, I heard. I got a man free from trouble
-North--he was no good, but I thought he ought to have another chance, and
-I got him free. He told me of what was to be done at Bindon. There'd
-been a strike in the mine, an' my friend had took it in hand with
-knuckle-dusters on. He isn't the kind to fell a tree with a jack-knife.
-Then three of the strikers that had been turned away--they was the
-ringleaders--they laid a plan that'd make the devil sick. They've put a
-machine in the mine, an' timed it, an' it'll go off when my friend comes
-out of the mine at noon to-morrow."
-
-Her face was pale now, and her eyes had a look of pain and horror. Her
-man--him that she was to marry--was the head of a mine also at Selby,
-forty miles beyond Bindon, and the horrible plot came home to her with
-piercing significance.
-
-"Without a second's warning," he urged, "to go like that, the man that
-was so good to my little gal, an' me with a chance to save him, an'
-others too, p'r'aps. You won't let it be. Say, I'm pinnin' my faith to
-you. I'm--"
-
-Suddenly he swayed. She caught him, held him, and lowered him gently in
-a chair. Presently he opened his eyes. "It's want o' food, I suppose,"
-he said. "If you've got a bit of bread and meat--I must keep up."
-
-She went to a cupboard, but suddenly turned towards him again. Her ears
-had caught a sound outside in the underbush. He had heard also, and he
-half staggered to his feet.
-
-"Quick-in here!" she said, and, opening a door, pushed him inside. "Lie
-down on my bed, and I'll bring you vittles as quick as I can," she added.
-Then she shut the door, turned to the ironing-board, and took up the
-iron, as the figure of a man darkened the doorway.
-
-"Hello, Jinny, fixin' up for to-morrow?" the man said, stepping inside,
-with a rifle under his arm and some pigeons in his hand.
-
-She nodded and gave him an impatient, scrutinising glance. His face had
-a fatuous kind of smile.
-
-"Been celebrating the pigeons?" she asked drily, jerking her head
-towards the two birds, which she had seen drop from her Eden skies a
-short time before.
-
-"I only had one swig of whiskey, honest Injun!" he answered. "I s'pose
-I might have waited till to-morrow, but I was dead-beat. I got a bear
-over by the Tenmile Reach, and I was tired. I ain't so young as I used
-to be, and, anyhow, what's the good! What's ahead of me? You're going
-to git married to-morrow after all these years we bin together, and
-you're going down to Selby from the mountains, where I won't see you, not
-once in a blue moon. Only that old trollop, Mother Massy, to look after
-me."
-
-"Come down to Selby and live there. You'll be welcome by Jake and me."
-
-He stood his gun in the corner and, swinging the pigeons in his hand,
-said: "Me live out of the mountains? Don't you know better than that?
-I couldn't breathe; and I wouldn't want to breathe. I've got my shack
-here, I got my fur business, and they're still fond of whiskey up North!"
-He chuckled to himself, as he thought of the illicit still farther up the
-mountain behind them. "I make enough to live on, and I've put a few
-dollars by, though I won't have so many after to-morrow, after I've given
-you a little pile, Jinny."
-
-"P'r'aps there won't be any to-morrow, as you expect," she said slowly.
-
-The old man started. "What, you and Jake ain't quarrelled again? You
-ain't broke it off at the last moment, same as before? You ain't had a
-letter from Jake?" He looked at the white petticoat on the chairback,
-and shook his head in bewilderment.
-
-"I've had no letter," she answered. "I've had no letter from Selby for a
-month. It was all settled then, and there was no good writing, when he
-was coming to-morrow with the minister and the licence. Who do you
-think'd be postman from Selby here? It must have cost him ten dollars to
-send the last letter."
-
-"Then what's the matter? I don't understand," the old man urged
-querulously. He did not want her to marry and leave him, but he wanted
-no more troubles; he did not relish being asked awkward questions by
-every mountaineer he met, as to why Jenny Long didn't marry Jake Lawson.
-
-"There's only one way that I can be married tomorrow," she said at last,
-"and that's by you taking a man down the Dog Nose Rapids to Bindon to-
-night."
-
-He dropped the pigeons on the floor, dumbfounded. "What in--"
-
-He stopped short, in sheer incapacity, to go further. Jenny had not
-always been easy to understand, but she was wholly incomprehensible now.
-
-She picked up the pigeons and was about to speak, but she glanced at the
-bedroom door, where her exhausted visitor had stretched himself on her
-bed, and beckoned her uncle to another room.
-
-"There's a plate of vittles ready for you in there," she said. "I'll
-tell you as you eat."
-
-He followed her into the little living-room adorned by the trophies of
-his earlier achievements with gun and rifle, and sat down at the table,
-where some food lay covered by a clean white cloth.
-
-"No one'll ever look after me as you've done, Jinny," he said, as he
-lifted the cloth and saw the palatable dish ready for him. Then he
-remembered again about to-morrow and the Dog Nose Rapids.
-
-"What's it all about, Jinny? What's that about my canoeing a man down to
-Bindon?"
-
-"Eat, uncle," she said more softly than she had yet spoken, for his words
-about her care of him had brought a moisture to her eyes. "I'll be back
-in a minute and tell you all about it."
-
-"Well, it's about took away my appetite," he said. "I feel a kind of
-sinking." He took from his pocket a bottle, poured some of its contents
-into a tin cup, and drank it off.
-
-"No, I suppose you couldn't take a man down to Bindon," she said, as she
-saw his hand trembling on the cup. Then she turned and entered the other
-room again. Going to the cupboard, she hastily heaped a plate with food,
-and, taking a dipper of water from a pail near by, she entered her
-bedroom hastily and placed what she had brought on a small table, as her
-visitor rose slowly from the bed.
-
-He was about to speak, but she made a protesting gesture.
-
-"I can't tell you anything yet," she said. "Who was it come?" he asked.
-
-"My uncle--I'm going to tell him."
-
-"The men after me may git here any minute," he urged anxiously.
-
-"They'd not be coming into my room," she answered, flushing slightly.
-
-"Can't you hide me down by the river till we start?" he asked, his eyes
-eagerly searching her face. He was assuming that she would take him down
-the river: but she gave no sign.
-
-"I've got to see if he'll take you first," she answered.
-
-"He--your uncle, Tom Sanger? He drinks, I've heard. He'd never git to
-Bindon."
-
-She did not reply directly to his words. "I'll come back and tell you.
-There's a place you could hide by the river where no one could ever find
-you," she said, and left the room.
-
-As she stepped out, she saw the old man standing in the doorway of the
-other room. His face was petrified with amazement.
-
-"Who you got in that room, Jinny? What man you got in that room? I
-heard a man's voice. Is it because o' him that you bin talkin' about no
-weddin' to-morrow? Is it one o' the others come back, puttin' you off
-Jake again?"
-
-Her eyes flashed fire at his first words, and her breast heaved with
-anger, but suddenly she became composed again and motioned him to a
-chair.
-
-"You eat, and I'll tell you all about it, Uncle Tom," she said, and,
-seating herself at the table also, she told him the story of the man who
-must go to Bindon.
-
-When she had finished, the old man blinked at her for a minute without
-speaking, then he said slowly: "I heard something 'bout trouble down at
-Bindon yisterday from a Hudson's Bay man goin' North, but I didn't take
-it in. You've got a lot o' sense, Jinny, an' if you think he's tellin'
-the truth, why, it goes; but it's as big a mixup as a lariat in a steer's
-horns. You've got to hide him sure, whoever he is, for I wouldn't hand
-an Eskimo over, if I'd taken him in my home once; we're mountain people.
-A man ought to be hung for horse-stealin', but this was different. He
-was doing it to save a man's life, an' that man at Bindon was good to his
-little gal, an' she's dead."
-
-He moved his head from side to side with the air of a sentimental
-philosopher. He had all the vanity of a man who had been a success in a
-small, shrewd, culpable way--had he not evaded the law for thirty years
-with his whiskey-still?
-
-"I know how he felt," he continued. "When Betsy died--we was only four
-years married--I could have crawled into a knot-hole an' died there. You
-got to save him, Jinny, but"--he came suddenly to his feet--"he ain't
-safe here. They might come any minute, if they've got back on his trail.
-I'll take him up the gorge. You know where."
-
-"You sit still, Uncle Tom," she rejoined. "Leave him where he is a
-minute. There's things must be settled first. They ain't going to look
-for him in my bedroom, be they?"
-
-The old man chuckled. "I'd like to see 'em at it. You got a temper,
-Jinny; and you got a pistol too, eh?" He chuckled again. "As good a
-shot as any in the mountains. I can see you darin' 'em to come on. But
-what if Jake come, and he found a man in your bedroom"--he wiped the
-tears of laughter from his eyes--"why, Jinny--!"
-
-He stopped short, for there was anger in her face. "I don't want to hear
-any more of that. I do what I want to do," she snapped out.
-
-"Well, well, you always done what you wanted; but we got to git him up
-the hills, till it's sure they're out o' the mountains and gone back.
-It'll be days, mebbe."
-
-"Uncle Tom, you've took too much to drink," she answered. "You don't
-remember he's got to be at Bindon by to-morrow noon. He's got to save
-his friend by then."
-
-"Pshaw! Who's going to take him down the river to-night? You're goin'
-to be married to-morrow. If you like, you can give him the canoe. It'll
-never come back, nor him neither!"
-
-"You've been down with me," she responded suggestively. "And you went
-down once by yourself."
-
-He shook his head. "I ain't been so well this summer. My sight ain't
-what it was. I can't stand the racket as I once could. 'Pears to me I'm
-gettin' old. No, I couldn't take them rapids, Jinny, not for one frozen
-minute."
-
-She looked at him with trouble in her eyes, and her face lost some of its
-colour. She was fighting back the inevitable, even as its shadow fell
-upon her. "You wouldn't want a man to die, if you could save him, Uncle
-Tom--blown up, sent to Kingdom Come without any warning at all; and
-perhaps he's got them that love him--and the world so beautiful."
-
-"Well, it ain't nice dyin' in the summer, when it's all sun, and there's
-plenty everywhere; but there's no one to go down the river with him.
-What's his name?"
-
-Her struggle was over. She had urged him, but in very truth she was
-urging herself all the time, bringing herself to the axe of sacrifice.
-
-"His name's Dingley. I'm going down the river with him--down to Bindon."
-
-The old man's mouth opened in blank amazement. His eyes blinked
-helplessly.
-
-"What you talkin' about, Jinny! Jake's comin' up with the minister, an'
-you're goin' to be married at noon to-morrow."
-
-"I'm takin' him"--she jerked her head towards the room where Dingley was
---"down Dog Nose Rapids to-night. He's risked his life for his friend,
-thinkin' of her that's dead an' gone, and a man's life is a man's life.
-If it was Jake's life in danger, what'd I think of a woman that could
-save him, and didn't?"
-
-"Onct you broke off with Jake Lawson--the day before you was to be
-married; an' it's took years to make up an' agree again to be spliced.
-If Jake comes here to-morrow, and you ain't here, what do you think he'll
-do? The neighbours are comin' for fifty miles round, two is comin' up a
-hundred miles, an' you can't--Jinny, you can't do it. I bin sick of
-answerin' questions all these years 'bout you and Jake, an' I ain't goin'
-through it again. I've told more lies than there's straws in a tick."
-
-She flamed out. "Then take him down the river yourself--a man to do a
-man's work. Are you afeard to take the risk?"
-
-He held out his hands slowly and looked at them. They shook a little.
-"Yes, Jinny," he said sadly, "I'm afeard. I ain't what I was. I made a
-mistake, Jinny. I've took too much whiskey. I'm older than I ought to
-be. I oughtn't never to have had a whiskey-still, an' I wouldn't have
-drunk so much. I got money--money for you, Jinny, for you an' Jake, but
-I've lost what I'll never git back. I'm afeard to go down the river with
-him. I'd go smash in the Dog Nose Rapids. I got no nerve. I can't hunt
-the grizzly any more, nor the puma, Jinny. I got to keep to common
-shootin', now and henceforth, amen! No, I'd go smash in Dog Nose
-Rapids."
-
-She caught his hands impulsively. "Don't you fret, Uncle Tom. You've
-bin a good uncle to me, and you've bin a good friend, and you ain't the
-first that's found whiskey too much for him. You ain't got an enemy in
-the mountains. Why, I've got two or three--"
-
-"Shucks! Women--only women whose beaux left 'em to follow after you.
-That's nothing, an' they'll be your friends fast enough after you're
-married tomorrow."
-
-"I ain't going to be married to-morrow. I'm going down to Bindon
-to-night. If Jake's mad, then it's all over, and there'll be more
-trouble among the women up here."
-
-By this time they had entered the other room. The old man saw the white
-petticoat on the chair. "No woman in the mountains ever had a petticoat
-like that, Jinny. It'd make a dress, it's that pretty an' neat. Golly,
-I'd like to see it on you, with the blue skirt over, and just hitched up
-a little."
-
-"Oh, shut up--shut up!" she said in sudden anger, and caught up the
-petticoat as though she would put it away; but presently she laid it down
-again and smoothed it with quick, nervous fingers. "Can't you talk sense
-and leave my clothes alone? If Jake comes, and I'm not here, and he
-wants to make a fuss, and spoil everything, and won't wait, you give him
-this petticoat. You put it in his arms. I bet you'll have the laugh on
-him. He's got a temper."
-
-"So've you, Jinny, dear, so've you," said the old man, laughing. "You're
-goin' to have your own way, same as ever--same as ever."
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-A moon of exquisite whiteness silvering the world, making shadows on the
-water as though it were sunlight and the daytime, giving a spectral look
-to the endless array of poplar trees on the banks, glittering on the foam
-of the rapids. The spangling stars made the arch of the sky like some
-gorgeous chancel in a cathedral as vast as life and time. Like the day
-which was ended, in which the mountain-girl had found a taste of Eden,
-it seemed too sacred for mortal strife. Now and again there came the
-note of a night-bird, the croak of a frog from the shore; but the serene
-stillness and beauty of the primeval North was over all.
-
-For two hours after sunset it had all been silent and brooding, and then
-two figures appeared on the bank of the great river. A canoe was softly
-and hastily pushed out from its hidden shelter under the overhanging
-bank, and was noiselessly paddled out to midstream, dropping down the
-current meanwhile.
-
-It was Jenny Long and the man who must get to Bindon. They had waited
-till nine o'clock, when the moon was high and full, to venture forth.
-Then Dingley had dropped from her bedroom window, had joined her under
-the trees, and they had sped away, while the man's hunters, who had come
-suddenly, and before Jenny could get him away into the woods, were
-carousing inside. These had tracked their man back to Tom Sanger's
-house, and at first they were incredulous that Jenny and her uncle had
-not seen him. They had prepared to search the house, and one had laid
-his finger on the latch of her bedroom door; but she had flared out with
-such anger that, mindful of the supper she had already begun to prepare
-for them, they had desisted, and the whiskey-jug which the old man
-brought out distracted their attention.
-
-One of their number, known as the Man from Clancey's, had, however, been
-outside when Dingley had dropped from the window, and had seen him from a
-distance. He had not given the alarm, but had followed, to make the
-capture by himself. But Jenny had heard the stir of life behind them,
-and had made a sharp detour, so that they had reached the shore and were
-out in mid-stream before their tracker got to the river. Then he called
-to them to return, but Jenny only bent a little lower and paddled on,
-guiding the canoe towards the safe channel through the first small rapids
-leading to the great Dog Nose Rapids.
-
-A rifle-shot rang out, and a bullet "pinged" over the water and
-splintered the side of the canoe where Dingley sat. He looked calmly
-back, and saw the rifle raised again, but did not stir, in spite of
-Jenny's warning to lie down.
-
-"He'll not fire on you so long as he can draw a bead on me," he said
-quietly.
-
-Again a shot rang out, and the bullet sang past his head.
-
-"If he hits me, you go straight on to Bindon," he continued. "Never mind
-about me. Go to the Snowdrop Mine. Get there by twelve o'clock, and
-warn them. Don't stop a second for me--"
-
-Suddenly three shots rang out in succession--Tom Sanger's house had
-emptied itself on the bank of the river--and Dingley gave a sharp
-exclamation.
-
-"They've hit me, but it's the same arm as before," he growled. "They got
-no right to fire at me. It's not the law. Don't stop," he added
-quickly, as he saw her half turn round.
-
-Now there were loud voices on the shore. Old Tom Sanger was threatening
-to shoot the first man that fired again, and he would have kept his word.
-
-"Who you firin' at?" he shouted. "That's my niece, Jinny Long, an' you
-let that boat alone. This ain't the land o' lynch law. Dingley ain't
-escaped from gaol. You got no right to fire at him."
-
-"No one ever went down Dog Nose Rapids at night," said the Man from
-Clancey's, whose shot had got Dingley's arm. "There ain't a chance of
-them doing it. No one's ever done it."
-
-The two were in the roaring rapids now, and the canoe was jumping through
-the foam like a racehorse. The keen eyes on the bank watched the canoe
-till it was lost in the half-gloom below the first rapids, and then they
-went slowly back to Tom Sanger's house.
-
-"So there'll be no wedding to-morrow," said the Man from Clancey's.
-
-"Funerals, more likely," drawled another.
-
-"Jinny Long's in that canoe, an' she ginerally does what she wants to,"
-said Tom Sanger sagely.
-
-"Well, we done our best, and now I hope they'll get to Bindon," said
-another.
-
-Sanger passed the jug to him freely. Then they sat down and talked of
-the people who had been drowned in Dog Nose Rapids and of the last
-wedding in the mountains.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-It was as the Man from Clancey's had said, no one had ever gone down Dog
-Nose Rapids in the nighttime, and probably no one but Jenny Long would
-have ventured it. Dingley had had no idea what a perilous task had been
-set his rescuer. It was only when the angry roar of the great rapids
-floated up-stream to them, increasing in volume till they could see the
-terror of tumbling waters just below, and the canoe shot forward like a
-snake through the swift, smooth current which would sweep them into the
-vast caldron, that he realised the terrible hazard of the enterprise.
-
-The moon was directly overhead when they drew upon the race of rocks and
-fighting water and foam. On either side only the shadowed shore,
-forsaken by the races which had hunted and roamed and ravaged here--not
-a light, nor any sign of life, or the friendliness of human presence to
-make their isolation less complete, their danger, as it were, shared by
-fellow-mortals. Bright as the moon was, it was not bright enough for
-perfect pilotage. Never in the history of white men had these rapids
-been ridden at nighttime. As they sped down the flume of the deep,
-irresistible current, and were launched into the trouble of rocks and
-water, Jenny realised how great their peril was, and how different the
-track of the waters looked at nighttime from daytime. Outlines seemed
-merged, rocks did not look the same, whirlpools had a different vortex,
-islands of stone had a new configuration. As they sped on, lurching,
-jumping, piercing a broken wall of wave and spray like a torpedo,
-shooting an almost sheer fall, she came to rely on a sense of intuition
-rather than memory, for night had transformed the waters.
-
-Not a sound escaped either. The man kept his eyes fixed on the woman;
-the woman scanned the dreadful pathway with eyes deep-set and burning,
-resolute, vigilant, and yet defiant too, as though she had been trapped
-into this track of danger, and was fighting without great hope, but with
-the temerity and nonchalance of despair. Her arms were bare to the
-shoulder almost, and her face was again and again drenched; but second
-succeeded second, minute followed minute in a struggle which might well
-turn a man's hair grey, and now, at last-how many hours was it since they
-had been cast into this den of roaring waters!--at last, suddenly, over a
-large fall, and here smooth waters again, smooth and untroubled, and
-strong and deep. Then, and only then, did a word escape either; but the
-man had passed through torture and unavailing regret, for he realised
-that he had had no right to bring this girl into such a fight. It was
-not her friend who was in danger at Bindon. Her life had been risked
-without due warrant. "I didn't know, or I wouldn't have asked it," he
-said in a low voice. "Lord, but you are a wonder--to take that hurdle
-for no one that belonged to you, and to do it as you've done it. This
-country will rise to you." He looked back on the raging rapids far
-behind, and he shuddered. "It was a close call, and no mistake. We must
-have been within a foot of down-you-go fifty times. But it's all right
-now, if we can last it out and git there." Again he glanced back, then
-turned to the girl. "It makes me pretty sick to look at it," he
-continued. "I bin through a lot, but that's as sharp practice as I
-want."
-
-"Come here and let me bind up your arm," she answered. "They hit you--
-the sneaks! Are you bleeding much?"
-
-He came near her carefully, as she got the big canoe out of the current
-into quieter water. She whipped the scarf from about her neck, and with
-his knife ripped up the seam of his sleeve. Her face was alive with the
-joy of conflict and elated with triumph. Her eyes were shining. She
-bathed the wound--the bullet had passed clean through the fleshy part of
-the arm--and then carefully tied the scarf round it over her
-handkerchief.
-
-"I guess it's as good as a man could do it," she said at last.
-
-"As good as any doctor," he rejoined.
-
-"I wasn't talking of your arm," she said.
-
-"'Course not. Excuse me. You was talkin' of them rapids, and I've got
-to say there ain't a man that could have done it and come through like
-you. I guess the man that marries you'll get more than his share of
-luck."
-
-"I want none of that," she said sharply, and picked up her paddle again,
-her eyes flashing anger.
-
-He took a pistol from his pocket and offered it to her. "I didn't mean
-any harm by what I said. Take this if you think I won't know how to
-behave myself," he urged.
-
-She flung up her head a little. "I knew what I was doing before I
-started," she said. "Put it away. How far is it, and can we do it in
-time?"
-
-"If you can hold out, we can do it; but it means going all night and all
-morning; and it ain't dawn yet, by a long shot."
-
-Dawn came at last, and the mist of early morning, and the imperious and
-dispelling sun; and with mouthfuls of food as they drifted on, the two
-fixed their eyes on the horizon beyond which lay Bindon. And now it
-seemed to the girl as though this race to save a life or many lives was
-the one thing in existence. To-morrow was to-day, and the white
-petticoat was lying in the little house in the mountains, and her wedding
-was an interminable distance off, so had this adventure drawn her into
-its risks and toils and haggard exhaustion.
-
-Eight, nine, ten, eleven o'clock came, and then they saw signs of
-settlement. Houses appeared here and there upon the banks, and now and
-then a horseman watched them from the shore, but they could not pause.
-Bindon--Bindon--Bindon--the Snowdrop Mine at Bindon, and a death-dealing
-machine timed to do its deadly work, were before the eyes of the two
-voyageurs.
-
-Half-past eleven, and the town of Bindon was just beyond them. A quarter
-to twelve, and they had run their canoe into the bank beyond which were
-the smokestacks and chimneys of the mine. Bindon was peacefully pursuing
-its way, though here and there were little groups of strikers who had not
-resumed work.
-
-Dingley and the girl scrambled up the bank. Trembling with fatigue, they
-hastened on. The man drew ahead of her, for she had paddled for fifteen
-hours, practically without ceasing, and the ground seemed to rise up at
-her. But she would not let him stop.
-
-He hurried on, reached the mine, and entered, shouting the name of his
-friend. It was seven minutes to twelve.
-
-A moment later, a half-dozen men came rushing from that portion of the
-mine where Dingley had been told the machine was placed, and at their
-head was Lawson, the man he had come to save.
-
-The girl hastened on to meet them, but she grew faint and leaned against
-a tree, scarce conscious. She was roused by voices.
-
-"No, it wasn't me, it wasn't me that done it; it was a girl. Here she
-is--Jenny Long! You got to thank her, Jake."
-
-Jake! Jake! The girl awakened to full understanding now. Jake--what
-Jake? She looked, then stumbled forward with a cry.
-
-"Jake--it was my Jake!" she faltered. The mine-boss caught her in his
-arms. "You, Jenny! It's you that's saved me!"
-
-Suddenly there was a rumble as of thunder, and a cloud of dust and stone
-rose from the Snowdrop Mine. The mine-boss tightened his arm round the
-girl's waist. "That's what I missed, through him and you, Jenny," he
-said.
-
-"What was you doing here, and not at Selby, Jake?" she asked.
-
-"They sent for me-to stop the trouble here."
-
-"But what about our wedding to-day?" she asked with a frown.
-
-"A man went from here with a letter to you three days ago," he said,
-"asking you to come down here and be married. I suppose he got drunk,
-or had an accident, and didn't reach you. It had to be. I was needed
-here--couldn't tell what would happen."
-
-"It has happened out all right," said Dingley, "and this'll be the end of
-it. You got them miners solid now. The strikers'll eat humble pie after
-to-day."
-
-"We'll be married to-day, just the same," the mine-boss said, as he gave
-some brandy to the girl.
-
-But the girl shook her head. She was thinking of a white petticoat in a
-little house in the mountains. "I'm not going to be married to-day," she
-said decisively.
-
-"Well, to-morrow," said the mine-boss.
-
-But the girl shook her head again. "To-day is tomorrow," she answered.
-"You can wait, Jake. I'm going back home to be married."
-
-
-
-
-
-
-QU'APPELLE
-
-(Who calls?)
-
-
-"But I'm white; I'm not an Indian. My father was a white man. I've been
-brought up as a white girl. I've had a white girl's schooling."
-
-Her eyes flashed as she sprang to her feet and walked up and down the
-room for a moment, then stood still, facing her mother,--a dark-faced,
-pock-marked woman, with heavy, somnolent eyes, and waited for her to
-speak. The reply came slowly and sullenly--
-
-"I am a Blackfoot woman. I lived on the Muskwat River among the braves
-for thirty years. I have killed buffalo. I have seen battles. Men,
-too, I have killed when they came to steal our horses and crept in on our
-lodges in the night-the Crees! I am a Blackfoot. You are the daughter
-of a Blackfoot woman. No medicine can cure that. Sit down. You have no
-sense. You are not white. They will not have you. Sit down."
-
-The girl's handsome face flushed; she threw up her hands in an agony of
-protest. A dreadful anger was in her panting breast, but she could not
-speak. She seemed to choke with excess of feeling. For an instant she
-stood still, trembling with agitation, then she sat down suddenly on a
-great couch covered with soft deerskins and buffalo robes. There was
-deep in her the habit of obedience to this sombre but striking woman.
-She had been ruled firmly, almost oppressively, and she had not yet
-revolted. Seated on the couch, she gazed out of the window at the flying
-snow, her brain too much on fire for thought, passion beating like a
-pulse in all her lithe and graceful young body, which had known the
-storms of life and time for only twenty years.
-
-The wind shrieked and the snow swept past in clouds of blinding drift,
-completely hiding from sight the town below them, whose civilisation had
-built itself many habitations and was making roads and streets on the
-green-brown plain, where herds of buffalo had stamped and streamed and
-thundered not long ago. The town was a mile and a half away, and these
-two were alone in a great circle of storm, one of them battling against a
-tempest which might yet overtake her, against which she had set her face
-ever since she could remember, though it had only come to violence since
-her father died two years before--a careless, strong, wilful white man,
-who had lived the Indian life for many years, but had been swallowed at
-last by the great wave of civilisation streaming westward and northward,
-wiping out the game and the Indian, and overwhelming the rough, fighting,
-hunting, pioneer life. Joel Renton had made money, by good luck chiefly,
-having held land here and there which he had got for nothing, and had
-then almost forgotten about it, and, when reminded of it, still held on
-to it with that defiant stubbornness which often possesses improvident
-and careless natures. He had never had any real business instinct, and
-to swagger a little over the land he held and to treat offers of purchase
-with contempt was the loud assertion of a capacity he did not possess.
-So it was that stubborn vanity, beneath which was his angry protest
-against the prejudice felt by the new people of the West for the white
-pioneer who married an Indian, and lived the Indian life,--so it was that
-this gave him competence and a comfortable home after the old trader had
-been driven out by the railway and the shopkeeper. With the first land
-he sold he sent his daughter away to school in a town farther east and
-south, where she had been brought in touch with a life that at once
-cramped and attracted her; where, too, she had felt the first chill
-of racial ostracism, and had proudly fought it to the end, her weapons
-being talent, industry, and a hot, defiant ambition.
-
-There had been three years of bitter, almost half-sullen, struggle,
-lightened by one sweet friendship with a girl whose face she had since
-drawn in a hundred different poses on stray pieces of paper, on the walls
-of the big, well-lighted attic to which she retreated for hours every
-day, when she was not abroad on the prairies, riding the Indian pony that
-her uncle the Piegan Chief, Ice Breaker, had given her years before.
-Three years of struggle, and then her father had died, and the refuge for
-her vexed, defiant heart was gone. While he lived she could affirm the
-rights of a white man's daughter, the rights of the daughter of a pioneer
-who had helped to make the West; and her pride in him had given a glow to
-her cheek and a spring to her step which drew every eye. In the chief
-street of Portage la Drome men would stop their trafficking and women
-nudge each other when she passed, and wherever she went she stirred
-interest, excited admiration, or aroused prejudice--but the prejudice did
-not matter so long as her father, Joel Renton, lived. Whatever his
-faults, and they were many--sometimes he drank too much, and swore a
-great deal, and bullied and stormed--she blinked at them all, for he was
-of the conquering race, a white man who had slept in white sheets and
-eaten off white tablecloths, and used a knife and fork, since he was
-born; and the women of his people had had soft petticoats and fine
-stockings, and silk gowns for festal days, and feathered hats of velvet,
-and shoes of polished leather, always and always, back through many
-generations. She had held her head high, for she was of his women, of
-the women of his people, with all their rights and all their claims. She
-had held it high till that stormy day--just such a day as this, with the
-surf of snow breaking against the house--when they carried him in out of
-the wild turmoil and snow, laying him on the couch where she now sat, and
-her head fell on his lifeless breast, and she cried out to him in vain to
-come back to her.
-
-Before the world her head was still held high, but in the attic-room,
-and out on the prairies far away, where only the coyote or the prairie-
-hen saw, her head drooped, and her eyes grew heavy with pain and sombre
-protest. Once in an agony of loneliness, and cruelly hurt by a
-conspicuous slight put upon her at the Portage by the wife of the Reeve
-of the town, who had daughters twain of pure white blood got from behind
-the bar of a saloon in Winnipeg, she had thrown open her window at night
-with the frost below zero, and stood in her thin nightdress, craving the
-death which she hoped the cold would give her soon. It had not availed,
-however, and once again she had ridden out in a blizzard to die, but had
-come upon a man lost in the snow, and her own misery had passed from her,
-and her heart, full of the blood of plainsmen, had done for another what
-it would not do for itself. The Indian in her had, with strange, sure
-instinct, found its way to Portage la Drome, the man with both hands and
-one foot frozen, on her pony, she walking at his side, only conscious
-that she had saved one, not two, lives that day.
-
-Here was another such day, here again was the storm in her heart which
-had driven her into the plains that other time, and here again was that
-tempest of white death outside.
-
-"You have no sense. You are not white. They will not have you. Sit
-down--"
-
-The words had fallen on her ears with a cold, deadly smother. There came
-a chill upon her which stilled the wild pulses in her, which suddenly
-robbed the eyes of their brightness and gave a drawn look to the face.
-
-"You are not white. They will not have you, Pauline." The Indian mother
-repeated the words after a moment, her eyes grown still more gloomy; for
-in her, too, there was a dark tide of passion moving. In all the
-outlived years this girl had ever turned to the white father rather than
-to her, and she had been left more and more alone. Her man had been kind
-to her, and she had been a faithful wife, but she had resented the
-natural instinct of her half-breed child, almost white herself and with
-the feelings and ways of the whites, to turn always to her father, as
-though to a superior guide, to a higher influence and authority. Was
-not she herself the descendant of Blackfoot and Piegan chiefs through
-generations of rulers and warriors? Was there not Piegan and Blackfoot
-blood in the girl's veins? Must only the white man's blood be reckoned
-when they made up their daily account and balanced the books of their
-lives, credit and debtor,--misunderstanding and kind act, neglect and
-tenderness, reproof and praise, gentleness and impulse, anger and
-caress,--to be set down in the everlasting record? Why must the Indian
-always give way--Indian habits, Indian desires, the Indian way of doing
-things, the Indian point of view, Indian food, Indian medicine? Was it
-all bad, and only that which belonged to white life good?
-
-"Look at your face in the glass, Pauline," she added at last. "You are
-good-looking, but it isn't the good looks of the whites. The lodge of a
-chieftainess is the place for you. There you would have praise and
-honour; among the whites you are only a half-breed. What is the good?
-Let us go back to the life out there beyond the Muskwat River--up beyond.
-There is hunting still, a little, and the world is quiet, and nothing
-troubles. Only the wild dog barks at night, or the wolf sniffs at the
-door and all day there is singing. Somewhere out beyond the Muskwat the
-feasts go on, and the old men build the great fires, and tell tales, and
-call the wind out of the north, and make the thunder speak; and the young
-men ride to the hunt or go out to battle, and build lodges for the
-daughters of the tribe; and each man has his woman, and each woman has in
-her breast the honour of the tribe, and the little ones fill the lodge
-with laughter. Like a pocket of deerskin is every house, warm and small
-and full of good things. Hai-yai, what is this life to that! There you
-will be head and chief of all, for there is money enough for a thousand
-horses; and your father was a white man, and these are the days when the
-white man rules. Like clouds before the sun are the races of men, and
-one race rises and another falls. Here you are not first, but last; and
-the child of the white father and mother, though they be as the dirt that
-flies from a horse's heels, it is before you. Your mother is a
-Blackfoot."
-
-As the woman spoke slowly and with many pauses, the girl's mood changed,
-and there came into her eyes a strange, dark look deeper than anger. She
-listened with a sudden patience which stilled the agitation in her breast
-and gave a little touch of rigidity to her figure. Her eyes withdrew
-from the wild storm without and gravely settled on her mother's face,
-and with the Indian woman's last words understanding pierced, but did not
-dispel, the sombre and ominous look in her eyes. There was silence for
-a moment, and then she spoke almost as evenly as her mother had done.
-
-"I will tell you everything. You are my mother, and I love you; but you
-will not see the truth. When my father took you from the lodges and
-brought you here, it was the end of the Indian life. It was for you to
-go on with him, but you would not go. I was young, but I saw, and I said
-that in all things I would go with him. I did not know that it would be
-hard, but at school, at the very first, I began to understand. There was
-only one, a French girl--I loved her--a girl who said to me, 'You are as
-white as I am, as anyone, and your heart is the same, and you are
-beautiful.' Yes, Manette said I was beautiful."
-
-She paused a moment, a misty, far-away look came into her eyes, her
-fingers clasped and unclasped, and she added:
-
-"And her brother, Julien,--he was older,--when he came to visit Manette,
-he spoke to me as though I was all white, and was good to me. I have
-never forgotten, never. It was five years ago, but I remember him. He
-was tall and strong, and as good as Manette--as good as Manette. I loved
-Manette, but she suffered for me, for I was not like the others, and my
-ways were different--then. I had lived up there on the Warais among the
-lodges, and I had not seen things--only from my father, and he did so
-much in an Indian way. So I was sick at heart, and sometimes I wanted to
-die; and once--But there was Manette, and she would laugh and sing, and
-we would play together, and I would speak French and she would speak
-English, and I learned from her to forget the Indian ways. What were
-they to me? I had loved them when I was of them, but I came on to a
-better life. The Indian life is to the white life as the parfleche pouch
-to--to this." She laid her hand upon a purse of delicate silver mesh
-hanging at her waist. "When your eyes are opened you must go on, you
-cannot stop. There is no going back. When you have read of all there is
-in the white man's world, when you have seen, then there is no returning.
-You may end it all, if you wish, in the snow, in the river, but there is
-no returning. The lodge of a chief--ah, if my father had heard you say
-that--!"
-
-The Indian woman shifted heavily in her chair, then shrank away from the
-look fixed on her. Once or twice she made as if she would speak, but
-sank down in the great chair, helpless and dismayed.
-
-"The lodge of a chief!" the girl continued in a low, bitter voice.
-"What is the lodge of a chief? A smoky fire, a pot, a bed of skins, aih-
-yi! If the lodges of the Indians were millions, and I could be head of
-all, and rule the land, yet would I rather be a white girl in the hut of
-her white man, struggling for daily bread among the people who sweep the
-buffalo out, but open up the land with the plough, and make a thousand
-live where one lived before. It is peace you want, my mother, peace and
-solitude, in which the soul goes to sleep. Your days of hope are over,
-and you want to drowse by the fire. I want to see the white men's cities
-grow, and the armies coming over the hill with the ploughs and the
-reapers and the mowers, and the wheels and the belts and engines of the
-great factories, and the white woman's life spreading everywhere; for I
-am a white man's daughter. I can't be both Indian and white. I will not
-be like the sun when the shadow cuts across it and the land grows dark.
-I will not be half-breed. I will be white or I will be Indian; and I
-will be white, white only. My heart is white, my tongue is white, I
-think, I feel, as white people think and feel. What they wish, I wish;
-as they live, I live; as white women dress, I dress."
-
-She involuntarily drew up the dark red skirt she wore, showing a white
-petticoat and a pair of fine stockings on an ankle as shapely as she had
-ever seen among all the white women she knew. She drew herself up with
-pride, and her body had a grace and ease which the white woman's
-convention had not cramped.
-
-Yet, with all her protests, no one would have thought her English.
-She might have been Spanish, or Italian, or Roumanian, or Slav, though
-nothing of her Indian blood showed in purely Indian characteristics, and
-something sparkled in her, gave a radiance to her face and figure which
-the storm and struggle in her did not smother. The white women of
-Portage la Drome were too blind, too prejudiced, to see all that she
-really was, and admiring white men could do little, for Pauline would
-have nothing to do with them till the women met her absolutely as an
-equal; and from the other halfbreeds, who intermarried with each other
-and were content to take a lower place than the pure whites, she held
-aloof, save when any of them was ill or in trouble. Then she recognised
-the claim of race, and came to their doors with pity and soft impulses to
-help them. French and Scotch and English half-breeds, as they were, they
-understood how she was making a fight for all who were half-Indian, half-
-white, and watched her with a furtive devotion, acknowledging her
-superior place, and proud of it.
-
-"I will not stay here," said the Indian mother with sullen stubbornness.
-"I will go back beyond the Warais. My life is my own life, and I will do
-what I like with it."
-
-The girl started, but became composed again on the instant. "Is your
-life all your own, mother?" she asked. "I did not come into the world
-of my own will. If I had I would have come all white or all Indian. I
-am your daughter, and I am here, good or bad--is your life all your own?"
-
-"You can marry and stay here, when I go. You are twenty. I had my man,
-your father, when I was seventeen. You can marry. There are men. You
-have money. They will marry you--and forget the rest."
-
-With a cry of rage and misery the girl sprang to her feet and started
-forwards, but stopped suddenly at sound of a hasty knocking and a voice
-asking admittance. An instant later, a huge, bearded, broad-shouldered
-man stepped inside, shaking himself free of the snow, laughing half-
-sheepishly as he did so, and laying his fur-cap and gloves with
-exaggerated care on the wide window-sill.
-
-"John Alloway," said the Indian woman in a voice of welcome, and with a
-brightening eye, for it would seem as though he came in answer to her
-words of a few moments before. With a mother's instinct she had divined
-at once the reason for the visit, though no warning thought crossed the
-mind of the girl, who placed a chair for their visitor with a heartiness
-which was real--was not this the white man she had saved from death in
-the snow a year ago? Her heart was soft towards the life she had kept in
-the world. She smiled at him, all the anger gone from her eyes, and
-there was almost a touch of tender anxiety in her voice as she said "What
-brought you out in this blizzard? It wasn't safe. It doesn't seem
-possible you got here from the Portage."
-
-The huge ranchman and auctioneer laughed cheerily. "Once lost, twice get
-there," he exclaimed, with a quizzical toss of the head, thinking he had
-said a good thing. "It's a year ago to the very day that I was lost out
-back"--he jerked a thumb over his shoulder--"and you picked me up and
-brought me in; and what was I to do but come out on the anniversary and
-say thank you? I'd fixed up all year to come to you, and I wasn't to be
-stopped, 'cause it was like the day we first met, old Coldmaker hitting
-the world with his whips of frost, and shaking his ragged blankets of
-snow over the wild west."
-
-"Just such a day," said the Indian woman after a pause. Pauline remained
-silent, placing a little bottle of cordial before their visitor, with
-which he presently regaled himself, raising his glass with an air.
-
-"Many happy returns to us both!" he said, and threw the liquor down his
-throat, smacked his lips, and drew his hand down his great moustache and
-beard like some vast animal washing its face with its paw. Smiling
-and yet not at ease, he looked at the two women and nodded his head
-encouragingly, but whether the encouragement was for himself or for
-them he could not have told.
-
-His last words, however, had altered the situation. The girl had caught
-at a suggestion in them which startled her. This rough white plainsman
-was come to make love to her, and to say--what? He was at once awkward
-and confident, afraid of her, of her refinement, grace, beauty, and
-education, and yet confident in the advantage of his position, a white
-man bending to a half-breed girl. He was not conscious of the
-condescension and majesty of his demeanour, but it was there, and
-his untutored words and ways must make it all too apparent to the girl.
-The revelation of the moment made her at once triumphant and humiliated.
-This white man had come to make love to her, that was apparent; but that
-he, ungrammatical, crude, and rough, should think he had but to put out
-his hand, and she in whom every subtle emotion and influence had delicate
-response, whose words and ways were as far removed from his as day from
-night, would fly to him, brought the flush of indignation to her cheek.
-She responded to his toast with a pleasant nod, however, and said:
-
-"But if you will keep coming in such wild storms, there will not be many
-anniversaries." Laughing, she poured out another glass of liquor for
-him.
-
-"Well, now, p'r'aps you're right, and so the only thing to do is not to
-keep coming, but to stay--stay right where you are."
-
-The Indian woman could not see her daughter's face, which was turned to
-the fire, but she herself smiled at John Alloway, and nodded her head
-approvingly. Here was the cure for her own trouble and loneliness.
-Pauline and she, who lived in different worlds, and yet were tied to each
-other by circumstances they could not control, would each work out her
-own destiny after her own nature, since John Alloway had come a-wooing.
-She would go back on the Warais, and Pauline would remain at the Portage,
-a white woman with her white man. She would go back to the smoky fires
-in the huddled lodges; to the venison stew and the snake dance; to the
-feasts of the Medicine Men, and the long sleeps in the summer days, and
-the winter's tales, and be at rest among her own people; and Pauline
-would have revenge of the wife of the prancing Reeve, and perhaps the
-people would forget who her mother was.
-
-With these thoughts flying through her sluggish mind, she rose and moved
-heavily from the room, with a parting look of encouragement at Alloway,
-as though to say, a man that is bold is surest.
-
-With her back to the man, Pauline watched her mother leave the room, saw
-the look she gave Alloway. When the door was closed she turned and
-looked Alloway in the eyes.
-
-"How old are you?" she asked suddenly.
-
-He stirred in his seat nervously. "Why, fifty, about," he answered with
-confusion.
-
-"Then you'll be wise not to go looking for anniversaries in blizzards,
-when they're few at the best," she said with a gentle and dangerous
-smile.
-
-"Fifty-why, I'm as young as most men of thirty," he responded with an
-uncertain laugh. "I'd have come here to-day if it had been snowing
-pitchforks and chain-lightning. I made up my mind I would. You saved my
-life, that's dead sure; and I'd be down among the: moles if it wasn't for
-you and that Piegan pony of yours. Piegan ponies are wonders in a storm-
-seem to know their way by instinct. You, too--why, I bin on the plains
-all my life, and was no better than a baby that day; but you--why, you
-had Piegan in you, why, yes--"
-
-He stopped short for a moment, checked by the look in her face, then went
-blindly on: "And you've got Blackfoot in you, too; and you just felt your
-way through the tornado and over the blind prairie like a, bird reaching
-for the hills. It was as easy to you as picking out a moverick in a
-bunch of steers to me. But I never could make out what you was doing on
-the prairie that terrible day. I've thought of it a hundred times. What
-was you doing, if it ain't cheek to ask?"
-
-"I was trying to lose a life," she answered quietly, her eyes dwelling
-on his face, yet not seeing him; for it all came back on her, the agony
-which had driven her out into the tempest to be lost evermore.
-
-He laughed. "Well, now, that's good," he said; "that's what they call
-speaking sarcastic. You was out to save, and not to lose, a life; that
-was proved to the satisfaction of the court." He paused and chuckled to
-himself, thinking he had been witty, and continued: "And I was that
-court, and my judgment was that the debt of that life you saved had to be
-paid to you within one calendar year, with interest at the usual per cent
-for mortgages on good security. That was my judgment, and there's no
-appeal from it. I am the great Justinian in this case."
-
-"Did you ever save anybody's life?" she asked, putting the bottle of
-cordial away, as he filled his glass for the third time.
-
-"Twice certain, and once dividin' the honours," he answered, pleased at
-the question.
-
-"And did you expect to get any pay, with or without interest?" she
-added.
-
-"Me? I never thought of it again. But yes--by gol, I did! One case was
-funny, as funny can be. It was Ricky Wharton over on the Muskwat River.
-I saved his life right enough, and he came to me a year after and said,
-You saved my life, now what are you going to do with it? I'm stony
-broke. I owe a hundred dollars, and I wouldn't be owing it if you hadn't
-saved my life. When you saved it I was five hunderd to the good, and
-I'd have left that much behind me. Now I'm on the rocks, because you
-insisted on saving my life; and you just got to take care of me.'
-I 'insisted!' Well, that knocked me silly, and I took him on--blame me,
-if I didn't keep Ricky a whole year, till he went north looking for gold.
-Get pay--why, I paid! Saving life has its responsibilities, little gal."
-
-"You can't save life without running some risk yourself, not as a rule,
-can you?" she said, shrinking from his familiarity.
-
-"Not as a rule," he replied. "You took on a bit of risk with me, you and
-your Piegan pony."
-
-"Oh, I was young," she responded, leaning over the table, and drawing
-faces on a piece of paper before her. "I could take more risks, I was
-only nineteen!"
-
-"I don't catch on," he rejoined. "If it's sixteen or--"
-
-"Or fifty," she interposed.
-
-"What difference does it make? If you're done for, it's the same at
-nineteen as fifty, and vicey-versey."
-
-"No, it's not the same," she answered. "You leave so much more that you
-want to keep, when you go at fifty."
-
-"Well, I dunno. I never thought of that."
-
-"There's all that has belonged to you. You've been married, and have
-children, haven't you?"
-
-He started, frowned, then straightened himself. "I got one girl--she's
-east with her grandmother," he said jerkily.
-
-"That's what I said; there's more to leave behind at fifty," she replied,
-a red spot on each cheek. She was not looking at him, but at the face of
-a man on the paper before her--a young man with abundant hair, a strong
-chin, and big, eloquent eyes; and all around his face she had drawn the
-face of a girl many times, and beneath the faces of both she was writing
-Manette and Julien.
-
-The water was getting too deep for John Alloway.
-
-He floundered towards the shore. "I'm no good at words," he said--
-"no good at argyment; but I've got a gift for stories--round the fire of
-a night, with a pipe and a tin basin of tea; so I'm not going to try and
-match you. You've had a good education down at Winnipeg. Took every
-prize, they say, and led the school, though there was plenty of fuss
-because they let you do it, and let you stay there, being half-Indian.
-You never heard what was going on outside, I s'pose. It didn't matter,
-for you won out. Blamed foolishness, trying to draw the line between red
-and white that way. Of course, it's the women always, always the women,
-striking out for all-white or nothing. Down there at Portage they've
-treated you mean, mean as dirt. The Reeve's wife--well, we'll fix that
-up all right. I guess John Alloway ain't to be bluffed. He knows too
-much and they all know he knows enough. When John Alloway, 32 Main
-Street, with a ranch on the Katanay, says, 'We're coming--Mr. and Mrs.
-John Alloway is coming,' they'll get out their cards visite, I guess."
-
-Pauline's head bent lower, and she seemed laboriously etching lines into
-the faces before her--Manette and Julien, Julien and Manette; and there
-came into her eyes the youth and light and gaiety of the days when Julien
-came of an afternoon and the riverside rang with laughter; the dearest,
-lightest days she had ever spent.
-
-The man of fifty went on, seeing nothing but a girl over whom he was
-presently going to throw the lasso of his affection, and take her home
-with him, yielding and glad, a white man, and his half-breed girl--but
-such a half-breed!
-
-"I seen enough of the way some of them women treated you," he continued,
-"and I sez to myself, Her turn next. There's a way out, I sez, and John
-Alloway pays his debts. When the anniversary comes round I'll put things
-right, I sez to myself. She saved my life, and she shall have the rest
-of it, if she'll take it, and will give a receipt in full, and open a new
-account in the name of John and Pauline Alloway. Catch it? See--
-Pauline?"
-
-Slowly she got to her feet. There was a look in her eyes such as had
-been in her mother's a little while before, but a hundred times
-intensified: a look that belonged to the flood and flow of generations of
-Indian life, yet controlled in her by the order and understanding of
-centuries of white men's lives, the pervasive, dominating power of race.
-
-For an instant she kept her eyes towards the window. The storm had
-suddenly ceased, and a glimmer of sunset light was breaking over the
-distant wastes of snow.
-
-"You want to pay a debt you think you owe," she said, in a strange,
-lustreless voice, turning to him at last. "Well, you have paid it. You
-have given me a book to read which I will keep always. And I give you a
-receipt in full for your debt."
-
-"I don't know about any book," he answered dazedly. "I want to marry you
-right away."
-
-"I am sorry, but it is not necessary," she replied suggestively.
-Her face was very pale now.
-
-"But I want to. It ain't a debt. That was only a way of putting it.
-I want to make you my wife. I got some position, and I can make the West
-sit up, and look at you and be glad."
-
-Suddenly her anger flared out, low and vivid and fierce, but her words
-were slow and measured. "There is no reason why I should marry you--not
-one. You offer me marriage as a prince might give a penny to a beggar.
-If my mother were not an Indian woman, you would not have taken it all
-as a matter of course. But my father was a white man, and I am a white
-man's daughter, and I would rather marry an Indian, who would think me
-the best thing there was in the light of the sun, than marry you. Had I
-been pure white you would not have been so sure, you would have asked,
-not offered. I am not obliged to you. You ought to go to no woman as
-you came to me. See, the storm has stopped. You will be quite safe
-going back now. The snow will be deep, perhaps, but it is not far."
-
-She went to the window, got his cap and gloves, and handed them to him.
-He took them, dumbfounded and overcome.
-
-"Say, I ain't done it right, mebbe, but I meant well, and I'd be good to
-you and proud of you, and I'd love you better than anything I ever saw,"
-he said shamefacedly, but eagerly and honestly too.
-
-"Ah, you should have said those last words first," she answered.
-
-"I say them now."
-
-"They come too late; but they would have been too late in any case," she
-added. "Still, I am glad you said them."
-
-She opened the door for him.
-
-"I made a mistake," he urged humbly. "I understand better now. I never
-had any schoolin'."
-
-"Oh, it isn't that," she answered gently. "Goodbye."
-
-Suddenly he turned. "You're right--it couldn't ever be," he said.
-"You're--you're great. And I owe you my life still."
-
-He stepped out into the biting air.
-
-For a moment Pauline stood motionless in the middle of the room, her gaze
-fixed upon the door which had just closed; then, with a wild gesture of
-misery and despair, she threw herself upon the couch in a passionate
-outburst of weeping. Sobs shook her from head to foot, and her hands,
-clenched above her head, twitched convulsively.
-
-Presently the door opened and her mother looked in eagerly. At what she
-saw her face darkened and hardened for an instant, but then the girl's
-utter abandonment of grief and agony convinced and conquered her.
-Some glimmer of the true understanding of the problem which Pauline
-represented got into her heart, and drove the sullen selfishness from
-her face and eyes and mind. She came over heavily and, sinking upon her
-knees, swept an arm around the girl's shoulder. She realised what had
-happened, and probably this was the first time in her life that she had
-ever come by instinct to a revelation of her daughter's mind, or of the
-faithful meaning of incidents of their lives.
-
-"You said no to John Alloway," she murmured. Defiance and protest spoke
-in the swift gesture of the girl's hands. "You think because he was
-white that I'd drop into his arms! No--no--no!"
-
-"You did right, little one."
-
-The sobs suddenly stopped, and the girl seemed to listen with all her
-body. There was something in her Indian mother's voice she had never
-heard before--at least, not since she was a little child, and swung in a
-deer-skin hammock in a tamarac tree by Renton's Lodge, where the chiefs
-met, and the West paused to rest on its onward march. Something of the
-accents of the voice that crooned to her then was in the woman's tones
-now.
-
-"He offered it like a lump of sugar to a bird--I know. He didn't know
-that you have great blood--yes, but it is true. My man's grandfather,
-he was of the blood of the kings of England. My man had the proof. And
-for a thousand years my people have been chiefs. There is no blood in
-all the West like yours. My heart was heavy, and dark thoughts came to
-me, because my man is gone, and the life is not my life, and I am only an
-Indian woman from the Warais, and my heart goes out there always now.
-But some great Medicine has been poured into my heart. As I stood at the
-door and saw you lying there, I called to the Sun. 'O great Spirit,' I
-said, 'help me to understand; for this girl is bone of my bone and flesh
-of my flesh, and Evil has come between us!' And the Sun Spirit poured
-the Medicine into my spirit, and there is no cloud between us now. It
-has passed away, and I see. Little white one, the white life is the only
-life, and I will live it with you till a white man comes and gives you a
-white man's home. But not John Alloway--shall the crow nest with the
-oriole?"
-
-As the woman spoke with slow, measured voice, full of the cadences of a
-heart revealing itself, the girl's breath at first seemed to stop, so
-still she lay; then, as the true understanding of the words came to her,
-she panted with excitement, her breast heaved, and the blood flushed her
-face. When the slow voice ceased, and the room became still, she lay
-quiet for a moment, letting the new thing find secure lodgment in her
-thought; then, suddenly, she raised herself and threw her arms round her
-mother in a passion of affection.
-
-"Lalika! O mother Lalika!" she said tenderly, and kissed her again and
-again. Not since she was a little girl, long before they left the
-Warais, had she called her mother by her Indian name, which her father
-had humorously taught her to do in those far-off happy days by the
-beautiful, singing river and the exquisite woods, when, with a bow
-and arrow, she had ranged a young Diana who slew only with love.
-
-"Lalika, mother Lalika, it is like the old, old times," she added softly.
-"Ah, it does not matter now, for you understand!"
-
-"I do not understand altogether," murmured the Indian woman gently.
-"I am not white, and there is a different way of thinking; but I will
-hold your hand, and we will live the white life together."
-
-Cheek to cheek they saw the darkness come, and, afterwards, the silver
-moon steal up over a frozen world, in which the air bit like steel and
-braced the heart like wine. Then, at last, before it was nine o'clock,
-after her custom, the Indian woman went to bed, leaving her daughter
-brooding peacefully by the fire.
-
-For a long time Pauline sat with hands clasped in her lap, her gaze on
-the tossing flames, in her heart and mind a new feeling of strength and
-purpose. The way before her was not clear, she saw no further than this
-day, and all that it had brought; yet she was as one that has crossed a
-direful flood and finds herself on a strange shore in an unknown country,
-with the twilight about her, yet with so much of danger passed that there
-was only the thought of the moment's safety round her, the camp-fire to
-be lit, and the bed to be made under the friendly trees and stars.
-
-For a half-hour she sat so, and then, suddenly, she raised her head
-listening, leaning towards the window, through which the moonlight
-streamed. She heard her name called without, distinct and strange--
-"Pauline! Pauline!"
-
-Starting up, she ran to the door and opened it. All was silent and
-cruelly cold. Nothing but the wide plain of snow and the steely air.
-But as she stood intently listening, the red glow from the fire behind
-her, again came the cry--"Pauline!" not far away. Her heart beat hard,
-and she raised her head and called--why was it she should call out in a
-language not her own? "Qu'appelle? Qu'appelle?"
-
-And once again on the still night air came the trembling appeal--
-"Pauline!"
-
-"Qu'appelle? Qu'appelle?" she cried, then, with a gasping murmur of
-understanding and recognition she ran forwards in the frozen night
-towards the sound of the voice. The same intuitive sense which had made
-her call out in French, without thought or reason, had revealed to her
-who it was that called; or was it that even in the one word uttered there
-was the note of a voice always remembered since those days with Manette
-at Winnipeg?
-
-Not far away from the house, on the way to Portage la Drome, but a little
-distance from the road, was a crevasse, and towards this she sped, for
-once before an accident had happened there. Again the voice called as
-she sped--"Pauline!" and she cried out that she was coming. Presently
-she stood above the declivity, and peered over. Almost immediately below
-her, a few feet down, was a man lying in the snow. He had strayed from
-the obliterated road, and had fallen down the crevasse, twisting his foot
-cruelly. Unable to walk he had crawled several hundred yards in the
-snow, but his strength had given out, and then he had called to the
-house, on whose dark windows flickered the flames of the fire, the name
-of the girl he had come so far to see. With a cry of joy and pain at
-once she recognised him now. It was as her heart had said--it was
-Julien, Manette's brother. In a moment she was beside him, her arm
-around his shoulder.
-
-"Pauline!" he said feebly, and fainted in her arms. An instant later
-she was speeding to the house, and, rousing her mother and two of the
-stablemen, she snatched a flask of brandy from a cupboard and hastened
-back.
-
-An hour later Julien Labrosse lay in the great sitting-room beside the
-fire, his foot and ankle bandaged, and at ease, his face alight with all
-that had brought him there. And once again the Indian mother with a sure
-instinct knew why he had come, and saw that now her girl would have a
-white woman's home, and, for her man, one of the race like her father's
-race, white and conquering.
-
-"I'm sorry to give trouble," Julien said, laughing--he had a trick
-of laughing lightly; "but I'll be able to get back to the Portage
-to-morrow."
-
-To this the Indian mother said, however: "To please yourself is a great
-thing, but to please others is better; and so you will stay here till you
-can walk back to the Portage, M'sieu' Julien."
-
-"Well, I've never been so comfortable," he said--"never so--happy. If
-you don't mind the trouble!" The Indian woman nodded pleasantly, and
-found an excuse to leave the room. But before she went she contrived
-to place near his elbow one of the scraps of paper on which Pauline had
-drawn his face, with that of Manette. It brought a light of hope and
-happiness into his eyes, and he thrust the paper under the fur robes of
-the couch.
-
-"What are you doing with your life?" Pauline asked him, as his eyes
-sought hers a few moments later.
-
-"Oh, I have a big piece of work before me," he answered eagerly, "a great
-chance--to build a bridge over the St. Lawrence, and I'm only thirty!
-I've got my start. Then, I've made over the old Seigneury my father left
-me, and I'm going to live in it. It will be a fine place, when I've done
-with it--comfortable and big, with old oak timbers and walls, and deep
-fireplaces, and carvings done in the time of Louis Quinze, and dark red
-velvet curtains for the drawingroom, and skins and furs. Yes, I must
-have skins and furs like these here." He smoothed the skins with his
-hand.
-
-"Manette, she will live with you?" Pauline asked. "Oh no, her husband
-wouldn't like that. You see, Manette is to be married. She told me to
-tell you all about it."
-
-He told her all there was to tell of Manette's courtship, and added that
-the wedding would take place in the spring.
-
-"Manette wanted it when the leaves first flourish and the birds come
-back," he said gaily; "and so she's not going to live with me at the
-Seigneury, you see. No, there it is, as fine a house, good enough for
-a prince, and I shall be there alone, unless--"
-
-His eyes met hers, and he caught the light that was in them, before the
-eyelids drooped over them and she turned her head to the fire. "But the
-spring is two months off yet," he added.
-
-"The spring?" she asked, puzzled, yet half afraid to speak.
-
-"Yes, I'm going into my new house when Manette goes into her new house--
-in the spring. And I won't go alone if--"
-
-He caught her eyes again, but she rose hurriedly and said: "You must
-sleep now. Good-night." She held out her hand.
-
-"Well, I'll tell you the rest to-morrow-to-morrow night when it's quiet
-like this, and the stars shine," he answered. "I'm going to have a home
-of my own like this--ah, bien sur, Pauline."
-
-That night the old Indian mother prayed to the Sun. "O great Spirit,"
-she said, "I give thanks for the Medicine poured into my heart. Be good
-to my white child when she goes with her man to the white man's home
-far away. O great Spirit, when I return to the lodges of my people, be
-kind to me, for I shall be lonely; I shall not have my child; I shall not
-hear my white man's voice. Give me good Medicine, O Sun and great
-Father, till my dream tells me that my man comes from over the hills for
-me once more."
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE STAKE AND THE PLUMB-LINE
-
-She went against all good judgment in marrying him; she cut herself off
-from her own people, from the life in which she had been an alluring and
-beautiful figure. Washington had never had two such seasons as those in
-which she moved; for the diplomatic circle who had had "the run of the
-world" knew her value, and were not content without her. She might have
-made a brilliant match with one ambassador thirty years older than
-herself--she was but twenty-two; and there were at least six attaches
-and secretaries of legation who entered upon a tournament for her heart
-and hand; but she was not for them. All her fine faculties of tact and
-fairness, of harmless strategy, and her gifts of wit and unexpected
-humour were needed to keep her cavaliers constant and hopeful to the
-last; but she never faltered, and she did not fail. The faces of old men
-brightened when they saw her, and one or two ancient figures who, for
-years, had been seldom seen at social functions now came when they knew
-she was to be present. There were, of course, a few women who said she
-would coquette with any male from nine to ninety; but no man ever said
-so; and there was none, from first to last, but smiled with pleasure at
-even the mention of her name, so had her vivacity, intelligence, and fine
-sympathy conquered them. She was a social artist by instinct. In their
-hearts they all recognised how fair and impartial she was; and she drew
-out of every man the best that was in him. The few women who did not
-like her said that she chattered; but the truth was she made other people
-talk by swift suggestion or delicate interrogation.
-
-After the blow fell, Freddy Hartzman put the matter succinctly, and told
-the truth faithfully, when he said, "The first time I met her, I told her
-all I'd ever done that could be told, and all I wanted to do; including a
-resolve to carry her off to some desert place and set up a Kingdom of
-Two. I don't know how she did it. I was like a tap, and poured myself
-out; and when it was all over, I thought she was the best talker I'd ever
-heard. But yet she'd done nothing except look at me and listen, and put
-in a question here and there, that was like a baby asking to see your
-watch. Oh, she was a lily-flower, was Sally Seabrook, and I've never
-been sorry I told her all my little story! It did me good. Poor
-darling--it makes me sick sometimes when I think of it. Yet she'll win
-out all right--a hundred to one she'll win out. She was a star."
-
-Freddy Hartzman was in an embassy of repute; he knew the chancelleries
-and salons of many nations, and was looked upon as one of the ablest and
-shrewdest men in the diplomatic service. He had written one of the best
-books on international law in existence, he talked English like a native,
-he had published a volume of delightful verse, and had omitted to publish
-several others, including a tiny volume which Sally Seabrook's charms had
-inspired him to write. His view of her was shared by most men who knew
-the world, and especially by the elderly men who had a real knowledge of
-human nature, among whom was a certain important member of the United
-States executive called John Appleton. When the end of all things at
-Washington came for Sally, these two men united to bear her up, that her
-feet should not stumble upon the stony path of the hard journey she had
-undertaken.
-
-Appleton was not a man of much speech, but his words had weight; for he
-was not only a minister; he came of an old family which had ruled the
-social destinies of a state, and had alternately controlled and disturbed
-its politics. On the day of the sensation, in the fiery cloud of which
-Sally disappeared, Appleton delivered himself of his mind in the matter
-at a reception given by the President.
-
-"She will come back--and we will all take her back, be glad to have her
-back," he said. "She has the grip of a lever which can lift the eternal
-hills with the right pressure. Leave her alone--leave her alone. This
-is a democratic country, and she'll prove democracy a success before
-she's done."
-
-The world knew that John Appleton had offered her marriage, and he had
-never hidden the fact. What they did not know was that she had told him
-what she meant to do before she did it. He had spoken to her plainly,
-bluntly, then with a voice that was blurred and a little broken, urging
-her against the course towards which she was set; but it had not availed;
-and, realising that he had come upon a powerful will underneath the sunny
-and so human surface, he had ceased to protest, to bear down upon her
-mind with his own iron force. When he realised that all his reasoning
-was wasted, that all worldly argument was vain, he made one last attempt,
-a forlorn hope, as though to put upon record what he believed to be the
-truth.
-
-"There is no position you cannot occupy," he said. "You have the perfect
-gift in private life, and you have a public gift. You have a genius for
-ruling. Say, my dear, don't wreck it all. I know you are not for me,
-but there are better men in the country than I am. Hartzman will be a
-great man one day--he wants you. Young Tilden wants you; he has
-millions, and he will never disgrace them or you, the power which they
-can command, and the power which you have. And there are others. Your
-people have told you they will turn you off; the world will say things--
-will rend you. There is nothing so popular for the moment as the fall of
-a favourite. But that's nothing--it's nothing at all compared with the
-danger to yourself. I didn't sleep last night thinking of it. Yet I'm
-glad you wrote me; it gave me time to think, and I can tell you the truth
-as I see it. Haven't you thought that he will drag you down, down, down,
-wear out your soul, break and sicken your life, destroy your beauty--you
-are beautiful, my dear, beyond what the world sees, even. Give it up--
-ah, give it up, and don't break our hearts! There are too many people
-loving you for you to sacrifice them--and yourself, too. . . . You've
-had such a good time!"
-
-"It's been like a dream," she interrupted, in a faraway voice, "like a
-dream, these two years."
-
-"And it's been such a good dream," he urged; "and you will only go to a
-bad one, from which you will never wake. The thing has fastened on him;
-he will never give it up. And penniless, too--his father has cast him
-off. My girl, it's impossible. Listen to me. There's no one on earth
-that would do more for you than I would--no one."
-
-"Dear, dear friend!" she cried with a sudden impulse, and caught his
-hand in hers and kissed it before he could draw it back. "You are so
-true, and you think you are right. But, but"--her eyes took on a deep,
-steady, far-away look--"but I will save him; and we shall not be
-penniless in the end. Meanwhile I have seven hundred dollars a year of
-my own. No one can touch that. Nothing can change me now--and I have
-promised."
-
-When he saw her fixed determination, he made no further protest, but
-asked that he might help her, be with her the next day, when she was to
-take a step which the wise world would say must lead to sorrow and a
-miserable end.
-
-The step she took was to marry Jim Templeton, the drunken, cast-off son
-of a millionaire senator from Kentucky, who controlled railways, and
-owned a bank, and had so resented his son's inebriate habits that for
-five years he had never permitted Jim's name to be mentioned in his
-presence. Jim had had twenty thousand dollars left him by his mother,
-and a small income of three hundred dollars from an investment which had
-been made for him when a little boy. And this had carried him on; for,
-drunken as he was, he had sense enough to eke out the money, limiting
-himself to three thousand dollars a year. He had four thousand dollars
-left, and his tiny income of three hundred, when he went to Sally
-Seabrook, after having been sober for a month, and begged her to marry
-him.
-
-Before dissipation had made him look ten years older than he was, there
-had been no handsomer man in all America. Even yet he had a remarkable
-face; long, delicate, with dark brown eyes, as fair a forehead as man
-could wish, and black, waving hair, streaked with grey-grey, though he
-was but twenty-nine years of age.
-
-When Sally was fifteen and he twenty-two, he had fallen in love with her
-and she with him; and nothing had broken the early romance. He had
-captured her young imagination, and had fastened his image on her heart.
-Her people, seeing the drift of things, had sent her to a school on the
-Hudson, and the two did not meet for some time. Then came a stolen
-interview, and a fastening of the rivets of attraction--for Jim had gifts
-of a wonderful kind. He knew his Horace and Anacreon and Heine and
-Lamartine and Dante in the originals, and a hundred others; he was a
-speaker of power and grace; and he had a clear, strong head for business.
-He was also a lawyer, and was junior attorney to his father's great
-business. It was because he had the real business gift, not because
-he had a brilliant and scholarly mind, that his father had taken him
-into his concerns, and was the more unforgiving when he gave way to
-temptation. Otherwise, he would have pensioned Jim off, and dismissed
-him from his mind as a useless, insignificant person; for Horace,
-Anacreon, and philosophy and history were to him the recreations of the
-feeble-minded. He had set his heart on Jim, and what Jim could do and
-would do by and by in the vast financial concerns he controlled, when he
-was ready to slip out and down; but Jim had disappointed him beyond
-calculation.
-
-In the early days of their association Jim had left his post and taken to
-drink at critical moments in their operations. At first, high words had
-been spoken; then there came the strife of two dissimilar natures, and
-both were headstrong, and each proud and unrelenting in his own way.
-Then, at last, had come the separation, irrevocable and painful; and Jim
-had flung out into the world, a drunkard, who, sober for a fortnight or a
-month, or three months, would afterward go off on a spree, in which he
-quoted Sappho and Horace in taverns, and sang bacchanalian songs with a
-voice meant for the stage--a heritage from an ancestor who had sung upon
-the English stage a hundred years before. Even in his cups, even after
-his darling vice had submerged him, Jim Templeton was a man marked out
-from his fellows, distinguished and very handsome. Society, however, had
-ceased to recognise him for a long time, and he did not seek it. For two
-or three years he practised law now and then. He took cases, preferably
-criminal cases, for which very often he got no pay; but that, too, ceased
-at last. Now, in his quiet, sober intervals he read omnivorously, and
-worked out problems in physics for which he had a taste, until the old
-appetite surged over him again. Then his spirits rose, and he was the
-old brilliant talker, the joyous galliard until, in due time, he became
-silently and lethargically drunk.
-
-In one of his sober intervals he had met Sally Seabrook in the street.
-It was the first time in four years, for he had avoided her, and though
-she had written to him once or twice, he had never answered her--shame
-was in his heart. Yet all the time the old song was in Sally's ears.
-Jim Templeton had touched her in some distant and intimate corner of her
-nature where none other had reached; and in all her gay life, when men
-had told their tale of admiration in their own way, her mind had gone
-back to Jim, and what he had said under the magnolia trees; and his voice
-had drowned all others. She was not blind to what he had become, but a
-deep belief possessed her that she, of all the world, could save him.
-She knew how futile it would look to the world, how wild a dream it
-looked even to her own heart, how perilous it was; but, play upon the
-surface of things as she had done so much and so often in her brief
-career, she was seized of convictions having origin, as it might seem,
-in something beyond herself.
-
-So when she and Jim met in the street, the old true thing rushed upon
-them both, and for a moment they stood still and looked at each other.
-As they might look who say farewell forever, so did each dwell upon the
-other's face. That was the beginning of the new epoch. A few days more,
-and Jim came to her and said that she alone could save him; and she meant
-him to say it, had led him to the saying, for the same conviction was
-burned deep in her own soul. She knew the awful risk she was taking,
-that the step must mean social ostracism, and that her own people would
-be no kinder to her than society; but she gasped a prayer, smiled at Jim
-as though all were well, laid her plans, made him promise her one thing
-on his knees, and took the plunge.
-
-Her people did as she expected. She was threatened with banishment from
-heart and home--with disinheritance; but she pursued her course; and the
-only person who stood with her and Jim at the altar was John Appleton,
-who would not be denied, and who had such a half-hour with Jim before
-the ceremony as neither of them forgot in the years that the locust ate
-thereafter. And, standing at the altar, Jim's eyes were still wet, with
-new resolves in his heart and a being at his side meant for the best man
-in the world. As he knelt beside her, awaiting the benediction, a sudden
-sense of the enormity of this act came upon him, and for her sake he
-would have drawn back then, had it not been too late. He realised that
-it was a crime to put this young, beautiful life in peril; that his own
-life was a poor, contemptible thing, and that he had been possessed of
-the egotism of the selfish and the young.
-
-But the thing was done, and a new life was begun. Before they were
-launched upon it, however, before society had fully grasped the
-sensation, or they had left upon their journey to northern Canada, where
-Sally intended they should work out their problem and make their home,
-far and free from all old associations, a curious thing happened. Jim's
-father sent an urgent message to Sally to come to him. When she came,
-he told her she was mad, and asked her why she had thrown her life away.
-
-"Why have you done it?" he said. "You--you knew all about him; you
-might have married the best man in the country. You could rule a
-kingdom; you have beauty and power, and make people do what you want:
-and you've got a sot."
-
-"He is your son," she answered quietly.
-
-She looked so beautiful and so fine as she stood there, fearless and
-challenging before him, that he was moved. But he would not show it.
-
-"He was my son--when he was a man," he retorted grimly.
-
-"He is the son of the woman you once loved," she answered.
-
-The old man turned his head away.
-
-"What would she have said to what you did to Jim?" He drew himself
-around sharply. Her dagger had gone home, but he would not let her know
-it.
-
-"Leave her out of the question--she was a saint," he said roughly.
-
-"She cannot be left out; nor can you. He got his temperament naturally;
-he inherited his weakness from your grandfather, from her father. Do you
-think you are in no way responsible?"
-
-He was silent for a moment, but then said stubbornly: "Why--why have you
-done it? What's between him and me can't be helped; we are father and
-son; but you--you had no call, no responsibility."
-
-"I love Jim. I always loved him, ever since I can remember, as you did.
-I see my way ahead. I will not desert him. No one cares what happens to
-him, no one but me. Your love wouldn't stand the test; mine will."
-
-"Your folks have disinherited you,--you have almost nothing, and I will
-not change my mind. What do you see ahead of you?"
-
-"Jim--only Jim--and God."
-
-Her eyes were shining, her hands were clasped together at her side in the
-tenseness of her feeling, her indomitable spirit spoke in her face.
-
-Suddenly the old man brought his fist down on the table with a bang.
-"It's a crime--oh, it's a crime, to risk your life so! You ought to have
-been locked up. I'd have done it."
-
-"Listen to me," she rejoined quietly. "I know the risk. But do you
-think that I could have lived my life out, feeling that I might have
-saved Jim, and didn't try? You talk of beauty and power and ruling--you
-say what others have said to me. Which is the greater thing, to get what
-pleases one, or to work for something which is more to one than all else
-in the world? To save one life, one intellect, one great man--oh, he has
-the making of a great man in him!--to save a soul, would not life be well
-lost, would not love be well spent in doing it?"
-
-"Love's labour lost," said the old man slowly, cynically, but not without
-emotion.
-
-"I have ambition," she continued. "No girl was ever more ambitious, but
-my ambition is to make the most and best of myself. Place?--Jim and I
-will hold it yet. Power?--it shall be as it must be; but Jim and I will
-work for it to fulfil ourselves. For me--ah, if I can save him--and I
-mean to do so--do you think that I would not then have my heaven on
-earth? You want money--money--money, power, and to rule; and these are
-to you the best things in the world. I make my choice differently,
-though I would have these other things if I could; and I hope I shall.
-But Jim first--Jim first, your son, Jim--my husband, Jim."
-
-The old man got to his feet slowly. She had him at bay. "But you are
-great," he said, "great! It is an awful stake--awful. Yet if you win,
-you'll have what money can't buy. And listen to me. We'll make the
-stake bigger. It will give it point, too, in another way. If you keep
-Jim sober for four years from the day of your marriage, on the last day
-of that four years I'll put in your hands for you and him, or for your
-child--if you have one--five millions of dollars. I am a man of my word.
-While Jim drinks I won't take him back; he's disinherited. I'll give him
-nothing now or hereafter. Save him for four years,--if he can do that he
-will do all, and there's five millions as sure as the sun's in heaven.
-Amen and amen."
-
-He opened the door. There was a strange soft light in her eyes as she
-came to go.
-
-"Aren't you going to kiss me?" she said, looking at him whimsically.
-
-He was disconcerted. She did not wait, but reached up and kissed him on
-the cheek. "Good-by," she said with a smile. "We'll win the stake.
-Good-by."
-
-An instant, and she was gone. He shut the door, then turned and looked
-in a mirror on the wall. Abstractedly he touched the cheek she had
-kissed. Suddenly a change passed over his face. He dropped in a chair,
-and his fist struck the table as he said: "By God, she may do it, she may
-do it! But it's life and death--it's life and death."
-
-Society had its sensation, and then the veil dropped. For a long time
-none looked behind it except Jim's father. He had too much at stake not
-to have his telescope upon them. A detective followed them to keep Jim's
-record. But this they did not know.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-From the day they left Washington Jim put his life and his fate in his
-wife's hands. He meant to follow her judgment, and, self-willed and
-strong in intellect as he was, he said that she should have a fair chance
-of fulfilling her purpose. There had been many pour parlers as to what
-Jim should do. There was farming. She set that aside, because it meant
-capital, and it also meant monotony and loneliness; and capital was
-limited, and monotony and loneliness were bad for Jim, deadening an
-active brain which must not be deprived of stimulants--stimulants of a
-different sort, however, from those which had heretofore mastered it.
-There was the law. But Jim would have to become a citizen of Canada,
-change his flag, and where they meant to go--to the outskirts--there
-would be few opportunities for the law; and with not enough to do there
-would be danger. Railway construction? That seemed good in many ways,
-but Jim had not the professional knowledge necessary; his railway
-experience with his father had only been financial. Above all else he
-must have responsibility, discipline, and strict order in his life.
-
-"Something that will be good for my natural vanity, and knock the
-nonsense out of me," Jim agreed, as they drew farther and farther away
-from Washington and the past, and nearer and nearer to the Far North and
-their future. Never did two more honest souls put their hands in each
-other's, and set forth upon the thorniest path to a goal which was their
-hearts' desire. Since they had become one, there had come into Sally's
-face that illumination which belongs only to souls possessed of an idea
-greater than themselves, outside themselves--saints, patriots; faces
-which have been washed in the salt tears dropped for others' sorrows,
-and lighted by the fire of self-sacrifice. Sally Seabrook, the high-
-spirited, the radiant, the sweetly wilful, the provoking, to concentrate
-herself upon this narrow theme--to reconquer the lost paradise of one
-vexed mortal soul!
-
-What did Jim's life mean?--It was only one in the millions coming and
-going, and every man must work out his own salvation. Why should she
-cramp her soul to this one issue, when the same soul could spend itself
-upon the greater motives and in the larger circle? A wide world of
-influence had opened up before her; position, power, adulation, could all
-have been hers, as John Appleton and Jim's father had said. She might
-have moved in well-trodden ways, through gardens of pleasure, lived a
-life where all would be made easy, where she would be shielded at every
-turn, and her beauty would be flattered by luxury into a constant glow.
-She was not so primitive, so unintellectual, as not to have thought of
-this, else her decision would have had less importance; she would have
-been no more than an infatuated emotional woman with a touch of second
-class drama in her nature. She had thought of it all, and she had made
-her choice. The easier course was the course for meaner souls, and she
-had not one vein of thin blood nor a small idea in her whole nature. She
-had a heart and mind for great issues. She believed that Jim had a great
-brain, and would and could accomplish great things. She knew that he had
-in him the strain of hereditary instinct--his mother's father had ended
-a brief life in a drunken duel on the Mississippi, and Jim's boyhood had
-never had discipline or direction, or any strenuous order. He might
-never acquire order, and the power that order and habit and the daily
-iteration of necessary thoughts and acts bring; but the prospect did not
-appal her. She had taken the risk with her eyes wide open; had set her
-own life and happiness in the hazard. But Jim must be saved, must be
-what his talents, his genius, entitled him to be. And the long game must
-have the long thought.
-
-So, as they drew into the great Saskatchewan Valley, her hand in his,
-and hope in his eyes, and such a look of confidence and pride in her as
-brought back his old strong beauty of face, and smoothed the careworn
-lines of self-indulgence, she gave him his course: as a private he must
-join the North-West Mounted Police, the red-coated riders of the plains,
-and work his way up through every stage of responsibility, beginning at
-the foot of the ladder of humbleness and self-control. She believed that
-he would agree with her proposal; but her hands clasped his a little more
-firmly and solicitously--there was a faint, womanly fear at her heart--
-as she asked him if he would do it. The life meant more than occasional
-separation; it meant that there would be periods when she would not be
-with him; and there was great danger in that; but she knew that the risks
-must be taken, and he must not be wholly reliant on her presence for his
-moral strength.
-
-His face fell for a moment when she made the suggestion, but it cleared
-presently, and he said with a dry laugh: "Well, I guess they must make me
-a sergeant pretty quick. I'm a colonel in the Kentucky Carbineers!"
-
-She laughed, too; then a moment afterwards, womanlike, wondered if she
-was right, and was a little frightened. But that was only because she
-was not self-opinionated, and was anxious, more anxious than any woman
-in all the North.
-
-It happened as Jim said; he was made a sergeant at once--Sally managed
-that; for, when it came to the point, and she saw the conditions in which
-the privates lived, and realised that Jim must be one of them and clean
-out the stables, and groom his horse and the officers' horses, and fetch
-and carry, her heart failed her, and she thought that she was making her
-remedy needlessly heroical. So she went to see the Commissioner, who was
-on a tour of scrutiny on their arrival at the post, and, as better men
-than he had done in more knowing circles, he fell under her spell. If
-she had asked for a lieutenancy, he would probably have corrupted some
-member of Parliament into securing it for Jim.
-
-But Jim was made a sergeant, and the Commissioner and the captain of the
-troop kept their eyes on him. So did other members of the troop who did
-not quite know their man, and attempted, figuratively, to pinch him here
-and there. They found that his actions were greater than his words, and
-both were in perfect harmony in the end, though his words often seemed
-pointless to their minds, until they understood that they had conveyed
-truths through a medium more like a heliograph than a telephone. By and
-by they begin to understand his heliographing, and, when they did that,
-they began to swear by him, not at him.
-
-In time it was found that the troop never had a better disciplinarian
-than Jim. He knew when to shut his eyes, and when to keep them open. To
-non-essentials he kept his eyes shut; to essentials he kept them very
-wide open. There were some men of good birth from England and elsewhere
-among them, and these mostly understood him first. But they all
-understood Sally from the beginning, and after a little they were glad
-enough to be permitted to come, on occasion, to the five-roomed little
-house near the barracks, and hear her talk, then answer her questions,
-and, as men had done at Washington, open out their hearts to her. They
-noticed, however, that while she made them barley-water, and all kinds
-of soft drinks from citric acid, sarsaparilla and the like, and had one
-special drink of her own invention, which she called cream-nectar, no
-spirits were to be had. They also noticed that Jim never drank a drop of
-liquor, and by and by, one way or another, they got a glimmer of the real
-truth, before it became known who he really was or anything of his story.
-And the interest in the two, and in Jim's reformation, spread through the
-country, while Jim gained reputation as the smartest man in the force.
-
-They were on the outskirts of civilisation; as Jim used to say, "One
-step ahead of the procession." Jim's duty was to guard the columns of
-settlement and progress, and to see that every man got his own rights and
-not more than his rights; that justice should be the plumb-line of march
-and settlement. His principle was embodied in certain words which he
-quoted once to Sally from the prophet Amos: "And the Lord said unto me,
-Amos, what seest thou? And I said, A plumbline."
-
-On the day that Jim became a lieutenant his family increased by one.
-It was a girl, and they called her Nancy, after Jim's mother. It was
-the anniversary of their marriage, and, so far, Jim had won, with what
-fightings and strugglings and wrestlings of the spirit only Sally and
-himself knew. And she knew as well as he, and always saw the storm
-coming before it broke--a restlessness, then a moodiness, then a hungry,
-eager, helpless look, and afterwards an agony of longing, a feverish
-desire to break away and get the thrilling thing which would still the
-demon within him.
-
-There had been moments when his doom seemed certain--he knew and she knew
-that if he once got drunk again he would fall never to rise. On one
-occasion, after a hard, long, hungry ride, he was half-mad with desire,
-but even as he seized the flask that was offered to him by his only
-enemy, the captain of B Troop, at the next station eastward, there came
-a sudden call to duty, two hundred Indians having gone upon the war-path.
-It saved him; it broke the spell. He had to mount and away, with the
-antidote and stimulant of responsibility driving him on.
-
-Another occasion was equally perilous to his safety. They had been idle
-for days in a hot week in summer, waiting for orders to return from the
-rail-head where they had gone to quell a riot, and where drink and
-hilarity were common. Suddenly--more suddenly than it had ever come, the
-demon of his thirst had Jim by the throat. Sergeant Sewell, of the grey-
-stubble head, who loved him more than his sour heart had loved anybody in
-all his life, was holding himself ready for the physical assault he must
-make upon his superior officer, if he raised a glass to his lips, when
-salvation came once again. An accident had occurred far down on the
-railway line, and the operator of the telegraph-office had that very day
-been stricken down with pleurisy and pneumonia. In despair the manager
-had sent to Jim, eagerly hoping that he might help them, for the Riders
-of the Plains were a sort of court of appeal for every trouble in the Far
-North.
-
-Instantly Jim was in the saddle with his troop. Out of curiosity he
-had learned telegraphy when a boy, as he had learned many things, and,
-arrived at the scene of the accident, he sent messages and received them-
--by sound, not on paper as did the official operator, to the amazement
-and pride of the troop. Then, between caring for the injured in the
-accident, against the coming of the relief train, and nursing the sick
-operator through the dark moments of his dangerous illness, he passed a
-crisis of his own disease triumphantly; but not the last crisis.
-
-So the first and so the second and third years passed in safety.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-"PLEASE, I want to go, too, Jim."
-
-Jim swung round and caught the child up in his arms. "Say, how dare you
-call your father Jim--eh, tell me that?"
-
-"It's what mummy calls you--it's pretty."
-
-"I don't call her 'mummy' because you do, and you mustn't call me Jim
-because she does--do you hear?" The whimsical face lowered a little,
-then the rare and beautiful dark blue eyes raised slowly, shaded by the
-long lashes, and the voice said demurely, "Yes--Jim."
-
-"Nancy--Nancy," said a voice from the corner in reproof, mingled with
-suppressed laughter. "Nancy, you musn't be saucy. You must say 'father'
-to--"
-
-"Yes, mummy. I'll say father to--Jim."
-
-"You imp--you imp of delight," said Jim, as he strained the dainty little
-lass to his breast, while she appeared interested in a wave of his black
-hair, which she curled around her finger.
-
-Sally came forwards with the little parcel of sandwiches she had been
-preparing, and put them in the saddle-bags lying on a chair at the door,
-in readiness for the journey Jim was about to make. Her eyes were
-glistening, and her face had a heightened colour. The three years which
-had passed since she married had touched her not at all to her
-disadvantage, rather to her profit. She looked not an hour older;
-motherhood had only added to her charm, lending it a delightful gravity.
-The prairie life had given a shining quality to her handsomeness, an air
-of depth and firmness, an exquisite health and clearness to the colour
-in her cheeks. Her step was as light as Nancy's, elastic and buoyant--
-a gliding motion which gave a sinuous grace to the movements of her body.
-There had also come into her eyes a vigilance such as deaf people
-possess, a sensitive observation imparting a deeper intelligence to the
-face.
-
-Here was the only change by which you could guess the story of her life.
-Her eyes were like the ears of an anxious mother who can never sleep till
-every child is abed; whose sense is quick to hear the faintest footstep
-without or within; and who, as years go on, and her children grow older
-and older, must still lie awake hearkening for the late footstep on the
-stair. In Sally's eyes was the story of the past three years: of love
-and temptation and struggle, of watchfulness and yearning and anxiety, of
-determination and an inviolable hope. Her eyes had a deeper look than
-that in Jim's. Now, as she gazed at him, the maternal spirit rose up
-from the great well of protectiveness in her and engulfed both husband
-and child. There was always something of the maternal in her eyes when
-she looked at Jim. He did not see it--he saw only the wonderful blue,
-and the humour which had helped him over such difficult places these past
-three years. In steadying and strengthening Jim's will, in developing
-him from his Southern indolence into Northern industry and sense of
-responsibility, John Appleton's warnings had rung in Sally's ears, and
-Freddy Hartzman's forceful and high-minded personality had passed before
-her eyes with an appeal powerful and stimulating; but always she came to
-the same upland of serene faith and white-hearted resolve; and Jim became
-dearer and dearer.
-
-The baby had done much to brace her faith in the future and comfort her
-anxious present. The child had intelligence of a rare order. She would
-lie by the half-hour on the floor, turning over the leaves of a book
-without pictures, and, before she could speak, would read from the pages
-in a language all her own. She made a fairy world for herself, peopled
-by characters to whom she gave names, to whom she assigned curious
-attributes and qualities. They were as real to her as though flesh and
-blood, and she was never lonely, and never cried; and she had buried
-herself in her father's heart. She had drawn to her the roughest men in
-the troop, and for old Sewell, the grim sergeant, she had a specially
-warm place.
-
-"You can love me if you like," she had said to him at the very start,
-with the egotism of childhood; but made haste to add, "because I love
-you, Gri-Gri." She called him Gri-Gri from the first, but they knew only
-long afterwards that "gri-gri" meant "grey-grey," to signify that she
-called him after his grizzled hairs.
-
-What she had been in the life-history of Sally and Jim they both knew.
-Jim regarded her with an almost superstitious feeling. Sally was his
-strength, his support, his inspiration, his bulwark of defence; Nancy was
-the charm he wore about his neck--his mascot, he called her. Once, when
-she was ill, he had suffered as he had never done before in his life. He
-could not sleep nor eat, and went about his duties like one in a dream.
-When his struggles against his enemy were fiercest, he kept saying over
-her name to himself, as though she could help him. Yet always it was
-Sally's hand he held in the darkest hours, in his brutal moments; for in
-this fight between appetite and will there are moments when only the
-animal seems to exist, and the soul disappears in the glare and gloom of
-the primal emotions. Nancy he called his "lucky sixpence," but he called
-Sally his "guinea-girl."
-
-From first to last his whimsicality never deserted him. In his worst
-hours, some innate optimism and humour held him steady in his fight.
-It was not depression that possessed him at the worst, but the violence
-of an appetite most like a raging pain which men may endure with a smile
-upon their lips. He carried in his face the story of a conflict, the
-aftermath of bitter experience; and through all there pulsed the glow of
-experience. He had grown handsomer, and the graceful decision of his
-figure, the deliberate certainty of every action, heightened the force of
-a singular personality. As in the eyes of Sally, in his eyes was a long
-reflective look which told of things overcome, and yet of dangers
-present. His lips smiled often, but the eyes said: "I have lived, I have
-seen, I have suffered, and I must suffer more. I have loved, I have been
-loved under the shadow of the sword. Happiness I have had, and golden
-hours, but not peace--never peace. My soul has need of peace."
-
-In the greater, deeper experience of their lives, the more material side
-of existence had grown less and less to them. Their home was a model of
-simple comfort and some luxury, though Jim had insisted that Sally's
-income should not be spent, except upon the child, and should be saved
-for the child, their home being kept on his pay and on the tiny income
-left by his mother. With the help of an Indian girl, and a half-breed
-for outdoor work and fires and gardening, Sally had cared for the house
-herself. Ingenious and tasteful, with a gift for cooking and an educated
-hand, she had made her little home as pretty as their few possessions
-would permit. Refinement covered all, and three or four-score books were
-like so many friends to comfort her when Jim was away; like kind and
-genial neighbours when he was at home. From Browning she had written
-down in her long sliding handwriting, and hung up beneath Jim's looking-
-glass, the heartening and inspiring words:
-
- "One who never turned his back, but marched breast forward,
- Never doubted clouds would break,
- Never dreamed, though right were worsted, wrong would triumph,
- Held we fall to rise, are baffled to fight better,
- Sleep to wake."
-
-They had lived above the sordid, and there was something in the nature of
-Jim's life to help them to it. He belonged to a small handful of men who
-had control over an empire, with an individual responsibility and
-influence not contained in the scope of their commissions. It was a
-matter of moral force and character, and of uniform, symbolical only of
-the great power behind; of the long arm of the State; of the insistence
-of the law, which did not rely upon force alone, but on the certainty of
-its administration. In such conditions the smallest brain was bound to
-expand, to take on qualities of judgment and temperateness which would
-never be developed in ordinary circumstances. In the case of Jim
-Templeton, who needed no stimulant to his intellect, but rather a
-steadying quality, a sense of proportion, the daily routine, the command
-of men, the diverse nature of his duties, half civil, half military, the
-personal appeals made on all sides by the people of the country for
-advice, for help, for settlement of disputes, for information which his
-well-instructed mind could give--all these modified the romantic
-brilliance of his intellect, made it and himself more human.
-
-It had not come to him all at once. His intellect at first stood in his
-way. His love of paradox, his deep observation, his insight, all made
-him inherently satirical, though not cruelly so; but satire had become
-pure whimsicality at last; and he came to see that, on the whole, the
-world was imperfect, but also, on the whole, was moving towards
-perfection rather than imperfection. He grew to realise that what seemed
-so often weakness in men was tendency and idiosyncrasy rather than evil.
-And in the end he thought better of himself as he came to think better
-of all others. For he had thought less of all the world because he had
-thought so little of himself. He had overestimated his own faults, had
-made them into crimes in his own eyes, and, observing things in others of
-similar import, had become almost a cynic in intellect, while in heart he
-had remained, a boy.
-
-In all that he had changed a great deal. His heart was still the heart
-of a boy, but his intellect had sobered, softened, ripened--even in this
-secluded and seemingly unimportant life; as Sally had said and hoped it
-would. Sally's conviction had been right. But the triumph was not yet
-achieved. She knew it. On occasion the tones of his voice told her, the
-look that came into his eyes proclaimed it to her, his feverishness and
-restlessness made it certain. How many a night had she thrown her arm
-over his shoulder, and sought his hand and held it while in the dark
-silence, wide-eyed, dry-lipped, and with a throat like fire he had held
-himself back from falling. There was liquor in the house--the fight
-would not have been a fight without it. She had determined that he
-should see his enemy and meet him in the plains and face him down; and he
-was never many feet away from his possible disaster. Yet for long over
-three years all had gone well. There was another year. Would he last
-out the course?
-
-At first the thought of the great stake for which she was playing in
-terms of currency, with the head of Jim's father on every note, was much
-with her. The amazing nature of the offer of five millions of dollars
-stimulated her imagination, roused her; gold coins are counters in the
-game of success, signs and tokens. Money alone could not have lured her;
-but rather what it represented--power, width of action, freedom to help
-when the heart prompted, machinery for carrying out large plans, ability
-to surround with advantage those whom we love. So, at first, while yet
-the memories of Washington were much with her, the appeal of the millions
-was strong. The gallant nature of the contest and the great stake braced
-her; she felt the blood quicken in her pulse.
-
-But, all through, the other thing really mastered her: the fixed idea
-that Jim must be saved. As it deepened, the other life that she had
-lived became like the sports in which we shared when children, full of
-vivacious memory, shining with impulse and the stir of life, but not to
-be repeated--days and deeds outgrown. So the light of one idea shone in
-her face. Yet she was intensely human too; and if her eyes had not been
-set on the greater glory, the other thought might have vulgarised her
-mind, made her end and goal sordid--the descent of a nature rather than
-its ascension.
-
-When Nancy came, the lesser idea, the stake, took on a new importance,
-for now it seemed to her that it was her duty to secure for the child its
-rightful heritage. Then Jim, too, appeared in a new light, as one who
-could never fulfil himself unless working through the natural channels of
-his birth, inheritance, and upbringing. Jim, drunken and unreliable,
-with broken will and fighting to find himself--the waste places were for
-him, until he was the master of his will and emotions. Once however,
-secure in ability to control himself, with cleansed brain and purpose
-defined, the widest field would still be too narrow for his talents--and
-the five, yes, the fifty millions of his father must be his.
-
-She had never repented having married Jim; but twice in those three years
-she had broken down and wept as though her heart would break. There were
-times when Jim's nerves were shaken in his struggle against the unseen
-foe, and he had spoken to her querulously, almost sharply. Yet in her
-tears there was no reproach for him, rather for herself--the fear that
-she might lose her influence over him, that she could not keep him close
-to her heart, that he might drift away from her in the commonplaces and
-monotony of work and domestic life. Everything so depended on her being
-to him not only the one woman for whom he cared, but the woman without
-whom he could care for nothing else.
-
-"Oh, my God, give me his love," she had prayed. "Let me keep it yet a
-little while. For his sake, not for my own, let me have the power to
-hold his love. Make my mind always quiet, and let me blow neither hot
-nor cold. Help me to keep my temper sweet and cheerful, so that he will
-find the room empty where I am not, and his footsteps will quicken when
-he comes to the door. Not for my sake, dear God, but for his, or my
-heart will break--it will break unless Thou dost help me to hold him.
-O Lord, keep me from tears; make my face happy that I may be goodly to
-his eyes, and forgive the selfishness of a poor woman who has little,
-and would keep her little and cherish it, for Christ's sake."
-
-Twice had she poured out her heart so, in the agony of her fear that she
-should lose favour in Jim's sight--she did not know how alluring she was,
-in spite of the constant proofs offered her. She had had her will with
-all who came her way, from governor to Indian brave. Once, in a journey
-they had made far north, soon after they came, she had stayed at a
-Hudson's Bay Company's post for some days, while there came news of
-restlessness among the Indians, because of lack of food, and Jim had
-gone farther north to steady the tribes, leaving her with the factor
-and his wife and a halfbreed servant.
-
-While she and the factor's wife were alone in the yard of the post one
-day, an Indian--chief, Arrowhead, in warpaint and feathers, entered
-suddenly, brandishing a long knife. He had been drinking, and there
-was danger in his black eyes. With a sudden inspiration she came forward
-quickly, nodded and smiled to him, and then pointed to a grindstone
-standing in the corner of the yard. As she did so, she saw Indians
-crowding into the gate armed with knives, guns, bows, and arrows. She
-beckoned to Arrowhead, and he followed her to the grindstone. She poured
-some water on the wheel and began to turn it, nodding at the now
-impassive Indian to begin. Presently he nodded also, and put his knife
-on the stone. She kept turning steadily, singing to herself the while,
-as with anxiety she saw the Indians drawing closer and closer in from the
-gate. Faster and faster she turned, and at last the Indian lifted his
-knife from the stone. She reached out her hand with simulated interest,
-felt the edge with her thumb, the Indian looking darkly at her the while.
-Presently, after feeling the edge himself, he bent over the stone again,
-and she went on turning the wheel still singing softly. At last he
-stopped again and felt the edge. With a smile which showed her fine
-white teeth, she said, "Is that for me?" making a significant sign across
-her throat at the same time.
-
-The old Indian looked at her grimly, then slowly shook his head in
-negation.
-
-"I go hunt Yellow Hawk to-night," he said. "I go fight; I like marry you
-when I come back. How!" he said and turned away towards the gate.
-
-Some of his braves held back, the blackness of death in their looks.
-He saw. "My knife is sharp," he said. "The woman is brave. She shall
-live--go and fight Yellow Hawk, or starve and die."
-
-Divining their misery, their hunger, and the savage thought that had come
-to them, Sally had whispered to the factor's wife to bring food, and the
-woman now came running out with two baskets full, and returned for more.
-Sally ran forward among the Indians and put the food into their hands.
-With grunts of satisfaction they seized what she gave, and thrust it into
-their mouths, squatting on the ground. Arrowhead looked on stern and
-immobile, but when at last she and the factor's wife sat down before the
-braves with confidence and an air of friendliness, he sat down also;
-yet, famished as he was, he would not touch the food. At last Sally,
-realising his proud defiance of hunger, offered him a little lump of
-pemmican and a biscuit, and with a grunt he took it from her hands and
-ate it. Then, at his command a fire was lit, the pipe of peace was
-brought out, and Sally and the factor's wife touched their lips to it,
-and passed it on.
-
-So was a new treaty of peace and loyalty made with Arrowhead and his
-tribe by a woman without fear, whose life had seemed not worth a minute's
-purchase; and, as the sun went down, Arrowhead and his men went forth to
-make war upon Yellow Hawk beside the Nettigon River. In this wise had
-her influence spread in the land.
-
- .......................
-
-Standing now with the child in his arms and his wife looking at him with
-a shining moisture of the eyes, Jim laughed outright. There came upon
-him a sudden sense of power, of aggressive force--the will to do. Sally
-understood, and came and laughingly grasped his arm.
-
-"Oh, Jim," she said playfully, "you are getting muscles like steel. You
-hadn't these when you were colonel of the Kentucky Carbineers!"
-
-"I guess I need them now," he said, smiling, and with the child still in
-his arms drew her to a window looking northward. As far as the eye could
-see, nothing but snow, like a blanket spread over the land. Here and
-there in the wide expanse a tree silhouetted against the sky, a tracery
-of eccentric beauty, and off in the far distance a solitary horseman
-riding towards the postriding hard.
-
-"It was root, hog, or die with me, Sally," he continued, "and I rooted.
-. . . I wonder--that fellow on the horse--I have a feeling about him.
-See, he's been riding hard and long-you can tell by the way the horse
-drops his legs. He sags a bit himself. . . . But isn't it beautiful,
-all that out there--the real quintessence of life."
-
-The air was full of delicate particles of frost on which the sun
-sparkled, and though there was neither bird nor insect, nor animal,
-nor stir of leaf, nor swaying branch or waving grass, life palpitated
-in the air, energy sang its song in the footstep that crunched the frosty
-ground, that broke the crusted snow; it was in the delicate wind that
-stirred the flag by the barracks away to the left; hope smiled in the
-wide prospect over which the thrilling, bracing air trembled. Sally had
-chosen right.
-
-"You had a big thought when you brought me here, guinea-girl," he added
-presently. "We are going to win out here"--he set the child down--"you
-and I and this lucky sixpence." He took up his short fur coat. "Yes,
-we'll win, honey." Then, with a brooding look in his face, he added:
-
- "'The end comes as came the beginning,
- And shadows fail into the past;
- And the goal, is it not worth the winning,
- If it brings us but home at the last?
-
- "'While far through the pain of waste places
- We tread, 'tis a blossoming rod
- That drives us to grace from disgraces,
- From the fens to the gardens of God!'"
-
-He paused reflectively. "It's strange that this life up here makes you
-feel that you must live a bigger life still, that this is only the wide
-porch to the great labour-house--it makes you want to do things. Well,
-we've got to win the stake first," he added with a laugh.
-
-"The stake is a big one, Jim--bigger than you think."
-
-"You and her and me--me that was in the gutter."
-
-"What is the gutter, dadsie?" asked Nancy.
-
-"The gutter--the gutter is where the dish-water goes, midget," he
-answered with a dry laugh.
-
-"Oh, I don't think you'd like to be in the gutter," Nancy said solemnly.
-
-"You have to get used to it first, miss," answered Jim. Suddenly Sally
-laid both hands on Jim's shoulders and looked him in the eyes. "You must
-win the stake Jim. Think--now!"
-
-She laid a hand on the head of the child. He did not know that he was
-playing for a certain five millions, perhaps fifty millions, of dollars.
-She had never told him of his father's offer. He was fighting only for
-salvation, for those he loved, for freedom. As they stood there, the
-conviction had come upon her that they had come to the last battle-field,
-that this journey which Jim now must take would decide all, would give
-them perfect peace or lifelong pain. The shadow of battle was over them,
-but he had no foreboding, no premonition; he had never been so full of
-spirits and life.
-
-To her adjuration Jim replied by burying his face in her golden hair, and
-he whispered: "Say, I've done near four years, my girl. I think I'm all
-right now--I think. This last six months, it's been easy--pretty fairly
-easy."
-
-"Four months more, only four months more--God be good to us!" she said
-with a little gasp.
-
-If he held out for four months more, the first great stage in their life
---journey would be passed, the stake won.
-
-"I saw a woman get an awful fall once," Jim said suddenly. "Her bones
-were broken in twelve places, and there wasn't a spot on her body without
-injury. They set and fixed up every broken bone except one. It was
-split down. They didn't dare perform the operation; she couldn't stand
-it. There was a limit to pain, and she had reached the boundary. Two
-years went by, and she got better every way, but inside her leg those
-broken pieces of bone were rubbing against each other. She tried to
-avoid the inevitable operation, but nature said, 'You must do it, or
-die in the end.' She yielded. Then came the long preparations for the
-operation. Her heart shrank, her mind got tortured. She'd suffered too
-much. She pulled herself together, and said, 'I must conquer this
-shrinking body of mine, by my will. How shall I do it?' Something
-within her said, 'Think and do for others. Forget yourself.' And so,
-as they got her ready for her torture, she visited hospitals, agonised
-cripple as she was, and smiled and talked to the sick and broken, telling
-them of her own miseries endured and dangers faced, of the boundary of
-human suffering almost passed; and so she got her courage for her own
-trial. And she came out all right in the end. Well, that's the way I've
-felt sometimes. But I'm ready for my operation now whenever it comes,
-and it's coming,
-
-I know. Let it come when it must." He smiled. There came a knock at
-the door, and presently Sewell entered. "The Commissioner wishes you to
-come over, sir," he said.
-
-"I was just coming, Sewell. Is all ready for the start?"
-
-"Everything's ready, sir, but there's to be a change of orders.
-Something's happened--a bad job up in the Cree country, I think."
-
-A few minutes later Jim was in the Commissioner's office. The murder of
-a Hudson's Bay Company's man had been committed in the Cree country. The
-stranger whom Jim and Sally had seen riding across the plains had brought
-the news for thirty miles, word of the murder having been carried from
-point to point. The Commissioner was uncertain what to do, as the Crees
-were restless through want of food and the absence of game, and a force
-sent to capture Arrowhead, the chief who had committed the murder, might
-precipitate trouble. Jim solved the problem by offering to go alone and
-bring the chief into the post. It was two hundred miles to the Cree
-encampment, and the journey had its double dangers.
-
-Another officer was sent on the expedition for which Jim had been
-preparing, and he made ready to go upon his lonely duty. His wife did
-not know till three days after he had gone what the nature of his mission
-was.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-Jim made his journey in good weather with his faithful dogs alone, and
-came into the camp of the Crees armed with only a revolver. If he had
-gone with ten men, there would have been an instant melee, in which
-he would have lost his life. This is what the chief had expected, had
-prepared for; but Jim was more formidable alone, with power far behind
-him which could come with force and destroy the tribe, if resistance was
-offered, than with fifty men. His tongue had a gift of terse and
-picturesque speech, powerful with a people who had the gift of
-imagination. With five hundred men ready to turn him loose in the plains
-without dogs or food, he carried himself with a watchful coolness and
-complacent determination which got home to their minds with great force.
-
-For hours the struggle for the murderer went on, a struggle of mind over
-inferior mind and matter. Arrowhead was a chief whose will had never
-been crossed by his own people, and to master that will by a superior
-will, to hold back the destructive force which, to the ignorant minds
-of the braves, was only a natural force of defence, meant a task needing
-more than authority behind it. For the very fear of that authority put
-in motion was an incentive to present resistance to stave off the day of
-trouble. The faces that surrounded Jim were thin with hunger, and the
-murder that had been committed by the chief had, as its origin, the
-foolish replies of the Hudson's Bay Company's man to their demand for
-supplies. Arrowhead had killed him with his own hand.
-
-But Jim Templeton was of a different calibre. Although he had not been
-told it, he realised that, indirectly, hunger was the cause of the crime
-and might easily become the cause of another; for their tempers were
-sharper even than their appetites. Upon this he played; upon this he
-made an exhortation to the chief. He assumed that Arrowhead had become
-violent, because of his people's straits, that Arrowhead's heart yearned
-for his people and would make sacrifice for them. Now, if Arrowhead came
-quietly, he would see that supplies of food were sent at once, and that
-arrangements were made to meet the misery of their situation. Therefore,
-if Arrowhead came freely, he would have so much in his favour before his
-judges; if he would not come quietly, then he must be brought by force;
-and if they raised a hand to prevent it, then destruction would fall upon
-all--all save the women and children. The law must be obeyed. They
-might try to resist the law through him, but, if violence was shown,
-he would first kill Arrowhead, and then destruction would descend like a
-wind out of the north, darkness would swallow them, and their bones would
-cover the plains.
-
-As he ended his words a young brave sprang forwards with hatchet raised.
-Jim's revolver slipped down into his palm from his sleeve, and a bullet
-caught the brave in the lifted arm. The hatchet dropped to the ground.
-
-Then Jim's eyes blazed, and he turned a look of anger on the chief, his
-face pale and hard, as he said: "The stream rises above the banks; come
-with me, chief, or all will drown. I am master, and I speak. Ye are
-hungry because ye are idle. Ye call the world yours, yet ye will not
-stoop to gather from the earth the fruits of the earth. Ye sit idle in
-the summer, and women and children die round you when winter comes.
-Because the game is gone, ye say. Must the world stand still because a
-handful of Crees need a hunting-ground? Must the makers of cities and
-the wonders of the earth, who fill the land with plenty--must they stand
-far off, because the Crees and their chief would wander over millions of
-acres, for each man a million, when by a hundred, ay, by ten, each white
-man would live in plenty, and make the land rejoice. See. Here is the
-truth. When the Great Spirit draws the game away so that the hunting is
-poor, ye sit down and fill your hearts with murder, and in the blackness
-of your thoughts kill my brother. Idle and shiftless and evil ye are,
-while the earth cries out to give you of its plenty, a great harvest from
-a little seed, if ye will but dig and plant, and plough and sow and reap,
-and lend your backs to toil. Now hear and heed. The end is come.
-
-"For this once ye shall be fed--by the blood of my heart, ye shall be fed!
-And another year ye shall labour, and get the fruits of your labour, and
-not stand waiting, as it were, till a fish shall pass the spear, or a
-stag water at your door, that ye may slay and eat. The end is come, ye
-idle men. O chief, harken! One of your braves would have slain me, even
-as you slew my brother--he one, and you a thousand. Speak to your people
-as I have spoken, and then come and answer for the deed done by your
-hand. And this I say that right shall be done between men and men.
-Speak."
-
-Jim had made his great effort, and not without avail. Arrowhead rose
-slowly, the cloud gone out of his face, and spoke to his people, bidding
-them wait in peace until food came, and appointing his son chief in his
-stead until his return.
-
-"The white man speaks truth, and I will go," he said. "I shall return,"
-he continued, "if it be written so upon the leaves of the Tree of Life;
-and if it be not so written, I shall fade like a mist, and the tepees
-will know me not again. The days of my youth are spent, and my step no
-longer springs from the ground. I shuffle among the grass and the fallen
-leaves, and my eyes scarce know the stag from the doe. The white man is
-master--if he wills it we shall die, if he wills it we shall live. And
-this was ever so. It is in the tale of our people. One tribe ruled, and
-the others were their slaves. If it is written on the leaves of the Tree
-of Life that the white man rule us for ever, then it shall be so. I have
-spoken. Now, behold I go."
-
-Jim had conquered, and together they sped away with the dogs through the
-sweet-smelling spruce woods where every branch carried a cloth of white,
-and the only sound heard was the swish of a blanket of snow as it fell to
-the ground from the wide webs of green, or a twig snapped under the load
-it bore. Peace brooded in the silent and comforting forest, and Jim and
-Arrowhead, the Indian ever ahead, swung along, mile after mile, on their
-snow-shoes, emerging at last upon the wide white prairie.
-
-A hundred miles of sun and fair weather, sleeping at night in the open in
-a trench dug in the snow, no fear in the thoughts of Jim, nor evil in the
-heart of the heathen man. There had been moments of watchfulness, of
-uncertainty, on Jim's part, the first few hours of the first night after
-they left the Cree reservation; but the conviction speedily came to Jim
-that all was well; for the chief slept soundly from the moment he lay
-down in his blankets between the dogs. Then Jim went to sleep as in his
-own bed, and, waking, found Arrowhead lighting a fire from a little load
-of sticks from the sledges. And between murderer and captor there sprang
-up the companionship of the open road which brings all men to a certain
-land of faith and understanding, unless they are perverted and vile.
-There was no vileness in Arrowhead. There were no handcuffs on his
-hands, no sign of captivity; they two ate out of the same dish, drank
-from the same basin, broke from the same bread. The crime of Arrowhead,
-the gallows waiting for him, seemed very far away. They were only two
-silent travellers, sharing the same hardship, helping to give material
-comfort to each other--in the inevitable democracy of those far places,
-where small things are not great nor great things small; where into men's
-hearts comes the knowledge of the things that matter; where, from the
-wide, starry sky, from the august loneliness, and the soul of the life
-which has brooded there for untold generations, God teaches the values of
-this world and the next.
-
-One hundred miles of sun and fair weather, and then fifty miles of
-bitter, aching cold, with nights of peril from the increasing chill,
-so that Jim dared not sleep lest he should never wake again, but die
-benumbed and exhausted. Yet Arrowhead slept through all. Day after day
-so, and then ten miles of storm such as come only to the vast barrens of
-the northlands; and woe to the traveller upon whom the icy wind and the
-blinding snow descended! Woe came upon Jim Templeton and Arrowhead, the
-heathen.
-
-In the awful struggle between man and nature that followed, the captive
-became the leader. The craft of the plains, the inherent instinct, the
-feeling which was more than eyesight became the only hope. One whole day
-to cover ten miles--an endless path of agony, in which Jim went down
-again and again, but came up blinded by snow and drift, and cut as with
-lashes by the angry wind. At the end of the ten miles was a Hudson's Bay
-Company's post and safety; and through ten hours had the two struggled
-towards it, going off at tangents, circling on their own tracks; but the
-Indian, by an instinct as sure as the needle to the pole, getting the
-direction to the post again, in the moments of direst peril and
-uncertainty. To Jim the world became a sea of maddening forces which
-buffeted him; a whirlpool of fire in which his brain was tortured, his
-mind was shrivelled up; a vast army rending itself, each man against the
-other. It was a purgatory of music, broken by discords; and then at
-last--how sweet it all was, after the eternity of misery--"Church bells
-and voices low," and Sally singing to him, Nancy's voice calling! Then,
-nothing but sleep--sleep, a sinking down millions of miles in an ether of
-drowsiness which thrilled him; and after--no more.
-
-None who has suffered up to the limit of what the human body and soul
-may bear can remember the history of those distracted moments when the
-struggle became one between the forces in nature and the forces in man,
-between agonised body and smothered mind, yet with the divine
-intelligence of the created being directing, even though subconsciously,
-the fight.
-
-How Arrowhead found the post in the mad storm he could never have told.
-Yet he found it, with Jim unconscious on the sledge and with limbs
-frozen, all the dogs gone but two, the leathers over the Indian's
-shoulders as he fell against the gate of the post with a shrill cry that
-roused the factor and his people within, together with Sergeant Sewell,
-who had been sent out from headquarters to await Jim's arrival there. It
-was Sewell's hand which first felt Jim's heart and pulse, and found that
-there was still life left, even before it could be done by the doctor
-from headquarters, who had come to visit a sick man at the post.
-
-For hours they worked with snow upon the frozen limbs to bring back life
-and consciousness. Consciousness came at last with half delirium, half
-understanding; as emerging from the passing sleep of anaesthetics, the
-eye sees things and dimly registers them, before the brain has set them
-in any relation to life or comprehension.
-
-But Jim was roused at last, and the doctor presently held to his lips a
-glass of brandy. Then from infinite distance Jim's understanding
-returned; the mind emerged, but not wholly, from the chaos in which it
-was travelling. His eyes stood out in eagerness.
-
-"Brandy! brandy!" he said hungrily.
-
-With an oath Sewell snatched the glass from the doctor's hand, put it on
-the table, then stooped to Jim's ear and said hoarsely: "Remember--Nancy.
-For God's sake, sir, don't drink."
-
-Jim's head fell back, the fierce light went out of his eyes, the face
-became greyer and sharper. "Sally--Nancy--Nancy," he whispered, and his
-fingers clutched vaguely at the quilt.
-
-"He must have brandy or he will die. The system is pumped out. He must
-be revived," said the doctor. He reached again for the glass of spirits.
-
-Jim understood now. He was on the borderland between life and death; his
-feet were at the brink. "No--not--brandy, no!" he moaned. "Sally-
-Sally, kiss me," he said faintly, from the middle world in which he was.
-
-"Quick, the broth!" said Sewell to the factor, who had been preparing
-it. "Quick, while there's a chance." He stooped and called into Jim's
-ear: "For the love of God, wake up, sir. They're coming--they're both
-coming--Nancy's coming. They'll soon be here." What matter that he
-lied, a life was at stake.
-
-Jim's eyes opened again. The doctor was standing with the brandy in
-his hand. Half madly Jim reached out. "I must live until they come,"
-he cried; "the brandy--give it me! Give it--ah, no, no, I must not!"
-he added, gasping, his lips trembling, his hands shaking.
-
-Sewell held the broth to his lips. He drank a little, yet his face
-became greyer and greyer; a bluish tinge spread about his mouth.
-
-"Have you nothing else, sir?" asked Sewell in despair. The doctor put
-down the brandy, went quickly to his medicine-case, dropped into a glass
-some liquid from a phial, came over again, and poured a little between
-the lips; then a little more, as Jim's eyes opened again; and at last
-every drop in the glass trickled down the sinewy throat.
-
-Presently as they watched him the doctor said: "It will not do. He must
-have brandy. It has life-food in it."
-
-Jim understood the words. He knew that if he drank the brandy the
-chances against his future were terrible. He had made his vow, and he
-must keep it. Yet the thirst was on him; his enemy had him by the throat
-again, was dragging him down. Though his body was so cold, his throat
-was on fire. But in the extremity of his strength his mind fought on--
-fought on, growing weaker every moment. He was having his last fight.
-They watched him with an aching anxiety, and there was anger in the
-doctor's face. He had no patience with these forces arrayed against him.
-
-At last the doctor whispered to Sewell: "It's no use; he must have the
-brandy, or he can't live an hour."
-
-Sewell weakened; the tears fell down his rough, hard cheeks. "It'll ruin
-him-it's ruin or death."
-
-"Trust a little more in God, and in the man's strength. Let us give him
-the chance. Force it down his throat--he's not responsible," said the
-physician, to whom saving life was more than all else.
-
-Suddenly there appeared at the bedside Arrowhead, gaunt and weak, his
-face swollen, the skin of it broken by the whips of storm.
-
-"He is my brother," he said, and, stooping, laid both hands, which he had
-held before the fire for a long time, on Jim's heart. "Take his feet,
-his hands, his, legs, and his head in your hands," he said to them all.
-"Life is in us; we will give him life."
-
-He knelt down and kept both hands on Jim's heart, while the others, even
-the doctor, awed by his act, did as they were bidden. "Shut your eyes.
-Let your life go into him. Think of him, and him alone. Now!" said
-Arrowhead in a strange voice.
-
-He murmured, and continued murmuring, his body drawing closer and closer
-to Jim's body, while in the deep silence, broken only by the chanting of
-his low monotonous voice, the others pressed Jim's hands and head and
-feet and legs--six men under the command of a heathen murderer.
-
-The minutes passed. The colour came back to Jim's face, the skin of his
-hands filled up, they ceased twitching, his pulse got stronger, his eyes
-opened with a new light in them.
-
-"I'm living, anyhow," he said at last with a faint smile. "I'm hungry--
-broth, please."
-
-The fight was won, and Arrowhead, the pagan murderer, drew over to the
-fire and crouched down beside it, his back to the bed, impassive and
-still. They brought him a bowl of broth and bread, which he drank
-slowly, and placed the empty bowl between his knees. He sat there
-through the night, though they tried to make him lie down.
-
-As the light came in at the windows, Sewell touched him on the shoulder,
-and said: "He is sleeping now."
-
-"I hear my brother breathe," answered Arrowhead. "He will live."
-
-All night he had listened, and had heard Jim's breath as only a man who
-has lived in waste places can hear. "He will live. What I take with one
-hand I give with the other."
-
-He had taken the life of the factor; he had given Jim his life. And when
-he was tried three months later for murder, some one else said this for
-him, and the hearts of all, judge and jury, were so moved they knew not
-what to do.
-
-But Arrowhead was never sentenced, for, at the end of the first day's
-trial, he lay down to sleep and never waked again. He was found the next
-morning still and cold, and there was clasped in his hands a little doll
-which Nancy had given him on one of her many visits to the prison during
-her father's long illness. They found a piece of paper in his belt with
-these words in the Cree language: "With my hands on his heart at the post
-I gave him the life that was in me, saving but a little until now.
-Arrowhead, the chief, goes to find life again by the well at the root
-of the tree. How!"
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-On the evening of the day that Arrowhead made his journey to "the well
-at the root of the tree" a stranger knocked at the door of Captain
-Templeton's cottage; then, without awaiting admittance, entered.
-
-Jim was sitting with Nancy on his knee, her head against his shoulder,
-Sally at his side, her face alight with some inner joy. Before the knock
-came to the door Jim had just said, "Why do your eyes shine so, Sally?
-What's in your mind?" She had been about to answer, to say to him what
-had been swelling her heart with pride, though she had not meant to tell
-him what he had forgotten--not till midnight. But the figure that
-entered the room, a big man with deep-set eyes, a man of power who had
-carried everything before him in the battle of life, answered for her.
-
-"You have won the stake, Jim," he said in a hoarse voice. "You and she
-have won the stake, and I've brought it--brought it."
-
-Before they could speak he placed in Sally's hands bonds for five million
-dollars.
-
-"Jim--Jim, my son!" he burst out. Then, suddenly, he sank into a chair
-and, putting his head in his hands, sobbed aloud.
-
-"My God, but I'm proud of you--speak to me, Jim. You've broken me up."
-He was ashamed of his tears, but he could not wipe them away.
-
-"Father, dear old man!" said Jim, and put his hands on the broad
-shoulders.
-
-Sally knelt down beside him, took both the great hands from the tear-
-stained face, and laid them against her cheek. But presently she put
-Nancy on his knees.
-
-"I don't like you to cry," the child said softly; "but to-day I cried
-too, 'cause my Indian man is dead."
-
-The old man could not speak, but he put his cheek down to hers. After a
-minute, "Oh, but she's worth ten times that!" he said as Sally came
-close to him with the bundle he had thrust into her hands.
-
-"What is it?" said Jim.
-
-"It's five million dollars--for Nancy," she said. "Five-million--what?"
-
-"The stake, Jim," said Sally. "If you did not drink for four years--
-never touched a drop--we were to have five million dollars."
-
-"You never told him, then--you never told him that?" asked the old man.
-
-"I wanted him to win without it," she said. "If he won, he would be the
-stronger; if he lost, it would not be so hard for him to bear."
-
-The old man drew her down and kissed her cheek. He chuckled, though the
-tears were still in his eyes. "You are a wonder--the tenth wonder of the
-world!" he declared.
-
-Jim stood staring at the bundle in Nancy's hands. "Five millions--five
-million dollars!"--he kept saying to himself.
-
-"I said Nancy's worth ten times that, Jim." The old man caught his hand
-and pressed it. "But it was a damned near thing, I tell you," he added.
-"They tried to break me and my railways and my bank. I had to fight the
-combination, and there was one day when I hadn't that five million
-dollars there, nor five. Jim, they tried to break the old man. And if
-they'd broken me, they'd have made me out a scoundrel to her--to this
-wife of yours who risked everything for both of us, for both of us, Jim;
-for she'd given up the world to save you, and she was playing like a soul
-in Hell for Heaven. If they'd broken me, I'd never have lifted my head
-again. When things were at their worst I played to save that five
-millions,--her stake and mine,--I played for that. I fought for it as a
-man fights his way out of a burning house. And I won--I won. And it was
-by fighting for that five millions I saved fifty--fifty millions, son.
-They didn't break the old man, Jim. They didn't break him--not much."
-
-"There are giants in the world still," said Jim, his own eyes full.
-He knew now his father and himself, and he knew the meaning of all the
-bitter and misspent life of the old days. He and his father were on a
-level of understanding at last.
-
-"Are you a giant?" asked Nancy, peering up into her grandfather's eyes.
-
-The old man laughed, then sighed. "Perhaps I was once, more or less, my
-dear--" saying to her what he meant for the other two. "Perhaps I was;
-but I've finished. I'm through. I've had my last fight."
-
-He looked at his son. "I pass the game on to you, Jim. You can do it.
-I knew you could do it as the reports came in this year. I've had a
-detective up here for four years. I had to do it. It was the devil in
-me.
-
-"You've got to carry on the game, Jim; I'm done. I'll stay home and
-potter about. I want to go back to Kentucky, and build up the old place,
-and take care of it a bit-your mother always loved it. I'd like to have
-it as it was when she was there long ago. But I'll be ready to help you
-when I'm wanted, understand."
-
-"You want me to run things--your colossal schemes? You think--?"
-
-"I don't think. I'm old enough to know."
-
-
-
-
-ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
-
-I don't think. I'm old enough to know
-Knew when to shut his eyes, and when to keep them open
-Nothing so popular for the moment as the fall of a favourite
-That he will find the room empty where I am not
-The temerity and nonchalance of despair
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NORTHERN LIGHTS
-
-By Gilbert Parker
-
-Volume 3.
-
-
-WHEN THE SWALLOWS HOMEWARD FLY
-GEORGE'S WIFE
-MARCILE
-
-
-
-
-WHEN THE SWALLOWS HOMEWARD FLY
-
-The arrogant sun had stalked away into the evening, trailing behind him
-banners of gold and crimson, and a swift twilight was streaming over the
-land. As the sun passed, the eyes of two men on a high hill followed it,
-and the look of one was like a light in a window to a lost traveller.
-It had in it the sense of home and the tale of a journey done. Such a
-journey this man had made as few have ever attempted, and fewer
-accomplished. To the farthermost regions of snow and ice, where the
-shoulder of a continent juts out into the northwestern Arctic seas, he
-had travelled on foot and alone, save for his dogs, and for Indian
-guides, who now and then shepherded him from point to point. The vast
-ice-hummocks had been his housing, pemmican, the raw flesh of fish, and
-even the fat and oil of seals had been his food. Ever and ever through
-long months the everlasting white glitter of the snow and ice, ever and
-ever the cold stars, the cloudless sky, the moon at full, or swung like a
-white sickle in the sky to warn him that his life must be mown like
-grass. At night to sleep in a bag of fur and wool, by day the steely
-wind, or the air shaking with a filmy powder of frost; while the
-illimitably distant sun made the tiny flakes sparkle like silver--a
-poudre day, when the face and hands are most like to be frozen, and all
-so still and white and passionless, yet aching with energy. Hundreds
-upon hundreds of miles that endless trail went winding to the farthest
-North-west. No human being had ever trod its lengths before, though
-Indians or a stray Hudson's Bay Company man had made journeys over part
-of it during the years that have passed since Prince Rupert sent his
-adventurers to dot that northern land with posts and forts, and trace
-fine arteries of civilisation through the wastes.
-
-Where this man had gone none other had been of white men from the Western
-lands, though from across the wide Pacific, from the Eastern world,
-adventurers and exiles had once visited what is now known as the Yukon
-Valley. So this man, browsing in the library of his grandfather, an
-Eastern scholar, had come to know; and for love of adventure, and because
-of the tale of a valley of gold and treasure to be had, and because he
-had been ruined by bad investments, he had made a journey like none ever
-essayed before. And on his way up to those regions, where the veil
-before the face of God is very thin and fine, and men's hearts glow
-within them, where there was no oasis save the unguessed deposit of a
-great human dream that his soul could feel, the face of a girl had
-haunted him. Her voice--so sweet a voice that it rang like muffled
-silver in his ears, till, in the everlasting theatre of the Pole, the
-stars seemed to repeat it through millions of echoing hills, growing
-softer and softer as the frost hushed it to his ears-had said to him late
-and early, "You must come back with the swallows." Then she had sung a
-song which had been like a fire in his heart, not alone because of the
-words of it, but because of the soul in her voice, and it had lain like a
-coverlet on his heart to keep it warm:
-
- "Adieu! The sun goes awearily down,
- The mist creeps up o'er the sleepy town,
- The white sail bends to the shuddering mere,
- And the reapers have reaped and the night is here.
-
- Adieu! And the years are a broken song,
- The right grows weak in the strife with wrong,
- The lilies of love have a crimson stain,
- And the old days never will come again.
-
- Adieu! Where the mountains afar are dim
- 'Neath the tremulous tread of the seraphim,
- Shall not our querulous hearts prevail,
- That have prayed for the peace of the Holy Grail.
-
- Adieu! Sometime shall the veil between
- The things that are and that might have been
- Be folded back for our eyes to see,
- And the meaning of all shall be clear to me."
-
-It had been but an acquaintance of five days while he fitted out for his
-expedition, but in this brief time it had sunk deep into his mind that
-life was now a thing to cherish, and that he must indeed come back;
-though he had left England caring little if, in the peril and danger of
-his quest, he ever returned. He had been indifferent to his fate till he
-came to the Valley of the Saskatchewan, to the town lying at the foot of
-the maple hill beside the great northern stream, and saw the girl whose
-life was knit with the far north, whose mother's heart was buried in the
-great wastes where Sir John Franklin's expedition was lost; for her
-husband had been one of the ill-fated if not unhappy band of lovers of
-that civilisation for which they had risked all and lost all save
-immortality. Hither the two had come after he had been cast away on the
-icy plains, and as the settlement had crept north, had gone north with
-it, always on the outer edge of house and field, ever stepping northward.
-Here, with small income but high hearts and quiet souls, they had lived
-and laboured. And when this newcomer from the old land set his face
-northward to an unknown destination, the two women had prayed as the
-mother did in the old days when the daughter was but a babe at her knee,
-and it was not yet certain that Franklin and his men had been cast away
-for ever. Something in him, his great height, his strength of body,
-his clear, meditative eyes, his brave laugh, reminded her of him--her
-husband--who, like Sir Humphrey Gilbert, had said that it mattered little
-where men did their duty, since God was always near to take or leave as
-it was His will. When Bickersteth went, it was as though one they had
-known all their lives had passed; and the woman knew also that a new
-thought had been sown in her daughter's mind, a new door opened in her
-heart.
-
-And he had returned. He was now looking down into the valley where the
-village lay. Far, far over, two days' march away, he could see the
-cluster of houses, and the glow of the sun on the tin spire of the little
-Mission Church where he had heard the girl and her mother sing, till the
-hearts of all were swept by feeling and ravished by the desire for "the
-peace of the Holy Grail." The village was, in truth, but a day's march
-away from him, but he was not alone, and the journey could not be
-hastened. Beside him, his eyes also upon the sunset and the village,
-was a man in a costume half-trapper, half-Indian, with bushy grey beard
-and massive frame, and a distant, sorrowful look, like that of one whose
-soul was tuned to past suffering. As he sat, his head sunk on his
-breast, his elbow resting on a stump of pine--the token of a progressive
-civilisation--his chin upon his hand, he looked like the figure of Moses
-made immortal by Michael Angelo. But his strength was not like that of
-the man beside him, who was thirty years younger. When he walked, it was
-as one who had no destination, who had no haven towards which to travel,
-who journeyed as one to whom the world is a wilderness, and one tent or
-one hut is the same as another, and none is home.
-
-Like two ships meeting hull to hull on the wide seas, where a few miles
-of water will hide them from each other, whose ports are thousands of
-miles apart, whose courses are not the same, they two had met, the elder
-man, sick and worn, and near to death, in the poor hospitality of an
-Indian's tepee. John Bickersteth had nursed the old man back to
-strength, and had brought him southward with him--a silent companion, who
-spoke in monosyllables, who had no conversation at all of the past, and
-little of the present; but who was a woodsman and an Arctic traveller of
-the most expert kind; who knew by instinct where the best places for
-shelter and for sleeping might be found; who never complained, and was
-wonderful with the dogs. Close as their association was, Bickersteth had
-felt concerning the other that his real self was in some other sphere or
-place towards which his mind was always turning, as though to bring it
-back.
-
-Again and again had Bickersteth tried to get the old man to speak about
-the past, but he had been met by a dumb sort of look, a straining to
-understand. Once or twice the old man had taken his hands in both of his
-own, and gazed with painful eagerness into his face, as though trying to
-remember or to comprehend something that eluded him. Upon these
-occasions the old man's eyes dropped tears in an apathetic quiet, which
-tortured Bickersteth beyond bearing. Just such a look he had seen in the
-eyes of a favourite dog when he had performed an operation on it to save
-its life--a reproachful, non-comprehending, loving gaze.
-
-Bickersteth understood a little of the Chinook language, which is
-familiar to most Indian tribes, and he had learned that the Indians knew
-nothing exact concerning the old man; but rumours had passed from tribe
-to tribe that this white man had lived for ever in the farthest north
-among the Arctic tribes, and that he passed from people to people,
-disappearing into the untenanted wilderness, but reappearing again among
-stranger tribes, never resting, and as one always seeking what he could
-not find.
-
-One thing had helped this old man in all his travels and sojourning.
-He had, as it seemed to the native people, a gift of the hands; for when
-they were sick, a few moments' manipulation of his huge, quiet fingers
-vanquished pain. A few herbs he gave in tincture, and these also were
-praised; but it was a legend that when he was persuaded to lay on his
-hands and close his eyes, and with his fingers to "search for the pain
-and find it, and kill it," he always prevailed. They believed that
-though his body was on earth his soul was with Manitou, and that it was
-his soul which came into him again, and gave the Great Spirit's healing
-to the fingers. This had been the man's safety through how many years--
-or how many generations--they did not know; for legends regarding the
-pilgrim had grown and were fostered by the medicine men who, by giving
-him great age and supernatural power, could, with more self-respect,
-apologise for their own incapacity.
-
-So the years--how many it was impossible to tell, since he did not know
-or would not say--had gone on; and now, after ceaseless wandering, his
-face was turned towards that civilisation out of which he had come so
-long ago--or was it so long ago--one generation, or two, or ten? It
-seemed to Bickersteth at times as though it were ten, so strange, so
-unworldly was his companion. At first he thought that the man remembered
-more than he would appear to acknowledge, but he found that after a day
-or two everything that happened as they journeyed was also forgotten.
-
-It was only visible things, or sounds, that appeared to open the doors of
-memory of the most recent happenings. These happenings, if not varied,
-were of critical moment, since, passing down from the land of unchanging
-ice and snow, they had come into March and April storms, and the perils
-of the rapids and the swollen floods of May. Now, in June, two years and
-a month since Bickersteth had gone into the wilds, they looked down upon
-the goal of one at least--of the younger man who had triumphed in his
-quest up in these wilds abandoned centuries ago.
-
-With the joyous thought in his heart, that he had discovered anew one of
-the greatest gold-fields of the world, that a journey unparalleled had
-been accomplished, he turned towards his ancient companion, and a feeling
-of pity and human love enlarged within him. He, John Bickersteth, was
-going into a world again, where--as he believed--a happy fate awaited
-him; but what of this old man? He had brought him out of the wilds, out
-of the unknown--was he only taking him into the unknown again?
-Were there friends, any friends anywhere in the world waiting for him?
-He called himself by no name, he said he had no name. Whence came he?
-Of whom? Whither was he wending now? Bickersteth had thought of the
-problem often, and he had no answer for it save that he must be taken
-care of, if not by others, then by himself; for the old man had saved him
-from drowning; had also saved him from an awful death on a March day when
-he fell into a great hole and was knocked insensible in the drifting
-snow; had saved him from brooding on himself--the beginning of madness--
-by compelling him to think for another. And sometimes, as he had looked
-at the old man, his imagination had caught the spirit of the legend of
-the Indians, and he had cried out, "O soul, come back and give him
-memory--give him back his memory, Manitou the mighty!"
-
-Looking on the old man now, an impulse seized him. "Dear old man," he
-said, speaking as one speaks to a child that cannot understand, "you
-shall never want, while I have a penny, or have head or hands to work.
-But is there no one that you care for or that cares for you, that you
-remember, or that remembers you?"
-
-The old man shook his head though not with understanding, and he laid a
-hand on the young man's shoulder, and whispered:
-
-"Once it was always snow, but now it is green, the land. I have seen it
---I have seen it once." His shaggy eyebrows gathered over, his eyes
-searched, searched the face of John Bickersteth. "Once, so long ago--
-I cannot think," he added helplessly.
-
-"Dear old man," Bickersteth said gently, knowing he would not wholly
-comprehend, "I am going to ask her--Alice--to marry me, and if she does,
-she will help look after you, too. Neither of us would have been here
-without the other, dear old man, and we shall not be separated. Whoever
-you are, you are a gentleman, and you might have been my father or hers
---or hers."
-
-He stopped suddenly. A thought had flashed through his mind, a thought
-which stunned him, which passed like some powerful current through his
-veins, shocked him, then gave him a palpitating life. It was a wild
-thought, but yet why not--why not? There was the chance, the faint,
-far-off chance. He caught the old man by the shoulders, and looked him
-in the eyes, scanned his features, pushed back the hair from the rugged
-forehead.
-
-"Dear old man," he said, his voice shaking, "do you know what I'm
-thinking? I'm thinking that you may be of those who went out to the
-Arctic Sea with Sir John Franklin--with Sir John Franklin, you
-understand. Did you know Sir John Franklin--is it true, dear old boy, is
-it true? Are you one that has lived to tell the tale? Did you know Sir
-John Franklin--is it--tell me, is it true?"
-
-He let go the old man's shoulders, for over the face of the other there
-had passed a change. It was strained and tense. The hands were
-outstretched, the eyes were staring straight into the west and the coming
-night.
-
-"It is--it is--that's it!" cried Bickersteth. "That's it--love o' God,
-that's it! Sir John Franklin--Sir John Franklin, and all the brave lads
-that died up there! You remember the ship--the Arctic Sea--the ice-
-fields, and Franklin--you remember him? Dear old man, say you remember
-Franklin?"
-
-The thing had seized him. Conviction was upon him, and he watched the
-other's anguished face with anguish and excitement in his own. But--but
-it might be, it might be her father--the eyes, the forehead are like
-hers; the hands, the long hands, the pointed fingers. "Come, tell me,
-did you have a wife and child, and were they both called Alice--do you
-remember? Franklin--Alice! Do you remember?"
-
-The other got slowly to his feet, his arms outstretched, the look in his
-face changing, understanding struggling for its place, memory fighting
-for its own, the soul contending for its mastery.
-
-"Franklin--Alice--the snow," he said confusedly, and sank down.
-
-"God have mercy!" cried Bickersteth, as he caught the swaying body, and
-laid it upon the ground. "He was there--almost."
-
-He settled the old man against the great pine stump and chafed his hands.
-"Man, dear man, if you belong to her--if you do, can't you see what it
-will mean to me? She can't say no to me then. But if it's true, you'll
-belong to England and to all the world, too, and you'll have fame
-everlasting. I'll have gold for her and for you, and for your Alice,
-too, poor old boy. Wake up now and remember if you are Luke Allingham
-who went with Franklin to the silent seas of the Pole. If it's you,
-really you, what wonder you lost your memory! You saw them all die,
-Franklin and all, die there in the snow, with all the white world round
-them. If you were there, what a travel you have had, what strange things
-you have seen! Where the world is loneliest, God lives most. If you get
-close to the heart of things, it's no marvel you forgot what you were,
-or where you came from; because it didn't matter; you knew that you were
-only one of thousands of millions who have come and gone, that make up
-the soul of things, that make the pulses of the universe beat. That's
-it, dear old man. The universe would die, if it weren't for the souls
-that leave this world and fill it with life. Wake up! Wake up,
-Allingham, and tell us where you've been and what you've seen."
-
-He did not labour in vain. Slowly consciousness came back, and the grey
-eyes opened wide, the lips smiled faintly under the bushy beard; but
-Bickersteth saw that the look in the face was much the same as it had
-been before. The struggle had been too great, the fight for the other
-lost self had exhausted him, mind and body, and only a deep obliquity and
-a great weariness filled the countenance. He had come back to the verge,
-he had almost again discovered himself; but the opening door had shut
-fast suddenly, and he was back again in the night, the incompanionable
-night of forgetfulness.
-
-Bickersteth saw that the travail and strife had drained life and energy,
-and that he must not press the mind and vitality of this exile of time
-and the unknown too far. He felt that when the next test came the old
-man would either break completely, and sink down into another and
-everlasting forgetfulness, or tear away forever the veil between himself
-and his past, and emerge into a long-lost life. His strength must be
-shepherded, and he must be kept quiet and undisturbed until they came to
-the town yonder in the valley, over which the night was slowly settling
-down. There two women waited, the two Alices, from both of whom had gone
-lovers into the North. The daughter was living over again in her young
-love the pangs of suspense through which her mother had passed. Two
-years since Bickersteth had gone, and not a sign!
-
-Yet, if the girl had looked from her bedroom window, this Friday night,
-she would have seen on the far hill a sign; for there burned a fire
-beside which sat two travellers who had come from the uttermost limits of
-snow. But as the fire burned--a beacon to her heart if she had but known
-it--she went to her bed, the words of a song she had sung at choir--
-practice with tears in her voice and in her heart ringing in her ears.
-A concert was to be held after the service on the coming Sunday night,
-at which there was to be a collection for funds to build another mission-
-house a hundred miles farther North, and she had been practising music
-she was to sing. Her mother had been an amateur singer of great power,
-and she was renewing her mother's gift in a voice behind which lay a
-hidden sorrow. As she cried herself to sleep the words of the song which
-had moved her kept ringing in her ears and echoing in her heart:
-
- "When the swallows homeward fly,
- And the roses' bloom is o'er--"
-
-But her mother, looking out into the night, saw on the far hill the fire,
-burning like a star, where she had never seen a fire set before, and a
-hope shot into her heart for her daughter--a hope that had flamed up and
-died down so often during the past year. Yet she had fanned with
-heartening words every such glimmer of hope when it came, and now she
-went to bed saying, "Perhaps he will come to-morrow." In her mind, too,
-rang the words of the song which had ravished her ears that night, the
-song she had sung the night before her own husband, Luke Allingham, had
-gone with Franklin to the Polar seas:
-
-"When the swallows homeward fly--"
-
-As she and her daughter entered the little church on the Sunday evening,
-two men came over the prairie slowly towards the town, and both raised
-their heads to the sound of the church-bell calling to prayer. In the
-eyes of the younger man there was a look which has come to many in this
-world returning from hard enterprise and great dangers, to the familiar
-streets, the friendly faces of men of their kin and clan-to the lights of
-home.
-
-The face of the older man, however, had another look.
-
-It was such a look as is seldom seen in the faces of men, for it showed
-the struggle of a soul to regain its identity. The words which the old
-man had uttered in response to Bickersteth's appeal before he fainted
-away, "Franklin--Alice--the snow," had showed that he was on the verge;
-the bells of the church pealing in the summer air brought him near it
-once again. How many years had gone since he had heard church-bells?
-Bickersteth, gazing at him in eager scrutiny, wondered if, after all, he
-might be mistaken about him. But no, this man had never been born and
-bred in the far North. His was a type which belonged to the civilisation
-from which he himself had come. There would soon be the test of it all.
-Yet he shuddered, too, to think what might happen if it was all true, and
-discovery or reunion should shake to the centre the very life of the two
-long-parted ones.
-
-He saw the look of perplexed pain and joy at once in the face of the old
-man, but he said nothing, and he was almost glad when the bell stopped.
-The old man turned to him.
-
-"What is it?" he asked. "I remember--" but he stopped suddenly, shaking
-his head.
-
-An hour later, cleared of the dust of travel, the two walked slowly
-towards the church from the little tavern where they were lodged. The
-service was now over, but the concert had begun. The church was full,
-and there were people in the porch; but these made way for the two
-strangers; and, as Bickersteth was recognised by two or three present,
-place was found for them. Inside, the old man stared round him in a
-confused and troubled way, but his motions were quiet and abstracted and
-he looked like some old viking, his workaday life done, come to pray ere
-he went hence forever. They had entered in a pause in the concert, but
-now two ladies came forward to the chancel steps, and one with her hands
-clasped before her, began to sing:
-
- "When the swallows homeward fly,
- And the roses' bloom is o'er,
- And the nightingale's sweet song
- In the woods is heard no more--"
-
-It was Alice--Alice the daughter--and presently the mother, the other
-Alice, joined in the refrain. At sight of them Bickersteth's eyes had
-filled, not with tears, but with a cloud of feeling, so that he went
-blind. There she was, the girl he loved. Her voice was ringing in his
-ears. In his own joy for one instant he had forgotten the old man beside
-him, and the great test that was now upon him. He turned quickly,
-however, as the old man got to his feet. For an instant the lost exile
-of the North stood as though transfixed. The blood slowly drained from
-his face, and in his eyes was an agony of struggle and desire. For a
-moment an awful confusion had the mastery, and then suddenly a clear
-light broke into his eyes, his face flushed healthily and shone, his arms
-went up, and there rang in his ears the words:
-
- "Then I think with bitter pain,
- Shall we ever meet again?
- When the swallows homeward fly--"
-
-"Alice--Alice!" he called, and tottered forward up the aisle, followed
-by John Bickersteth.
-
-"Alice, I have come back!" he cried again.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-GEORGE'S WIFE
-
-"She's come, and she can go back. No one asked her, no one wants her,
-and she's got no rights here. She thinks she'll come it over me, but
-she'll get nothing, and there's no place for her here."
-
-The old, grey-bearded man, gnarled and angular, with overhanging brows
-and a harsh face, made this little speech of malice and unfriendliness,
-looking out on the snow-covered prairie through the window. Far in the
-distance were a sleigh and horses like a spot in the snow, growing larger
-from minute to minute.
-
-It was a day of days. Overhead, the sun was pouring out a flood of light
-and warmth, and though it was bitterly cold, life was beating hard in the
-bosom of the West. Men walked lightly, breathed quickly, and their eyes
-were bright with the brightness of vitality and content. Even the old
-man at the window of this lonely house, in a great lonely stretch of
-country, with the cedar hills behind it, had a living force which defied
-his seventy odd years, though the light in his face was hard and his
-voice was harder still. Under the shelter of the foothills, cold as the
-day was, his cattle were feeding in the open, scratching away the thin
-layer of snow, and browsing on the tender grass underneath. An arctic
-world in appearance, it had an abounding life which made it friendly and
-generous--the harshness belonged to the surface. So, perhaps, it was
-with the old man who watched the sleigh in the distance coming nearer,
-but that in his nature on which any one could feed was not so easily
-reached as the fresh young grass under the protecting snow.
-
-"She'll get nothing out of me," he repeated, as the others in the room
-behind him made no remark, and his eyes ranged gloatingly over the cattle
-under the foothills and the buildings which he had gathered together to
-proclaim his substantial greatness in the West. "Not a sous markee," he
-added, clinking some coins in his pocket. "She's got no rights."
-
-"Cassy's got as much right here as any of us, Abel, and she's coming to
-say it, I guess."
-
-The voice which spoke was unlike a Western voice. It was deep and full
-and slow, with an organ-like quality. It was in good keeping with the
-tall, spare body and large, fine rugged face of the woman to whom it
-belonged. She sat in a rocking-chair, but did not rock, her fingers busy
-with the knitting-needles, her feet planted squarely on the home-made
-hassock at her feet.
-
-The old man waited for a minute in a painful silence, then he turned
-slowly round, and, with tight-pressed lips, looked at the woman in the
-rocking-chair. If it had been anyone else who had "talked back" at him,
-he would have made quick work of them, for he was of that class of tyrant
-who pride themselves on being self-made, and have an undue respect for
-their own judgment and importance. But the woman who had ventured to
-challenge his cold-blooded remarks about his dead son's wife, now
-hastening over the snow to the house her husband had left under a cloud
-eight years before, had no fear of him, and, maybe, no deep regard for
-him. He respected her, as did all who knew her--a very reticent,
-thoughtful, busy being, who had been like a well of comfort to so many
-that had drunk and passed on out of her life, out of time and time's
-experiences. Seventy-nine years saw her still upstanding, strong, full
-of work, and fuller of life's knowledge. It was she who had sent the
-horses and sleigh for "Gassy," when the old man, having read the letter
-that Cassy had written him, said that she could "freeze at the station"
-for all of him. Aunt Kate had said nothing then, but, when the time
-came, by her orders the sleigh and horses were at the station; and the
-old man had made no direct protest, for she was the one person he had
-never dominated nor bullied. If she had only talked, he would have worn
-her down, for he was fond of talking, and it was said by those who were
-cynical and incredulous about him that he had gone to prayer-meetings,
-had been a local preacher, only to hear his own voice. Probably if there
-had been any politics in the West in his day, he would have been a
-politician, though it would have been too costly for his taste, and
-religion was very cheap; it enabled him to refuse to join in many forms
-of expenditure, on the ground that he "did not hold by such things."
-
-In Aunt Kate, the sister of his wife, dead so many years ago, he had
-found a spirit stronger than his own. He valued her; he had said more
-than once, to those who he thought would never repeat it to her, that
-she was a "great woman"; but self-interest was the mainspring of his
-appreciation. Since she had come again to his house--she had lived with
-him once before for two years when his wife was slowly dying--it had been
-a different place. Housekeeping had cost less than before, yet the
-cooking was better, the place was beautifully clean, and discipline
-without rigidity reigned everywhere. One by one the old woman's boys
-and girls had died--four of them--and she was now alone, with not
-a single grandchild left to cheer her; and the life out here with Abel
-Baragar had been unrelieved by much that was heartening to a woman; for
-Black Andy, Abel's son, was not an inspiring figure, though even his
-moroseness gave way under her influence. So it was that when Cassy's
-letter came, her breast seemed to grow warmer, and swell with longing to
-see the wife of her nephew, who had such a bad reputation in Abel's eyes,
-and to see George's little boy, who was coming too. After all, whatever
-Cassy was, she was the mother of Abel's son's son; and Aunt Kate was too
-old and wise to be frightened by tales told of Cassy or any one else.
-So, having had her own way so far regarding Cassy's coming, she looked
-Abel calmly in the eyes, over the gold-rimmed spectacles which were her
-dearest possession--almost the only thing of value she had. She was not
-afraid of Abel's anger, and he knew it; but his eldest son, Black Andy,
-was present, and he must make a show of being master of the situation.
-
-"Aunt Kate," he said, "I didn't make a fuss about you sending the horses
-and sleigh for her, because women do fool things sometimes. I suppose
-curiosity got the best of you. Anyhow, mebbe it's right Cassy should
-find out, once for all, how things stand, and that they haven't altered
-since she took George away, and ruined his life, and sent him to his
-grave. That's why I didn't order Mick back when I saw him going out with
-the team."
-
-"Cassy Mavor," interjected a third voice from a corner behind the great
-stove--"Cassy Mavor, of the variety-dance-and-song, and a talk with the
-gallery between!"
-
-Aunt Kate looked over at Black Andy, and stopped knitting, for there was
-that in the tone of the sullen ranchman which stirred in her a sudden
-anger, and anger was a rare and uncomfortable sensation to her. A flush
-crept slowly over her face, then it died away, and she said quietly to
-Black Andy--for she had ever prayed to be master of the demon of temper
-down deep in her, and she was praying now:
-
-"She earnt her living by singing and dancing, and she's brought up
-George's boy by it, and singing and dancing isn't a crime. David danced
-before the Lord. I danced myself when I was a young girl, and before I
-joined the church. 'Twas about the only pleasure I ever had; 'bout the
-only one I like to remember. There's no difference to me 'twixt making
-your feet handy and clever and full of music, and playing with your
-fingers on the piano or on a melodeon at a meeting. As for singing, it's
-God's gift; and many a time I wisht I had it. I'd have sung the
-blackness out of your face and heart, Andy." She leaned back again and
-began to knit very fast. "I'd like to hear Cassy sing, and see her dance
-too."
-
-Black Andy chuckled coarsely, "I often heard her sing and saw her dance
-down at Lumley's before she took George away East. You wouldn't have
-guessed she had consumption. She knocked the boys over down to Lumley's.
-The first night at Lumley's done for George."
-
-Black Andy's face showed no lightening of its gloom as he spoke, but
-there was a firing up of the black eyes, and the woman with the knitting
-felt that--for whatever reason--he was purposely irritating his father.
-
-"The devil was in her heels and in her tongue," Andy continued. "With
-her big mouth, red hair, and little eyes, she'd have made anybody laugh.
-I laughed."
-
-"You laughed!" snapped out his father with a sneer.
-
-Black Andy's eyes half closed with a morose look, then he went on. "Yes,
-I laughed at Cassy. While she was out here at Lumley's getting cured,
-accordin' to the doctor's orders, things seemed to get a move on in the
-West. But it didn't suit professing Christians like you, dad." He
-jerked his head towards the old man and drew the spittoon near with his
-feet.
-
-"The West hasn't been any worse off since she left," snarled the old man.
-
-"Well, she took George with her," grimly retorted Black Andy.
-
-Abel Baragar's heart had been warmer towards his dead son George than
-to any one else in the world. George had been as fair of face and hair
-as Andrew was dark; as cheerful and amusing as Andrew was gloomy and
-dispiriting; as agile and dexterous of mind and body as his brother was
-slow and angular; as emotional and warm-hearted as the other was
-phlegmatic and sour--or so it seemed to the father and to nearly all
-others.
-
-In those old days they had not been very well off. The railway was not
-completed, and the West had not begun "to move." The old man had bought
-and sold land and cattle and horses, always living on a narrow margin of
-safety, but in the hope that one day the choice bits of land he was
-shepherding here and there would take a leap up in value; and his
-judgment had been right. His prosperity had all come since George went
-away with Cassy Mavor. His anger at George had been the more acute,
-because the thing happened at a time when his affairs were on the edge of
-a precipice. He had won through it, but only by the merest shave, and it
-had all left him with a bad spot in his heart, in spite of his "having
-religion." Whenever he remembered George, he instinctively thought of
-those black days when a Land and Cattle Syndicate was crowding him over
-the edge into the chasm of failure, and came so near doing it. A few
-thousand dollars less to put up here and there, and he would have been
-ruined; his blood became hotter whenever he thought of it. He had had to
-fight the worst of it through alone, for George, who had been useful as a
-kind of buyer and seller, who was ever all things to all men, and ready
-with quip and jest, and not a little uncertain as to truth--to which the
-old man shut his eyes when there was a "deal" on--had, in the end, been
-of no use at all, and had seemed to go to pieces just when he was most
-needed. His father had put it all down to Cassy Mavor, who had unsettled
-things since she had come to Lumley's, and being a man of very few ideas,
-he cherished those he had with an exaggerated care. Prosperity had not
-softened him; it had given him an arrogance unduly emphasised by a
-reputation for rigid virtue and honesty. The indirect attack which
-Andrew now made on George's memory roused him to anger, as much because
-it seemed to challenge his own judgment as cast a slight on the name of
-the boy whom he had cast off, yet who had a firmer hold on his heart than
-any human being ever had. It had only been pride which had prevented him
-from making it up with George before it was too late; but, all the more,
-he was set against the woman who "kicked up her heels for a living"; and,
-all the more, he resented Black Andy, who, in his own grim way, had
-managed to remain a partner with him in their present prosperity, and had
-done so little for it.
-
-"George helped to make what you've got, Andy," he said darkly now. "The
-West missed George. The West said, 'There was a good man ruined by a
-woman.' The West'd never think anything or anybody missed you, 'cept
-yourself. When you went North, it never missed you; when you come back,
-its jaw fell. You wasn't fit to black George's boots."
-
-Black Andy's mouth took on a bitter sort of smile, and his eyes drooped
-furtively, as he struck the damper of the stove heavily with his foot,
-then he replied slowly:
-
-"Well, that's all right; but if I wasn't fit to black his boots, it ain't
-my fault. I git my nature honest, as he did. We wasn't any cross-
-breeds, I s'pose. We got the strain direct, and we was all right on her
-side." He jerked his head towards Aunt Kate, whose face was growing
-pale. She interposed now.
-
-"Can't you leave the dead alone?" she asked in a voice ringing a little.
-"Can't you let them rest? Ain't it enough to quarrel about the living?
-Cassy'll be here soon," she added, peering out of the window, "and if I
-was you, I'd try and not make her sorry she ever married a Baragar. It
-ain't a feeling that'd make a sick woman live long."
-
-Aunt Kate did not strike often, but when she did, she struck hard. Abel
-Baragar staggered a little under this blow, for, at the moment, it seemed
-to him that he saw his dead wife's face looking at him from the chair
-where her sister now sat. Down in his ill-furnished heart, where there
-had been little which was companionable, there was a shadowed corner.
-Sophy Baragar had been such a true-hearted, brave-souled woman, and he
-had been so impatient and exacting with her, till the beautiful face,
-which had been reproduced in George, had lost its colour and its fire,
-had become careworn and sweet with that sweetness which goes early out of
-the world. In all her days the vanished wife had never hinted at as much
-as Aunt Kate suggested now, and Abel Baragar shut his eyes against the
-thing which he was seeing. He was not all hard, after all.
-
-Aunt Kate turned to Black Andy now.
-
-"Mebbe Cassy ain't for long," she said. "Mebbe she's come out for what
-she came out for before. It seems to me it's that, or she wouldn't have
-come; because she's young yet, and she's fond of her boy, and she'd not
-want to bury herself alive out here with us. Mebbe her lungs is bad
-again."
-
-"Then she's sure to get another husband out here," said the old man,
-recovering himself. "She got one before easy, on the same ticket." With
-something of malice he looked over at Black Andy.
-
-"If she can sing and dance as she done nine years ago, I shouldn't
-wonder," answered Black Andy smoothly. These two men knew each other;
-they had said hard things to each other for many a year, yet they lived
-on together unshaken by each other's moods and bitternesses.
-
-"I'm getting old,--I'm seventy-nine,--and I ain't for long," urged Aunt
-Kate, looking Abel in the eyes. "Some day soon I'll be stepping out and
-away. Then things'll go to sixes and sevens, as they did after Sophy
-died. Some one ought to be here that's got a right to be here, not a
-hired woman."
-
-Suddenly the old man raged out.
-
-"Her--off the stage, to look after this! Her, that's kicked up her heels
-for a living! It's--no, she's no good. She's common. She's come, and
-she can go. I ain't having sweepings from the streets living here as if
-they had rights."
-
-Aunt Kate set her lips.
-
-"Sweepings! You've got to take that back, Abel. It's not Christian.
-You've got to take that back."
-
-"He'll take it back all right before we've done, I guess," remarked Black
-Andy. "He'll take a lot back."
-
-"Truth's truth, and I'll stand by it, and--"
-
-The old man stopped, for there came to them now, clearly, the sound of
-sleigh bells. They all stood still for an instant, silent and attentive,
-then Aunt Kate moved towards the door.
-
-"Cassy's come," she said. "Cassy and George's boy've come."
-
-Another instant and the door was opened on the beautiful, white,
-sparkling world, and the low sleigh, with its great warm buffalo robes,
-in which the small figures of a woman and a child were almost lost,
-stopped at the door. Two whimsical but tired eyes looked over a rim of
-fur at the old woman in the doorway, then Cassy's voice rang out.
-
-"Hello, that's Aunt Kate, I know! Well, here we are, and here's my boy.
-Jump, George!"
-
-A moment later, and the gaunt old woman folded both mother and son in her
-arms and drew them into the room. The door was shut, and they all faced
-each other.
-
-The old man and Black Andy did not move, but stood staring at the trim
-figure in black, with the plain face, large mouth, and tousled red hair,
-and the dreamy-eyed, handsome little boy beside her.
-
-Black Andy stood behind the stove, looking over at the new-comers with
-quizzical, almost furtive eyes, and his father remained for a moment with
-mouth open, gazing at his dead son's wife and child, as though not quite
-comprehending the scene. The sight of the boy had brought back, in some
-strange, embarrassing way, a vision of thirty years before, when George
-was a little boy in buckskin pants and jacket, and was beginning to ride
-the prairie with him. This boy was like George, yet not like him. The
-face was George's, the sensuous, luxurious mouth; but the eyes were not
-those of a Baragar, nor yet those of Aunt Kate's family; and they were
-not wholly like the mother's. They were full and brimming, while hers
-were small and whimsical; yet they had her quick, humourous flashes and
-her quaintness.
-
-"Have I changed so much? Have you forgotten me?" Cassy asked, looking
-the old man in the eyes. "You look as strong as a bull." She held out
-her hand to him and laughed.
-
-"Hope I see you well," said Abel Baragar mechanically, as he took the
-hand and shook it awkwardly.
-
-"Oh, I'm all right," answered the nonchalant little woman, undoing her
-jacket. "Shake hands with your grandfather, George. That's right--don't
-talk too much," she added, with a half-nervous little laugh, as the old
-man, with a kind of fixed smile, and the child shook hands in silence.
-
-Presently she saw Black Andy behind the stove. "Well, Andy, have you
-been here ever since?" she asked, and, as he came forward, she suddenly
-caught him by both arms, stood on tiptoe, and kissed him. "Last time I
-saw you, you were behind the stove at Lumley's. Nothing's ever too warm
-for you," she added. "You'd be shivering on the Equator. You were
-always hugging the stove at Lumley's."
-
-"Things was pretty warm there, too, Cassy," he said, with a sidelong look
-at his father.
-
-She saw the look, her face flashed with sudden temper, then her eyes fell
-on her boy, now lost in the arms of Aunt Kate, and she curbed herself.
-
-"There were plenty of things doing at Lumley's in those days," she said
-brusquely. "We were all young and fresh then," she added, and then
-something seemed to catch her voice, and she coughed a little--a hard,
-dry, feverish cough. "Are the Lumleys all right? Are they still there,
-at the Forks?" she asked, after the little paroxysm of coughing.
-
-"Cleaned out--all scattered. We own the Lumleys' place now," replied
-Black Andy, with another sidelong glance at his father, who, as he put
-some more wood on the fire and opened the damper of the stove wider,
-grimly watched and listened.
-
-"Jim, and Lance, and Jerry, and Abner?" she asked almost abstractedly.
-
-"Jim's dead-shot by a U. S. marshal by mistake for a smuggler," answered
-Black Andy suggestively. "Lance is up on the Yukon, busted; Jerry is one
-of our, hands on the place; and Abner is in jail."
-
-"Abner-in jail!" she exclaimed in a dazed way. "What did he do? Abner
-always seemed so straight."
-
-"Oh, he sloped with a thousand dollars of the railway people's money.
-They caught him, and he got seven years."
-
-"He was married, wasn't he?" she asked in a low voice. "Yes, to Phenie
-Tyson. There's no children, so she's all right, and divorce is cheap
-over in the States, where she is now."
-
-"Phenie Tyson didn't marry Abner because he was a saint, but because he
-was a man, I suppose," she replied gravely. "And the old folks?"
-
-"Both dead. What Abner done sent the old man to his grave. But Abner's
-mother died a year before."
-
-"What Abner done killed his father," said Abel Baragar with dry emphasis.
-"Phenie Tyson was extravagant-wanted this and that, and nothin' was too
-good for her. Abner spoilt his life gettin' her what she wanted; and it
-broke old Ezra Lumley's heart."
-
-George's wife looked at him for a moment with her eyes screwed up, and
-then she laughed softly. "My, it's curious how some folks go up and some
-go down! It must be lonely for Phenie waiting all these years for Abner
-to get free. . . . I had the happiest time in my life at Lumley's.
-I was getting better of my-cold. While I was there I got lots of
-strength stored up, to last me many a year when I needed it; and, then,
-George and I were married at Lumley's. . . ."
-
-Aunt Kate came slowly over with the boy, and laid a hand on Cassy's
-shoulder, for there was an undercurrent to the conversation which boded
-no good. The very first words uttered had plunged Abel Baragar and his
-son's wife into the midst of the difficulty which she had hoped might,
-after all, be avoided.
-
-"Come, and I'll show you your room, Cassy," she said. "It faces south,
-and you'll get the sun all day. It's like a sun-parlour. We're going to
-have supper in a couple of hours, and you must rest some first. Is the
-house warm enough for you?"
-
-The little, garish woman did not reply directly, but shook back her red
-hair and caught her boy to her breast and kissed him; then she said in
-that staccato manner which had given her words on the stage such point
-and emphasis, "Oh, this house is a'most too warm for me, Aunt Kate!"
-
-Then she moved towards the door with the grave, kindly old woman, her
-son's hand in her own.
-
-"You can see the Lumleys' place from your window, Cassy," said Black Andy
-grimly. "We got a mortgage on it, and foreclosed it, and it's ours now;
-and Jerry Lumley's stock-riding for us. Anyhow, he's better off than
-Abner, or Abner's wife."
-
-Cassy turned at the door and faced him. Instinctively she caught at some
-latent conflict with old Abel Baragar in what Black Andy had said, and
-her face softened, for it suddenly flashed into her mind that he was not
-against her.
-
-"I'm glad to be back West," she said. "It meant a lot to me when I was
-at Lumley's." She coughed a little again, but turned to the door with a
-laugh.
-
-"How long have you come to stay here--out West?" asked the old man
-furtively.
-
-"Why, there's plenty of time to think of that!" she answered brusquely,
-and she heard Black Andy laugh derisively as the door closed behind her.
-
-In a blaze of joy the sun swept down behind the southern hills, and the
-windows of Lumley's house at the Forks, catching the oblique rays,
-glittered and shone like flaming silver. Nothing of life showed, save
-the cattle here and there, creeping away to the shelter of the foothills
-for the night. The white, placid snow made a coverlet as wide as the
-vision of the eye, save where spruce and cedar trees gave a touch of
-warmth and refuge here and there. A wonderful, buoyant peace seemed to
-rest upon the wide, silent expanse. The birds of song were gone South
-over the hills, and the living wild things of the prairies had stolen
-into winter quarters. Yet, as Cassy Mavor looked out upon the exquisite
-beauty of the scene, upon the splendid outspanning of the sun along the
-hills, the deep plangent blue of the sky and the thrilling light, she saw
-a world in agony and she heard the moans of the afflicted. The sun shone
-bright on the windows of Lumley's house, but she could hear the crying of
-Abner's wife, and of old Ezra and Eliza Lumley, when their children were
-stricken or shamed; when Abel Baragar drew tighter and tighter the chains
-of the mortgage, which at last made them tenants in the house once their
-own. Only eight years ago, and all this had happened. And what had not
-happened to her, too, in those eight years!
-
-With George--reckless, useless, loving, lying George--she had left
-Lumley's with her sickness cured, as it seemed, after a long year in the
-West, and had begun life again. What sort of life had it been? "Kicking
-up her heels on the stage," as Abel Baragar had said; but, somehow, not
-as it was before she went West to give her perforated lung to the healing
-air of the plains, and to live outdoors with the men--a man's life. Then
-she had never put a curb on her tongue, or greatly on her actions, except
-that, though a hundred men quarrelled openly, or in their own minds,
-about her, no one had ever had any right to quarrel about her. With a
-tongue which made men gasp with laughter, with as comic a gift as ever
-woman had, and as equally comic a face, she had been a good-natured
-little tyrant in her way. She had given a kiss here and there, and had
-taken one, but always there had been before her mind the picture of a
-careworn woman who struggled to bring up her three children honestly, and
-without the help of charity, and, with a sigh of content and weariness,
-had died as Cassy made her first hit on the stage and her name became a
-household word. And Cassy, garish, gay, freckled, witty and whimsical,
-had never forgotten those days when her mother prayed and worked her
-heart out to do her duty by her children. Cassy Mavor had made her
-following, had won her place, was the idol of "the gallery"; and yet she
-was "of the people," as she had always been, until her first sickness
-came, and she had gone out to Lumley's, out along the foothills of the
-Rockies.
-
-What had made her fall in love with George Baragar?
-
-She could not have told, if she had been asked. He was wayward, given to
-drink at times, given also to card-playing and racing; but he had a way
-with him which few women could resist and which made men his friends; and
-he had a sense of humour akin to her own. In any case, one day she let
-him catch her up in his arms, and there was the end of it. But no, not
-the end, after all. It was only the beginning of real life for her. All
-that had gone before seemed but playing on the threshold, though it had
-meant hard, bitter hard work, and temptation, and patience, and endurance
-of many kinds. And now George was gone for ever. But George's little
-boy lay there on the bed in a soft sleep, with all his life before him.
-
-She turned from the warm window and the buoyant, inspiring scene to the
-bed. Stooping over, she kissed the sleeping boy with an abrupt
-eagerness, and made a little awkward, hungry gesture of love over him,
-and her face flushed hot with the passion of motherhood in her.
-
-"All I've got now," she murmured. "Nothing else left--nothing else at
-all."
-
-She heard the door open behind her, and she turned round. Aunt Kate was
-entering with a bowl in her hands.
-
-"I heard you moving about, and I've brought you something hot to drink,"
-she said.
-
-"That's real good of you, Aunt Kate," was the cheerful reply. "But it's
-near supper-time, and I don't need it."
-
-"It's boneset tea--for your cold," answered Aunt Kate gently, and put it
-on the high dressing-table made of a wooden box and covered with muslin.
-"For your cold, Cassy," she repeated.
-
-The little woman stood still a moment gazing at the steaming bowl, lines
-growing suddenly around her mouth, then she looked at Aunt Kate
-quizzically. "Is my cold bad--so bad that I need boneset?" she asked in
-a queer, constrained voice.
-
-"It's comforting, is boneset tea, even when there's no cold, 'specially
-when the whiskey's good, and the boneset and camomile has steeped some
-days."
-
-"Have you been steeping them some days?" Cassy asked softly, eagerly.
-
-Aunt Kate nodded, then tried to explain.
-
-"It's always good to be prepared, and I didn't know but what the cold you
-used to have might be come back," she said. "But I'm glad if it ain't,
-if that cough of yours is only one of the measly little hacks people get
-in the East, where it's so damp."
-
-Cassy was at the window again, looking out at the dying radiance of the
-sun. Her voice seemed hollow and strange and rather rough, as she said
-in reply:
-
-"It's a real cold, deep down, the same as I had nine years ago, Aunt
-Kate; and it's come to stay, I guess. That's why I came back West. But
-I couldn't have gone to Lumley's again, even if they were at the Forks
-now, for I'm too poor. I'm a back-number now. I had to give up singing
-and dancing a year ago, after George died. So I don't earn my living any
-more, and I had to come to George's father with George's boy."
-
-Aunt Kate had a shrewd mind, and it was tactful, too. She did not
-understand why Cassy, who had earned so much money all these years,
-should be so poor now, unless it was that she hadn't saved--that she and
-George hadn't saved. But, looking at the face before her, and the child
-on the bed, she was convinced that the woman was a good woman, that,
-singer and dancer as she was, there was no reason why any home should be
-closed to her, or any heart should shut its doors before her. She
-guessed a reason for this poverty of Cassy Mavor, but it only made her
-lay a hand on the little woman's shoulders and look into her eyes.
-
-"Cassy," she said gently, "you was right to come here. There's trials
-before you, but for the boy's sake you must bear them. Sophy, George's
-mother, had to bear them, and Abel was fond of her, too, in his way.
-He's stored up a lot of things to say, and he'll say them; but you'll
-keep the boy in your mind, and be patient, won't you, Cassy? You got
-rights here, and it's comfortable, and there's plenty, and the air will
-cure your lung as it did before. It did all right before, didn't it?"
-She handed the bowl of boneset tea. "Take it; it'll do you good, Cassy,"
-she added.
-
-Cassy said nothing in reply. She looked at the bed where her boy lay,
-she looked at the angular face of the woman, with its brooding
-motherliness, at the soft, grey hair, and, with a little gasp of feeling,
-she raised the bowl to her lips and drank freely. Then, putting it down,
-she said:
-
-"He doesn't mean to have us, Aunt Kate, but I'll try and keep my temper
-down. Did he ever laugh in his life?"
-
-"He laughs sometimes--kind o' laughs."
-
-"I'll make him laugh real, if I can," Cassy rejoined. "I've made a lot
-of people laugh in my time."
-
-The old woman leaned suddenly over, and drew the red, ridiculous head to
-her shoulder with a gasp of affection, and her eyes were full of tears.
-
-"Cassy," she exclaimed, "Cassy, you make me cry." Then she turned and
-hurried from the room.
-
-Three hours later the problem was solved in the big sitting-room where
-Cassy had first been received with her boy. Aunt Kate sat with her feet
-on a hassock, rocking gently and watching and listening. Black Andy was
-behind the great stove with his chair tilted back, carving the bowl of a
-pipe; the old man sat rigid by the table, looking straight before him and
-smacking his lips now and then as he was won't to do at meeting; while
-Cassy, with her chin in her hands and elbows on her knees, gazed into the
-fire and waited for the storm to break.
-
-Her little flashes of humour at dinner had not brightened things,
-and she had had an insane desire to turn cart-wheels round the room,
-so implacable and highly strained was the attitude of the master of the
-house, so unctuous was the grace and the thanksgiving before and after
-the meal. Abel Baragar had stored up his anger and his righteous
-antipathy for years, and this was the first chance he had had of visiting
-his displeasure on the woman who had "ruined" George, and who had now
-come to get "rights," which he was determined she should not have. He
-had steeled himself against seeing any good in her whatever. Self-will,
-self-pride, and self-righteousness were big in him, and so the supper had
-ended in silence, and with a little attack of coughing on the part of
-Cassy, which made her angry at herself. Then the boy had been put to
-bed, and she had come back to await the expected outburst. She could
-feel it in the air, and while her blood tingled in a desire to fight this
-tyrant to the bitter end, she thought of her boy and his future, and she
-calmed the tumult in her veins.
-
-She did not have to wait very long. The querulous voice of the old man
-broke the silence.
-
-"When be you goin' back East? What time did you fix for goin'?" he
-asked.
-
-She raised her head and looked at him squarely. "I didn't fix any time
-for going East again," she replied. "I came out West this time to stay."
-
-"I thought you was on the stage," was the rejoinder.
-
-"I've left the stage. My voice went when I got a bad cold again, and I
-couldn't stand the draughts of the theatre, and so I couldn't dance,
-either. I'm finished with the stage. I've come out here for good and
-all.
-
-"Where did you think of livin' out here?"
-
-"I'd like to have gone to Lumley's, but that's not possible, is it?
-Anyway, I couldn't afford it now. So I thought I'd stay here, if there
-was room for me."
-
-"You want to board here?"
-
-"I didn't put it to myself that way. I thought perhaps you'd be glad to
-have me. I'm handy. I can cook, I can sew, and I'm quite cheerful and
-kind. Then there's George--little George. I thought you'd like to have
-your grandson here with you."
-
-"I've lived without him--or his father--for eight years, an' I could bear
-it a while yet, mebbe."
-
-There was a half-choking sound from the old woman in the rocking-chair,
-but she did not speak, though her knitting dropped into her lap.
-
-"But if you knew us better, perhaps you'd like us better," rejoined Cassy
-gently. "We're both pretty easy to get on with, and we see the bright
-side of things. He has a wonderful disposition, has George."
-
-"I ain't goin' to like you any better," said the old man, getting to his
-feet. "I ain't goin' to give you any rights here. I've thought it out,
-and my mind's made up. You can't come it over me. You ruined my boy's
-life and sent him to his grave. He'd have lived to be an old man out
-here; but you spoiled him. You trapped him into marrying you, with your
-kicking and your comic songs, and your tricks of the stage, and you
-parted us--parted him and me for ever."
-
-"That was your fault. George wanted to make it up."
-
-"With you!" The old man's voice rose shrilly, the bitterness and passion
-of years was shooting high in the narrow confines of his mind. The
-geyser of his prejudice and antipathy was furiously alive. "To come back
-with you that ruined him and broke up my family, and made my life like
-bitter aloes! No! And if I wouldn't have him with you, do you think
-I'll have you without him? By the God of Israel, no!"
-
-Black Andy was now standing up behind the stove intently watching, his
-face grim and sombre; Aunt Kate sat with both hands gripping the arms of
-the rocker.
-
-Cassy got slowly to her feet. "I've been as straight a woman as your
-mother or your wife ever was," she said, "and all the world knows it.
-I'm poor--and I might have been rich. I was true to myself before I
-married George, and I was true to George after, and all I earned he
-shared; and I've got little left. The mining stock I bought with what
-I saved went smash, and I'm poor as I was when I started to work for
-myself. I can work awhile yet, but I wanted to see if I could fit in out
-here, and get well again, and have my boy fixed in the house of his
-grandfather. That's the way I'm placed, and that's how I came. But
-give a dog a bad name--ah, you shame your dead boy in thinking bad of me!
-I didn't ruin him. I didn't kill him. He never came to any bad through
-me. I helped him; he was happy. Why, I--" She stopped suddenly, putting
-a hand to her mouth. "Go on, say what you want to say, and let's
-understand once for all," she added with a sudden sharpness.
-
-Abel Baragar drew himself up. "Well, I say this. I'll give you three
-thousand dollars, and you can go somewhere else to live. I'll keep the
-boy here. That's what I've fixed in my mind to do. You can go, and the
-boy stays. I ain't goin' to live with you that spoiled George's life."
-
-The eyes of the woman dilated, she trembled with a sudden rush of anger,
-then stood still, staring in front of her without a word. Black Andy
-stepped from behind the stove.
-
-"You are going to stay here, Cassy," he said; "here where you have rights
-as good as any, and better than any, if it comes to that." He turned to
-his father. "You thought a lot of George," he added. "He was the apple
-of your eye. He had a soft tongue, and most people liked him; but George
-was foolish--I've known it all these years. George was pretty foolish.
-He gambled, he bet at races, he speculated--wild. You didn't know it.
-He took ten thousand dollars of your money, got from the Wonegosh farm he
-sold for you. He--"
-
-Cassy Mavor started forwards with a cry, but Black Andy waved her down.
-
-"No, I'm going to tell it. George lost your ten thousand dollars, dad,
-gambling, racing, speculating. He told her--Cassy-two days after they
-was married, and she took the money she earned on the stage, and give it
-to him to pay you back on the quiet through the bank. You never knew,
-but that's the kind of boy your son George was, and that's the kind of
-wife he had. George told me all about it when I was East six years ago."
-
-He came over to Cassy and stood beside her. "I'm standing by George's
-wife," he said, taking her hand, while she shut her eyes in her misery--
-had she not hid her husband's wrong-doing all these years? "I'm standing
-by her. If it hadn't been for that ten thousand dollars she paid back
-for George, you'd have been swamped when the Syndicate got after you,
-and we wouldn't have had Lumley's place, nor this, nor anything. I guess
-she's got rights here, dad, as good as any."
-
-The old man sank slowly into a chair. "George--George stole from me--
-stole money from me!" he whispered. His face was white. His pride and
-vainglory were broken. He was a haggard, shaken figure. His self-
-righteousness was levelled in the dust.
-
-With sudden impulse, Cassy stole over to him, and took his hand and held
-it tight.
-
-"Don't! Don't feel so bad!" she said. "He was weak and wild then.
-But he was all right afterwards. He was happy with me."
-
-"I've owed Cassy this for a good many years, dad," said Black Andy, "and
-it had to be paid. She's got better stuff in her than any Baragar."
-
- .........................
-
-An hour later, the old man said to Cassy at the door of her room: "You
-got to stay here and git well. It's yours, the same as the rest of us
---what's here."
-
-Then he went downstairs and sat with Aunt Kate by the fire.
-
-"I guess she's a good woman," he said at last. "I didn't use her right."
-
-"You've been lucky with your women-folk," Aunt Kate answered quietly.
-
-"Yes, I've been lucky," he answered. "I dunno if I deserve it. Mebbe
-not. Do you think she'll git well?"
-
-"It's a healing air out here," Aunt Kate answered, and listened to the
-wood of the house snapping in the sharp frost.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-MARCILE
-
-That the day was beautiful, that the harvest of the West had been a great
-one, that the salmon-fishing had been larger than ever before, that gold
-had been found in the Yukon, made no difference to Jacques Grassette, for
-he was in the condemned cell of Bindon Jail, living out those days which
-pass so swiftly between the verdict of the jury and the last slow walk
-with the Sheriff.
-
-He sat with his back to the stone wall, his hands on his knees, looking
-straight before him. All that met his physical gaze was another stone
-wall, but with his mind's eye he was looking beyond it into spaces far
-away. His mind was seeing a little house with dormer windows, and a
-steep roof on which the snow could not lodge in winter-time; with a
-narrow stoop in front where one could rest of an evening, the day's work
-done; the stone-and-earth oven near by in the open, where the bread for a
-family of twenty was baked; the wooden plough tipped against the fence,
-to wait the "fall" cultivation; the big iron cooler in which the sap from
-the maple trees was boiled, in the days when the snow thawed and spring
-opened the heart of the wood; the flash of the sickle and the scythe hard
-by; the fields of the little narrow farm running back from the St.
-Lawrence like a riband; and, out on the wide stream, the great rafts with
-their riverine population floating down to Michelin's mill-yards.
-
-For hours he had sat like this, unmoving, his gnarled red hands clamping
-each leg as though to hold him steady while he gazed; and he saw himself
-as a little lad, barefooted, doing chores, running after the shaggy,
-troublesome pony which would let him catch it when no one else could,
-and, with only a halter on, galloping wildly back to the farmyard, to be
-hitched up in the carriole which had once belonged to the old Seigneur.
-He saw himself as a young man, back from "the States" where he had been
-working in the mills, regarded austerely by little Father Roche, who had
-given him his first Communion--for, down in Massachusetts he had learned
-to wear his curly hair plastered down on his forehead, smoke bad cigars,
-and drink "old Bourbon," to bet and to gamble, and be a figure at horse-
-races.
-
-Then he saw himself, his money all gone, but the luck still with him,
-at Mass on the Sunday before going to the backwoods lumber-camp for the
-winter, as boss of a hundred men. He had a way with him, and he had
-brains, had Jacques Grassette, and he could manage men, as Michelin the
-lumber-king himself had found in a great river-row and strike, when
-bloodshed seemed certain. Even now the ghost of a smile played at his
-lips, as he recalled the surprise of the old habitants and of Father
-Roche when he was chosen for this responsible post; for to run a great
-lumber-camp well, hundreds of miles from civilisation, where there is no
-visible law, no restraints of ordinary organised life, and where men, for
-seven months together, never saw a woman or a child, and ate pork and
-beans, and drank white whisky, was a task of administration as difficult
-as managing a small republic new-created out of violent elements of
-society. But Michelin was right, and the old Seigneur, Sir Henri
-Robitaille, who was a judge of men, knew he was right, as did also
-Hennepin the schoolmaster, whose despair Jacques had been, for he never
-worked at his lessons as a boy, and yet he absorbed Latin and mathematics
-by some sure but unexplainable process. "Ah! if you would but work,
-Jacques, you vaurien, I would make a great man of you," Hennepin had said
-to him more than once; but this had made no impression on Jacques. It
-was more to the point that the ground-hogs and black squirrels and
-pigeons were plentiful in Casanac Woods.
-
-And so he thought as he stood at the door of the Church of St. Francis on
-that day before going "out back" to the lumber-camp. He had reached the
-summit of greatness--to command men. That was more than wealth or
-learning, and as he spoke to the old Seigneur going in to Mass, he still
-thought so, for the Seigneur's big house and the servants and the great
-gardens had no charm for him. The horses--that was another thing; but
-there would be plenty of horses in the lumber-camp; and, on the whole, he
-felt himself rather superior to the old Seigneur, who now was Lieutenant-
-Governor of the province in which lay Bindon Jail.
-
-At the door of the Church of St. Francis he had stretched himself up
-with good-natured pride, for he was by nature gregarious and friendly,
-but with a temper quick and strong, and even savage when roused; though
-Michelin the lumber-king did not know that when he engaged him as boss,
-having seen him only at the one critical time, when his superior brain
-and will saw its chance to command, and had no personal interest in the
-strife. He had been a miracle of coolness then, and his six-foot-two of
-pride and muscle was taking natural tribute at the door of the Church of
-St. Francis, where he waited till nearly everyone had entered, and Father
-Roche's voice could be heard in the Mass.
-
-Then had happened the real event of his life: a blackeyed, rose-checked
-girl went by with her mother, hurrying in to Mass. As she passed him
-their eyes met, and his blood leapt in his veins. He had never seen her
-before, and, in a sense, he had never seen any woman before. He had
-danced with many a one, and kissed a few in the old days among the flax-
-beaters, at the harvesting, in the gaieties of a wedding, and also down
-in Massachusetts. That, however, was a different thing, which he forgot
-an hour after; but this was the beginning of the world for him; for he
-knew now, of a sudden, what life was, what home meant, why "old folks"
-slaved for their children, and mothers wept when girls married or sons
-went away from home to bigger things; why in there, in at Mass, so many
-were praying for all the people, and thinking only of one. All in a
-moment it came--and stayed; and he spoke to her, to Marcile, that very
-night, and he spoke also to her father, Valloir the farrier, the next
-morning by lamplight, before he started for the woods. He would not be
-gainsaid, nor take no for an answer, nor accept, as a reason for refusal,
-that she was only sixteen, and that he did not know her, for she had been
-away with a childless aunt since she was three. That she had fourteen
-brothers and sisters who had to be fed and cared for did not seem to
-weigh with the farrier. That was an affair of le bon Dieu, and enough
-would be provided for them all as heretofore--one could make little
-difference; and though Jacques was a very good match, considering his
-prospects and his favour with the lumber-king, Valloir had a kind of fear
-of him, and could not easily promise his beloved Marcile, the flower of
-his flock, to a man of whom the priest so strongly disapproved. But it
-was a new sort of Jacques Grassette who, that morning, spoke to him
-with the simplicity and eagerness of a child; and the suddenly conceived
-gift of a pony stallion, which every man in the parish envied Jacques,
-won Valloir over; and Jacques went "away back" with the first timid kiss
-of Marcile Valloir burning on his cheek.
-
-"Well, bagosh, you are a wonder!" said Jacques' father, when he told him
-the news, and saw Jacques jump into the carriole and drive away.
-
-Here in prison, this, too, Jacques saw--this scene; and then the wedding
-in the spring, and the tour through the parishes for days together, lads
-and lasses journeying with them; and afterwards the new home with a
-bigger stoop than any other in the village, with some old gnarled crab-
-apple trees and lilac bushes, and four years of happiness, and a little
-child that died; and all the time Jacques rising in the esteem of
-Michelin the lumber-king, and sent on inspections, and to organise camps;
-for weeks, sometimes for months, away from the house behind the lilac
-bushes--and then the end of it all, sudden and crushing and unredeemable.
-
-Jacques came back one night and found the house empty. Marcile had gone
-to try her luck with another man.
-
-That was the end of the upward career of Jacques Grassette. He went out
-upon a savage hunt which brought him no quarry, for the man and the woman
-had disappeared as completely as though they had been swallowed by the
-sea. And here, at last, he was waiting for the day when he must settle
-a bill for a human life taken in passion and rage.
-
-His big frame seemed out of place in the small cell, and the watcher
-sitting near him, to whom he had not addressed a word nor replied to a
-question since the watching began, seemed an insignificant factor in the
-scene. Never had a prisoner been more self-contained, or rejected more
-completely all those ministrations of humanity which relieve the horrible
-isolation of the condemned cell. Grassette's isolation was complete. He
-lived in a dream, did what little there was to do in a dark abstraction,
-and sat hour after hour, as he was sitting now, piercing, with a brain at
-once benumbed to all outer things and afire with inward things, those
-realms of memory which are infinite in a life of forty years.
-
-"Sacre!" he muttered at last, and a shiver seemed to pass through him
-from head to foot; then an ugly and evil oath fell from his lips, which
-made his watcher shrink back appalled, for he also was a Catholic, and
-had been chosen of purpose, in the hope that he might have an influence
-on this revolted soul. It had, however, been of no use, and Grassette
-had refused the advances and ministrations of the little good priest,
-Father Laflamme, who had come from the coast of purpose to give him the
-offices of the Church. Silent, obdurate, sullen, he had looked the
-priest straight in the face and had said in broken English, "Non, I pay
-my bill. Nom de diable, I will say my own Mass, light my own candle, go
-my own way. I have too much."
-
-Now, as he sat glooming, after his outbreak of oaths, there came a
-rattling noise at the door, the grinding of a key in the lock, the
-shooting of bolts, and a face appeared at the little wicket in the door.
-Then the door opened and the Sheriff stepped inside, accompanied by a
-white-haired, stately old man. At sight of this second figure--the
-Sheriff had come often before, and would come for one more doleful walk
-with him--Grassette started. His face, which had never whitened in all
-the dismal and terrorising doings of the capture and the trial and
-sentence, though it had flushed with rage more than once, now turned a
-little pale, for it seemed as if this old man had stepped out of the
-visions which had just passed before his eyes.
-
-"His Honour, the Lieutenant-Governor, Sir Henri Robitaille, has come to
-speak with you. . . . Stand up," the Sheriff added sharply, as
-Grassette kept his seat.
-
-Grassette's face flushed with anger, for the prison had not broken his
-spirits; then he got up slowly. "I not stand up for you," he growled at
-the Sheriff; "I stand up for him." He jerked his head towards Sir Henri
-Robitaille. This grand Seigneur, with Michelin, had believed in him in
-those far-off days which he had just been seeing over again, and all his
-boyhood and young manhood was rushing back on him. But now it was the
-Governor who turned pale, seeing who the criminal was.
-
-"Jacques Grassette!" he cried in consternation and emotion, for under
-another name the murderer had been tried and sentenced, nor had his
-identity been established--the case was so clear, the defence had been
-perfunctory, and Quebec was very far away.
-
-"M'sieu'!" was the respectful response, and Grassette's fingers
-twitched.
-
-"It was my sister's son you killed, Grassette," said the Governor in a
-low, strained voice.
-
-"Nom de Dieu!" said Grassette hoarsely.
-
-"I did not know, Grassette," the Governor went on "I did not know it was
-you."
-
-"Why did you come, m'sieu'?"
-
-"Call him 'your Honour,"' said the Sheriff sharply. Grassette's face
-hardened, and his look turned upon the Sheriff was savage and forbidding.
-"I will speak as it please me. Who are you? What do I care? To hang
-me--that is your business; but, for the rest, you spik to me differen'.
-Who are you? Your father kep' a tavern for thieves, vous savez bien!"
-It was true that the Sheriff's father had had no savoury reputation in
-the West.
-
-The Governor turned his head away in pain and trouble, for the man's rage
-was not a thing to see--and they both came from the little parish of St.
-Francis, and had passed many an hour together.
-
-"Never mind, Grassette," he said gently. "Call me what you will. You've
-got no feeling against me; and I can say with truth that I don't want
-your life for the life you took."
-
-Grassette's breast heaved. "He put me out of my work, the man I kill.
-He pass the word against me, he hunt me out of the mountains, he call--
-tete de diable! he call me a name so bad. Everything swim in my head,
-and I kill him."
-
-The Governor made a protesting gesture. "I understand. I am glad his
-mother was dead. But do you not think how sudden it was? Now here, in
-the thick of life, then, out there, beyond this world in the darkin
-purgatory."
-
-The brave old man had accomplished what everyone else, priest, lawyer,
-Sheriff and watcher, had failed to do: he had shaken Grassette out of his
-blank isolation and obdurate unrepentance, had touched some chord of
-recognisable humanity.
-
-"It is done--well, I pay for it," responded Grassette, setting his jaw.
-"It is two deaths for me. Waiting and remembering, and then with the
-Sheriff there the other--so quick, and all."
-
-The Governor looked at him for some moments without speaking. The
-Sheriff intervened again officiously.
-
-"His Honour has come to say something important to you," he remarked
-oracularly.
-
-"Hold you--does he need a Sheriff to tell him when to spik?" was
-Grassette's surly comment. Then he turned to the Governor. "Let us
-speak in French," he said in patois. "This rope-twister will not
-understan'. He is no good--I spit at him."
-
-The Governor nodded, and, despite the Sheriff's protest, they spoke in
-French, Grassette with his eyes intently fixed on the other, eagerly
-listening.
-
-"I have come," said the Governor, "to say to you, Grassette, that you
-have still a chance of life."
-
-He paused, and Grassette's face took on a look of bewilderment and vague
-anxiety. A chance of life--what did it mean?
-
-"Reprieve?" he asked in a hoarse voice.
-
-The Governor shook his head. "Not yet; but there is a chance. Something
-has happened. A man's life is in danger, or it may be he is dead; but
-more likely he is alive. You took a life; perhaps you can save one now.
-Keeley's Gulch--the mine there."
-
-"They have found it--gold?" asked Grassette, his eyes staring. He was
-forgetting for a moment where and what he was.
-
-"He went to find it, the man whose life is in danger. He had heard from
-a trapper who had been a miner once. While he was there, a landslip
-came, and the opening to the mine was closed up--"
-
-"There were two ways in. Which one did he take?" cried Grassette.
-
-"The only one he could take, the only one he or anyone else knew. You
-know the other way in--you only, they say."
-
-"I found it--the easier, quick way in; a year ago I found it."
-
-"Was it near the other entrance?" Grassette shook his head. "A mile
-away."
-
-"If the man is alive--and we think he is--you are the only person that
-can save him. I have telegraphed the Government. They do not promise,
-but they will reprieve, and save your life, if you find the man."
-
-"Alive or dead?"
-
-"Alive or dead, for the act would be the same. I have an order to take
-you to the Gulch, if you will go; and I am sure that you will have your
-life, if you do it. I will promise--ah yes, Grassette, but it shall be
-so! Public opinion will demand it. You will do it?"
-
-"To go free--altogether?"
-
-"Well, but if your life is saved, Grassette?"
-
-The dark face flushed, then grew almost repulsive again in its
-sullenness.
-
-"Life--and this, in prison, shut in year after year. To do always what
-some one else wills, to be a slave to a warder. To have men like that
-over me that have been a boss of men--wasn't it that drove me to kill?--
-to be treated like dirt. And to go on with this, while outside there is
-free life, and to go where you will at your own price-no! What do I care
-for life! What is it to me! To live like this--ah, I would break my
-head against these stone walls, I would choke myself with my own hands!
-If I stayed here, I would kill again, I would kill--kill."
-
-"Then to go free altogether--that would be the wish of all the world,
-if you save this man's life, if it can be saved. Will you not take the
-chance? We all have to die some time or other, Grassette, some sooner,
-some later; and when you go, will you not want to take to God in your
-hands a life saved for a life taken? Have you forgotten God, Grassette?
-We used to remember Him in the Church of St. Francis down there at home."
-
-There was a moment's silence, in which Grassette's head was thrust
-forwards, his eyes staring into space. The old Seigneur had touched a
-vulnerable corner in his nature.
-
-Presently he said in a low voice: "To be free altogether. . . . What
-is his name? Who is he?"
-
-"His name is Bignold," the Governor answered. He turned to the Sheriff
-inquiringly. "That is it, is it not?" he asked in English again.
-
-"James Tarran Bignold," answered the Sheriff.
-
-The effect of these words upon Grassette was remarkable. His body
-appeared to stiffen, his face became rigid, he stared at the Governor
-blankly, appalled, the colour left his face, and his mouth opened with a
-curious and revolting grimace. The others drew back, startled, and
-watched him.
-
-"Sang de Dieu!" he murmured at last, with a sudden gesture of misery and
-rage.
-
-Then the Governor understood: he remembered that the name just given by
-the Sheriff and himself was the name of the Englishman who had carried
-off Grassette's wife years ago. He stepped forwards and was about to
-speak, but changed his mind. He would leave it all to Grassette; he
-would not let the Sheriff know the truth, unless Grassette himself
-disclosed the situation. He looked at Grassette with a look of poignant
-pity and interest combined. In his own placid life he had never had any
-tragic happening, his blood had run coolly, his days had been blessed by
-an urbane fate; such scenes as this were but a spectacle to him; there
-was no answering chord of human suffering in his own breast, to make him
-realise what Grassette was undergoing now; but he had read widely, he had
-been an acute observer of the world and its happenings, and he had a
-natural human sympathy which had made many a man and woman eternally
-grateful to him.
-
-What would Grassette do? It was a problem which had no precedent, and
-the solution would be a revelation of the human mind and heart. What
-would the man do?
-
-"Well, what is all this, Grassette?" asked the Sheriff brusquely. His
-official and officious intervention, behind which was the tyranny of the
-little man, given a power which he was incapable of wielding wisely,
-would have roused Grassette to a savage reply a half-hour before, but now
-it was met by a contemptuous wave of the hand, and Grassette kept his
-eyes fixed on the Governor.
-
-"James Tarran Bignold!" Grassette said harshly, with eyes that searched
-the Governor's face; but they found no answering look there. The
-Governor, then, did not remember that tragedy of his home and hearth, and
-the man who had made of him an Ishmael. Still, Bignold had been almost a
-stranger in the parish, and it was not curious if the Governor had
-forgotten.
-
-"Bignold!" he repeated, but the Governor gave no response.
-
-"Yes, Bignold is his name, Grassette," said the Sheriff. "You took a
-life, and now, if you save one, that'll balance things. As the Governor
-says, there'll be a reprieve anyhow. It's pretty near the day, and this
-isn't a bad world to kick in, so long as you kick with one leg on the
-ground, and--"
-
-The Governor hastily intervened upon the Sheriff's brutal remarks.
-"There is no time to be lost, Grassette. He has been ten days in the
-mine."
-
-Grassette's was not a slow brain. For a man of such physical and bodily
-bulk, he had more talents than are generally given. If his brain had
-been slower, his hand also would have been slower to strike. But his
-intelligence had been surcharged with hate these many years, and since
-the day he had been deserted, it had ceased to control his actions--a
-passionate and reckless wilfulness had governed it. But now, after the
-first shock and stupefaction, it seemed to go back to where it was before
-Marcile went from him, gather up the force and intelligence it had then,
-and come forwards again to this supreme moment, with all that life's
-harsh experiences had done for it, with the education that misery and
-misdoing give. Revolutions are often the work of instants, not years,
-and the crucial test and problem by which Grassette was now faced had
-lifted him into a new atmosphere, with a new capacity alive in him.
-A moment ago his eyes had been bloodshot and swimming with hatred and
-passion; now they grew, almost suddenly, hard and lurking and quiet,
-with a strange, penetrating force and inquiry in them.
-
-"Bignold--where does he come from? What is he?" he asked the Sheriff.
-
-"He is an Englishman; he's only been out here a few months. He's been
-shooting and prospecting; but he's a better shooter than prospector.
-He's a stranger; that's why all the folks out here want to save him if
-it's possible. It's pretty hard dying in a strange land far away from
-all that's yours. Maybe he's got a wife waiting for him over there."
-
-"Nom de Dieu!" said Grassette with suppressed malice, under his breath.
-
-"Maybe there's a wife waiting for him, and there's her to think of. The
-West's hospitable, and this thing has taken hold of it; the West wants to
-save this stranger, and it's waiting for you, Grassette, to do its work
-for it, you being the only man that can do it, the only one that knows
-the other secret way into Keeley's Gulch. Speak right out, Grassette.
-It's your chance for life. Speak out quick."
-
-The last three words were uttered in the old slave-driving tone, though
-the earlier part of the speech had been delivered oracularly, and had
-brought again to Grassette's eyes the reddish, sullen look which had made
-them, a little while before, like those of some wounded, angered animal
-at bay; but it vanished slowly, and there was silence for a moment. The
-Sheriff's words had left no vestige of doubt in Grassette's mind. This
-Bignold was the man who had taken Marcile away, first to the English
-province, then into the States, where he had lost track of them, then
-over to England. Marcile--where was Marcile now?
-
-In Keeley's Gulch was the man who could tell him, the man who had ruined
-his home and his life. Dead or alive, he was in Keeley's Gulch, the man
-who knew where Marcile was; and if he knew where Marcile was, and if she
-was alive, and he was outside these prison walls, what would he do to
-her? And if he was outside these prison walls, and in the Gulch,
-and the man was there alive before him, what would he do?
-
-Outside these prison walls-to be out there in the sun, where life would
-be easier to give up, if it had to be given up! An hour ago he had been
-drifting on a sea of apathy, and had had his fill of life. An hour ago
-he had had but one desire, and that was to die fighting, and he had even
-pictured to himself a struggle in this narrow cell where he would compel
-them to kill him, and so in any case let him escape the rope. Now he
-was suddenly brought face to face with the great central issue of his
-life, and the end, whatever that end might be, could not be the same in
-meaning, though it might be the same concretely. If he elected to let
-things be, then Bignold would die out there in the Gulch, starved,
-anguished, and alone. If he went, he could save his own life by saving
-Bignold, if Bignold was alive; or he could go--and not save Bignold's
-life or his own! What would he do?
-
-The Governor watched him with a face controlled to quietness, but with
-an anxiety which made him pale in spite of himself.
-
-"What will you do, Grassette?" he said at last in a low voice, and with
-a step forwards to him. "Will you not help to clear your conscience by
-doing this thing? You don't want to try and spite the world by not doing
-it. You can make a lot of your life yet, if you are set free. Give
-yourself, and give the world a chance. You haven't used it right. Try
-again."
-
-Grassette imagined that the Governor did not remember who Bignold was,
-and that this was an appeal against his despair, and against revenging
-himself on the community which had applauded his sentence. If he went
-to the Gulch, no one would know or could suspect the true situation,
-everyone would be unprepared for that moment when Bignold and he would
-face each other--and all that would happen then.
-
-Where was Marcile? Only Bignold knew. Alive or dead? Only Bignold
-knew.
-
-"Bien, I will do it, m'sieu'," he said to the Governor. "I am to go
-alone--eh?"
-
-The Sheriff shook his head. "No, two warders will go with you--and
-myself."
-
-A strange look passed over Grassette's face. He seemed to hesitate for
-a moment, then he said again: "Bon, I will go."
-
-"Then there is, of course, the doctor," said the Sheriff.
-
-"Bon," said Grassette. "What time is it?" "Twelve o'clock," answered
-the Sheriff, and made a motion to the warder to open the door of the
-cell.
-
-"By sundown!" Grassette said, and he turned with a determined gesture to
-leave the cell.
-
-At the gate of the prison, a fresh, sweet air caught his face.
-Involuntarily he drew in a great draught of it, and his eyes seemed
-to gaze out, almost wonderingly, over the grass and the trees to the
-boundless horizon. Then he became aware of the shouts of the crowd--
-shouts of welcome. This same crowd had greeted him with shouts of
-execration when he had left the Court House after his sentence. He stood
-still for a moment and looked at them, as it were only half comprehending
-that they were cheering him now, and that voices were saying, "Bravo,
-Grassette! Save him, and we'll save you."
-
-Cheer upon cheer, but he took no notice. He walked like one in a dream,
-a long, strong step. He turned neither to left nor right, not even when
-the friendly voice of one who had worked with him bade him: "Cheer up,
-and do the trick." He was busy working out a problem which no one but
-himself could solve. He was only half conscious of his surroundings; he
-was moving in a kind of detached world of his own, where the warders and
-the Sheriff and those who followed were almost abstract and unreal
-figures. He was living with a past which had been everlasting distant,
-and had now become a vivid and buffeting present. He returned no answers
-to the questions addressed to him, and would not talk, save when for a
-little while they dismounted from their horses, and sat under the shade
-of a great ash-tree for a few moments, and snatched a mouthful of
-luncheon. Then he spoke a little and asked some questions, but lapsed
-into a moody silence afterwards. His life and nature were being passed
-through a fiery crucible. In all the years that had gone, he had had an
-ungovernable desire to kill both Bignold and Marcile if he ever met them,
-a primitive, savage desire to blot them out of life and being. His
-fingers had ached for Marcile's neck, that neck in which he had lain his
-face so often in the transient, unforgettable days of their happiness.
-If she was alive now--if she was still alive! Her story was hidden there
-in Keeley's Gulch with Bignold, and he was galloping hard to reach his
-foe. As he went, by some strange alchemy of human experience, by that
-new birth of his brain, the world seemed different from what it had ever
-been before, at least since the day when he had found an empty home and a
-shamed hearthstone. He got a new feeling toward it, and life appealed to
-him as a thing that might have been so well worth living. But since that
-was not to be, then he would see what he could do to get compensation for
-all that he had lost, to take toll for the thing that had spoiled him,
-and given him a savage nature and a raging temper, which had driven him
-at last to kill a man who, in no real sense, had injured him.
-
-Mile after mile they journeyed, a troop of interested people coming
-after, the sun and the clear sweet air, the waving grass, the occasional
-clearings where settlers had driven in the tent-pegs of home, the forest
-now and then swallowing them, the mountains rising above them like a
-blank wall, and then suddenly opening out before them; and the rustle and
-scamper of squirrels and coyotes; and over their heads the whistle of
-birds, the slow beat of wings of great wild-fowl. The tender sap of
-youth was in this glowing and alert new world, and, by sudden contrast
-with the prison walls which he had just left behind, the earth seemed
-recreated, unfamiliar, compelling and companionable. Strange that in all
-the years that had been since he had gone back to his abandoned home to
-find Marcile gone, the world had had no beauty, no lure for him. In the
-splendour of it all, he had only raged and stormed, hating his fellowman,
-waiting, however hopelessly, for the day when he should see Marcile and
-the man who had taken her from him. And yet now, under the degradation
-of his crime and its penalty, and the unmanning influence of being the
-helpless victim of the iron power of the law, rigid, ugly and
-demoralising--now with the solution of his life's great problem here
-before him in the hills, with the man for whom he had waited so long
-caverned in the earth, but a hand-reach away, as it were, his wrongs had
-taken a new manifestation in him, and the thing that kept crying out in
-him every moment was, Where is Marcile?
-
-It was four o'clock when they reached the pass which only Grassette knew,
-the secret way into the Gulch. There was two hours' walking through the
-thick, primeval woods, where few had ever been, except the ancient tribes
-which had once lorded it here; then came a sudden drop into the earth,
-a short travel through a dim cave, and afterward a sheer wall of stone
-enclosing a ravine where the rocks on either side nearly met overhead.
-
-Here Grassette gave the signal to shout aloud, and the voice of the
-Sheriff called out: "Hello, Bignold!
-
-"Hello! Hello, Bignold! Are you there?--Hello!" His voice rang out
-clear and piercing, and then came a silence-a long, anxious silence.
-Again the voice rang out: "Hello! Hello-o-o! Bignold! Bigno-o-ld!"
-
-They strained their ears. Grassette was flat on the ground, his ear to
-the earth. Suddenly he got to his feet, his face set, his eyes
-glittering.
-
-"He is there beyon'--I hear him," he said, pointing farther down the
-Gulch. "Water--he is near it."
-
-"We heard nothing," said the Sheriff, "not a sound." "I hear ver' good.
-He is alive. I hear him--so," responded Grassette; and his face had a
-strange, fixed look which the others interpreted to be agitation at the
-thought that he had saved his own life by finding Bignold--and alive;
-which would put his own salvation beyond doubt.
-
-He broke away from them and hurried down the Gulch. The others followed
-hard after, the Sheriff and the warders close behind; but he outstripped
-them.
-
-Suddenly he stopped and stood still, looking at something on the ground.
-They saw him lean forwards and his hands stretch out with a fierce
-gesture. It was the attitude of a wild animal ready to spring.
-
-They were beside him in an instant, and saw at his feet Bignold worn to a
-skeleton, with eyes starting from his head, and fixed on Grassette in
-agony and stark fear.
-
-The Sheriff stooped to lift Bignold up, but Grassette waved them back
-with a fierce gesture, standing over the dying man.
-
-"He spoil my home. He break me--I have my bill to settle here," he said
-in a voice hoarse and harsh. "It is so? It is so--eh? Spik!" he said
-to Bignold.
-
-"Yes," came feebly from the shrivelled lips. "Water! Water!" the
-wretched man gasped. "I'm dying!"
-
-A sudden change came over Grassette. "Water--queeck!" he said.
-
-The Sheriff stooped and held a hatful of water to Bignold's lips, while
-another poured brandy from a flask into the water.
-
-Grassette watched them eagerly. When the dying man had swallowed a
-little of the spirit and water, Grassette leaned over him again, and the
-others drew away. They realised that these two men had an account to
-settle, and there was no need for Grassette to take revenge, for Bignold
-was going fast.
-
-"You stan' far back," said Grassette, and they fell away.
-
-Then he stooped down to the sunken, ashen face, over which death was fast
-drawing its veil. "Marcile--where is Marcile?" he asked.
-
-The dying man's lips opened. "God forgive me--God save my soul!" he
-whispered. He was not concerned for Grassette now.
-
-"Queeck-queeck, where is Marcile?" Grassette said sharply. "Come back,
-Bignold. Listen--where is Marcile?"
-
-He strained to hear the answer. Bignold was going, but his eyes opened
-again, however, for this call seemed to pierce to his soul as it
-struggled to be free.
-
-"Ten years--since--I saw her," he whispered. "Good girl--Marcile. She
-loves you, but she--is afraid." He tried to say something more, but his
-tongue refused its office.
-
-"Where is she-spik!" commanded Grassette in a tone of pleading and agony
-now.
-
-Once more the flying spirit came back. A hand made a motion towards his
-pocket, then lay still.
-
-Grassette felt hastily in the dead man's pocket, drew forth a letter,
-and with half-blinded eyes read the few lines it contained. It was dated
-from a hospital in New York, and was signed: "Nurse Marcile."
-
-With a moan of relief Grassette stood staring at the dead man. When the
-others came to him again, his lips were moving, but they did not hear
-what he was saying. They took up the body and moved away with it up the
-ravine.
-
-"It's all right, Grassette. You'll be a freeman," said the Sheriff.
-
-Grassette did not answer. He was thinking how long it would take him to
-get to Marcile, when he was free.
-
-He had a true vision of beginning life again with Marcile.
-
-
-
-
-ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
-
-Being a man of very few ideas, he cherished those he had
-Self-will, self-pride, and self-righteousness were big in him
-Tyranny of the little man, given a power
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NORTHERN LIGHTS
-
-By Gilbert Parker
-
-Volume 4.
-
-
-
-A MAN, A FAMINE, AND A HEATHEN BOY
-THE HEALING SPRINGS AND THE PIONEERS
-THE LITTLE WIDOW OF JANSEN
-WATCHING THE RISE OF ORION
-
-
-
-
-A MAN, A FAMINE, AND A HEATHEN BOY
-
-Athabasca in the Far North is the scene of this story--Athabasca, one of
-the most beautiful countries in the world in summer, but a cold, bare
-land in winter. Yet even in winter it is not so bleak and bitter as the
-districts south-west of it, for the Chinook winds steal through from the
-Pacific and temper the fierceness of the frozen Rockies. Yet forty and
-fifty degrees below zero is cold after all, and July strawberries in this
-wild North land are hardly compensation for seven months of ice and snow,
-no matter how clear and blue the sky, how sweet the sun during its short
-journey in the day. Some days, too, the sun may not be seen even when
-there is no storm, because of the fine, white, powdered frost in the air.
-
-A day like this is called a poudre day; and woe to the man who tempts it
-unthinkingly, because the light makes the delicate mist of frost shine
-like silver. For that powder bites the skin white in short order, and
-sometimes reckless men lose ears, or noses, or hands under its sharp
-caress. But when it really storms in that Far North, then neither man
-nor beast should be abroad--not even the Eskimo dogs; though times and
-seasons can scarcely be chosen when travelling in Athabasca, for a storm
-comes unawares. Upon the plains you will see a cloud arising, not in the
-sky, but from the ground--a billowy surf of drifting snow; then another
-white billow from the sky will sweep down and meet it, and you are caught
-between.
-
-He who went to Athabasca to live a generation ago had to ask himself if
-the long winter, spent chiefly indoors, with, maybe, a little trading
-with the Indians, meagre sport, and scant sun, savages and half-breeds
-the only companions, and out of all touch with the outside world, letters
-coming but once a year; with frozen fish and meat, always the same, as
-the staple items in a primitive fare; with danger from starvation and
-marauding tribes; with endless monotony, in which men sometimes go mad--
-he had to ask himself if these were to be cheerfully endured because, in
-the short summer, the air is heavenly, the rivers and lakes are full of
-fish, the flotilla of canoes of the fur-hunters is pouring down, and all
-is gaiety and pleasant turmoil; because there is good shooting in the
-autumn, and the smell of the land is like a garden, and hardy fruits and
-flowers are at hand.
-
-That is a question which was asked William Rufus Holly once upon a time.
-
-William Rufus Holly, often called "Averdoopoy," sometimes "Sleeping
-Beauty," always Billy Rufus, had had a good education. He had been to
-high school and to college, and he had taken one or two prizes en route
-to graduation; but no fame travelled with him, save that he was the
-laziest man of any college year for a decade. He loved his little
-porringer, which is to say that he ate a good deal; and he loved to read
-books, which is not to say that he loved study; he hated getting out of
-bed, and he was constantly gated for morning chapel. More than once he
-had sweetly gone to sleep over his examination papers. This is not to
-say that he failed at his examinations--on the contrary, he always
-succeeded; but he only did enough to pass and no more; and he did not
-wish to do more than pass. His going to sleep at examinations was
-evidence that he was either indifferent or self-indulgent, and it
-certainly showed that he was without nervousness. He invariably roused
-himself, or his professor roused him, a half-hour before the papers
-should be handed in, and, as it were by a mathematical calculation,
-he had always done just enough to prevent him being plucked.
-
-He slept at lectures, he slept in hall, he slept as he waited his turn
-to go to the wicket in a cricket match, and he invariably went to sleep
-afterwards. He even did so on the day he had made the biggest score,
-in the biggest game ever played between his college and the pick of the
-country; but he first gorged himself with cake and tea. The day he took
-his degree he had to be dragged from a huge grandfather's chair, and
-forced along in his ragged gown--"ten holes and twelve tatters"--to the
-function in the convocation hall. He looked so fat and shiny, so balmy
-and sleepy when he took his degree and was handed his prize for a poem on
-Sir John Franklin, that the public laughed, and the college men in the
-gallery began singing:
-
- "Bye O, my baby,
- Father will come to you soo-oon!"
-
-He seemed not to care, but yawned in his hand as he put his prize book
-under his arm through one of the holes in his gown, and in two minutes
-was back in his room, and in another five was fast asleep.
-
-It was the general opinion that William Rufus Holly, fat, yellow-haired,
-and twenty-four years old, was doomed to failure in life, in spite of the
-fact that he had a little income of a thousand dollars a year, and had
-made a century in an important game of cricket. Great, therefore, was
-the surprise of the college, and afterward of the Province, when, at the
-farewell dinner of the graduates, Sleeping Beauty announced, between his
-little open-eyed naps, that he was going Far North as a missionary.
-
-At first it was thought he was joking, but when at last, in his calm and
-dreamy look, they saw he meant what he said, they rose and carried him
-round the room on a chair, making impromptu songs as they travelled.
-They toasted Billy Rufus again and again, some of them laughing till they
-cried at the thought of Averdoopoy going to the Arctic regions. But an
-uneasy seriousness fell upon these "beautiful, bountiful, brilliant
-boys," as Holly called them later, when in a simple, honest, but indolent
-speech he said he had applied for ordination.
-
-Six months later William Rufus Holly, a deacon in holy orders, journeyed
-to Athabasca in the Far North. On his long journey there was plenty of
-time to think. He was embarked on a career which must for ever keep him
-in the wilds; for very seldom indeed does a missionary of the North ever
-return to the crowded cities or take a permanent part in civilised life.
-
-What the loneliness of it would be he began to feel, as for hours and
-hours he saw no human being on the plains; in the thrilling stillness of
-the night; in fierce storms in the woods, when his half-breed guides bent
-their heads to meet the wind and rain, and did not speak for hours; in
-the long, adventurous journey on the river by day, in the cry of the
-plaintive loon at night; in the scant food for every meal. Yet what the
-pleasure would be he felt in the joyous air, the exquisite sunshine, the
-flocks of wild-fowl flying North, honking on their course; in the song of
-the half-breeds as they ran the rapids. Of course, he did not think
-these things quite as they are written here--all at once and all
-together; but in little pieces from time to time, feeling them rather
-than saying them to himself.
-
-At least he did understand how serious a thing it was, his going as a
-missionary into the Far North. Why did he do it? Was it a whim, or the
-excited imagination of youth, or that prompting which the young often
-have to make the world better? Or was it a fine spirit of adventure with
-a good heart behind it? Perhaps it was a little of all these; but there
-was also something more, and it was to his credit.
-
-Lazy as William Rufus Holly had been at school and college, he had still
-thought a good deal, even when he seemed only sleeping; perhaps he
-thought more because he slept so much, because he studied little and read
-a great deal. He always knew what everybody thought--that he would never
-do anything but play cricket till he got too heavy to run, and then would
-sink into a slothful, fat, and useless middle and old age; that his life
-would be a failure. And he knew that they were right; that if he stayed
-where he could live an easy life, a fat and easy life he would lead; that
-in a few years he would be good for nothing except to eat and sleep--no
-more. One day, waking suddenly from a bad dream of himself so fat as to
-be drawn about on a dray by monstrous fat oxen with rings through their
-noses, led by monkeys, he began to wonder what he should do--the hardest
-thing to do; for only the hardest life could possibly save him from
-failure, and, in spite of all, he really did want to make something of
-his life. He had been reading the story of Sir John Franklin's Arctic
-expedition, and all at once it came home to him that the only thing for
-him to do was to go to the Far North and stay there, coming back about
-once every ten years to tell the people in the cities what was being done
-in the wilds. Then there came the inspiration to write his poem on Sir
-John Franklin, and he had done so, winning the college prize for poetry.
-But no one had seen any change in him in those months; and, indeed, there
-had been little or no change, for he had an equable and practical, though
-imaginative, disposition, despite his avoirdupois, and his new purpose
-did not stir him yet from his comfortable sloth.
-
-And in all the journey West and North he had not been stirred greatly
-from his ease of body, for the journey was not much harder than playing
-cricket every day, and there were only the thrill of the beautiful air,
-the new people, and the new scenes to rouse him. As yet there was no
-great responsibility. He scarcely realised what his life must be, until
-one particular day. Then Sleeping Beauty waked wide up, and from that
-day lost the name. Till then he had looked and borne himself like any
-other traveller, unrecognised as a parson or "mikonaree." He had not had
-prayers in camp en route, he had not preached, he had held no meetings.
-He was as yet William Rufus Holly, the cricketer, the laziest dreamer of
-a college decade. His religion was simple and practical; he had never
-had any morbid ideas; he had lived a healthy, natural, and honourable
-life, until he went for a mikonaree, and if he had no cant, he had not a
-clear idea of how many-sided, how responsible, his life must be--until
-that one particular day. This is what happened then.
-
-From Fort O'Call, an abandoned post of the Hudson's Bay Company on the
-Peace River, nearly the whole tribe of the Athabasca Indians in
-possession of the post now had come up the river, with their chief,
-Knife-in-the-Wind, to meet the mikonaree. Factors of the Hudson's Bay
-Company, coureurs de bois, and voyageurs had come among them at times,
-and once the renowned Father Lacombe, the Jesuit priest, had stayed with
-them three months; but never to this day had they seen a Protestant
-mikonaree, though once a factor, noted for his furious temper, his powers
-of running, and his generosity, had preached to them. These men,
-however, were both over fifty years old. The Athabascas did not hunger
-for the Christian religion, but a courier from Edmonton had brought them
-word that a mikonaree was coming to their country to stay, and they put
-off their stoical manner and allowed themselves the luxury of curiosity.
-That was why even the squaws and papooses came up the river with the
-braves, all wondering if the stranger had brought gifts with him, all
-eager for their shares; for it had been said by the courier of the tribe
-that "Oshondonto," their name for the newcomer, was bringing mysterious
-loads of well-wrapped bales and skins. Upon a point below the first
-rapids of the Little Manitou they waited with their camp-fires burning
-and their pipe of peace.
-
-When the canoes bearing Oshondonto and his voyageurs shot the rapids to
-the song of the river,
-
- "En roulant, ma boule roulant,
- En roulant, ma boule!"
-
-with the shrill voices of the boatmen rising to meet the cry of the
-startled water-fowl, the Athabascas crowded to the high banks. They
-grunted "How!" in greeting, as the foremost canoe made for the shore.
-
-But if surprise could have changed the countenances of Indians, these
-Athabascas would not have known one another when the missionary stepped
-out upon the shore. They had looked to see a grey-bearded man like the
-chief factor who quarrelled and prayed; but they found instead a round-
-faced, clean-shaven youth, with big, good-natured eyes, yellow hair, and
-a roundness of body like that of a month-old bear's cub. They expected
-to find a man who, like the factor, could speak their language, and they
-found a cherub sort of youth who talked only English, French, and
-Chinook--that common language of the North--and a few words of their own
-language which he had learned on the way.
-
-Besides, Oshondonto was so absent-minded at the moment, so absorbed in
-admiration of the garish scene before him, that he addressed the chief in
-French, of which Knife-in-the-Wind knew but the one word cache, which all
-the North knows.
-
-But presently William Rufus Holly recovered himself, and in stumbling
-Chinook made himself understood. Opening a bale, he brought out beads
-and tobacco and some bright red flannel, and two hundred Indians sat
-round him and grunted "How!" and received his gifts with little comment.
-Then the pipe of peace went round, and Oshondonto smoked it becomingly.
-
-But he saw that the Indians despised him for his youth, his fatness, his
-yellow hair as soft as a girl's, his cherub face, browned though it was
-by the sun and weather.
-
-As he handed the pipe to Knife-in-the-Wind, an Indian called Silver
-Tassel, with a cruel face, said grimly:
-
-"Why does Oshondonto travel to us?"
-
-William Rufus Holly's eyes steadied on those of the Indian as he replied
-in Chinook: "To teach the way to Manitou the Mighty, to tell the
-Athabascas of the Great Chief who died to save the world."
-
-"The story is told in many ways; which is right? There was the factor,
-Word of Thunder. There is the song they sing at Edmonton--I have heard."
-
-"The Great Chief is the same Chief," answered the missionary. "If you
-tell of Fort O'Call, and Knife-in-the-Wind tells of Fort O'Call, he and
-you will speak different words, and one will put in one thing and one
-will leave out another; men's tongues are different. But Fort O'Call is
-the-same, and the Great Chief is the same."
-
-"It was a long time ago," said Knife-in-the-Wind sourly, "many thousand
-moons, as the pebbles in the river, the years."
-
-"It is the same world, and it is the same Chief, and it was to save us,"
-answered William Rufus Holly, smiling, yet with a fluttering heart, for
-the first test of his life had come.
-
-In anger Knife-in-the-Wind thrust an arrow into the ground and said:
-
-"How can the white man who died thousands of moons ago in a far country
-save the red man to-day?"
-
-"A strong man should bear so weak a tale," broke in Silver Tassel
-ruthlessly. "Are we children that the Great Chief sends a child as
-messenger?"
-
-For a moment Billy Rufus did not know how to reply, and in the pause
-Knife-in-the-Wind broke in two pieces the arrow he had thrust in the
-ground in token of displeasure.
-
-Suddenly, as Oshondonto was about to speak, Silver Tassel sprang to his
-feet, seized in his arms a lad of twelve who was standing near, and
-running to the bank, dropped him into the swift current.
-
-"If Oshondonto be not a child, let him save the lad," said Silver Tassel,
-standing on the brink.
-
-Instantly William Rufus Holly was on his feet. His coat was off before
-Silver Tassel's words were out of his mouth, and crying, "In the name of
-the Great White Chief!" he jumped into the rushing current. "In the
-name of your Manitou, come on, Silver Tassel!" he called up from the
-water, and struck out for the lad.
-
-Not pausing an instant, Silver Tassel sprang into the flood, into the
-whirling eddies and dangerous current below the first rapids and above
-the second.
-
-Then came the struggle for Wingo of the Cree tribe, a waif among the
-Athabascas, whose father had been slain as they travelled, by a wandering
-tribe of Blackfeet. Never was there a braver rivalry, although the odds
-were with the Indian-in lightness, in brutal strength. With the
-mikonaree, however, were skill, and that sort of strength which the world
-calls "moral," the strength of a good and desperate purpose. Oshondonto
-knew that on the issue of this shameless business--this cruel sport of
-Silver Tassel--would depend his future on the Peace River. As he shot
-forward with strong strokes in the whirling torrent after the helpless
-lad, who, only able to keep himself afloat, was being swept down towards
-the rapids below, he glanced up to the bank along which the Athabascas
-were running. He saw the garish colours of their dresses; he saw the
-ignorant medicine man, with his mysterious bag, making incantations; he
-saw the tepee of the chief, with its barbarous pennant above; he saw the
-idle, naked children tearing at the entrails of a calf; and he realised
-that this was a deadly tournament between civilisation and barbarism.
-
-Silver Tassel was gaining on him, they were both overhauling the boy; it
-was now to see which should reach Wingo first, which should take him to
-shore. That is, if both were not carried under before they reached him;
-that is, if, having reached him, they and he would ever get to shore;
-for, lower down, before it reached the rapids, the current ran horribly
-smooth and strong, and here and there were jagged rocks just beneath the
-surface.
-
-Still Silver Tassel gained on him, as they both gained on the boy.
-Oshondonto swam strong and hard, but he swam with his eye on the struggle
-for the shore also; he was not putting forth his utmost strength, for he
-knew it would be bitterly needed, perhaps to save his own life by a last
-effort.
-
-Silver Tassel passed him when they were about fifty feet from the boy.
-Shooting by on his side, with a long stroke and the plunge of his body
-like a projectile, the dark face with the long black hair plastering it
-turned towards his own, in fierce triumph Silver Tassel cried "How!" in
-derision.
-
-Billy Rufus set his teeth and lay down to his work like a sportsman. His
-face had lost its roses, and it was set and determined, but there was no
-look of fear upon it, nor did his heart sink when a cry of triumph went
-up from the crowd on the banks. The white man knew by old experience in
-the cricket-field and in many a boat-race that it is well not to halloo
-till you are out of the woods. His mettle was up, he was not the
-Reverend William Rufus Holly, missionary, but Billy Rufus, the champion
-cricketer, the sportsman playing a long game.
-
-Silver Tassel reached the boy, who was bruised and bleeding and at his
-last gasp, and throwing an arm round him, struck out for the shore. The
-current was very strong, and he battled fiercely as Billy Rufus, not far
-above, moved down toward them at an angle. For a few yards Silver Tassel
-was going strong, then his pace slackened, he seemed to sink lower in the
-water, and his stroke became splashing and irregular. Suddenly he struck
-a rock, which bruised him badly, and, swerving from his course, he lost
-his stroke and let go the boy.
-
-By this time the mikonaree had swept beyond them, and he caught the boy
-by his long hair as he was being swept below. Striking out for the
-shore, he swam with bold, strong strokes, his judgment guiding him well
-past rocks beneath the surface. Ten feet from shore he heard a cry of
-alarm from above. It concerned Silver Tassel, he knew, but he could not
-look round yet.
-
-In another moment the boy was dragged up the bank by strong hands, and
-Billy Rufus swung round in the water towards Silver Tassel, who, in his
-confused energy, had struck another rock, and, exhausted now, was being
-swept towards the rapids. Silver Tassel's shoulder scarcely showed, his
-strength was gone. In a flash Billy Rufus saw there was but one thing to
-do. He must run the rapids with Silver Tassel-there was no other way.
-It would be a fight through the jaws of death; but no Indian's eyes had
-a better sense for river-life than William Rufus Holly's.
-
-How he reached Silver Tassel, and drew the Indian's arm over his own
-shoulder; how they drove down into the boiling flood; how Billy Rufus's
-fat body was battered and torn and ran red with blood from twenty flesh
-wounds; but how by luck beyond the telling he brought Silver Tassel
-through safely into the quiet water a quarter of a mile below the rapids,
-and was hauled out, both more dead than alive, is a tale still told by
-the Athabascas around their camp-fire. The rapids are known to-day as
-the Mikonaree Rapids.
-
-The end of this beginning of the young man's career was that Silver
-Tassel gave him the word of eternal friendship, Knife-in-the-Wind took
-him into the tribe, and the boy Wingo became his very own, to share his
-home, and his travels, no longer a waif among the Athabascas.
-
-After three days' feasting, at the end of which the missionary held his
-first service and preached his first sermon, to the accompaniment of
-grunts of satisfaction from the whole tribe of Athabascas, William Rufus
-Holly began his work in the Far North.
-
-The journey to Fort O'Call was a procession of triumph, for, as it was
-summer, there was plenty of food, the missionary had been a success, and
-he had distributed many gifts of beads and flannel.
-
-All went well for many moons, although converts were uncertain and
-baptisms few, and the work was hard and the loneliness at times terrible.
-But at last came dark days.
-
-One summer and autumn there had been poor fishing and shooting, the
-caches of meat were fewer on the plains, and almost nothing had come up
-to Fort O'Call from Edmonton, far below. The yearly supplies for the
-missionary, paid for out of his private income--the bacon, beans, tea,
-coffee and flour--had been raided by a band of hostile Indians, and he
-viewed with deep concern the progress of the severe winter. Although
-three years of hard, frugal life had made his muscles like iron, they had
-only mellowed his temper, increased his flesh and rounded his face; nor
-did he look an hour older than on the day when he had won Wingo for his
-willing slave and devoted friend.
-
-He never resented the frequent ingratitude of the Indians; he said little
-when they quarrelled over the small comforts his little income brought
-them yearly from the South. He had been doctor, lawyer, judge among
-them, although he interfered little in the larger disputes, and was
-forced to shut his eyes to intertribal enmities. He had no deep faith
-that he could quite civilise them; he knew that their conversion was only
-on the surface, and he fell back on his personal influence with them. By
-this he could check even the excesses of the worst man in the tribe, his
-old enemy, Silver Tassel of the bad heart, who yet was ready always to
-give a tooth for a tooth, and accepted the fact that he owed Oshondonto
-his life.
-
-When famine crawled across the plains to the doors of the settlement and
-housed itself at Fort O'Call, Silver Tassel acted badly, however, and
-sowed fault-finding among the thoughtless of the tribe.
-
-"What manner of Great Spirit is it who lets the food of his chief
-Oshondonto fall into the hands of the Blackfeet?" he said. "Oshondonto
-says the Great Spirit hears. What has the Great Spirit to say? Let
-Oshondonto ask."
-
-Again, when they all were hungrier, he went among them with complaining
-words. "If the white man's Great Spirit can do all things, let him give
-Oshondonto and the Athabascas food."
-
-The missionary did not know of Silver Tassel's foolish words, but he saw
-the downcast face of Knife-in-the-Wind, the sullen looks of the people;
-and he unpacked the box he had reserved jealously for the darkest days
-that might come. For meal after meal he divided these delicacies among
-them--morsels of biscuit, and tinned meats, and dried fruits. But his
-eyes meanwhile were turned again and again to the storm raging without,
-as it had raged for this the longest week he had ever spent. If it would
-but slacken, a boat could go out to the nets set in the lake near by some
-days before, when the sun of spring had melted the ice. From the hour
-the nets had been set the storm had raged. On the day when the last
-morsel of meat and biscuit had been given away the storm had not abated,
-and he saw with misgiving the gloomy, stolid faces of the Indians round
-him. One man, two children, and three women had died in a fortnight. He
-dreaded to think what might happen, his heart ached at the looks of gaunt
-suffering in the faces of all; he saw, for the first time, how black and
-bitter Knife-in-the-Wind looked as Silver Tassel whispered to him.
-
-With the colour all gone from his cheeks, he left the post and made his
-way to the edge of the lake where his canoe was kept. Making it ready
-for the launch, he came back to the Fort. Assembling the Indians, who
-had watched his movements closely, he told them that he was going through
-the storm to the nets on the lake, and asked for a volunteer to go with
-him.
-
-No one replied. He pleaded-for the sake of the women and children.
-
-Then Knife-in-the-Wind spoke. "Oshondonto will die if he goes. It is a
-fool's journey--does the wolverine walk into an empty trap?"
-
-Billy Rufus spoke passionately now. His genial spirit fled; he
-reproached them.
-
-Silver Tassel spoke up loudly. "Let Oshondonto's Great Spirit carry him
-to the nets alone, and back again with fish for the heathen the Great
-Chief died to save."
-
-"You have a wicked heart, Silver Tassel. You know well that one man
-can't handle the boat and the nets also. Is there no one of you--?"
-
-A figure shot forwards from a corner. "I will go with Oshondonto," came
-the voice of Wingo, the waif of the Crees.
-
-The eye of the mikonaree flashed round in contempt on the tribe. Then
-suddenly it softened, and he said to the lad: "We will go together,
-Wingo."
-
-Taking the boy by the hand, he ran with him through the rough wind to the
-shore, launched the canoe on the tossing lake, and paddled away through
-the tempest.
-
-The bitter winds of an angry spring, the sleet and wet snow of a belated
-winter, the floating blocks of ice crushing against the side of the boat,
-the black water swishing over man and boy, the harsh, inclement world
-near and far. . . . The passage made at last to the nets; the brave
-Wingo steadying the canoe--a skilful hand sufficing where the strength of
-a Samson would not have availed; the nets half full, and the breaking cry
-of joy from the lips of the waif-a cry that pierced the storm and brought
-back an answering cry from the crowd of Indians on the far shore. . .
-The quarter-hour of danger in the tossing canoe; the nets too heavy to be
-dragged, and fastened to the thwarts instead; the canoe going shoreward
-jerkily, a cork on the waves with an anchor behind; heavier seas and
-winds roaring down on them as they slowly near the shore; and at last, in
-one awful moment, the canoe upset, and the man and the boy in the water.
-. . . Then both clinging to the upturned canoe as it is driven nearer
-and nearer shore.... The boy washed off once, twice, and the man with
-his arm round clinging-clinging, as the shrieking storm answers to the
-calling of the Athabascas on the shore, and drives craft and fish and man
-and boy down upon the banks; no savage bold enough to plunge in to their
-rescue. . . . At last a rope thrown, a drowning man's wrists wound
-round it, his teeth set in it--and now, at last, a man and a heathen boy,
-both insensible, being carried to the mikonaree's but and laid upon two
-beds, one on either side of the small room, as the red sun goes slowly
-down. . . . The two still bodies on bearskins in the hut, and a
-hundred superstitious Indians flying from the face of death. . . .
-The two alone in the light of the flickering fire; the many gone to feast
-on fish, the price of lives.
-
-But the price was not yet paid, for the man waked from insensibility--
-waked to see himself with the body of the boy beside him in the red light
-of the fires.
-
-For a moment his heart stopped beating, he turned sick and faint.
-Deserted by those for whom he risked his life! . . . How long had he
-lain there? What time was it? When was it that he had fought his way to
-the nets and back again-hours maybe? And the dead boy there, Wingo, who
-had risked his life, also dead--how long? His heart leaped--ah! not
-hours, only minutes maybe. It was sundown as unconsciousness came on
-him--Indians would not stay with the dead after sundown. Maybe it was
-only ten minutes-five minutes--one minute ago since they left him!. . .
-
-His watch! Shaking fingers drew it out, wild eyes scanned it. It was
-not stopped. Then it could have only been minutes ago. Trembling to his
-feet, he staggered over to Wingo, he felt the body, he held a mirror to
-the lips. Yes, surely there was light moisture on the glass.
-
-Then began another fight with death--William Rufus Holly struggling to
-bring to life again Wingo, the waif of the Crees.
-
-The blood came back to his own heart with a rush as the mad desire to
-save this life came on him. He talked to the dumb face, he prayed in a
-kind of delirium, as he moved the arms up and down, as he tilted the
-body, as he rubbed, chafed and strove. He forgot he was a missionary,
-he almost cursed himself. "For them--for cowards, I risked his life,
-the brave lad with no home. Oh, God! give him back to me!" he sobbed.
-"What right had I to risk his life for theirs? I should have shot the
-first man that refused to go.... Wingo, speak! Wake up! Come back!"
-
-The sweat poured from him in his desperation and weakness. He said to
-himself that he had put this young life into the hazard without cause.
-Had he, then, saved the lad from the rapids and Silver Tassel's brutality
-only to have him drag fish out of the jaws of death for Silver Tassel's
-meal?
-
-It seemed to him that he had been working for hours, though it was in
-fact only a short time, when the eyes of the lad slowly opened and closed
-again, and he began to breathe spasmodically. A cry of joy came from the
-lips of the missionary, and he worked harder still. At last the eyes
-opened wide, stayed open, saw the figure bent over him, and the lips
-whispered, "Oshondonto--my master," as a cup of brandy was held to his
-lips.
-
-He had conquered the Athabascas for ever. Even Silver Tassel
-acknowledged his power, and he as industriously spread abroad the
-report that the mikonaree had raised Wingo from the dead, as he had sown
-dissension during the famine. But the result was that the missionary had
-power in the land, and the belief in him was so great, that, when Knife-
-in-the-Wind died, the tribe came to ask him to raise their chief from the
-dead. They never quite believed that he could not--not even Silver
-Tassel, who now rules the Athabascas and is ruled by William Rufus Holly:
-which is a very good thing for the Athabascas.
-
-Billy Rufus the cricketer had won the game, and somehow the Reverend
-William Rufus Holly the missionary never repented the strong language he
-used against the Athabascas, as he was bringing Wingo back to life,
-though it was not what is called "strictly canonical."
-
-
-
-
-
-THE HEALING SPRINGS AND THE PIONEERS
-
-He came out of the mysterious South one summer day, driving before him a
-few sheep, a cow, and a long-eared mule which carried his tent and other
-necessaries, and camped outside the town on a knoll, at the base of which
-was a thicket of close shrub. During the first day no one in Jansen
-thought anything of it, for it was a land of pilgrimage, and hundreds
-came and went on their journeys in search of free homesteads and good
-water and pasturage. But when, after three days, he was still there,
-Nicolle Terasse, who had little to do, and an insatiable curiosity, went
-out to see him. He found a new sensation for Jansen. This is what he
-said when he came back:
-
-"You want know 'bout him, bagosh! Dat is somet'ing to see, dat man--
-Ingles is his name. Sooch hair--mooch long an' brown, and a leetla beard
-not so brown, an' a leather sole onto his feet, and a grey coat to his
-anklesyes, so like dat. An' his voice--voila, it is like water in a
-cave. He is a great man--I dunno not; but he spik at me like dis,
-'Is dere sick, and cripple, and stay in-bed people here dat can't get
-up?' he say. An' I say, 'Not plenty, but some-bagosh! Dere is dat Miss
-Greet, an' ole Ma'am Drouchy, an' dat young Pete Hayes--an' so on.'
-'Well, if they have faith I will heal them,' he spik at me. 'From de
-Healing Springs dey shall rise to walk,' he say. Bagosh, you not t'ink
-dat true? Den you go see."
-
-So Jansen turned out to see, and besides the man they found a curious
-thing. At the foot of the knoll, in a space which he had cleared, was a
-hot spring that bubbled and rose and sank, and drained away into the
-thirsty ground. Luck had been with Ingles the Faith Healer. Whether he
-knew of the existence of this spring, or whether he chanced upon it, he
-did not say; but while he held Jansen in the palm of his hand, in the
-feverish days that followed, there were many who attached mysterious
-significance to it, who claimed for it supernatural origin. In any case,
-the one man who had known of the existence of this spring was far away
-from Jansen, and he did not return till a day of reckoning came for the
-Faith Healer.
-
-Meanwhile Jansen made pilgrimage to the Springs of Healing, and at
-unexpected times Ingles suddenly appeared in the town, and stood at
-street corners; and in his "Patmian voice," as Flood Rawley the lawyer
-called it, warned the people to flee their sins, and purifying their
-hearts, learn to cure all ills of mind and body, the weaknesses of the
-sinful flesh and the "ancient evil" in their souls, by faith that saves.
-
-"'Is not the life more than meat'" he asked them. "And if, peradventure,
-there be those among you who have true belief in hearts all purged of
-evil, and yet are maimed, or sick of body, come to me, and I will lay my
-hands upon you, and I will heal you." Thus he cried.
-
-There were those so wrought upon by his strange eloquence and spiritual
-passion, so hypnotised by his physical and mental exaltation, that they
-rose up from the hand-laying and the prayer eased of their ailments.
-Others he called upon to lie in the hot spring at the foot of the hill
-for varying periods, before the laying on of hands, and these also,
-crippled, or rigid with troubles' of the bone, announced that they were
-healed.
-
-People flocked from other towns, and though, to some who had been cured,
-their pains and sickness returned, there were a few who bore perfect
-evidence to his teaching and healing, and followed him, "converted and
-consecrated," as though he were a new Messiah. In this corner of the
-West was such a revival as none could remember--not even those who had
-been to camp meetings in the East in their youth, and had seen the Spirit
-descend upon hundreds and draw them to the anxious seat.
-
-Then came the great sensation--the Faith Healer converted Laura Sloly.
-Upon which Jansen drew its breath painfully; for, while it was willing
-to bend to the inspiration of the moment, and to be swept on a tide of
-excitement into that enchanted field called Imagination, it wanted to
-preserve its institutions--and Laura Sloly had come to be an institution.
-Jansen had always plumed itself, and smiled, when she passed; and even
-now the most sentimentally religious of them inwardly anticipated the
-time when the town would return to its normal condition; and that
-condition would not be normal if there were any change in Laura Sloly.
-It mattered little whether most people were changed or not because one
-state of their minds could not be less or more interesting than another;
-but a change in Laura. Sloly could not be for the better.
-
-Her father had come to the West in the early days, and had prospered by
-degrees until a town grew up beside his ranch; and though he did not
-acquire as much permanent wealth from this golden chance as might have
-been expected, and lost much he did make by speculation, still he had his
-rich ranch left, and it, and he, and Laura were part of the history of
-Jansen. Laura had been born at Jansen before even it had a name. Next
-to her father she was the oldest inhabitant, and she had a prestige which
-was given to no one else.
-
-Everything had conspired to make her a figure of moment and interest.
-She was handsome in almost a mannish sort of way, being of such height
-and straightness, and her brown eyes had a depth and fire in which more
-than a few men had drowned themselves. Also, once she had saved a
-settlement by riding ahead of a marauding Indian band to warn their
-intended victims, and had averted another tragedy of pioneer life.
-Pioneers proudly told strangers to Jansen of the girl of thirteen who
-rode a hundred and twenty miles without food, and sank inside the
-palisade of the Hudson's Bay Company's fort, as the gates closed upon the
-settlers taking refuge, the victim of brain fever at last. Cerebrospinal
-meningitis, the doctor from Winnipeg called it, and the memory of that
-time when men and women would not sleep till her crisis was past, was
-still fresh on the tongues of all.
-
-Then she had married at seventeen, and, within a year, had lost both her
-husband and her baby, a child bereaved of her Playmates--for her husband
-had been but twenty years old and was younger far than she in everything.
-And since then, twelve years before, she had seen generations of lovers
-pass into the land they thought delectable; and their children flocked to
-her, hung about her, were carried off by her to the ranch, and kept for
-days, against the laughing protests of their parents. Flood Rawley
-called her the Pied Piper of Jansen, and indeed she had a voice that
-fluted and piped, and yet had so whimsical a note, that the hardest faces
-softened at the sound of it; and she did not keep its best notes for the
-few. She was impartial, almost impersonal; no woman was her enemy, and
-every man was her friend--and nothing more. She had never had an
-accepted lover since the day her Playmates left her. Every man except
-one had given up hope that he might win her; and though he had been gone
-from Jansen for two years, and had loved her since the days before the
-Playmates came and went, he never gave up hope, and was now to return and
-say again what he had mutely said for years--what she understood, and he
-knew she understood.
-
-Tim Denton had been a wild sort in his brief day. He was a rough
-diamond, but he was a diamond, and was typical of the West--its heart,
-its courage, its freedom, and its force; capable of exquisite gentleness,
-strenuous to exaggeration, with a very primitive religion; and the only
-religion Tim knew was that of human nature. Jansen did not think Tim
-good enough--not within a comet shot--for Laura Sloly; but they thought
-him better than any one else.
-
-But now Laura was a convert to the prophet of the Healing Springs,
-and those people who still retain their heads in the eddy of religious
-emotion were in despair. They dreaded to meet Laura; they kept away from
-the "protracted meetings," but were eager to hear about her and what she
-said and did. What they heard allayed their worst fears. She still
-smiled, and seemed as cheerful as before, they heard, and she neither
-spoke nor prayed in public, but she led the singing always. Now the
-anxious and the sceptical and the reactionary ventured out to see and
-hear; and seeing and hearing gave them a satisfaction they hardly dared
-express. She was more handsome than ever, and if her eyes glistened with
-a light they had never seen before, and awed them, her lips still smiled,
-and the old laugh came when she spoke to them. Their awe increased.
-This was "getting religion" with a difference.
-
-But presently they received a shock. A whisper grew that Laura was in
-love with the Faith Healer. Some woman's instinct drove straight to the
-centre of a disconcerting possibility, and in consternation she told her
-husband; and Jansen husbands had a freemasonry of gossip. An hour, and
-all Jansen knew, or thought they knew; and the "saved" rejoiced; and the
-rest of the population, represented by Nicolle Terasse at one end and
-Flood Rawley at the other, flew to arms. No vigilance committee was ever
-more determined and secret and organised than the unconverted civic
-patriots, who were determined to restore Jansen to its old-time
-condition. They pointed out cold-bloodedly that the Faith Healer had
-failed three times where he had succeeded once; and that, admitting the
-successes, there was no proof that his religion was their cause. There
-were such things as hypnotism and magnetism and will-power, and abnormal
-mental stimulus on the part of the healed--to say nothing of the Healing
-Springs.
-
-Carefully laying their plans, they quietly spread the rumour that Ingles
-had promised to restore to health old Mary Jewell, who had been bedridden
-ten years, and had sent word and prayed to have him lay his hands upon
-her--Catholic though she was. The Faith Healer, face to face with this
-supreme and definite test, would have retreated from it but for Laura
-Sloly. She expected him to do it, believed that he could, said that he
-would, herself arranged the day and the hour, and sang so much exaltation
-into him, that at last a spurious power seemed to possess him. He felt
-that there had entered into him something that could be depended on,
-not the mere flow of natural magnetism fed by an outdoor life and a
-temperament of great emotional force, and chance, and suggestion--
-and other things. If, at first, he had influenced Laura, some ill-
-controlled, latent idealism in him, working on a latent poetry and
-spirituality in her, somehow bringing her into nearer touch with her
-lost Playmates than she had been in the long years that had passed;
-she, in turn, had made his unrationalised brain reel; had caught him up
-into a higher air, on no wings of his own; had added another lover to her
-company of lovers--and the first impostor she had ever had. She who
-had known only honest men as friends, in one blind moment lost her
-perspicuous sense; her instinct seemed asleep. She believed in the man
-and in his healing. Was there anything more than that?
-
-The day of the great test came, hot, brilliant, vivid. The air was of
-a delicate sharpness, and, as it came toward evening, the glamour of an
-August when the reapers reap was upon Jansen; and its people gathered
-round the house of Mary Jewell to await the miracle of faith. Apart
-from the emotional many who sang hymns and spiritual songs were a few
-determined men, bent on doing justice to Jansen though the heavens might
-fall. Whether or no Laura Sloly was in love with the Faith Healer,
-Jansen must look to its own honour--and hers. In any case, this
-peripatetic saint at Sloly's Ranch--the idea was intolerable;
-women must be saved in spite of themselves.
-
-Laura was now in the house by the side of the bedridden Mary Jewell,
-waiting, confident, smiling, as she held the wasted hand on the coverlet.
-With her was a minister of the Baptist persuasion, who was swimming with
-the tide, and who approved of the Faith Healer's immersions in the hot
-Healing Springs; also a medical student who had pretended belief in
-Ingles, and two women weeping with unnecessary remorse for human failings
-of no dire kind. The windows were open, and those outside could see.
-Presently, in a lull of the singing, there was a stir in the crowd, and
-then, sudden loud greetings:
-
-"My, if it ain't Tim Denton! Jerusalem! You back, Tim!"
-
-These and other phrases caught the ear of Laura Sloly in the sick-room.
-A strange look flashed across her face, and the depth of her eyes was
-troubled for a moment, as to the face of the old comes a tremor at the
-note of some long-forgotten song. Then she steadied herself and waited,
-catching bits of the loud talk which still floated towards her from
-without.
-
-"What's up? Some one getting married--or a legacy, or a saw-off? Why,
-what a lot of Sunday-go-to-meeting folks to be sure!" Tim laughed
-loudly.
-
-After which the quick tongue of Nicolle Terasse: "You want know? Tiens,
-be quiet; here he come. He cure you body and soul, ver' queeck--yes."
-
-The crowd swayed and parted, and slowly, bare head uplifted, face looking
-to neither right nor left, the Faith Healer made his way to the door of
-the little house. The crowd hushed. Some were awed, some were
-overpoweringly interested, some were cruelly patient. Nicolle Terasse
-and others were whispering loudly to Tim Denton. That was the only
-sound, until the Healer got to the door. Then, on the steps, he turned
-to the multitude.
-
-"Peace be to you all, and upon this house," he said and stepped through
-the doorway.
-
-Tim Denton, who had been staring at the face of the Healer, stood for an
-instant like one with all his senses arrested. Then he gasped, and
-exclaimed, "Well, I'm eternally--" and broke off with a low laugh,
-which was at first mirthful, and then became ominous and hard.
-
-"Oh, magnificent--magnificent--jerickety!" he said into the sky above
-him.
-
-His friends who were not "saved," closed in on him to find the meaning
-of his words, but he pulled himself together, looked blankly at them, and
-asked them questions. They told him so much more than he cared to hear,
-that his face flushed a deep red--the bronze of it most like the colour
-of Laura Sloly's hair; then he turned pale. Men saw that he was roused
-beyond any feeling in themselves.
-
-"'Sh!" he said. "Let's see what he can do." With the many who were
-silently praying, as they had been, bidden to do, the invincible ones
-leant forwards, watching the little room where healing--or tragedy--was
-afoot. As in a picture, framed by the window, they saw the kneeling
-figures, the Healer standing with outstretched arms. They heard his
-voice, sonorous and appealing, then commanding--and yet Mary Jewell did
-not rise from her bed and walk. Again, and yet again, the voice rang
-out, and still the woman lay motionless. Then he laid his hands upon
-her, and again he commanded her to rise.
-
-There was a faint movement, a desperate struggle to obey, but Nature and
-Time and Disease had their way. Yet again there was the call. An agony
-stirred the bed. Then another great Healer came between, and mercifully
-dealt the sufferer a blow--Death has a gentle hand sometimes. Mary
-Jewell was bedridden still--and for ever.
-
-Like a wind from the mountains the chill knowledge of death wailed
-through the window, and over the heads of the crowd. All the figures
-were upright now in the little room. Then those outside saw Laura Sloly
-lean over and close the sightless eyes. This done, she came to the door
-and opened it, and motioned for the Healer to leave. He hesitated,
-hearing the harsh murmur from the outskirts of the crowd. Once again she
-motioned, and he came. With a face deadly pale she surveyed the people
-before her silently for a moment, her eyes all huge and staring.
-
-Presently she turned to Ingles and spoke to him quickly in a low voice;
-then, descending the steps, passed out through the lane made for her by
-the crowd, he following with shaking limbs and bowed bead.
-
-Warning words had passed among the few invincible ones who waited where
-the Healer must pass into the open, and there was absolute stillness as
-Laura advanced. Their work was to come--quiet and swift and sure; but
-not yet.
-
-Only one face Laura saw, as she led the way to the moment's safety--Tim
-Denton's; and it was as stricken as her own. She passed, then turned,
-and looked at him again. He understood; she wanted him.
-
-He waited till she sprang into her waggon, after the Healer had mounted
-his mule and ridden away with ever-quickening pace into the prairie.
-Then he turned to the set, fierce men beside him.
-
-"Leave him alone," he said, "leave him to me. I know him. You hear?
-Ain't I no rights? I tell you I knew him--South. You leave him to me."
-
-They nodded, and he sprang into his saddle and rode away. They watched
-the figure of the Healer growing smaller in the dusty distance.
-
-"Tim'll go to her," one said, "and perhaps they'll let the snake get off.
-Hadn't we best make sure?"
-
-"Perhaps you'd better let him vamoose," said Flood Rawley anxiously.
-"Jansen is a law-abiding place!" The reply was decisive. Jansen had its
-honour to keep. It was the home of the Pioneers--Laura Sloly was a
-Pioneer.
-
-Tim Denton was a Pioneer, with all the comradeship which lay in the word,
-and he was that sort of lover who has seen one woman, and can never see
-another--not the product of the most modern civilisation. Before Laura
-had had Playmates he had given all he had to give; he had waited and
-hoped ever since; and when the ruthless gossips had said to him before
-Mary Jewell's house that she was in love with the Faith Healer, nothing
-changed in him. For the man, for Ingles, Tim belonged to a primitive
-breed, and love was not in his heart. As he rode out to Sloly's Ranch,
-he ground his teeth in rage. But Laura had called him to her, and:
-"Well, what you say goes, Laura," he muttered at the end of a long hour
-of human passion and its repression. "If he's to go scot-free, then he's
-got to go; but the boys yonder'll drop on me, if he gets away. Can't you
-see what a swab he is, Laura?"
-
-The brown eyes of the girl looked at him gently. The struggle between
-them was over; she had had her way--to save the preacher, impostor though
-he was; and now she felt, as she had never felt before in the same
-fashion, that this man was a man of men.
-
-"Tim, you do not understand," she urged. "You say he was a landsharp in
-the South, and that he had to leave-"
-
-"He had to vamoose, or take tar and feathers."
-
-"But he had to leave. And he came here preaching and healing; and he is
-a hypocrite and a fraud--I know that now, my eyes are opened. He didn't
-do what he said he could do, and it killed Mary Jewell--the shock; and
-there were other things he said he could do, and he didn't do them.
-Perhaps he is all bad, as you say--I don't think so. But he did some
-good things, and through him I've felt as I've never felt before about
-God and life, and about Walt and the baby--as though I'll see them again,
-sure. I've never felt that before. It was all as if they were lost in
-the hills, and no trail home, or out to where they are. Like as not God
-was working in him all the time, Tim; and he failed because he counted
-too much on the little he had, and made up for what he hadn't by what he
-pretended."
-
-"He can pretend to himself, or God Almighty, or that lot down there"--he
-jerked a finger towards the town--"but to you, a girl, and a Pioneer--"
-
-A flash of humour shot into her eyes at his last words, then they filled
-with tears, through which the smile shone. To pretend to "a Pioneer"--
-the splendid vanity and egotism of the West!
-
-"He didn't pretend to me, Tim. People don't usually have to pretend to
-like me."
-
-"You know what I'm driving at."
-
-"Yes, yes, I know. And whatever he is, you've said that you will save
-him. I'm straight, you know that. Somehow, what I felt from his
-preaching--well, everything got sort of mixed up with him, and he was--
-was different. It was like the long dream of Walt and the baby, and he a
-part of it. I don't know what I felt, or what I might have felt for him.
-I'm a woman--I can't understand. But I know what I feel now. I never
-want to see him again on earth--or in Heaven. It needn't be necessary
-even in Heaven; but what happened between God and me through him stays,
-Tim; and so you must help him get away safe. It's in your hands--you say
-they left it to you."
-
-"I don't trust that too much."
-
-Suddenly he pointed out of the window towards the town. "See, I'm right;
-there they are, a dozen of 'em mounted. They're off, to run him down."
-
-Her face paled; she glanced towards the Hill of Healing. "He's got an
-hour's start," she said; "he'll get into the mountains and be safe."
-
-"If they don't catch him 'fore that."
-
-"Or if you don't get to him first," she said, with nervous insistence.
-
-He turned to her with a hard look; then, as he met her soft, fearless,
-beautiful eyes, his own grew gentle. "It takes a lot of doing. Yet I'll
-do it for you, Laura," he said. "But it's hard on the Pioneers." Once
-more her humour flashed, and it seemed to him that "getting religion" was
-not so depressing after all--wouldn't be, anyhow, when this nasty job was
-over. "The Pioneers will get over it, Tim," she rejoined. "They've
-swallowed a lot in their time. Heaven's gate will have to be pretty
-wide to let in a real Pioneer," she added. "He takes up so much room--
-ah, Timothy Denton!" she added, with an outburst of whimsical merriment.
-
-"It hasn't spoiled you--being converted, has it?" he said, and gave a
-quick little laugh, which somehow did more for his ancient cause with her
-than all he had ever said or done. Then he stepped outside and swung
-into his saddle.
-
-It had been a hard and anxious ride, but Tim had won, and was keeping his
-promise. The night had fallen before he got to the mountains, which he
-and the Pioneers had seen the Faith Healer enter. They had had four
-miles' start of Tim, and had ridden fiercely, and they entered the gulch
-into which the refugee had disappeared still two miles ahead.
-
-The invincibles had seen Tim coming, but they had determined to make a
-sure thing of it, and would themselves do what was necessary with the
-impostor, and take no chances. So they pressed their horses, and he saw
-them swallowed by the trees, as darkness gathered. Changing his course,
-he entered the familiar hills, which he knew better than any pioneer of
-Jansen, and rode a diagonal course over the trail they would take. But
-night fell suddenly, and there was nothing to do but to wait till
-morning. There was comfort in this--the others must also wait, and the
-refugee could not go far. In any case, he must make for settlement or
-perish, since he had left behind his sheep and his cow.
-
-It fell out better than Tim hoped. The Pioneers were as good hunters as
-was he, their instinct was as sure, their scouts and trackers were many,
-and he was but one. They found the Faith Healer by a little stream,
-eating bread and honey, and, like an ancient woodlander drinking from a
-horn--relics of his rank imposture. He made no resistance. They tried
-him formally, if perfunctorily; he admitted his imposture, and begged for
-his life. Then they stripped him naked, tied a bit of canvas round his
-waist, fastened him to a tree, and were about to complete his punishment
-when Tim Denton burst upon them.
-
-Whether the rage Tim showed was all real or not; whether his accusations
-of bad faith came from so deeply wounded a spirit as he would have them
-believe, he was not likely to tell; but he claimed the prisoner as his
-own, and declined to say what he meant to do.
-
-When, however, they saw the abject terror of the Faith Healer as he
-begged not to be left alone with Tim--for they had not meant death,
-and Ingles thought he read death in Tim's ferocious eyes--they laughed
-cynically, and left it to Tim to uphold the honour of Jansen and the
-Pioneers.
-
-As they disappeared, the last thing they saw was Tim with his back to
-them, his hands on his hips, and a knife clasped in his fingers.
-
-"He'll lift his scalp and make a monk of him," chuckled the oldest and
-hardest of them.
-
-"Dat Tim will cut his heart out, I t'ink-bagosh!" said Nicolle Terasse,
-and took a drink of white-whiskey. For a long time Tim stood looking at
-the other, until no sound came from the woods, whither the Pioneers had
-gone. Then at last, slowly, and with no roughness, as the terror-
-stricken impostor shrank and withered, he cut the cords.
-
-"Dress yourself," he said shortly, and sat down beside the stream, and
-washed his face and hands, as though to cleanse them from contamination.
-He appeared to take no notice of the other, though his ears keenly noted
-every movement.
-
-The impostor dressed nervously, yet slowly; he scarce comprehended
-anything, except that he was not in immediate danger. When he had
-finished, he stood looking at Tim, who was still seated on a log plunged
-in meditation.
-
-It seemed hours before Tim turned round, and now his face was quiet,
-if set and determined. He walked slowly over, and stood looking at his
-victim for some time without speaking. The other's eyes dropped, and
-a greyness stole over his features. This steely calm was even more
-frightening than the ferocity which had previously been in his captor's
-face. At length the tense silence was broken.
-
-"Wasn't the old game good enough? Was it played out? Why did you take
-to this? Why did you do it, Scranton?"
-
-The voice quavered a little in reply. "I don't know. Something sort of
-pushed me into it."
-
-"How did you come to start it?"
-
-There was a long silence, then the husky reply came. "I got a sickener
-last time--"
-
-"Yes, I remember, at Waywing."
-
-"I got into the desert, and had hard times--awful for a while. I hadn't
-enough to eat, and I didn't know whether I'd die by hunger, or fever, or
-Indians--or snakes."
-
-"Oh, you were seeing snakes!" said Tim grimly.
-
-"Not the kind you mean; I hadn't anything to drink--"
-
-"No, you never did drink, I remember--just was crooked, and slopped over
-women. Well, about the snakes?"
-
-"I caught them to eat, and they were poison-snakes often. And I wasn't
-quick at first to get them safe by the neck--they're quick, too."
-
-Tim laughed inwardly. "Getting your food by the sweat of your brow--and
-a snake in it, same as Adam! Well, was it in the desert you got your
-taste for honey, too, same as John the Baptist--that was his name, if I
-recomember?" He looked at the tin of honey on the ground.
-
-"Not in the desert, but when I got to the grass-country."
-
-"How long were you in the desert?"
-
-"Close to a year."
-
-Tim's eyes opened wider. He saw that the man was speaking the truth.
-
-"Got to thinking in the desert, and sort of willing things to come to
-pass, and mooning along, you, and the sky, and the vultures, and the hot
-hills, and the snakes, and the flowers--eh?"
-
-"There weren't any flowers till I got to the grass-country."
-
-"Oh, cuss me, if you ain't simple for your kind! I know all about that.
-And when you got to the grass-country, you just picked up the honey, and
-the flowers, and a calf, and a lamb, and a mule here and there, 'without
-money and without price,' and walked on--that it?"
-
-The other shrank before the steel in the voice, and nodded his head.
-
-"But you kept thinking in the grass-country of what you'd felt and said
-and done--and willed, in the desert, I suppose?"
-
-Again the other nodded.
-
-"It seemed to you in the desert, as if you'd saved your own life a
-hundred times, as if you'd just willed food and drink and safety to come;
-as if Providence had been at your elbow?"
-
-"It was like a dream, and it stayed with me. I had to think in the
-desert things I'd never thought before," was the half-abstracted answer.
-
-"You felt good in the desert?" The other hung his head in shame.
-
-"Makes you seem pretty small, doesn't it? You didn't stay long enough,
-I guess, to get what you were feeling for; you started in on the new
-racket too soon. You never got really possessed that you was a sinner.
-I expect that's it."
-
-The other made no reply.
-
-"Well, I don't know much about such things. I was loose brought up; but
-I've a friend"--Laura was before his eyes--"that says religion's all
-right, and long ago as I can remember my mother used to pray three times
-a day--with grace at meals, too. I know there's a lot in it for them
-that need it; and there seems to be a lot of folks needing it, if I'm to
-judge by folks down there at Jansen, specially when there's the laying-on
-of hands and the Healing Springs. Oh, that was a pigsty game, Scranton,
-that about God giving you the Healing Springs, like Moses and the rock!
-Why, I discovered them springs myself two years ago, before I went South,
-and I guess God wasn't helping me any--not after I've kept out of His way
-as I have. But, anyhow, religion's real; that's my sense of it; and you
-can get it, I bet, if you try. I've seen it got. A friend of mine got
-it--got it under your preaching; not from you; but you was the accident
-that brought it about, I expect. It's funny--it's merakilous, but it's
-so. Kneel down!" he added, with peremptory suddenness. "Kneel,
-Scranton!"
-
-In fear the other knelt.
-
-"You're going to get religion now--here. You're going to pray for what
-you didn't get--and almost got--in the desert. You're going to ask
-forgiveness for all your damn tricks, and pray like a fanning-mill for
-the spirit to come down. You ain't a scoundrel at heart--a friend of
-mine says so. You're a weak vessel, cracked, perhaps. You've got to
-be saved, and start right over again--and 'Praise God from whom all
-blessings flow!' Pray--pray, Scranton, and tell the whole truth,
-and get it--get religion. Pray like blazes. You go on, and pray out
-loud. Remember the desert, and Mary Jewell, and your mother--did you
-have a mother, Scranton--say, did you have a mother, lad?"
-
-Tim's voice suddenly lowered before the last word, for the Faith Healer
-had broken down in a torrent of tears.
-
-"Oh, my mother--O God!" he groaned.
-
-"Say, that's right--that's right--go on," said the other, and drew back a
-little, and sat down on a log. The man on his knees was convulsed with
-misery. Denton, the world, disappeared. He prayed in agony. Presently
-Tim moved uneasily, then got up and walked about; and at last, with a
-strange, awed look, when an hour was past, he stole back into the shadow
-of the trees, while still the wounded soul poured out its misery and
-repentance.
-
-Time moved on. A curious shyness possessed Tim now, a thing which he had
-never felt in his life. He moved about self-consciously, awkwardly,
-until at last there was a sudden silence over by the brook.
-
-Tim looked, and saw the face of the kneeling man cleared, and quiet and
-shining. He hesitated, then stepped out, and came over.
-
-"Have you got it?" he asked quietly. "It's noon now."
-
-"May God help me to redeem my past," answered the other in a new voice.
-
-"You've got it--sure?" Tim's voice was meditative. "God has spoken to
-me," was the simple answer. "I've got a friend'll be glad to hear that,"
-he said; and once more, in imagination, he saw Laura Sloly standing at
-the door of her home, with a light in her eyes he had never seen before.
-
-"You'll want some money for your journey?" Tim asked.
-
-"I want nothing but to go away--far away," was the low reply.
-
-"Well, you've lived in the desert--I guess you can live in the grass-
-country," came the dry response. "Good-bye-and good luck, Scranton."
-
-Tim turned to go, moved on a few steps, then looked back.
-
-"Don't be afraid--they'll not follow," he said. "I'll fix it for you all
-right."
-
-But the man appeared not to hear; he was still on his knees.
-
-Tim faced the woods once more.
-
-He was about to mount his horse when he heard a step behind him. He
-turned sharply--and faced Laura. "I couldn't rest. I came out this
-morning. I've seen everything," she said.
-
-"You didn't trust me," he said heavily.
-
-"I never did anything else," she answered.
-
-He gazed half-fearfully into her eyes. "Well?" he asked. "I've done my
-best, as I said I would."
-
-"Tim," she said, and slipped a hand in his, "would you mind the religion
---if you had me?"
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE LITTLE WIDOW OF JANSEN
-
-Her advent to Jansen was propitious. Smallpox in its most virulent form
-had broken out in the French-Canadian portion of the town, and, coming
-with some professional nurses from the East, herself an amateur, to
-attend the sufferers, she worked with such skill and devotion that the
-official thanks of the Corporation were offered her, together with a tiny
-gold watch, the gift of grateful citizens. But she still remained on at
-Jansen, saying always, however, that she was "going East in the spring."
-
-Five years had passed, and still she had not gone East, but remained
-perched in the rooms she had first taken, over the Imperial Bank, while
-the town grew up swiftly round her. And even when the young bank manager
-married, and wished to take over the rooms, she sent him to the right-
-about from his own premises in her gay, masterful way. The young manager
-behaved well in the circumstances, because he had asked her to marry him,
-and she had dismissed him with a warning against challenging his own
-happiness--that was the way she had put it. Perhaps he was galled the
-less because others had striven for the same prize, and had been thrust
-back, with an almost tender misgiving as to their sense of self-
-preservation and sanity. Some of them were eligible enough, and all were
-of some position in the West. Yet she smiled them firmly away, to the
-wonder of Jansen, and to its satisfaction, for was it not a tribute to
-all that she would distinguish no particular unit by her permanent
-favour? But for one so sprightly and almost frivolous in manner at
-times, the self-denial seemed incongruous. She was unconventional enough
-to sit on the side-walk with a half-dozen children round her blowing
-bubbles, or to romp in any garden, or in the street, playing Puss-in-the-
-ring; yet this only made her more popular. Jansen's admiration was at
-its highest, however, when she rode in the annual steeplechase with the
-best horsemen of the province. She had the gift of doing as well as of
-being.
-
-"'Tis the light heart she has, and slippin' in and out of things like a
-humming-bird, no easier to ketch, and no longer to stay," said Finden,
-the rich Irish landbroker, suggestively to Father Bourassa, the huge
-French-Canadian priest who had worked with her through all the dark weeks
-of the smallpox epidemic, and who knew what lay beneath the outer gaiety.
-She had been buoyant of spirit beside the beds of the sick, and her words
-were full of raillery and humour, yet there was ever a gentle note behind
-all; and the priest had seen her eyes shining with tears, as she bent
-over some stricken sufferer bound upon an interminable journey.
-
-"Bedad! as bright a little spark as ever struck off the steel," added
-Finden to the priest, with a sidelong, inquisitive look, "but a heart no
-bigger than a marrowfat pea-selfishness, all self. Keepin' herself for
-herself when there's manny a good man needin' her. Mother o' Moses, how
-manny! From Terry O'Ryan, brother of a peer, at Latouche, to Bernard
-Bapty, son of a millionaire, at Vancouver, there's a string o' them. All
-pride and self; and as fair a lot they've been as ever entered for the
-Marriage Cup. Now, isn't that so, father?"
-
-Finden's brogue did not come from a plebeian origin. It was part of his
-commercial equipment, an asset of his boyhood spent among the peasants on
-the family estate in Galway.
-
-Father Bourassa fanned himself with the black broadbrim hat he wore, and
-looked benignly but quizzically on the wiry, sharp-faced Irishman.
-
-"You t'ink her heart is leetla. But perhaps it is your mind not so big
-enough to see--hein?" The priest laughed noiselessly, showing white
-teeth. "Was it so selfish in Madame to refuse the name of Finden--
-n'est-ce pas?"
-
-Finden flushed, then burst into a laugh. "I'd almost forgotten I was one
-of them--the first almost. Blessed be he that expects nothing, for he'll
-get it, sure. It was my duty, and I did it. Was she to feel that Jansen
-did not price her high? Bedad, father, I rose betimes and did it, before
-anny man should say he set me the lead. Before the carpet in the parlour
-was down, and with the bare boards soundin' to my words, I offered her
-the name of Finden."
-
-"And so--the first of the long line! Bien, it is an honour." The priest
-paused a moment, looked at Finden with a curious reflective look, and
-then said: "And so you t'ink there is no one; that she will say yes not
-at all--no?"
-
-They were sitting on Father Bourassa's veranda, on the outskirts of the
-town, above the great river, along which had travelled millions of bygone
-people, fighting, roaming, hunting, trapping; and they could hear it
-rushing past, see the swirling eddies, the impetuous currents, the
-occasional rafts moving majestically down the stream. They were facing
-the wild North, where civilisation was hacking and hewing and ploughing
-its way to newer and newer cities, in an empire ever spreading to the
-Pole.
-
-Finden's glance loitered on this scene before he replied. At length,
-screwing up one eye, and with a suggestive smile, he answered: "Sure,
-it's all a matter of time, to the selfishest woman. 'Tis not the same
-with women as with men; you see, they don't get younger--that's a point.
-But"--he gave a meaning glance at the priest--"but perhaps she's not
-going to wait for that, after all. And there he rides, a fine figure of
-a man, too, if I have to say it!"
-
-"M'sieu' Varley?" the priest responded, and watched a galloping horseman
-to whom Finden had pointed, till he rounded the corner of a little wood.
-
-"Varley, the great London surgeon, sure! Say, father, it's a hundred to
-one she'd take him, if--"
-
-There was a curious look in Father Bourassa's face, a cloud in his eyes.
-He sighed. "London, it is ver' far away," he remarked obliquely.
-
-"What's to that? If she is with the right man, near or far is nothing."
-
-"So far--from home," said the priest reflectively, but his eyes furtively
-watched the other's face.
-
-"But home's where man and wife are."
-
-The priest now looked him straight in the eyes. "Then, as you say, she
-will not marry M'sieu' Varley--hein?"
-
-The humour died out of Finden's face. His eyes met the priest's eyes
-steadily. "Did I say that? Then my tongue wasn't making a fool of me,
-after all. How did you guess I knew--everything, father?"
-
-"A priest knows many t'ings--so."
-
-There was a moment of gloom, then the Irishman brightened. He came
-straight to the heart of the mystery around which they had been
-maneuvering. "Have you seen her husband--Meydon--this year? It isn't
-his usual time to come yet."
-
-Father Bourassa's eyes drew those of his friend into, the light of a new
-understanding and revelation. They understood and trusted each other.
-
-"Helas! He is there in the hospital," he answered, and nodded towards
-a building not far away, which had been part of an old Hudson's Bay
-Company's fort. It had been hastily adapted as a hospital for the
-smallpox victims.
-
-"Oh, it's Meydon, is it, that bad case I heard of to-day?"
-
-The priest nodded again and 'pointed. "Voila, Madame Meydon, she is
-coming. She has seen him--her hoosban'."
-
-Finden's eyes followed the gesture. The little widow of Jansen was
-coming from the hospital, walking slowly towards the river.
-
-"As purty a woman, too--as purty and as straight bewhiles. What is the
-matter with him--with Meydon?" Finden asked, after a moment.
-
-"An accident in the woods--so. He arrive, it is las' night, from Great
-Slave Lake."
-
-Finden sighed. "Ten years ago he was a man to look at twice--before he
-did It and got away. Now his own mother wouldn't know him--bad 'cess to
-him! I knew him from the cradle almost. I spotted him here by a knife-
-cut I gave him in the hand when we were lads together. A divil of a
-timper always both of us had, but the good-nature was with me, and I
-didn't drink and gamble and carry a pistol. It's ten years since he did
-the killing, down in Quebec, and I don't suppose the police will get him
-now. He's been counted dead. I recognised him here the night after I
-asked her how she liked the name of Finden. She doesn't know that I ever
-knew him. And he didn't recognise me-twenty-five years since we met
-before! It would be better if he went under the sod. Is he pretty sick,
-father?"
-
-"He will die unless the surgeon's knife it cure him before twenty-four
-hours, and--"
-
-"And Doctor Brydon is sick, and Doctor Hadley away at Winnipeg, and this
-is two hundred miles from nowhere! It looks as if the police'll never
-get him, eh?"
-
-"You have not tell any one--never?"
-
-Finden laughed. "Though I'm not a priest, I can lock myself up as tight
-as anny. There's no tongue that's so tied, when tying's needed, as the
-one that babbles most bewhiles. Babbling covers a lot of secrets."
-
-"So you t'ink it better Meydon should die, as Hadley is away and Brydon
-is sick-hein?"
-
-"Oh, I think--"
-
-Finden stopped short, for a horse's hoofs sounded on the turf beside the
-house, and presently Varley, the great London surgeon, rounded the corner
-and stopped his horse in front of the veranda.
-
-He lifted his hat to the priest. "I hear there's a bad case at the
-hospital," he said.
-
-"It is ver' dangerous," answered Father Bourassa; "but, voila, come in!
-There is something cool to drink. Ah yes, he is ver' bad, that man from
-the Great Slave Lake."
-
-Inside the house, with the cooling drinks, Varley pressed his questions,
-and presently, much interested, told at some length of singular cases
-which had passed through his hands--one a man with his neck broken, who
-had lived for six months afterward.
-
-"Broken as a man's neck is broken by hanging--dislocation, really--the
-disjointing of the medulla oblongata, if you don't mind technicalities,"
-he said. "But I kept him living just the same. Time enough for him to
-repent in and get ready to go. A most interesting case. He was a
-criminal, too, and wanted to die; but you have to keep life going if
-you can, to the last inch of resistance."
-
-The priest looked thoughtfully out of the window; Finden's eyes were
-screwed up in a questioning way, but neither made any response to
-Varley's remarks. There was a long minute's silence. They were all
-three roused by hearing a light footstep on the veranda.
-
-Father Bourassa put down his glass and hastened into the hallway. Finden
-caught a glimpse of a woman's figure, and, without a word, passed
-abruptly from the dining-room where they were, into the priest's study,
-leaving Varley alone. Varley turned to look after him, stared, and
-shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"The manners of the West," he said good-humouredly, and turned again to
-the hallway, from whence came the sound of the priest's voice. Presently
-there was another voice--a woman's. He flushed slightly and
-involuntarily straightened himself.
-
-"Valerie," he murmured.
-
-An instant afterwards she entered the room with the priest. She was
-dressed in a severely simple suit of grey, which set off to advantage her
-slim, graceful figure. There seemed no reason why she should have been
-called the little widow of Jansen, for she was not small, but she was
-very finely and delicately made, and the name had been but an expression
-of Jansen's paternal feeling for her. She had always had a good deal of
-fresh colour, but to-day she seemed pale, though her eyes had a strange
-disturbing light. It was not that they brightened on seeing this man
-before her; they had been brighter, burningly bright, when she left the
-hospital, where, since it had been built, she had been the one visitor of
-authority--Jansen had given her that honour. She had a gift of smiling,
-and she smiled now, but it came from grace of mind rather than from
-humour. As Finden had said, "She was for ever acting, and never doin'
-any harm by it."
-
-Certainly she was doing no harm by it now; nevertheless, it was acting.
-Could it be otherwise, with what was behind her life--a husband who had
-ruined her youth, had committed homicide, had escaped capture, but who
-had not subsequently died, as the world believed he had done, so
-circumstantial was the evidence. He was not man enough to make the
-accepted belief in his death a fact. What could she do but act, since
-the day she got a letter from the Far North, which took her out to
-Jansen, nominally to nurse those stricken with smallpox under Father
-Bourassa's care, actually to be where her wretched husband could come
-to her once a year, as he had asked with an impossible selfishness?
-
-Each year she had seen him for an hour or less, giving him money,
-speaking to him over a gulf so wide that it seemed sometimes as though
-her voice could not be heard across it; each year opening a grave to look
-at the embalmed face of one who had long since died in shame, which only
-brought back the cruellest of all memories, that which one would give
-one's best years to forget. With a fortitude beyond description she had
-faced it, gently, quietly, but firmly faced it--firmly, because she had
-to be firm in keeping him within those bounds the invasion of which would
-have killed her. And after the first struggle with his unchangeable
-brutality it had been easier: for into his degenerate brain there had
-come a faint understanding of the real situation and of her. He had
-kept his side of the gulf, but gloating on this touch between the old
-luxurious, indulgent life, with its refined vices, and this present
-coarse, hard life, where pleasures were few and gross. The free Northern
-life of toil and hardship had not refined him. He greedily hung over
-this treasure, which was not for his spending, yet was his own--as though
-in a bank he had hoards of money which he might not withdraw.
-
-So the years had gone on, with their recurrent dreaded anniversaries,
-carrying misery almost too great to be borne by this woman mated to the
-loathed phantom of a sad, dead life; and when this black day of each year
-was over, for a few days afterwards she went nowhere, was seen by none.
-Yet, when she did appear again, it was with her old laughing manner, her
-cheerful and teasing words, her quick response to the emotions of others.
-
-So it had gone till Varley had come to follow the open air life for four
-months, after a heavy illness due to blood-poisoning got in his surgical
-work in London. She had been able to live her life without too great a
-struggle till he came. Other men had flattered her vanity, had given her
-a sense of power, had made her understand her possibilities, but nothing
-more--nothing of what Varley brought with him. And before three months
-had gone, she knew that no man had ever interested her as Varley had
-done. Ten years before, she would not have appreciated or understood
-him, this intellectual, clean-shaven, rigidly abstemious man, whose
-pleasures belonged to the fishing-rod and the gun and the horse, and who
-had come to be so great a friend of him who had been her best friend--
-Father Bourassa. Father Bourassa had come to know the truth--not from
-her, for she had ever been a Protestant, but from her husband, who,
-Catholic by birth and a renegade from all religion, had had a moment of
-spurious emotion, when he went and confessed to Father Bourassa and got
-absolution, pleading for the priest's care of his wife. Afterwards
-Father Bourassa made up his mind that the confession had a purpose behind
-it other than repentance, and he deeply resented the use to which he
-thought he was being put--a kind of spy upon the beautiful woman whom
-Jansen loved, and who, in spite of any outward flippancy, was above
-reproach.
-
-In vital things the instinct becomes abnormally acute, and, one day, when
-the priest looked at her commiseratingly, she had divined what moved him.
-However it was, she drove him into a corner with a question to which he
-dare not answer yes, but to which he might not answer no, and did not;
-and she realised that he knew the truth, and she was the better for his
-knowing, though her secret was no longer a secret. She was not aware
-that Finden also knew. Then Varley came, bringing a new joy and interest
-in her life, and a new suffering also, for she realised that if she were
-free, and Varley asked her to marry him, she would consent.
-
-But when he did ask her, she said no with a pang that cut her heart in
-two. He had stayed his four months, and it was now six months, and he
-was going at last-tomorrow. He had stayed to give her time to learn to
-say yes, and to take her back with him to London; and she knew that he
-would speak again to-day, and that she must say no again; but she had
-kept him from saying the words till now. And the man who had ruined her
-life and had poisoned her true spirit was come back broken and battered.
-He was hanging between life and death; and now--for he was going
-to-morrow--Varley would speak again.
-
-The half-hour she had just spent in the hospital with Meydon had tried
-her cruelly. She had left the building in a vortex of conflicting
-emotions, with the call of duty and of honour ringing through a thousand
-other voices of temptation and desire, the inner pleadings for a little
-happiness while yet she was young. After she married Meydon, there had
-only been a few short weeks of joy before her black disillusion came,
-and she had realised how bitter must be her martyrdom.
-
-When she left the hospital, she seemed moving in a dream, as one,
-intoxicated by some elixir, might move unheeding among event and accident
-and vexing life and roaring multitudes. And all the while the river
-flowing through the endless prairies, high-banked, ennobled by living
-woods, lipped with green, kept surging in her ears, inviting her,
-alluring her--alluring her with a force too deep and powerful for weak
-human nature to bear for long. It would ease her pain, it said; it would
-still the tumult and the storm; it would solve her problem, it would give
-her peace. But as she moved along the river-bank among the trees, she
-met the little niece of the priest, who lived in his house, singing as
-though she was born but to sing, a song which Finden had written and
-Father Bourassa had set to music. Did not the distant West know Father
-Bourassa's gift, and did not Protestants attend Mass to hear him play the
-organ afterwards? The fresh, clear voice of the child rang through the
-trees, stealing the stricken heart away from the lure of the river:
-
- "Will you come back home, where the young larks are singin'?
- The door is open wide, and the bells of Lynn are ringin';
- There's a little lake I know,
- And a boat you used to row
- To the shore beyond that's quiet--will you come back home?
-
- Will you come back, darlin'? Never heed the pain and blightin',
- Never trouble that you're wounded, that you bear the scars of
- fightin';
- Here's the luck o' Heaven to you,
- Here's the hand of love will brew you
- The cup of peace--ah, darlin', will you come back home?"
-
-She stood listening for a few moments, and, under the spell of the fresh,
-young voice, the homely, heart-searching words, and the intimate
-sweetness of the woods, the despairing apathy lifted slowly away. She
-started forwards again with a new understanding, her footsteps quickened.
-She would go to Father Bourassa. He would understand. She would tell
-him all. He would help her to do what now she knew she must do, ask
-Leonard Varley to save her husband's life--Leonard Varley to save her
-husband's life!
-
-When she stepped upon the veranda of the priest's house, she did not know
-that Varley was inside. She had no time to think. She was ushered into
-the room where he was, with the confusing fact of his presence fresh upon
-her. She had had but a word or two with the priest, but enough for him
-to know what she meant to do, and that it must be done at once.
-
-Varley advanced to meet her. She shuddered inwardly to think what a
-difference there was between the fallen creature she had left behind in
-the hospital and this tall, dark, self-contained man, whose name was
-familiar in the surgeries of Europe, who had climbed from being the son
-of a clockmaker to his present distinguished place.
-
-"Have you come for absolution, also?" he asked with a smile; "or is it
-to get a bill of excommunication against your only enemy--there couldn't
-be more than one?"
-
-Cheerful as his words were, he was shrewdly observing her, for her
-paleness, and the strange light in her eyes, gave him a sense of anxiety.
-He wondered what trouble was on her.
-
-"Excommunication?" he repeated.
-
-The unintended truth went home. She winced, even as she responded with
-that quaint note in her voice which gave humour to her speech. "Yes,
-excommunication," she replied; "but why an enemy? Do we not need to
-excommunicate our friends sometimes?"
-
-"That is a hard saying," he answered soberly. Tears sprang to her eyes,
-but she mastered herself, and brought the crisis abruptly.
-
-"I want you to save a man's life," she said, with her eyes looking
-straight into his. "Will you do it?"
-
-His face grew grave and eager. "I want you to save a man's happiness,"
-he answered. "Will you do it?"
-
-"That man yonder will die unless your skill saves him," she urged.
-
-"This man here will go away unhappy and alone, unless your heart
-befriends him," he replied, coming closer to her.
-
-"At sunrise to-morrow he goes." He tried to take her hand.
-
-"Oh, please, please," she pleaded, with a quick, protesting gesture.
-"Sunrise is far off, but the man's fate is near, and you must save him.
-You only can do so, for Doctor Hadley is away, and Doctor Brydon is sick,
-and in any case Doctor Brydon dare not attempt the operation alone. It
-is too critical and difficult, he says."
-
-"So I have heard," he answered, with a new note in his voice, his
-professional instinct roused in spite of himself. "Who is this man?
-What interests you in him?"
-
-"To how many unknown people have you given your skill for nothing--your
-skill and all your experience to utter strangers, no matter how low or
-poor! Is it not so? Well, I cannot give to strangers what you have
-given to so many, but I can help in my own way."
-
-"You want me to see the man at once?"
-
-"If you will."
-
-"What is his name? I know of his accident and the circumstances."
-
-She hesitated for an instant, then said, "He is called Draper--a trapper
-and woodsman."
-
-"But I was going away to-morrow at sunrise. All my arrangements are
-made," he urged, his eyes holding hers, his passion swimming in his eyes
-again.
-
-"But you will not see a man die, if you can save him?" she pleaded,
-unable now to meet his look, its mastery and its depth.
-
-Her heart had almost leaped with joy at the suggestion that he could not
-stay; but as suddenly self-reproach and shame filled her mind, and she
-had challenged him so. But yet, what right had she to sacrifice this man
-she loved to the perverted criminal who had spoiled her youth and taken
-away from her every dear illusion of her life and heart? By every right
-of justice and humanity she was no more the wife of Henry Meydon than if
-she had never seen him. He had forfeited every claim upon her, dragged
-in the mire her unspotted life--unspotted, for in all temptation, in her
-defenceless position, she had kept the whole commandment; she had, while
-at the mercy of her own temperament, fought her way through all, with a
-weeping heart and laughing lips. Had she not longed for a little home
-with a great love, and a strong, true man? Ah, it had been lonely,
-bitterly lonely! Yet she had remained true to the scoundrel, from whom
-she could not free herself without putting him in the grasp of the law to
-atone for his crime. She was punished for his crimes; she was denied the
-exercise of her womanhood in order to shield him. Still she remembered
-that once she had loved him, those years ago, when he first won her heart
-from those so much better than he, who loved her so much more honestly;
-and this memory had helped her in a way. She had tried to be true to it,
-that dead, lost thing, of which this man who came once a year to see her,
-and now, lying with his life at stake in the hospital, was the repellent
-ghost.
-
-"Ah, you will not see him die?" she urged.
-
-"It seems to move you greatly what happens to this man," he said, his
-determined dark eyes searching hers, for she baffled him. If she could
-feel so much for a, "casual," why not a little more feeling for him?
-Suddenly, as he drew her eyes to him again, there came the conviction
-that they were full of feeling for him. They were sending a message, an
-appealing, passionate message, which told him more than he had ever heard
-from her or seen in her face before. Yes, she was his! Without a spoken
-word she had told him so. What, then, held her back? But women were a
-race by themselves, and he knew that he must wait till she chose to have
-him know what she had unintentionally conveyed but now.
-
-"Yes, I am moved," she continued slowly. "Who can tell what this man
-might do with his life, if it is saved! Don't you think of that? It
-isn't the importance of a life that's at stake; it's the importance of
-living; and we do not live alone, do we?"
-
-His mind was made up. "I will not, cannot promise anything till I have
-seen him. But I will go and see him, and I'll send you word later what
-I can do, or not do. Will that satisfy you? If I cannot do it, I will
-come to say good-by."
-
-Her face was set with suppressed feeling. She held out her hand to him
-impulsively, and was about to speak, but suddenly caught the hand away
-again from his thrilling grasp and, turning hurriedly, left the room.
-In the hall she met Father Bourassa.
-
-"Go with him to the hospital," she whispered, and disappeared through the
-doorway.
-
-Immediately after she had gone, a man came driving hard to bring Father
-Bourassa to visit a dying Catholic in the prairie, and it was Finden who
-accompanied Varley to the hospital, waited for him till his examination
-of the "casual" was concluded, and met him outside.
-
-"Can it be done?" he asked of Varley. "I'll take word to Father
-Bourassa."
-
-"It can be done--it will be done," answered Varley absently. "I do not
-understand the man. He has been in a different sphere of life. He tried
-to hide it, but the speech--occasionally! I wonder."
-
-"You wonder if he's worth saving?"
-
-Varley shrugged his shoulders impatiently. "No, that's not what I
-meant."
-
-Finden smiled to himself. "Is it a difficult case?" he asked.
-
-"Critical and delicate; but it has been my specialty."
-
-"One of the local doctors couldn't do it, I suppose?"
-
-"They would be foolish to try."
-
-"And you are going away at sunrise to-morrow?"
-
-"Who told you that?" Varley's voice was abrupt, impatient.
-
-"I heard you say so-everybody knows it. . . . That's a bad man
-yonder, Varley." He jerked his thumb towards the hospital. "A terrible
-bad man, he's been. A gentleman once, and fell down--fell down hard.
-He's done more harm than most men. He's broken a woman's heart and
-spoilt her life, and, if he lives, there's no chance for her, none at
-all. He killed a man, and the law wants him; and she can't free herself
-without ruining him; and she can't marry the man she loves because of
-that villain yonder, crying for his life to be saved. By Josh and by
-Joan, but it's a shame, a dirty shame, it is!"
-
-Suddenly Varley turned and gripped his arm with fingers of steel.
-
-"His name--his real name?"
-
-"His name's Meydon--and a dirty shame it is, Varley."
-
-Varley was white. He had been leading his horse and talking to Finden.
-He mounted quickly now, and was about to ride away, but stopped short
-again. "Who knows--who knows the truth?" he asked.
-
-"Father Bourassa and me--no others," he answered. "I knew Meydon thirty
-years ago."
-
-There was a moment's hesitation, then Varley said hoarsely, "Tell me--
-tell me all."
-
-When all was told, he turned his horse towards the wide waste of the
-prairie, and galloped away. Finden watched him till he was lost to view
-beyond the bluff.
-
-"Now, a man like that, you can't guess what he'll do," he said
-reflectively. "He's a high-stepper, and there's no telling what
-foolishness will get hold of him. It'd be safer if he got lost on the
-prairie for twenty-four hours. He said that Meydon's only got twenty-
-four hours, if the trick isn't done! Well--"
-
-He took a penny from his pocket. "I'll toss for it. Heads he does it,
-and tails he doesn't."
-
-He tossed. It came down heads. "Well, there's one more fool in the
-world than I thought," he said philosophically, as though he had settled
-the question; as though the man riding away into the prairie with a dark
-problem to be solved had told the penny what he meant to do.
-
-Mrs. Meydon, Father Bourassa, and Finden stood in the little waiting-room
-of the hospital at Jansen, one at each window, and watched the wild
-thunderstorm which had broken over the prairie. The white heliographs of
-the elements flashed their warnings across the black sky, and the roaring
-artillery of the thunder came after, making the circle of prairie and
-tree and stream a theatre of anger and conflict. The streets of Jansen
-were washed with flood, and the green and gold things of garden and field
-and harvest crumbled beneath the sheets of rain.
-
-The faces at the window of the little room of the hospital, however, were
-but half-conscious of the storm; it seemed only an accompaniment of their
-thoughts, to typify the elements of tragedy surrounding them.
-
-For Varley there had been but one thing to do. A life might be saved,
-and it was his duty to save it. He had ridden back from the prairie as
-the sun was setting the night before, and had made all arrangements at
-the hospital, giving orders that Meydon should have no food whatever till
-the operation was performed the next afternoon, and nothing to drink
-except a little brandy-and-water.
-
-The operation was performed successfully, and Varley had issued from the
-operating-room with the look of a man who had gone through an ordeal
-which had taxed his nerve to the utmost, to find Valerie Meydon waiting,
-with a piteous, dazed look in her eyes. But this look passed when she
-heard him say, "All right!" The words brought a sense of relief,
-for if he had failed it would have seemed almost unbearable in the
-circumstances--the cup of trembling must be drunk to the dregs.
-
-Few words had passed between them, and he had gone, while she remained
-behind with Father Bourassa, till the patient should wake from the sleep
-into which he had fallen when Varley left.
-
-But within two hours they sent for Varley again, for Meydon was in
-evident danger. Varley had come, and had now been with the patient for
-some time.
-
-At last the door opened and Varley came in quickly. He beckoned to Mrs.
-Meydon and to Father Bourassa. "He wishes to speak with you," he said to
-her. "There is little time."
-
-Her eyes scarcely saw him, as she left the room and passed to where
-Meydon lay nerveless, but with wide-open eyes, waiting for her. The eyes
-closed, however, before she reached the bed. Presently they opened
-again, but the lids remained fixed. He did not hear what she said.
-
- ......................
-
-In the little waiting-room, Finden said to Varley, "What happened?"
-
-"Food was absolutely forbidden, but he got it from another patient early
-this morning while the nurse was out for a moment. It has killed him."
-
-"'Twas the least he could do, but no credit's due him. It was to be.
-I'm not envying Father Bourassa nor her there with him."
-
-Varley made no reply. He was watching the receding storm with eyes which
-told nothing.
-
-Finden spoke once more, but Varley did not hear him. Presently the door
-opened and Father Bourassa entered. He made a gesture of the hand to
-signify that all was over.
-
-Outside, the sun was breaking through the clouds upon the Western
-prairie, and there floated through the evening air the sound of a child's
-voice singing beneath the trees that fringed the river:
-
- "Will you come back, darlin'? Never heed the pain and blightin',
- Never trouble that you're wounded, that you bear the scars of
- fightin';
- Here's the luck o' Heaven to you,
- Here's the hand of love will brew you
- The cup of peace-ah, darlin', will you come back home?"
-
-
-
-
-
-
-WATCHING THE RISE OF ORION
-
-"In all the wide border his steed was the best," and the name and fame of
-Terence O'Ryan were known from Strathcona to Qu'appelle. He had ambition
-of several kinds, and he had the virtue of not caring who knew of it. He
-had no guile, and little money; but never a day's work was too hard for
-him, and he took bad luck, when it came, with a jerk of the shoulder and
-a good-natured surprise on his clean-shaven face that suited well his
-wide grey eyes and large, luxurious mouth. He had an estate, half ranch,
-half farm, with a French Canadian manager named Vigon, an old prospector
-who viewed every foot of land in the world with the eye of the
-discoverer. Gold, coal, iron, oil, he searched for them everywhere,
-making sure that sooner or later he would find them. Once Vigon had
-found coal. That was when he worked for a man called Constantine Jopp,
-and had given him great profit; but he, the discoverer, had been put off
-with a horse and a hundred dollars. He was now as devoted to Terence
-O'Ryan as he had been faithful to Constantine Jopp, whom he cursed waking
-and sleeping.
-
-In his time O'Ryan had speculated, and lost; he had floated a coal mine,
-and "been had"; he had run for the local legislature, had been elected,
-and then unseated for bribery committed by an agent; he had run races at
-Regina, and won--he had won for three years in succession; and this had
-kept him going and restored his finances when they were at their worst.
-He was, in truth, the best rider in the country, and, so far, was the
-owner also of the best three-year-old that the West had produced. He
-achieved popularity without effort. The West laughed at his enterprises
-and loved him; he was at once a public moral and a hero. It was a legend
-of the West that his forbears had been kings in Ireland like Brian
-Borhoime. He did not contradict this; he never contradicted anything.
-His challenge to all fun and satire and misrepresentation was, "What'll
-be the differ a hundred years from now!"
-
-He did not use this phrase, however, towards one experience--the advent
-of Miss Molly Mackinder, the heiress, and the challenge that reverberated
-through the West after her arrival. Philosophy deserted him then; he
-fell back on the primary emotions of mankind.
-
-A month after Miss Mackinder's arrival at La Touche a dramatic
-performance was given at the old fort, in which the officers of the
-Mounted Police took part, together with many civilians who fancied
-themselves. By that time the district had realised that Terry O'Ryan
-had surrendered to what they called "the laying on of hands" by Molly
-Mackinder. It was not certain, however, that the surrender was complete,
-because O'Ryan had been wounded before, and yet had not been taken
-captive altogether. His complete surrender seemed now more certain to
-the public because the lady had a fortune of two hundred thousand
-dollars, and that amount of money would be useful to an ambitious man in
-the growing West. It would, as Gow Johnson said, "Let him sit back and
-view the landscape o'er, before he puts his ploughshare in the mud."
-
-There was an outdoor scene in the play produced by the impetuous
-amateurs, and dialogue had been interpolated by three "imps of fame" at
-the suggestion of Constantine Jopp, one of the three, who bore malice
-towards O'Ryan, though this his colleagues did not know distinctly. The
-scene was a camp-fire--a starlit night, a colloquy between the three,
-upon which the hero of the drama, played by Terry O'Ryan, should break,
-after having, unknown to them, but in sight of the audience, overheard
-their kind of intentions towards himself.
-
-The night came. When the curtain rose for the third act there was
-exposed a star-sown sky, in which the galaxy of Orion was shown with
-distinctness, each star sharply twinkling from the electric power behind-
-a pretty scene evoking great applause. O'Ryan had never seen this back
-curtain--they had taken care that he should not--and, standing in the
-wings awaiting his cue, he was unprepared for the laughter of the
-audience, first low and uncertain, then growing, then insistent,
-and now a peal of ungovernable mirth, as one by one they understood
-the significance of the stars of Orion on the back curtain.
-
-O'Ryan got his cue, and came on to an outburst of applause which shook
-the walls. La Touche rose at him, among them Miss Molly Mackinder in the
-front row with the notables.
-
-He did not see the back curtain, or Orion blazing in the ultramarine
-blue. According to the stage directions, he was to steal along the trees
-at the wings, and listen to the talk of the men at the fire plotting
-against him, who were presently to pretend good comradeship to his face.
-It was a vigorous melodrama with some touches of true Western feeling.
-After listening for a moment, O'Ryan was to creep up the stage again
-towards the back curtain, giving a cue for his appearance.
-
-When the hilarious applause at his entrance had somewhat subsided, the
-three took up their parable, but it was not the parable of the play.
-They used dialogue not in the original. It had a significance which the
-audience were not slow to appreciate, and went far to turn "The Sunburst
-Trail" at this point into a comedy-farce. When this new dialogue began,
-O'Ryan could scarcely trust his ears, or realise what was happening.
-
-"Ah, look," said Dicky Fergus at the fire, "as fine a night as ever I saw
-in the West! The sky's a picture. You could almost hand the stars down,
-they're so near."
-
-"What's that clump together on the right--what are they called in
-astronomy?" asked Constantine Jopp, with a leer.
-
-"Orion is the name--a beauty, ain't it?" answered Fergus.
-
-"I've been watching Orion rise," said the third--Holden was his name.
-"Many's the time I've watched Orion rising. Orion's the star for me.
-Say, he wipes 'em all out--right out. Watch him rising now."
-
-By a manipulation of the lights Orion moved up the back curtain slowly,
-and blazed with light nearer the zenith. And La Touche had more than the
-worth of its money in this opening to the third act of the play. O'Ryan
-was a favourite, at whom La Touche loved to jeer, and the parable of the
-stars convulsed them.
-
-At the first words O'Ryan put a hand on himself and tried to grasp the
-meaning of it all, but his entrance and the subsequent applause had
-confused him. Presently, however, he turned to the back curtain, as
-Orion moved slowly up the heavens, and found the key to the situation.
-He gasped. Then he listened to the dialogue which had nothing to do with
-"The Sunburst Trail."
-
-"What did Orion do, and why does he rise? Has he got to rise? Why was
-the gent called Orion in them far-off days?" asked Holden.
-
-"He did some hunting in his time--with a club," Fergus replied. "He kept
-making hits, he did. Orion was a spoiler. When he took the field there
-was no room for the rest of the race. Why does he rise? Because it is a
-habit. They could always get a rise out of Orion. The Athens Eirenicon
-said that yeast might fail to rise, but touch the button and Orion would
-rise like a bird."
-
-At that instant the galaxy jerked up the back curtain again, and when the
-audience could control itself, Constantine Jopp, grinning meanly, asked:
-
-"Why does he wear the girdle?"
-
-"It is not a girdle--it is a belt," was Dicky Fergus's reply. "The gods
-gave it to him because he was a favourite. There was a lady called
-Artemis--she was the last of them. But he went visiting with Eos,
-another lady of previous acquaintance, down at a place called Ortygia,
-and Artemis shot him dead with a shaft Apollo had given her; but she
-didn't marry Apollo neither. She laid Orion out on the sky, with his
-glittering belt, around him. And Orion keeps on rising."
-
-"Will he ever stop rising?" asked Holden.
-
-Followed for the conspirators a disconcerting moment; for, when the
-laughter had subsided, a lazy voice came from the back of the hall,
-"He'll stop long enough to play with Apollo a little, I guess."
-
-It was Gow Johnson who had spoken, and no man knew Terry O'Ryan better,
-or could gauge more truly the course he would take. He had been in many
-an enterprise, many a brush with O'Ryan, and his friendship would bear
-any strain.
-
-O'Ryan recovered himself from the moment he saw the back curtain, and
-he did not find any fun in the thing. It took a hold on him out of all
-proportion to its importance. He realised that he had come to the
-parting of the ways in his life. It suddenly came upon him that
-something had been lacking in him in the past; and that his want of
-success in many things had not been wholly due to bad luck. He had been
-eager, enterprising, a genius almost at seeing good things; and yet
-others had reaped where he had sown. He had believed too much in his
-fellow-man. For the first time in his life he resented the friendly,
-almost affectionate satire of his many friends. It was amusing, it was
-delightful; but down beneath it all there was a little touch of ridicule.
-He had more brains than any of them, and he had known it in a way; he had
-led them sometimes, too, as on raids against cattle-stealers, and in a
-brush with half-breeds and Indians; as when he stood for the legislature;
-but he felt now for the first time that he had not made the most of
-himself, that there was something hurting to self-respect in this prank
-played upon him. When he came to that point his resentment went higher.
-He thought of Molly Mackinder, and he heard all too acutely the vague
-veiled references to her in their satire. By the time Gow Johnson spoke
-he had mastered himself, however, and had made up his mind. He stood
-still for a moment.
-
-"Now, please, my cue," he said quietly and satirically from the trees
-near the wings.
-
-He was smiling, but Gow Johnson's prognostication was right; and ere long
-the audience realised that he was right. There was standing before them
-not the Terry O'Ryan they had known, but another. He threw himself fully
-into his part--a young rancher made deputy sheriff, who by the occasional
-exercise of his duty had incurred the hatred of a small floating
-population that lived by fraud, violence, and cattle-stealing. The
-conspiracy was to raid his cattle, to lure him to pursuit, to ambush him,
-and kill him. Terry now played the part with a naturalness and force
-which soon lifted the play away from the farcical element introduced into
-it by those who had interpolated the gibes at himself. They had gone a
-step too far.
-
-"He's going large," said Gow Johnson, as the act drew near its close,
-and the climax neared, where O'Ryan was to enter upon a physical struggle
-with his assailants. "His blood's up. There'll be hell to pay."
-
-To Gow Johnson the play had instantly become real, and O'Ryan an injured
-man at bay, the victim of the act--not of the fictitious characters of
-the play, but of the three men, Fergus, Holden, and Constantine Jopp, who
-had planned the discomfiture of O'Ryan; and he felt that the victim's
-resentment would fall heaviest on Constantine Jopp, the bully, an old
-schoolmate of Terry's.
-
-Jopp was older than O'Ryan by three years, which in men is little, but in
-boys, at a certain time of life, is much. It means, generally, weight
-and height, an advantage in a scrimmage. Constantine Jopp had been the
-plague and tyrant of O'Ryan's boyhood. He was now a big, leering fellow
-with much money of his own, got chiefly from the coal discovered on his
-place by Vigon, the half-breed French Canadian. He had a sense of dark
-and malicious humour, a long horse-like face, with little beady eyes and
-a huge frame.
-
-Again and again had Terry fought him as a boy at school, and often he had
-been badly whipped, but he had never refused the challenge of an insult
-when he was twelve and Jopp fifteen. The climax to their enmity at
-school had come one day when Terry was seized with a cramp while bathing,
-and after having gone down twice was rescued by Jopp, who dragged him out
-by the hair of the head. He had been restored to consciousness on the
-bank and carried to his home, where he lay ill for days. During the
-course of the slight fever which followed the accident his hair was cut
-close to his head. Impetuous always, his first thought was to go and
-thank Constantine Jopp for having saved his life. As soon as he was able
-he went forth to find his rescuer, and met him suddenly on turning a
-corner of the street. Before he could stammer out the gratitude that was
-in his heart, Jopp, eyeing him with a sneering smile, said drawlingly:
-
-"If you'd had your hair cut like that I couldn't have got you out, could
-I? Holy, what a sight! Next time I'll take you by the scruff, putty-
-face--bah!"
-
-That was enough for Terry. He had swallowed the insult, stuttered his
-thanks to the jeering laugh of the lank bully, and had gone home and
-cried in shame and rage.
-
-It was the one real shadow in his life. Ill luck and good luck had been
-taken with an equable mind; but the fact that he must, while he lived,
-own the supreme debt of his life to a boy and afterwards to a man whom he
-hated by instinct was a constant cloud on him. Jopp owned him. For some
-years they did not meet, and then at last they again were thrown together
-in the West, when Jopp settled at La Touche. It was gall and wormwood to
-Terry, but he steeled himself to be friendly, although the man was as
-great a bully as the boy, as offensive in mind and character; but withal
-acute and able in his way, and with a reputation for commercial sharpness
-which would be called by another name in a different civilisation. They
-met constantly, and O'Ryan always put a hand on himself, and forced
-himself to be friendly. Once when Jopp became desperately ill there had
-been--though he fought it down, and condemned himself in every term of
-reproach--a sense of relief in the thought that perhaps his ancient debt
-would now be cancelled. It had gone on so long. And Constantine Jopp
-had never lost an opportunity of vexing him, of torturing him, of giving
-veiled thrusts, which he knew O'Ryan could not resent. It was the
-constant pin-prick of a mean soul, who had an advantage of which he could
-never be dispossessed--unless the ledger was balanced in some inscrutable
-way.
-
-Apparently bent on amusement only, and hiding his hatred from his
-colleagues, Jopp had been the instigator and begetter of the huge joke of
-the play; but it was the brains of Dick Fergus which had carried it out,
-written the dialogue, and planned the electric appliances of the back
-curtain--for he was an engineer and electrician. Neither he nor Holden
-had known the old antipathy of Terry and Constantine Jopp. There was
-only one man who knew the whole truth, and that was Gow Johnson, to whom
-Terry had once told all. At the last moment Fergus had interpolated
-certain points in the dialogue which were not even included at rehearsal.
-These referred to Apollo. He had a shrewd notion that Jopp had an idea
-of marrying Molly Mackinder if he could, cousins though they were; and he
-was also aware that Jopp, knowing Molly's liking for Terry, had tried to
-poison her mind against him, through suggestive gossip about a little
-widow at Jansen, thirty miles away. He had in so far succeeded that,
-on the very day of the performance, Molly had declined to be driven home
-from the race-course by Terry, despite the fact that Terry had won the
-chief race and owned the only dog-cart in the West.
-
-As the day went on Fergus realised, as had Gow Johnson, that Jopp had
-raised a demon. The air was electric. The play was drawing near to its
-climax--an attempt to capture the deputy sheriff, tie him to a tree, and
-leave him bound and gagged alone in the waste. There was a glitter in
-Terry's eyes, belying the lips which smiled in keeping with the character
-he presented. A look of hardness was stamped on his face, and the
-outlines of the temples were as sharp as the chin was set and the
-voice slow and penetrating.
-
-Molly Mackinder's eyes were riveted on him. She sat very still, her
-hands clasped in her lap, watching his every move. Instinct told her
-that Terry was holding himself in; that some latent fierceness and iron
-force in him had emerged into life; and that he meant to have revenge on
-Constantine Jopp one way or another, and that soon; for she had heard the
-rumour flying through the hall that her cousin was the cause of the
-practical joke just played. From hints she had had from Constantine that
-very day she knew that the rumour was the truth; and she recalled now
-with shrinking dislike the grimace accompanying the suggestion. She had
-not resented it then, being herself angry with Terry because of the
-little widow at Jansen.
-
-Presently the silence in the hall became acute; the senses of the
-audience were strained to the utmost. The acting before them was more
-realistic than anything they had ever seen, or were ever likely to see
-again in La Touche. All three conspirators, Fergus, Holden, and Jopp,
-realised that O'Ryan's acting had behind it an animal anger which
-transformed him. When he looked into their eyes it was with a steely
-directness harder and fiercer than was observed by the audience. Once
-there was occasion for O'Ryan to catch Fergus by the arm, and Fergus
-winced from the grip. When standing in the wings with Terry he ventured
-to apologise playfully for the joke, but Terry made no answer; and once
-again he had whispered good-naturedly as they stood together on the
-stage; but the reply had been a low, scornful laugh. Fergus realised
-that a critical moment was at hand. The play provided for some dialogue
-between Jopp and Terry, and he observed with anxiety that Terry now
-interpolated certain phrases meant to warn Constantine, and to excite
-him to anger also.
-
-The moment came upon them sooner than the text of the play warranted.
-O'Ryan deliberately left out several sentences, and gave a later cue, and
-the struggle for his capture was precipitated. Terry meant to make the
-struggle real. So thrilling had been the scene that to an extent the
-audience was prepared for what followed; but they did not grasp the full
-reality--that the play was now only a vehicle for a personal issue of a
-desperate character. No one had ever seen O'Ryan angry; and now that the
-demon of rage was on him, directed by a will suddenly grown to its full
-height, they saw not only a powerful character in a powerful melodrama,
-but a man of wild force. When the three desperadoes closed in on O'Ryan,
-and, with a blow from the shoulder which was not a pretence, he sent
-Holden into a far corner gasping for breath and moaning with pain, the
-audience broke out into wild cheering. It was superb acting, they
-thought. As most of them had never seen the play, they were not
-surprised when Holden did not again join the attack on the deputy
-sheriff. Those who did know the drama--among them Molly Mackinder--
-became dismayed, then anxious. Fergus and Jopp knew well from the blow
-O'Ryan had given that, unless they could drag him down, the end must be
-disaster to some one. They were struggling with him for personal safety
-now. The play was forgotten, though mechanically O'Ryan and Fergus
-repeated the exclamations and the few phrases belonging to the part.
-Jopp was silent, fighting with a malice which belongs to only half-breed,
-or half-bred, natures; and from far back in his own nature the distant
-Indian strain in him was working in savage hatred. The two were
-desperately hanging on to O'Ryan like pumas on a grizzly, when suddenly,
-with a twist he had learned from Ogami the Jap on the Smoky River, the
-slim Fergus was slung backward to the ground with the tendons of his arm
-strained and the arm itself useless for further work. There remained now
-Constantine Jopp, heavier and more powerful than O'Ryan.
-
-For O'Ryan the theatre, the people, disappeared. He was a boy again on
-the village green, with the bully before him who had tortured his young
-days. He forgot the old debt to the foe who saved his life; he forgot
-everything, except that once again, as of old, Constantine Jopp was
-fighting him, with long, strong arms trying to bring him to the ground.
-Jopp's superior height gave him an advantage in a close grip; the
-strength of his gorilla-like arms was difficult to withstand. Both were
-forgetful of the world, and the two other injured men, silent and awed,
-were watching the, fight, in which one of them, at least, was powerless
-to take part.
-
-The audience was breathless. Most now saw the grim reality of the scene
-before them; and when at last O'Ryan's powerful right hand got a grip
-upon the throat of Jopp, and they saw the grip tighten, tighten, and
-Jopp's face go from red to purple, a hundred people gasped. Excited men
-made as though to move toward the stage; but the majority still believed
-that it all belonged to the play, and shouted "Sit down!"
-
-Suddenly the voice of Gow Johnson was heard "Don't kill him--let go,
-boy!"
-
-The voice rang out with sharp anxiety, and pierced the fog of passion and
-rage in which O'Ryan was moving. He realised what he was doing, the real
-sense of it came upon him. Suddenly he let go the lank throat of his
-enemy, and, by a supreme effort, flung him across the stage, where Jopp
-lay resting on his hands, his bleared eyes looking at Terry with the fear
-and horror still in them which had come with that tightening grip on his
-throat.
-
-Silence fell suddenly on the theatre. The audience was standing. A
-woman sobbed somewhere in a far corner, but the rest were dismayed and
-speechless. A few steps before them all was Molly Mackinder, white and
-frightened, but in her eyes was a look of understanding as she gazed at
-Terry. Breathing hard, Terry stood still in the middle of the stage, the
-red fog not yet gone out of his eyes, his hands clasped at his side,
-vaguely realising the audience again. Behind him was the back curtain in
-which the lights of Orion twinkled aggressively. The three men who had
-attacked him were still where he had thrown them.
-
-The silence was intense, the strain oppressive. But now a drawling voice
-came from the back of the hall. "Are you watching the rise of Orion?"
-it said. It was the voice of Gow Johnson.
-
-The strain was broken; the audience dissolved in laughter; but it was not
-hilarious; it was the nervous laughter of relief, touched off by a native
-humour always present in the dweller of the prairie.
-
-"I beg your pardon," said Terry quietly and abstractedly to the audience.
-
-And the scene-shifter bethought himself and let down the curtain.
-
-The fourth act was not played that night. The people had had more than
-the worth of their money. In a few moments the stage was crowded with
-people from the audience, but both Jopp and O'Ryan had disappeared.
-
-Among the visitors to the stage was Molly Mackinder. There was a meaning
-smile upon her face as she said to Dicky Fergus:
-
-"It was quite wonderful, wasn't it--like a scene out of the classics--the
-gladiators or something?"
-
-Fergus gave a wary smile as he answered: "Yes. I felt like saying Ave
-Caesar, Ave! and I watched to see Artemis drop her handkerchief."
-
-"She dropped it, but you were too busy to pick it up. It would have been
-a useful sling for your arm," she added with thoughtful malice. "It
-seemed so real--you all acted so well, so appropriately. And how you
-keep it up!" she added, as he cringed when some one knocked against his
-elbow, hurting the injured tendons.
-
-Fergus looked at her meditatively before he answered. "Oh, I think we'll
-likely keep it up for some time," he rejoined ironically.
-
-"Then the play isn't finished?" she added. "There is another act? Yes,
-I thought there was, the programme said four."
-
-"Oh yes, there's another act," he answered, "but it isn't to be played
-now; and I'm not in it."
-
-"No, I suppose you are not in it. You really weren't in the last act.
-Who will be in it?"
-
-Fergus suddenly laughed outright, as he looked at Holden expostulating
-intently to a crowd of people round him. "Well, honour bright, I don't
-think there'll be anybody in it except little Conny Jopp and gentle Terry
-O'Ryan; and Conny mayn't be in it very long. But he'll be in it for a
-while, I guess. You see, the curtain came down in the middle of a
-situation, not at the end of it. The curtain has to rise again."
-
-"Perhaps Orion will rise again--you think so?" She laughed in satire;
-for Dicky Fergus had made love to her during the last three months with
-unsuppressed activity, and she knew him in his sentimental moments; which
-is fatal. It is fatal if, in a duet, one breathes fire and the other
-frost.
-
-"If you want my opinion," he said in a lower voice, as they moved towards
-the door, while people tried to listen to them--"if you want it straight,
-I think Orion has risen--right up where shines the evening star--Oh, say,
-now," he broke off, "haven't you had enough fun out of me? I tell you,
-it was touch and go. He nearly broke my arm--would have done it, if I
-hadn't gone limp to him; and your cousin Conny Jopp, little Conny Jopp,
-was as near Kingdom Come as a man wants at his age. I saw an elephant
-go 'must' once in India, and it was as like O'Ryan as putty is to dough.
-It isn't all over either, for O'Ryan will forget and forgive, and Jopp
-won't. He's your cousin, but he's a sulker. If he has to sit up nights
-to do it, he'll try to get back on O'Ryan. He'll sit up nights, but
-he'll do it, if he can. And whatever it is, it won't be pretty."
-
-Outside the door they met Gow Johnson, excitement in his eyes. He heard
-Fergus's last words.
-
-"He'll see Orion rising if he sits up nights," Gow Johnson said. "The
-game is with Terry--at last." Then he called to the dispersing gossiping
-crowd: "Hold on--hold on, you people. I've got news for you. Folks,
-this is O'Ryan's night. It's his in the starry firmament. Look at him
-shine," he cried, stretching out his arm towards the heavens, where the
-glittering galaxy hung near the zenith. "Terry O'Ryan, our O'Ryan--he's
-struck oil--on his ranch it's been struck. Old Vigon found it. Terry's
-got his own at last. O'Ryan's in it--in it alone. Now, let's hear the
-prairie-whisper," he shouted, in a great raucous voice. "Let's hear the
-prairie-whisper. What is it?"
-
-The crowd responded in a hoarse shout for O'Ryan and his fortune.
-Even the women shouted--all except Molly Mackinder. She was wondering if
-O'Ryan risen would be the same to her as O'Ryan rising. She got into her
-carriage with a sigh, though she said to the few friends with her:
-
-"If it's true, it's splendid. He deserves it too. Oh, I'm glad--I'm so
-glad." She laughed; but the laugh was a little hysterical.
-
-She was both glad and sorry. Yet as she drove home over the prairie she
-was silent. Far off in the east was a bright light. It was a bonfire
-built on O'Ryan's ranch, near where he had struck oil--struck it rich.
-The light grew and grew, and the prairie was alive with people hurrying
-towards it. La Touche should have had the news hours earlier, but the
-half-breed French-Canadian, Vigon, who had made the discovery, and had
-started for La Touche with the news, went suddenly off his head with
-excitement, and had ridden away into the prairie fiercely shouting his
-joy to an invisible world. The news had been brought in later by a
-farmhand.
-
-Terry O'Ryan had really struck oil, and his ranch was a scene of decent
-revelry, of which Gow Johnson was master. But the central figure of it
-all, the man who had, in truth, risen like a star, had become to La
-Touche all at once its notoriety as well as its favourite, its great man
-as well as its friend, he was nowhere to be found. He had been seen
-riding full speed into the prairie towards the Kourmash Wood, and the
-starlit night had swallowed him. Constantine Jopp had also disappeared;
-but at first no one gave that thought or consideration.
-
-As the night went on, however, a feeling began to stir which it is not
-good to rouse in frontier lands. It is sure to exhibit itself in forms
-more objective than are found in great populations where methods of
-punishment are various, and even when deadly are often refined. But
-society in new places has only limited resources, and is thrown back on
-primary ways and means. La Touche was no exception, and the keener
-spirits, to whom O'Ryan had ever been "a white man," and who so rejoiced
-in his good luck now that they drank his health a hundred times in his
-own whiskey and cider, were simmering with desire for a public reproval
-of Constantine Jopp's conduct. Though it was pointed out to them by the
-astute Gow Johnson that Fergus and Holden had participated in the
-colossal joke of the play, they had learned indirectly also the whole
-truth concerning the past of the two men. They realised that Fergus and
-Holden had been duped by Jopp into the escapade. Their primitive sense
-of justice exonerated the humourists and arraigned the one malicious man.
-As the night wore on they decided on the punishment to be meted out by La
-Touche to the man who had not "acted on the square."
-
-Gow Johnson saw, too late, that he had roused a spirit as hard to appease
-as the demon roused in O'Ryan earlier in the evening. He would have
-enjoyed the battue of punishment under ordinary circumstances; but he
-knew that Miss Molly Mackinder would be humiliated and indignant at the
-half-savage penalty they meant to exact. He had determined that O'Ryan
-should marry her; and this might be an obstruction in the path. It was
-true that O'Ryan now would be a rich man--one of the richest in the West,
-unless all signs failed; but meanwhile a union of fortunes would only be
-an added benefit. Besides, he had seen that O'Ryan was in earnest, and
-what O'Ryan wanted he himself wanted even more strongly. He was not
-concerned greatly for O'Ryan's absence. He guessed that Terry had ridden
-away into the night to work off the dark spirit that was on him, to have
-it out with himself. Gow Johnson was a philosopher. He was twenty years
-older than O'Ryan, and he had studied his friend as a pious monk his
-missal.
-
-He was right in his judgment. When Terry left the theatre he was like
-one in a dream, every nerve in his body at tension, his head aflame, his
-pulses throbbing. For miles he rode away into the waste along the
-northern trail, ever away from La Touche and his own home. He did not
-know of the great good fortune that had come to him; and if, in this
-hour, he had known, he would not have cared. As he rode on and on
-remorse drew him into its grasp. Shame seized him that he had let
-passion be his master, that he had lost his self-control, had taken a
-revenge out of all proportion to the injury and insult to himself. It
-did not ease his mind that he knew Constantine Jopp had done the thing
-out of meanness and malice; for he was alive to-night in the light of
-the stars, with the sweet crisp air blowing in his face, because of an
-act of courage on the part of his schooldays' foe. He remembered now
-that, when he was drowning, he had clung to Jopp with frenzied arms and
-had endangered the bully's life also. The long torture of owing this
-debt to so mean a soul was on him still, was rooted in him; but suddenly,
-in the silent searching night, some spirit whispered in his ear that this
-was the price which he must pay for his life saved to the world, a
-compromise with the Inexorable Thing. On the verge of oblivion and the
-end, he had been snatched back by relenting Fate, which requires
-something for something given, when laws are overridden and doom
-defeated. Yes, the price he was meant to pay was gratitude to one of
-shrivelled soul and innate antipathy; and he had not been man enough to
-see the trial through to the end! With a little increased strain put
-upon his vanity and pride he had run amuck. Like some heathen gladiator
-he had ravaged in the ring. He had gone down into the basements of human
-life and there made a cockpit for his animal rage, till, in the contest,
-brain and intellect had been saturated by the fumes and sweat of fleshly
-fury.
-
-How quiet the night was, how soothing to the fevered mind and body, how
-the cool air laved the heated head and flushed the lungs of the rheum of
-passion! He rode on and on, farther and farther away from home, his back
-upon the scenes where his daily deeds were done. It was long past
-midnight before he turned his horse's head again homeward.
-
-Buried in his thoughts, now calm and determined, with a new life grown up
-in him, a new strength different from the mastering force which gave him
-a strength in the theatre like one in delirium, he noticed nothing. He
-was only conscious of the omniscient night and its warm penetrating
-friendliness; as, in a great trouble, when no words can be spoken, a cool
-kind palm steals into the trembling hand of misery and stills it, gives
-it strength and life and an even pulse. He was now master in the house
-of his soul, and had no fear or doubt as to the future, or as to his
-course.
-
-His first duty was to go to Constantine Jopp, and speak his regret like a
-man. And after that it would be his duty to carry a double debt his life
-long for the life saved, for the wrong done. He owed an apology to La
-Touche, and he was scarcely aware that the native gentlemanliness in him
-had said through his fever of passion over the footlights: "I beg your
-pardon." In his heart he felt that he had offered a mean affront to
-every person present, to the town where his interests lay, where his
-heart lay.
-
-Where his heart lay--Molly Mackinder! He knew now that vanity had
-something to do, if not all to do, with his violent acts, and though
-there suddenly shot through his mind, as he rode back, a savage thrill at
-the remembrance of how he had handled the three, it was only a passing
-emotion. He was bent on putting himself right with Jopp and with La
-Touche. With the former his way was clear; he did not yet see his way as
-to La Touche. How would he be able to make the amende honorable to La
-Touche?
-
-By and by he became somewhat less absorbed and enveloped by the
-comforting night. He saw the glimmer of red light afar, and vaguely
-wondered what it was. It was in the direction of O'Ryan's Ranch, but he
-thought nothing of it, because it burned steadily. It was probably a
-fire lighted by settlers trailing to the farther north. While the night
-wore on he rode as slowly back to the town as he had galloped from it
-like a centaur with a captive.
-
-Again and again Molly Mackinder's face came before him; but he resolutely
-shut it out of his thoughts. He felt that he had no right to think of
-her until he had "done the right thing" by Jopp and by La Touche. Yet
-the look in her face as the curtain came down, it was not that of one
-indifferent to him or to what he did. He neared the town half-way
-between midnight and morning. Almost unconsciously avoiding the main
-streets, he rode a roundabout way towards the little house where
-Constantine Jopp lived. He could hear loud noises in the streets,
-singing, and hoarse shouts. Then silence came, then shouts, and silence
-again. It was all quiet as he rode up to Jopp's house, standing on the
-outskirts of the town. There was a bright light in the window of a room.
-
-Jopp, then, was still up. He would not wait till tomorrow. He would do
-the right thing now. He would put things straight with his foe before he
-slept; he would do it at any sacrifice to his pride. He had conquered
-his pride.
-
-He dismounted, threw the bridle over a post, and, going into the garden,
-knocked gently at the door. There was no response. He knocked again,
-and listened intently. Now he heard a sound-like a smothered cry or
-groan. He opened the door quickly and entered. It was dark. In another
-room beyond was a light. From it came the same sound he had heard
-before, but louder; also there was a shuffling footstep. Springing
-forward to the half-open door, he pushed it wide, and met the terror-
-stricken eyes of Constantine Jopp--the same look that he had seen at
-the theatre when his hands were on Jopp's throat, but more ghastly.
-
-Jopp was bound to a chair by a lasso. Both arms were fastened to the
-chair-arm, and beneath them, on the floor, were bowls into which blood
-dripped from his punctured wrists.
-
-He had hardly taken it all in--the work of an instant--when he saw
-crouched in a corner, madness in his eyes, his half-breed Vigon. He
-grasped the situation in a flash. Vigon had gone mad, had lain in wait
-in Jopp's house, and when the man he hated had seated himself in the
-chair, had lassoed him, bound him, and was slowly bleeding him to death.
-
-He had no time to think. Before he could act Vigon was upon him also,
-frenzy in his eyes, a knife clutched in his hand. Reason had fled, and
-he only saw in O'Ryan the frustrator of his revenge. He had watched the
-drip, drip from his victim's wrists with a dreadful joy.
-
-They were man and man, but O'Ryan found in this grisly contest a vaster
-trial of strength than in the fight upon the stage a few hours ago. The
-first lunge that Vigon made struck him on the tip of the shoulder, and
-drew blood; but he caught the hand holding the knife in an iron grasp,
-while the half-breed, with superhuman strength, tried in vain for the
-long brown throat of the man for whom he had struck oil. As they
-struggled and twisted, the eyes of the victim in the chair watched them
-with agonised emotions. For him it was life or death. He could not cry
-out--his mouth was gagged; but to O'Ryan his groans were like a distant
-echo of his own hoarse gasps as he fought his desperate fight. Terry was
-as one in an awful dream battling with vague impersonal powers which
-slowly strangled his life, yet held him back in torture from the final
-surrender.
-
-For minutes they struggled. At last O'Ryan's strength came to the point
-of breaking, for Vigon was a powerful man, and to this was added a
-madman's energy. He felt that the end was coming. But all at once,
-through the groans of the victim in the chair, Terry became conscious of
-noises outside--such noises as he had heard before he entered the house,
-only nearer and louder. At the same time he heard a horse's hoofs, then
-a knock at the door, and a voice calling: "Jopp! Jopp!"
-
-He made a last desperate struggle, and shouted hoarsely.
-
-An instant later there were footsteps in the room, followed by a cry of
-fright and amazement.
-
-It was Gow Johnson. He had come to warn Constantine Jopp that a crowd
-were come to tar and feather him, and to get him away on his own horse.
-
-Now he sprang to the front door, called to the approaching crowd for
-help, then ran back to help O'Ryan. A moment later a dozen men had Vigon
-secure, and had released Constantine Jopp, now almost dead from loss of
-blood.
-
-As they took the gag from his mouth and tied their handkerchiefs round
-his bleeding wrists, Jopp sobbed aloud. His eyes were fixed on Terry
-O'Ryan. Terry met the look, and grasped the limp hand lying on the
-chair-arm.
-
-"I'm sorry, O'Ryan, I'm sorry for all I've done to you," Jopp sobbed.
-"I was a sneak, but I want to own it. I want to be square now. You can
-tar and feather me, if you like. I deserve it." He looked at the
-others. "I deserve it," he repeated.
-
-"That's what the boys had thought would be appropriate," said Gow Johnson
-with a dry chuckle, and the crowd looked at each other and winked. The
-wink was kindly, however. "To own up and take your gruel" was the
-easiest way to touch the men of the prairie.
-
-A half-hour later the roisterers, who had meant to carry Constantine Jopp
-on a rail, carried Terry O'Ryan on their shoulders through the town,
-against his will. As they passed the house where Miss Mackinder lived
-some one shouted:
-
-"Are you watching the rise of Orion?"
-
-Many a time thereafter Terry O'Ryan and Molly Mackinder looked at the
-galaxy in the evening sky with laughter and with pride. It had played
-its part with Fate against Constantine Jopp and the little widow at
-Jansen. It had never shone so brightly as on the night when Vigon struck
-oil on O'Ryan's ranch. But Vigon had no memory of that. Such is the
-irony of life.
-
-
-
-
-ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
-
-Babbling covers a lot of secrets
-Beneath it all there was a little touch of ridicule
-What'll be the differ a hundred years from now
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NORTHERN LIGHTS
-
-By Gilbert Parker
-
-Volume 5.
-
-
-THE ERROR OF THE DAY
-THE WHISPERER
-AS DEEP AS THE SEA
-
-
-
-
-THE ERROR OF THE DAY
-
-The "Error of the Day" may be defined as "The difference between the
-distance or range which must be put upon the sights in order to hit the
-target and the actual distance from the gun to the target."--Admiralty
-Note.
-
-A great naval gun never fires twice alike. It varies from day to day,
-and expert allowance has to be made in sighting every time it is fired.
-Variations in atmosphere, condition of ammunition, and the wear of the
-gun are the contributory causes to the ever-varying "Error of the Day."
-
- .........................
-
-"Say, ain't he pretty?"
-
-"A Jim-dandy-oh, my!"
-
-"What's his price in the open market?"
-
-"Thirty millions-I think not."
-
-Then was heard the voice of Billy Goat--his name was William Goatry
-
- "Out in the cold world, out in the street;
- Nothing to wear, and nothing to eat,
- Fatherless, motherless, sadly I roam,
- Child of misfortune, I'm driven from home."
-
-A loud laugh followed, for Billy Goat was a popular person at Kowatin in
-the Saskatchewan country. He had an inimitable drollery, heightened by a
-cast in his eye, a very large mouth, and a round, good-humoured face;
-also he had a hand and arm like iron, and was altogether a great man on a
-"spree."
-
-There had been a two days' spree at Kowatin, for no other reason than
-that there had been great excitement over the capture and the subsequent
-escape of a prairie-rover, who had robbed the contractor's money-chest at
-the rail-head on the Canadian Pacific Railroad. Forty miles from Kowatin
-he had been caught by, and escaped from, the tall, brown-eyed man with
-the hard-bitten face who leaned against the open window of the tavern,
-looking indifferently at the jeering crowd before him. For a police
-officer he was not unpopular with them, but he had been a failure for
-once, and, as Billy Goat had said: "It tickled us to death to see a rider
-of the plains off his trolley--on the cold, cold ground, same as you and
-me."
-
-They did not undervalue him. If he had been less a man than he was,
-they would not have taken the trouble to cover him with their drunken
-ribaldry. He had scored off them in the past in just such sprees as
-this, when he had the power to do so, and used the power good-naturedly
-and quietly--but used it.
-
-Then, he was Sergeant Foyle of the Royal North-West Mounted Police, on
-duty in a district as large as the United Kingdom. And he had no greater
-admirer than Billy Goat, who now reviled him. Not without cause, in a
-way, for he had reviled himself to this extent, that when the prairie-
-rover, Halbeck, escaped on the way to Prince Albert, after six months'
-hunt for him and a final capture in the Kowatin district, Foyle resigned
-the Force before the Commissioner could reproach him or call him to
-account. Usually so exact, so certain of his target, some care had not
-been taken, he had miscalculated, and there had been the Error of the
-Day. Whatever it was, it had seemed to him fatal; and he had turned his
-face from the barrack yard.
-
-Then he had made his way to the Happy Land Hotel at Kowatin, to begin
-life as "a free and independent gent on the loose," as Billy Goat had
-said. To resign had seemed extreme; because, though the Commissioner was
-vexed at Halbeck's escape, Foyle was the best non-commissioned officer in
-the Force. He had frightened horse thieves and bogus land-agents and
-speculators out of the country; had fearlessly tracked down a criminal or
-a band of criminals when the odds were heavy against him. He carried on
-his cheek the scars of two bullets, and there was one white lock in his
-brown hair, where an arrow had torn the scalp away as, alone, he drove
-into the Post a score of Indians, fresh from raiding the cattle of an
-immigrant trailing north.
-
-Now he was out of work, or so it seemed; he had stepped down from his
-scarlet-coated dignity, from the place of guardian and guide of
-civilisation, into the idleness of a tavern stoop.
-
-As the little group swayed round him, and Billy Goat started another
-song, Foyle roused himself as though to move away--he was waiting for
-the mail-stage to take him south:
-
- "Oh, father, dear father, come home with me now,
- The clock in the steeple strikes one;
- You said you were coming right home from the shop
- As soon as your day's work was done.
- Come home--come home--"
-
-The song arrested him, and he leaned back against the window again. A
-curious look came into his eyes, a look that had nothing to do with the
-acts of the people before him. It was searching into a scene beyond this
-bright sunlight and the far green-brown grass, and the little oasis of
-trees in the distance marking a homestead and the dust of the wagon-
-wheels, out on the trail beyond the grain-elevator-beyond the blue
-horizon's rim, quivering in the heat, and into regions where this crisp,
-clear, life-giving, life-saving air never blew.
-
- "You said you were coming right home from the shop
- As soon as your day's work was done.
- Come home--come home--"
-
-He remembered when he had first heard this song in a play called 'Ten
-Nights in a Bar-room', many years before, and how it had wrenched his
-heart and soul, and covered him with a sudden cloud of shame and anger.
-For his father had been a drunkard, and his brother had grown up a
-drunkard, that brother whom he had not seen for ten years until--until--
-
-He shuddered, closed his eyes, as though to shut out something that the
-mind saw. He had had a rough life, he had become inured to the seamy
-side of things--there was a seamy side even in this clean, free, wide
-land; and he had no sentimentality; though something seemed to hurt and
-shame him now.
-
- "As soon as your day's work was done.
- Come home--come home--"
-
-The crowd was uproarious. The exhilaration had become a kind of
-delirium. Men were losing their heads; there was an element of
-irresponsibility in the new outbreak likely to breed some violent act,
-which every man of them would lament when sober again.
-
-Nettlewood Foyle watched the dust rising from the wheels of the stage,
-which had passed the elevator and was nearing the Prairie Home Hotel far
-down the street. He would soon leave behind him this noisy ribaldry of
-which he was the centre. He tossed his cheroot away. Suddenly he heard
-a low voice behind him.
-
-"Why don't you hit out, sergeant?" it said.
-
-He started almost violently, and turned round. Then his face flushed,
-his eyes blurred with feeling and deep surprise, and his lips parted
-in a whispered exclamation and greeting.
-
-A girl's face from the shade of the sitting-room was looking out at him,
-half-smiling, but with heightened colour and a suppressed agitation. The
-girl was not more than twenty-five, graceful, supple, and strong. Her
-chin was dimpled; across her right temple was a slight scar. She had
-eyes of a wonderful deep blue; they seemed to swim with light. As Foyle
-gazed at her for a moment dumfounded, with a quizzical suggestion and
-smiling still a little more, she said:
-
-"You used to be a little quicker, Nett." The voice appeared to attempt
-unconcern; but it quivered from a force of feeling underneath. It was so
-long since she had seen him.
-
-He was about to reply, but, at the instant, a reveller pushed him with a
-foot behind the knees so that they were sprung forward. The crowd
-laughed--all save Billy Goat, who knew his man.
-
-Like lightning, and with cold fury in his eyes, Foyle caught the tall
-cattleman by the forearm, and, with a swift, dexterous twist, had the
-fellow in his power.
-
-"Down--down, to your knees, you skunk," he said in a low, fierce voice.
-
-The knees of the big man bent,--Foyle had not taken lessons of Ogami,
-the Jap, for nothing--they bent, and the cattleman squealed, so intense
-was the pain. It was break or bend; and he bent--to the ground and
-lay there. Foyle stood over him for a moment, a hard light in his eyes,
-and then, as if bethinking himself, he looked at the other roisterers,
-and said:
-
-"There's a limit, and he reached it. Your mouths are your own, and you
-can blow off to suit your fancy, but if any one thinks I'm a tame coyote
-to be poked with a stick--!" He broke off, stooped over, and helped the
-man before him to his feet. The arm had been strained, and the big
-fellow nursed it.
-
-"Hell, but you're a twister!" the cattleman said with a grimace of pain.
-
-Billy Goat was a gentleman, after his kind, and he liked Sergeant Foyle
-with a great liking. He turned to the crowd and spoke.
-
-"Say, boys, this mine's worked out. Let's leave the Happy Land to Foyle.
-Boys, what is he--what--is he? What--is--Sergeant Foyle--boys?"
-
-The roar of the song they all knew came in reply, as Billy Goat waved his
-arms about like the wild leader of a wild orchestra:
-
- "Sergeant Foyle, oh, he's a knocker from the West,
- He's a chase-me-Charley, come-and-kiss-me tiger from the zoo;
- He's a dandy on the pinch, and he's got a double cinch
- On the gent that's going careless, and he'll soon cinch you:
- And he'll soon--and he'll soon--cinch you!"
-
-Foyle watched them go, dancing, stumbling, calling back at him, as they
-moved towards the Prairie Home Hotel:
-
- "And he'll soon-and he'll soon-cinch you!"
-
-His under lip came out, his eyes half-closed, as he watched them. "I've
-done my last cinch. I've done my last cinch," he murmured.
-
-Then, suddenly, the look in his face changed, the eyes swam as they had
-done a minute before at the sight of the girl in the room behind.
-Whatever his trouble was, that face had obscured it in a flash, and the
-pools of feeling far down in the depths of a lonely nature had been
-stirred. Recognition, memory, tenderness, desire swam in his face, made
-generous and kind the hard lines of the strong mouth. In an instant he
-had swung himself over the window-sill. The girl had drawn away now into
-a more shaded corner of the room, and she regarded him with a mingled
-anxiety and eagerness. Was she afraid of something? Did she fear that
---she knew not quite what, but it had to do with a long ago.
-
-"It was time you hit out, Nett," she said, half shyly. "You're more
-patient than you used to be, but you're surer. My, that was a twist you
-gave him, Nett. Aren't you glad to see me?" she added hastily, and with
-an effort to hide her agitation.
-
-He reached out and took her hand with a strange shyness, and a self-
-consciousness which was alien to his nature. The touch of her hand
-thrilled him. Their eyes met. She dropped hers. Then he gathered him
-self together. "Glad to see you? Of course, of course, I'm glad. You
-stunned me, Jo. Why, do you know where you are? You're a thousand miles
-from home. I can't get it through my head, not really. What brings you
-here? It's ten years--ten years since I saw you, and you were only
-fifteen, but a fifteen that was as good as twenty."
-
-He scanned her face closely. "What's that scar on your forehead, Jo?
-You hadn't that--then."
-
-"I ran up against something," she said evasively, her eyes glittering,
-"and it left that scar. Does it look so bad?"
-
-"No, you'd never notice it, if you weren't looking close as I am. You
-see, I knew your face so well ten years ago."
-
-He shook his head with a forced kind of smile. It became him, however,
-for he smiled rarely; and the smile was like a lantern turned on his
-face; it gave light and warmth to its quiet strength-or hardness.
-
-"You were always quizzing," she said with an attempt at a laugh--"always
-trying to find out things. That's why you made them reckon with you out
-here. You always could see behind things; always would have your own
-way; always were meant to be a success."
-
-She was beginning to get control of herself again, was trying hard to
-keep things on the surface. "You were meant to succeed--you had to,"
-she added.
-
-"I've been a failure--a dead failure," he answered slowly. "So they say.
-So they said. You heard them, Jo."
-
-He jerked his head towards the open window.
-
-"Oh, those drunken fools!" she exclaimed indignantly, and her face
-hardened. "How I hate drink! It spoils everything."
-
-There was silence for a moment. They were both thinking of the same
-thing--of the same man. He repeated a question.
-
-"What brings you out here, Jo?" he asked gently. "Dorland," she
-answered, her face setting into determination and anxiety.
-
-His face became pinched. "Dorl!" he said heavily. "What for, Jo?
-What do you want with Dorl?"
-
-"When Cynthy died she left her five hundred dollars a year to the baby,
-and--"
-
-"Yes, yes, I know. Well, Jo?"
-
-"Well, it was all right for five years--Dorland paid it in; but for five
-years he hasn't paid anything. He's taken it, stolen it from his own
-child by his own honest wife. I've come to get it--anyway, to stop him
-from doing it any more. His own child--it puts murder in my heart, Nett!
-I could kill him."
-
-He nodded grimly. "That's likely. And you've kept, Dorl's child with
-your own money all these years?"
-
-"I've got four hundred dollars a year, Nett, you know; and I've been
-dressmaking--they say I've got taste," she added, with a whimsical smile.
-
-Nett nodded his head. "Five years. That's twenty-five hundred dollars
-he's stolen from his own child. It's eight years old now, isn't it?"
-
-"Bobby is eight and a half," she answered.
-
-"And his schooling, and his clothing, and everything; and you have to pay
-for it all?"
-
-"Oh, I don't mind, Nett, it isn't that. Bobby is Cynthy's child; and I
-love him--love him; but I want him to have his rights. Dorl must give up
-his hold on that money--or--"
-
-He nodded gravely. "Or you'll set the law on him?"
-
-"It's one thing or the other. Better to do it now when Bobby is young
-and can't understand."
-
-"Or read the newspapers," he commented thoughtfully.
-
-"I don't think I've a hard heart," she continued, "but I'd like to punish
-him, if it wasn't that he's your brother, Nett; and if it wasn't for
-Bobby. Dorland was dreadfully cruel, even to Cynthy."
-
-"How did you know he was up here?" he asked. "From the lawyer that pays
-over the money. Dorland has had it sent out here to Kowatin this two
-years. And he sent word to the lawyer a month ago that he wanted it to
-get here as usual. The letter left the same day as I did, and it got
-here yesterday with me, I suppose. He'll be after it-perhaps to-day.
-He wouldn't let it wait long, Dorl wouldn't."
-
-Foyle started. "To-day--to-day--"
-
-There was a gleam in his eyes, a setting of the lips, a line sinking into
-the forehead between the eyes.
-
-"I've been watching for him all day, and I'll watch till he comes. I'm
-going to say some things to him that he won't forget. I'm going to get
-Bobby's money, or have the law do it--unless you think I'm a brute,
-Nett." She looked at him wistfully.
-
-"That's all right. Don't worry about me, Jo. He's my brother, but I
-know him--I know him through and through. He's done everything that a
-man can do and not be hanged. A thief, a drunkard, and a brute--and he
-killed a man out here," he added hoarsely. "I found it out myself--
-myself. It was murder."
-
-Suddenly, as he looked at her, an idea seemed to flash into his mind.
-He came very near and looked at her closely. Then he reached over and
-almost touched the scar on her forehead.
-
-"Did he do that, Jo?"
-
-For an instant she was silent and looked down at the floor. Presently
-she raised her eyes, her face suffused. Once or twice she tried to
-speak, but failed. At last she gained courage and said:
-
-"After Cynthy's death I kept house for him for a year, taking care of
-little Bobby. I loved Bobby so--he has Cynthy's eyes. One day Dorland
---oh, Nett, of course I oughtn't to have stayed there, I know it now; but
-I was only sixteen, and what did I understand! And my mother was dead.
-One day--oh, please, Nett, you can guess. He said something to me.
-I made him leave the house. Before I could make plans what to do,
-he came back mad with drink. I went for Bobby, to get out of the house,
-but he caught hold of me. I struck him in the face, and he threw me
-against the edge of the open door. It made the scar."
-
-Foyle's face was white. "Why did you never write and tell me that, Jo?
-You know that I--" He stopped suddenly.
-
-"You had gone out of our lives down there. I didn't know where you were
-for a long time; and then--then it was all right about Bobby and me,
-except that Bobby didn't get the money that was his. But now--"
-
-Foyle's voice was hoarse and low. "He made that scar, and he--and you
-only sixteen--Oh, my God!" Suddenly his face reddened, and he choked
-with shame and anger. "And he's my brother!" was all that he could say.
-
-"Do you see him up here ever?" she asked pityingly.
-
-"I never saw him till a week ago." A moment, then he added: "The letter
-wasn't to be sent here in his own name, was it?"
-
-She nodded. "Yes, in his own name, Dorland W. Foyle. Didn't he go by
-that name when you saw him?"
-
-There was an oppressive silence, in which she saw that something moved
-him strangely, and then he answered: "No, he was going by the name of
-Halbeck--Hiram Halbeck."
-
-The girl gasped. Then the whole thing burst upon her. "Hiram Halbeck!
-Hiram Halbeck, the thief--I read it all in the papers--the thief that you
-caught, and that got away. And you've left the Mounted Police because of
-it--oh, Nett!" Her eyes were full of tears, her face was drawn and grey.
-
-He nodded. "I didn't know who he was till I arrested him," he said.
-"Then, afterward, I thought of his child, and let him get away; and for
-my poor old mother's sake. She never knew how bad he was even as a boy.
-But I remember how he used to steal and drink the brandy from her
-bedside, when she had the fever. She never knew the worst of him.
-But I let him away in the night, Jo, and I resigned, and they thought
-that Halbeck had beaten me, had escaped. Of course I couldn't stay in
-the Force, having done that. But, by the heaven above us, if I had him
-here now, I'd do the thing--do it, so help me God!"
-
-"Why should you ruin your life for him?" she said, with an outburst of
-indignation. All that was in her heart welled up in her eyes at the
-thought of what Foyle was. "You must not do it. You shall not do it.
-He must pay for his wickedness, not you. It would be a sin. You and
-what becomes of you mean so much." Suddenly with a flash of purpose she
-added: "He will come for that letter, Nett. He would run any kind of
-risk to get a dollar. He will come here for that letter--perhaps today."
-
-He shook his head moodily, oppressed by the trouble that was on him.
-"He's not likely to venture here, after what's happened."
-
-"You don't know him as well as I do, Nett. He is so vain he'd do it,
-just to show that he could. He'd' probably come in the evening. Does
-any one know him here? So many people pass through Kowatin every day.
-Has any one seen him?"
-
-"Only Billy Goatry," he answered, working his way to a solution of the
-dark problem. "Only Billy Goatry knows him. The fellow that led the
-singing--that was Goatry."
-
-"There he is now," he added, as Billy Goat passed the window.
-
-She came and laid a hand on his arm. "We've got to settle things with
-him," she said. "If Dorl comes, Nett--"
-
-There was silence for a moment, then he caught her hand in his and held
-it. "If he comes, leave him to me, Jo. You will leave him to me?" he
-added anxiously.
-
-"Yes," she answered. "You'll do what's right-by Bobby?"
-
-"And by Dorl, too," he replied strangely. There were loud footsteps
-without.
-
-"It's Goatry," said Foyle. "You stay here. I'll tell him everything.
-He's all right; he's a true friend. He'll not interfere."
-
-The handle of the door turned slowly. "You keep watch on the post-
-office, Jo," he added.
-
-Goatry came round the opening door with a grin. "Hope I don't intrude,"
-he said, stealing a half-leering look at the girl. As soon as he saw her
-face, however, he straightened himself up and took on different manners.
-He had not been so intoxicated as he had made, out, and he seemed only
-"mellow" as he stood before them, with his corrugated face and queer,
-quaint look, the eye with the cast in it blinking faster than the.
-other.
-
-"It's all right, Goatry," said Foyle. "This lady is, one of my family
-from the East."
-
-"Goin' on by stage?" Goatry said vaguely, as they shook hands.
-
-She did not reply, for she was looking down the street, and presently she
-started as she gazed. She laid a hand suddenly on Foyle's arm.
-
-"See--he's come," she said in a whisper, and as though not realising
-Goatry's presence. "He's come."
-
-Goatry looked as well as Foyle. "Halbeck--the devil!" he said.
-
-Foyle turned to him. "Stand by, Goatry. I want you to keep a shut
-mouth. I've work to do."
-
-Goatry held out his hand. "I'm with you. If you get him this time,
-clamp him, clamp him like a tooth in a harrow."
-
-Halbeck had stopped his horse at the post-office door. Dismounting he
-looked quickly round, then drew the reins over the horse's head, letting
-them trail, as is the custom of the West.
-
-A few swift words passed between Goatry and Foyle. "I'll do this myself,
-Jo," he whispered to the girl presently. "Go into another room. I'll
-bring him here."
-
-In another minute Goatry was leading the horse away from the post-office,
-while Foyle stood waiting quietly at the door. The departing footsteps
-of the horse brought Halbeck swiftly to the doorway, with a letter in his
-hand.
-
-"Hi, there, you damned sucker!" he called after Goatry, and then saw
-Foyle waiting.
-
-"What the hell--!" he said fiercely, his hand on something in his hip
-pocket.
-
-"Keep quiet, Dorl. I want to have a little talk with you. Take your
-hand away from that gun--take it away," he added with a meaning not to be
-misunderstood.
-
-Halbeck knew that one shout would have the town on him, and he did not
-know what card his brother was going to play. He let his arm drop to his
-side. "What's your game? What do you want?" he asked surlily.
-
-"Come over to the Happy Land Hotel," Foyle answered, and in the light of
-what was in his mind his words had a grim irony.
-
-With a snarl Halbeck stepped out. Goatry, who had handed the horse over
-to the hostler, watched them coming.
-
-"Why did I never notice the likeness before?" Goatry said to himself.
-"But, gosh! what a difference in the men. Foyle's going to double cinch
-him this time, I guess."
-
-He followed them inside the hall of the Happy Land. When they stepped
-into the sitting-room, he stood at the door waiting. The hotel was
-entirely empty, the roisterers at the Prairie Home having drawn off the
-idlers and spectators. The barman was nodding behind the bar, the
-proprietor was moving about in the backyard inspecting a horse. There
-was a cheerful warmth everywhere, the air was like an elixir, the pungent
-smell of a pine-tree at the door gave a kind of medicament to the indrawn
-breath. And to Billy Goat, who sometimes sang in the choir of a church
-not a hundred miles away--for people agreed to forget his occasional
-sprees--there came, he knew not why, the words of a hymn he had sung only
-the preceding Sunday:
-
- "As pants the hart for cooling streams,
- When heated in the chase--"
-
-The words kept ringing in his ears as he listened to the conversation
-inside the room--the partition was thin, the door thinner, and he heard
-much. Foyle had asked him not to intervene, but only to stand by and
-await the issue of this final conference. He meant, however, to take a
-hand in, if he thought he was needed, and he kept his ear glued to the
-door. If he thought Foyle needed him--his fingers were on the handle of
-the door.
-
-"Now, hurry up! What do you want with me?" asked Halbeck of his
-brother.
-
-"Take your time," said ex-Sergeant Foyle, as he drew the blind three-
-quarters down, so that they could not be seen from the street.
-
-"I'm in a hurry, I tell you. I've got my plans. I'm going South. I've
-only just time to catch the Canadian Pacific three days from now, riding
-hard."
-
-"You're not going South, Dorl."
-
-"Where am I going, then?" was the sneering reply. "Not farther than the
-Happy Land."
-
-"What the devil's all this? You don't mean you're trying to arrest me
-again, after letting me go?"
-
-"You don't need to ask. You're my prisoner. You're my prisoner," he
-said in a louder voice--" until you free yourself."
-
-"I'll do that damn quick, then," said the other, his hand flying to his
-hip.
-
-"Sit down," was the sharp rejoinder, and a pistol was in his face before
-he could draw his own weapon. "Put your gun on the table," Foyle said
-quietly. Halbeck did so. There was no other way.
-
-Foyle drew it over to himself. His brother made a motion to rise.
-
-"Sit still, Dorl," came the warning voice.
-
-White with rage, the freebooter sat still, his dissipated face and heavy
-angry lips looking like a debauched and villainous caricature of his
-brother before him.
-
-"Yes, I suppose you'd have potted me, Dorl," said the ex-sergeant.
-
-"You'd have thought no more of doing that than you did of killing Linley,
-the ranchman; than you did of trying to ruin Jo Byndon, your wife's
-sister, when she was sixteen years old, when she was caring for your
-child--giving her life for the child you brought into the world."
-
-"What in the name of hell--it's a lie!"
-
-"Don't bluster. I know the truth."
-
-"Who told you-the truth?"
-
-"She did--to-day--an hour ago."
-
-"She here--out here?" There was a new cowed note in the voice.
-
-"She is in the next room."
-
-"What did she come here for?"
-
-"To make you do right by your own child. I wonder what a jury of decent
-men would think about a man who robbed his child for five years, and let
-that child be fed and clothed and cared for by the girl he tried to
-destroy, the girl he taught what sin there was in the world."
-
-"She put you up to this. She was always in love with you, and you know
-it."
-
-There was a dangerous look in Foyle's eyes, and his jaw set hard. "There
-would be no shame in a decent woman caring for me, even if it was true.
-I haven't put myself outside the boundary as you have. You're my
-brother, but you're the worst scoundrel in the country--the worst
-unhanged. Put on the table there the letter in your pocket. It holds
-five hundred dollars belonging to your child. There's twenty-five
-hundred dollars more to be accounted for."
-
-The other hesitated, then with an oath threw the letter on the table.
-"I'll pay the rest as soon as I can, if you'll stop this damned
-tomfoolery," he said sullenly, for he saw that he was in a hole.
-
-"You'll pay it, I suppose, out of what you stole from the C.P.R.
-contractor's chest. No, I don't think that will do."
-
-"You want me to go to prison, then?"
-
-"I think not. The truth would come out at the trial--the whole truth--
-the murder, and all. There's your child Bobby. You've done him enough
-wrong already. Do you want him--but it doesn't matter whether you do or
-not--do you want him to carry through life the fact that his father was a
-jail-bird and a murderer, just as Jo Byndon carries the scar you made
-when you threw her against the door?"
-
-"What do you want with me, then?" The man sank slowly and heavily back
-into the chair.
-
-"There is a way--have you never thought of it? When you threatened
-others as you did me, and life seemed such a little thing in others
---can't you think?"
-
-Bewildered, the man looked around helplessly. In the silence which
-followed Foyle's words his brain was struggling to see a way out.
-Foyle's further words seemed to come from a great distance.
-
-"It's not too late to do the decent thing. You'll never repent of all
-you've done; you'll never do different."
-
-The old reckless, irresponsible spirit revived in the man; he had both
-courage and bravado, he was not hopeless yet of finding an escape from
-the net. He would not beg, he would struggle.
-
-"I've lived as I meant to, and I'm not going to snivel or repent now.
-It's all a rotten business, anyhow," he rejoined.
-
-With a sudden resolution the ex-sergeant put his own pistol in his
-pocket, then pushed Halbeck's pistol over towards him on the table.
-Halbeck's eyes lighted eagerly, grew red with excitement, then a change
-passed over them. They now settled on the pistol, and stayed. He heard
-Foyle's voice. "It's with you to do what you ought to do. Of course you
-can kill me. My pistol's in my pocket. But I don't think you will.
-You've murdered one man. You won't load your soul up with another.
-Besides, if you kill me, you will never get away from Kowatin alive.
-But it's with you--take your choice. It's me or you."
-
-Halbeck's fingers crept out and found the pistol. "Do your duty, Dorl,"
-said the ex-sergeant as he turned his back on his brother.
-
-The door of the room opened, and Goatry stepped inside softly. He had
-work to do, if need be, and his face showed it. Halbeck did not see him.
-
-There was a demon in Halbeck's eyes, as his brother stood, his back
-turned, taking his chances. A large mirror hung on the wall opposite
-Halbeck. Goatry was watching Halbeck's face in the glass, and saw the
-danger. He measured his distance.
-
-All at once Halbeck caught Goatry's face in the mirror. The dark devilry
-faded out of his eyes. His lips moved in a whispered oath. Every way
-was blocked.
-
-With a sudden wild resolution he raised the pistol to his head. It
-cracked, and he fell back heavily in the chair. There was a red trickle
-at the temple.
-
-He had chosen the best way out.
-
-"He had the pluck," said Goatry, as Foyle swung round with a face of
-misery.
-
-A moment afterward came a rush of people. Goatry kept them back.
-
-"Sergeant Foyle arrested Halbeck, and Halbeck's shot himself," Goatry
-explained to them.
-
-A white-faced girl with a scar on her temple made her way into the room.
-
-"Come away-come away, Jo," said the voice of the man she loved; and he
-did not let her see the lifeless figure in the chair.
-
-Three days later the plains swallowed them, as they made their way with
-Billy Goatry to the headquarters of the Riders of the Plains, where
-Sergeant Foyle was asked to reconsider his resignation: which he did.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE WHISPERER
-
- "And thou shalt be brought down and shalt speak out of the ground,
- and thy speech shall be low out of the dust, and thy voice shall be
- as of one that hath a familiar spirit out of the ground, and thy
- speech shall whisper out of the dust."
-
-The harvest was all in, and, as far as eye could observe nothing remained
-of the golden sea of wheat which had covered the wide prairie save the
-yellow stubble, the bed of an ocean of wealth which had been gathered.
-Here, the yellow level was broken by a dark patch of fallow land, there,
-by a covert of trees also tinged with yellow, or deepening to crimson and
-mauve--the harbinger of autumn. The sun had not the insistent and
-intensive strength of more southerly climes; it was buoyant, confident
-and heartening, and it shone in a turquoise vault which covered and
-endeared the wide, even world beneath. Now and then a flock of wild
-ducks whirred past, making for the marshes or the innumerable lakes that
-vitalised the expanse, or buzzards hunched heavily along, frightened from
-some far resort by eager sportsmen.
-
-That was above; but beneath, on a level with the unlifted eye, were
-houses here and there, looking in the vastness like dolls' habitations.
-Many of the houses stood blank and staring in the expanse, but some had
-trees, and others little oases of green. Everywhere prosperity,
-everywhere the strings of life pulled taut, signs that energy had been
-straining on the leash.
-
-Yet there was one spot where it seemed that deadness made encampment.
-It could not be seen in the sweep of the eye, you must have travelled and
-looked vigilantly to find it; but it was there--a lake shimmering in the
-eager sun, washing against a reedy shore, a little river running into the
-reedy lake at one end and out at, the other, a small, dilapidated house
-half hid in a wood that stretched for half a mile or so upon a rising
-ground. In front of the house, not far from the lake, a man was lying
-asleep upon the ground, a rough felt hat drawn over his eyes.
-
-Like the house, the man seemed dilapidated also: a slovenly, ill-dressed,
-demoralised figure he looked, even with his face covered. He seemed in a
-deep sleep. Wild ducks settled on the lake not far from him with a swish
-and flutter; a coyote ran past, veering as it saw the recumbent figure;
-a prairie hen rustled by with a shrill cluck, but he seemed oblivious to
-all. If asleep, he was evidently dreaming, for now and then he started,
-or his body twitched, and a muttering came from beneath the hat.
-
-The battered house, the absence of barn or stable or garden, or any token
-of thrift or energy, marked the man as an excrescence in this theatre of
-hope and fruitful toil. It all belonged to some degenerate land, some
-exhausted civilisation, not to this field of vigour where life rang like
-silver.
-
-So the man lay for hour upon hour. He slept as though he had been upon a
-long journey in which the body was worn to helplessness. Or was it that
-sleep of the worn-out spirit which, tortured by remembrance and remorse,
-at last sinks into the depths where the conscious vexes the unconscious
---a little of fire, a little of ice, and now and then the turn of the
-screw?
-
-The day marched nobly on towards evening, growing out of its blue and
-silver into a pervasive golden gleam; the bare, greyish houses on the
-prairie were transformed into miniature palaces of light. Presently a
-girl came out of the woods behind, looking at the neglected house with a
-half-pitying curiosity. She carried in one hand a fishing rod which had
-been telescoped till it was no bigger than a cane; in the other she
-carried a small fishing basket. Her father's shooting and fishing camp
-was a few miles away by a lake of greater size than this which she
-approached. She had tired of the gay company in camp, brought up for
-sport from beyond the American border where she also belonged, and she
-had come to explore the river running into this reedy lake. She turned
-from the house and came nearer to the lake, shaking her head, as though
-compassionating the poor, folk who lived there. She was beautiful. Her
-hair was brown, going to tawny, but in this soft light which enwrapped
-her, she was in a sort of topaz flame. As she came on, suddenly she
-stopped as though transfixed. She saw the man--and saw also a tragedy
-afoot.
-
-The man stirred violently in his sleep, cried out, and started up. As he
-did so, a snake, disturbed in its travel past him, suddenly raised itself
-in anger. Startled out of sleep by some inner torture, the man heard the
-sinister rattle he knew so well, and gazed paralysed.
-
-The girl had been but a few feet away when she first saw the man and his
-angry foe. An instant, then, with the instinct of the woods and the
-plains, and the courage that has habitation everywhere, dropping her
-basket she sprang forward noiselessly. The short, telescoped fishing rod
-she carried swung round her head and completed its next half-circle at
-the head of the reptile, even as it was about to strike. The blow was
-sure, and with half-severed head the snake fell dead upon the ground
-beside the man.
-
-He was like one who has been projected from one world to another, dazed,
-stricken, fearful. Presently the look of agonised dismay gave way to
-such an expression of relief as might come upon the face of a reprieved
-victim about to be given to the fire, or to the knife that flays. The
-place of dreams from which he had emerged was like hell, and this was
-some world of peace that he had not known these many years. Always one
-had been at his elbow--"a familiar spirit out of the ground"--whispering
-in his ear. He had been down in the abysses of life.
-
-He glanced again at the girl, and realised what she had done: she had
-saved his life. Whether it had been worth saving was another question;
-but he had been near to the brink, had looked in, and the animal in him
-had shrunk back from the precipice in a confused agony of fear. He
-staggered to his feet.
-
-"Where do you come from?" he said, pulling his coat closer to hide the
-ragged waistcoat underneath, and adjusting his worn and dirty hat--in his
-youth he had been vain and ambitious and good-looking also.
-
-He asked his question in no impertinent tone, but in the low voice of one
-who "shall whisper out of the dust." He had not yet recovered from the
-first impression of his awakening, that the world in which he now stood
-was not a real world.
-
-She understood, and half in pity and half in conquered repugnance said:
-
-"I come from a camp beyond"--she indicated the direction by a gesture.
-"I had been fishing"--she took up the basket--"and chanced on you--then."
-She glanced at the snake significantly.
-
-"You killed it in the nick of time," he said, in a voice that still spoke
-of the ground, but with a note of half-shamed gratitude. "I want to
-thank you," he added. "You were brave. It would have turned on you if
-you had missed. I know them. I've killed five." He spoke very slowly,
-huskily.
-
-"Well, you are safe--that is the chief thing," she rejoined, making as
-though to depart. But presently she turned back. "Why are you so
-dreadfully poor--and everything?" she asked gently.
-
-His eye wandered over the lake and back again before he answered her, in
-a dull, heavy tone: "I've had bad luck, and, when you get down, there are
-plenty to kick you farther."
-
-"You weren't always poor as you are now--I mean long ago, when you were
-young."
-
-"I'm not so old," he rejoined sluggishly--"only thirty-four."
-
-She could not suppress her astonishment. She looked at the hair already
-grey, the hard, pinched face, the lustreless eyes.
-
-"Yet it must seem long to you," she said with meaning. Now he laughed
---a laugh sodden and mirthless. He was thinking of his boyhood.
-Everything, save one or two spots all fire or all darkness, was dim
-in his debilitated mind.
-
-"Too far to go back," he said, with a gleam of the intelligence which had
-been strong in him once.
-
-She caught the gleam. She had wisdom beyond her years. It was the
-greater because her mother was dead, and she had had so much wealth to
-dispense, for her father was rich beyond counting, and she controlled his
-household, and helped to regulate his charities. She saw that he was not
-of the labouring classes, that he had known better days; his speech, if
-abrupt and cheerless, was grammatical.
-
-"If you cannot go back, you can go forwards," she said firmly. "Why
-should you be the only man in this beautiful land who lives like this,
-who is idle when there is so much to do, who sleeps in the daytime when
-there is so much time to sleep at night?"
-
-A faint flush came on the greyish, colourless face. "I don't sleep at
-night," he returned moodily.
-
-"Why don't you sleep?" she asked.
-
-He did not answer, but stirred the body of the snake with his foot. The
-tail moved; he stamped upon the head with almost frenzied violence, out
-of keeping with his sluggishness.
-
-She turned away, yet looked back once more--she felt tragedy around her.
-"It is never too late to mend," she said, and moved on, but stopped; for
-a young man came running from the woods towards her.
-
-"I've had a hunt--such a hunt for you," the young man said eagerly, then
-stopped short when he saw to whom she had been talking. A look of
-disgust came upon his face as he drew her away, his hand on her arm.
-
-"In Heaven's name, why did you talk to that man?" he said. "You ought
-not to have trusted yourself near him."
-
-"What has he done?" she asked. "Is he so bad?"
-
-"I've heard about him. I inquired the other day. He was once in a
-better position as a ranchman--ten years ago; but he came into some money
-one day, and he changed at once. He never had a good character; even
-before he got his money he used to gamble, and was getting a bad name.
-Afterwards he began drinking, and he took to gambling harder than ever.
-Presently his money all went and he had to work; but his bad habits had
-fastened on him, and now he lives from hand to mouth, sometimes working
-for a month, sometimes idle for months. There's something sinister about
-him, there's some mystery; for poverty or drink even--and he doesn't
-drink much now--couldn't make him what he is. He doesn't seek company,
-and he walks sometimes endless miles talking to himself, going as hard
-as he can. How did you come to speak to him, Grace?"
-
-She told him all, with a curious abstraction in her voice, for she was
-thinking of the man from a standpoint which her companion could not
-realise. She was also trying to verify something in her memory. Ten
-years ago, so her lover had just said, the poor wretch behind them had
-been a different man; and there had shot into her mind the face of a
-ranchman she had seen with her father, the railway king, one evening when
-his "special" had stopped at a railway station on his tour through
-Montana--ten years ago. Why did the face of the ranchman which had fixed
-itself on her memory then, because he had come on the evening of her
-birthday and had spoiled it for her, having taken her father away from
-her for an hour--why did his face come to her now? What had it to do
-with the face of this outcast she had just left?
-
-"What is his name?" she asked at last.
-
-"Roger Lygon," he answered.
-
-"Roger Lygon," she repeated mechanically. Something in the man chained
-her thought--his face that moment when her hand saved him and the awful
-fear left him, and a glimmer of light came into his eyes.
-
-But her lover beside her broke into song. He was happy with her.
-Everything was before him, her beauty, her wealth, herself. He could not
-dwell upon dismal things; his voice rang out on the sharp sweet evening
-air:
-
- "'Oh, where did you get them, the bonny, bonny roses
- That blossom in your cheeks, and the morning in your eyes?'
- 'I got them on the North Trail, the road that never closes,
- That widens to the seven gold gates of paradise.'
- 'O come, let us camp in the North Trail together,
- With the night-fires lit and the tent-pegs down.'"
-
-Left alone, the man by the reedy lake stood watching them until they were
-out of view. The song came back to him, echoing across the waters:
-
- "O come, let us camp on the North Trail together,
- With the night-fires lit and the tent-pegs down."
-
-The sunset glow, the girl's presence, had given him a moment's illusion,
-had absorbed him for a moment, acting on his deadened nature like a
-narcotic at once soothing and stimulating. As some wild animal in a
-forgotten land, coming upon ruins of a vast civilisation, towers,
-temples, and palaces, in the golden glow of an Eastern evening, stands
-abashed and vaguely wondering, having neither reason to understand, nor
-feeling to enjoy, yet is arrested and abashed, so he stood. He had lived
-the last three years so much alone, had been cut off so completely from
-his kind--had lived so much alone. Yet to-night, at last, he would not
-be alone.
-
-Some one was coming to-night, some one whom he had not seen for a long
-time. Letters had passed, the object of the visit had been defined, and
-he had spent the intervening days since the last letter had arrived, now
-agitated, now apathetic and sullen, now struggling with some invisible
-being that kept whispering in his ear, saying to him, "It was the price
-of fire, and blood, and shame. You did it--you--you--you! You are down,
-and you will never get up. You can only go lower still--fire, and blood,
-and shame!"
-
-Criminal as he was he had never become hardened, he had only become
-degraded. Crime was not his vocation. He had no gift for it; still the
-crime he had committed had never been discovered--the crime that he did
-with others. There were himself and Dupont and another. Dupont was
-coming to-night--Dupont who had profited by the crime, and had not spent
-his profits, but had built upon them to further profit; for Dupont was
-avaricious and prudent, and a born criminal. Dupont had never had any
-compunctions or remorse, had never lost a night's sleep because of what
-they two had done, instigated thereto by the other, who had paid them so
-well for the dark thing.
-
-The other was Henderley, the financier. He was worse perhaps than
-Dupont, for he was in a different sphere of life, was rich beyond
-counting, and had been early nurtured in quiet Christian surroundings.
-The spirit of ambition, rivalry, and the methods of a degenerate and
-cruel finance had seized him, mastered him; so that, under the cloak of
-power--as a toreador hides the blade under the red cloth before his enemy
-the toro--he held a sword of capital which did cruel and vicious things,
-at last becoming criminal also. Henderley had incited and paid; the
-others, Dupont and Lygon, had acted and received. Henderley had had no
-remorse, none at any rate that weighed upon him; for he had got used to
-ruining rivals, and seeing strong men go down, and those who had fought
-him come to beg or borrow of him in the end. He had seen more than one
-commit suicide, and those they loved go down and farther down, and he had
-helped these up a little, but not enough to put them near his own plane
-again; and he could not see--it never occurred to him--that he had done
-any evil to them. Dupont thought upon his crimes now and then, and his
-heart hardened, for he had no moral feeling; Henderley did not think at
-all. It was left to the man of the reedy lake to pay the penalty of
-apprehension, to suffer the effects of crime upon a nature not naturally
-criminal.
-
-Again and again, how many hundreds of times, had Roger Lygon seen in his
-sleep--had even seen awake so did hallucination possess him--the new
-cattle trail he had fired for scores of miles. The fire had destroyed
-the grass over millions of acres, two houses had been burned and three
-people had lost their lives; all to satisfy the savage desire of one man,
-to destroy the chance of a cattle trade over a great section of country
-for the railway which was to compete with his own--an act which, in the
-end, was futile, failed of its purpose. Dupont and Lygon had been paid
-their price, and had disappeared, and been forgotten--they were but pawns
-in his game--and there was no proof against Henderley. Henderley had
-forgotten. Lygon wished to forget, but Dupont remembered, and meant now
-to reap fresh profit by the remembrance.
-
-Dupont was coming to-night, and the hatchet of crime was to be dug up
-again. So it had been planned. As the shadows fell, Lygon roused
-himself from his trance with a shiver. It was not cold, but in him there
-was a nervous agitation, making him cold from head to foot; his body
-seemed as impoverished as his mind. Looking with heavy-lidded eyes
-across the prairie, he saw in the distance the barracks of the Riders of
-the Plains and the jail near by, and his shuddering ceased. There was
-where he belonged, within four stone walls; yet here he was free to go
-where he willed, to live as he willed, with no eye upon him. With no eye
-upon him? There was no eye, but there was the Whisperer whom he could
-never drive away. Morning and night he heard the words, "You--you--you!
-Fire, and blood, and shame!" He had snatched sleep when he could find
-it, after long, long hours of tramping over the plains, ostensibly to
-shoot wild fowl, but in truth to bring on a great bodily fatigue--and
-sleep. His sleep only came then in the first watches of the night. As
-the night wore on the Whisperer began again, as the cloud of weariness
-lifted a little from him, and the senses were released from the heavy
-sedative of unnatural exertion.
-
- .........................
-
-The dusk deepened. The moon slowly rose. He cooked his scanty meal,
-and took a deep draught from a horn of whiskey from beneath a board in
-the flooring. He had not the courage to face Dupont without it, nor yet
-to forget what he must forget, if he was to do the work Dupont came to
-arrange--he must forget the girl who had saved his life and the influence
-of those strange moments in which she had spoken down to him, in the
-abyss where he had been lying.
-
-He sat in the doorway, a fire gleaming behind him; he drank in the good
-air as though his lungs were thirsty for it, and saw the silver glitter
-of the moon upon the water. Not a breath of wind stirred, and the
-shining path the moon made upon the reedy lake fascinated his eye.
-Everything was so still except that whisper louder in his ear than it had
-ever been before.
-
-Suddenly, upon the silver path upon the lake there shot a silent canoe,
-with a figure as silently paddling towards him. He gazed for a moment
-dismayed, and then got to his feet with a jerk.
-
-"Dupont," he said mechanically.
-
-The canoe swished among the reeds and rushes, scraped on the shore, and a
-tall, burly figure sprang from it, and stood still, looking at the house.
-
-"Qui reste la--Lygon?" he asked.
-
-"Dupont," was the nervous, hesitating reply. Dupont came forwards
-quickly. "Ah, ben, here we are again--so," he grunted cheerily.
-
-Entering the house they sat before the fire, holding their hands to the
-warmth from force of habit, though the night was not cold.
-
-"Ben, you will do it to-night--then?" Dupont said. "Sacre, it is time!"
-
-"Do what?" rejoined the other heavily.
-
-An angry light leapt into Dupont's eyes. "You not unnerstan' my letters-
-bah! You know it all right, so queeck."
-
-The other remained silent, staring into the fire with wide, searching
-eyes.
-
-Dupont put a hand on him. "You ketch my idee queeck. We mus' have more
-money from that Henderley--certainlee. It is ten years, and he t'ink it
-is all right. He t'ink we come no more becos' he give five t'ousan'
-dollars to us each. That was to do the t'ing, to fire the country.
-Now we want another ten t'ousan' to us each, to forget we do it for him
---hein?"
-
-Still there was no reply. Dupont went on, watching the other furtively,
-for he did not like this silence. But he would not resent it till he was
-sure there was good cause.
-
-"It comes to suit us. He is over there at the Old Man Lak', where you
-can get at him easy, not like in the city where he lif'. Over in the
-States, he laugh mebbe, becos' he is at home, an' can buy off the law.
-But here--it is Canadaw, an' they not care eef he have hunder' meellion
-dollar. He know that--sure. Eef you say you not care a dam to go to
-jail, so you can put him there, too, becos' you have not'ing, an' so dam
-seeck of everyt'ing, he will t'ink ten t'ousan' dollar same as one cent
-to Nic Dupont--ben sur!"
-
-Lygon nodded his head, still holding his hands to the blaze. With ten
-thousand dollars he could get away into--into another world somewhere,
-some world where he could forget; as he forgot for a moment this
-afternoon when the girl said to him, "It is never too late to mend."
-
-Now as he thought of her, he pulled his coat together, and arranged the
-rough scarf at his neck involuntarily. Ten thousand dollars--but ten
-thousand dollars by blackmail, hush-money, the reward of fire, and blood,
-and shame! Was it to go on? Was he to commit a new crime?
-
-He stirred, as though to shake off the net that he felt twisting round
-him, in the hands of the robust and powerful Dupont, on whom crime sat
-so lightly, who had flourished while he, Lygon, had gone lower and lower.
-Ten years ago he had been the better man, had taken the lead, was the
-master, Dupont the obedient confederate, the tool. Now, Dupont, once the
-rough river-driver, grown prosperous in a large way for him--who might
-yet be mayor of his town in Quebec--he held the rod of rule. Lygon was
-conscious that the fifty dollars sent him every New Year for five years
-by Dupont had been sent with a purpose, and that he was now Dupont's
-tool. Debilitated, demoralised, how could he, even if he wished,
-struggle against this powerful confederate, as powerful in will as in
-body? Yet if he had his own way he would not go to Henderley. He had
-lived with "a familiar spirit" so long, he feared the issue of this next
-excursion into the fens of crime.
-
-Dupont was on his feet now. "He will be here only three days more--I haf
-find it so. To-night it mus' be done. As we go I will tell you what to
-say. I will wait at the Forks, an' we will come back togedder. His
-cheque will do. Eef he gif at all, the cheque is all right. He will not
-stop it. Eef he haf the money, it is better--sacre--yes. Eef he not
-gif--well, I will tell you, there is the other railway man he try to
-hurt, how would he like--But I will tell you on the river. Main'enant--
-queeck, we go."
-
-Without a word Lygon took down another coat and put it on. Doing so he
-concealed a weapon quickly as Dupont stooped to pick a coal for his pipe
-from the blaze. Lygon had no fixed purpose in taking a weapon with him;
-it was only a vague instinct of caution that moved him.
-
-In the canoe on the river, in an almost speechless apathy, he heard
-Dupont's voice giving him instructions.
-
- .......................
-
-Henderley, the financier, had just finished his game of whist and
-dismissed his friends--it was equivalent to dismissal, rough yet genial
-as he seemed to be, so did immense wealth and its accompanying power
-affect his relations with those about him. In everything he was
-"considered." He was in good humour, for he had won all the evening, and
-with a smile he rubbed his hands among the notes--three thousand dollars
-it was. It was like a man with a pocket full of money, chuckling over a
-coin he has found in the street. Presently he heard a rustle of the
-inner tent-curtain and swung round. He faced the man from the reedy
-lake.
-
-Instinctively he glanced round for a weapon, mechanically his hands
-firmly grasped the chair in front of him.
-
-He had been in danger of his life many times, and he had no fear. He had
-been threatened with assassination more than once, and he had got used to
-the idea of danger; life to him was only a game.
-
-He kept his nerve; he did not call out; he looked his visitor in the
-eyes.
-
-"What are you doing here? Who are you?" he said.
-
-"Don't you know me?" answered Lygon, gazing intently at him.
-
-Face to face with the man who had tempted him to crime, Lygon had a new
-sense of boldness, a sudden feeling of reprisal, a rushing desire to put
-the screw upon him. At sight of this millionaire with the pile of notes
-before him there vanished the sickening hesitation of the afternoon, of
-the journey with Dupont. The look of the robust, healthy financier was
-like acid in a wound; it maddened him.
-
-"You will know me better soon," Lygon added, his head twitching with
-excitement.
-
-Henderley recognised him now. He gripped the armchair spasmodically,
-but presently regained a complete composure. He knew the game that was
-forward here; and he also thought that if once he yielded to blackmail
-there would never be an end to it. He made no pretence, but came
-straight to the point.
-
-"You can do nothing; there is no proof," he said with firm assurance.
-
-"There is Dupont," answered Lygon doggedly.
-
-"Who is Dupont?"
-
-"The French Canadian who helped me--I divided with him."
-
-"You said the man who helped you died. You wrote that to me. I suppose
-you are lying now."
-
-Henderley coolly straightened the notes on the table, smoothing out the
-wrinkles, arranging them according to their denominations with an
-apparently interested eye; yet he was vigilantly watching the outcast
-before him. To yield to blackmail would be fatal; not to yield to it--
-he could not see his way. He had long ago forgotten the fire, and blood,
-and shame. No Whisperer reminded him of that black page in the history
-of his life; he had been immune of conscience. He could not understand
-this man before him. It was as bad a case of human degradation as ever
-he had seen--he remembered the stalwart, if dissipated, ranchman who had
-acted on his instigation. He knew now that he had made a foolish blunder
-then, that the scheme had been one of his failures; but he had never
-looked on it as with eyes reproving crime. As a hundred thoughts tending
-towards the solution of the problem by which he was faced, flashed
-through his mind, and he rejected them all, he repeated mechanically the
-phrase, "I suppose you are lying now."
-
-"Dupont is here--not a mile away," was the reply. "He will give proof.
-He would go to jail or to the gallows to put you there, if you do not
-pay. He is a devil--Dupont."
-
-Still the great man could not see his way out. He must temporise for a
-little longer, for rashness might bring scandal or noise; and near by was
-his daughter, the apple of his eye.
-
-"What do you want? How much did you figure you could get out of me,
-if I let you bleed me?" he asked sneeringly and coolly. "Come now, how
-much?"
-
-Lygon, in whom a blind hatred of the man still raged, was about to reply,
-when he heard a voice calling, "Daddy, Daddy!"
-
-Suddenly the red, half-insane light died down in Lygon's eyes. He saw
-the snake upon the ground by the reedy lake, the girl standing over it--
-the girl with the tawny hair. This was her voice.
-
-Henderley had made a step towards a curtain opening into another room of
-the great tent, but before he could reach it the curtain was pushed back,
-and the girl entered with a smile.
-
-"May I come in?" she said; then stood still astonished; seeing Lygon.
-
-"Oh!" she exclaimed. "Oh--you!"
-
-All at once a look came into her face which stirred it as a flying insect
-stirs the water of a pool. On the instant she remembered that she had
-seen the man before.
-
-It was ten years ago in Montana on the night of her birthday. Her father
-had been called away to talk with this man, and she had seen him from the
-steps of the "special." It was only the caricature of the once strong,
-erect ranchman that she saw, but there was no mistake, she recognised him
-now.
-
-Lygon, dumfounded, looked from her to her father, and he saw now in
-Henderley's eyes a fear that was not to be misunderstood.
-
-Here was where Henderley could be smitten, could be brought to his knees.
-It was the vulnerable part of him. Lygon could see that he was stunned.
-The great financier was in his power. He looked back again to the girl,
-and her face was full of trouble.
-
-A sharp suspicion was in her heart that somehow or other her father was
-responsible for this man's degradation and ruin. She looked Lygon in the
-eyes.
-
-"Did you want to see me?" she asked.
-
-She scarcely knew why she said it; but she was sensible of trouble, maybe
-of tragedy, somewhere; and she had a vague dread of she knew not what,
-for hide it, avoid it, as she had done so often, there was in her heart
-an unhappy doubt concerning her father.
-
-A great change had come over Lygon. Her presence had altered him. He
-was again where she had left him in the afternoon.
-
-He heard her say to her father, "This was the man I told you of--at the
-reedy lake. Did you come to see me?" she repeated.
-
-"I did not know you were here," he answered. "I came"--he was conscious
-of Henderley's staring eyes fixed upon him helplessly--"I came to ask
-your father if he would not buy my shack. There is good shooting at the
-lake; the ducks come plenty, sometimes. I want to get away, to start
-again somewhere. I've been a failure. I want to get away, right away
-south. If he would buy it I could start again. I've had no luck." He
-had invented it on the moment, but the girl understood better than Lygon
-or Henderley could have dreamed. She had seen the change pass over
-Lygon. Henderley had a hand on himself again, and the startled look went
-out of his eyes.
-
-"What do you want for your shack and the lake?" he asked with restored
-confidence. The fellow no doubt was grateful that his daughter had saved
-his life, he thought.
-
-"Five hundred dollars," answered Lygon quickly. Henderley would have
-handed over all that lay on the table before him but that he thought it
-better not to do so. "I'll buy it," he said. "You seem to have been hit
-hard. Here is the money. Bring me the deed to-morrow--to-morrow."
-
-"I'll not take the money till I give you the deed," said Lygon. "It will
-do to-morrow. It's doing me a good turn. I'll get away and start again
-somewhere. I've done no good up here. Thank you, sir--thank you."
-Before they realised it, the tent-curtain rose and fell, and he was gone
-into the night.
-
-The trouble was still deep in the girl's eyes as she kissed her father,
-and he, with an overdone cheerfulness, wished her a good night.
-
-The man of iron had been changed into a man of straw once at least in his
-lifetime.
-
-Lygon found Dupont at the Forks.
-
-"Eh ben, it is all right--yes?" Dupont asked eagerly as Lygon joined
-him.
-
-"Yes, it is all right," answered Lygon.
-
-With an exulting laugh and an obscene oath, Dupont pushed out the canoe,
-and they got away into the moonlight. No word was spoken for some
-distance, but Dupont kept giving grunts of satisfaction.
-
-"You got the ten t'ousan' each--in cash or cheque, eh? The cheque or the
-money-hein?"
-
-"I've got nothing," answered Lygon. Dupont dropped his paddle with a
-curse.
-
-"You got not'ing! You said eet was all right," he growled.
-
-"It is all right. I got nothing. I asked for nothing. I have had
-enough. I have finished."
-
-With a roar of rage Dupont sprang on him, and caught him by the throat as
-the canoe swayed and dipped. He was blind with fury.
-
-Lygon tried with one hand for his knife, and got it, but the pressure on
-his throat was growing terrible. For minutes the struggle continued, for
-Lygon was fighting with the desperation of one who makes his last awful
-onset against fate and doom.
-
-Dupont also had his knife at work. At last it drank blood, but as he got
-it home, he suddenly reeled blindly, lost his balance, and lurched into
-the water with a groan.
-
-Lygon, weapon in hand, and bleeding freely, waited for him to rise and
-make for the canoe again.
-
-Ten, twenty, fifty seconds passed. Dupont did not rise. A minute went
-by, and still there was no stir, no sign. Dupont would never rise again.
-In his wild rage he had burst a blood vessel on the brain.
-
-Lygon bound up his reeking wound as best he could. He did--it calmly,
-whispering to himself the while.
-
-"I must do it. I must get there if I can. I will not be afraid to die
-then," he muttered to himself. Presently he grasped an oar and paddled
-feebly.
-
-A slight wind had risen, and, as he turned the boat in to face the Forks
-again, it helped to carry the canoe to the landing-place.
-
-Lygon dragged himself out. He did not try to draw the canoe up, but
-began this journey of a mile back to the tent he had left so recently.
-First, step by step, leaning against trees, drawing himself forwards, a
-journey as long to his determined mind as from youth to age. Would it
-never end? It seemed a terrible climbing up the sides of a cliff, and,
-as he struggled fainting on, all sorts of sounds were in his ears, but he
-realised that the Whisperer was no longer there. The sounds he heard did
-not torture, they helped his stumbling feet. They were like the murmur
-of waters, like the sounds of the forest and soft, booming bells. But
-the bells were only the beatings of his heart-so loud, so swift.
-
-He was on his knees now crawling on-on-on. At last there came a light,
-suddenly bursting on him from a tent, he was so near. Then he called,
-and called again, and fell forwards on his face. But now he heard a
-voice above him. It was her voice. He had blindly struggled on to die
-near her, near where she was, she was so pitiful and good.
-
-He had accomplished his journey, and her voice was speaking above him.
-There were other voices, but it was only hers that he heard.
-
-"God help him--oh, God help him!" she was saying. He drew a long quiet
-breath. "I will sleep now," he said clearly.
-
-He would hear the Whisperer no more.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-AS DEEP AS THE SEA
-
-"What can I do, Dan? I'm broke, too. My last dollar went to pay my last
-debt to-day. I've nothing but what I stand in. I've got prospects, but
-I can't discount prospects at the banks." The speaker laughed bitterly.
-"I've reaped and I'm sowing, the same as you, Dan."
-
-The other made a nervous motion of protest. "No; not the same as me,
-Flood--not the same. It's sink or swim with me, and if you can't help
-me--oh, I'd take my gruel without whining, if it wasn't for Di! It's
-that knocks me over. It's the shame to her. Oh, what a cursed ass and
-fool--and thief, I've been!"
-
-"Thief-thief?"
-
-Flood Rawley dropped the flaming match with which he was about to light a
-cheroot, and stood staring, his dark-blue eyes growing wider, his worn,
-handsome face becoming drawn, as swift conviction mastered him. He felt
-that the black words which had fallen from his friend's lips--from the
-lips of Diana Welldon's brother--were the truth. He looked at the plump
-face, the full amiable eyes, now misty with fright, at the characterless
-hand nervously feeling the golden moustache, at the well-fed, inert body;
-and he knew that whatever the trouble or the peril, Dan Welldon could not
-surmount it alone.
-
-"What is it?" Rawley asked rather sharply, his fingers running through
-his slightly grizzled, black hair, but not excitedly, for he wanted no
-scenes; and if this thing could hurt Di Welldon, and action was
-necessary, he must remain cool. What she was to him, Heaven and he only
-knew; what she had done for him, perhaps neither understood fully as yet.
-"What is it--quick?" he added, and his words were like a sharp grip upon
-Dan Welldon's shoulder. "Racing--cards?"
-
-Dan nodded. "Yes, over at Askatoon; five hundred on Jibway, the
-favourite--he fell at the last fence; five hundred at poker with Nick
-Fison; and a thousand in land speculation at Edmonton, on margin.
-Everything went wrong."
-
-"And so you put your hand in the railway company's money-chest?"
-
-"It seemed such a dead certainty--Jibway; and the Edmonton corner-blocks,
-too. I'd had luck with Nick before; but--well, there it is, Flood."
-
-"They know--the railway people--Shaughnessy knows?"
-
-"Yes, the president knows. He's at Calgary now. They telegraphed him,
-and he wired to give me till midnight to pay up, or go to jail. They're
-watching me now. I can't stir. There's no escape, and there's no one I
-can ask for help but you. That's why I've come, Flood."
-
-"Lord, what a fool! Couldn't you see what the end would be, if your
-plunging didn't come off? You--you oughtn't to bet, or speculate, or
-play cards, you're not clever enough. You've got blind rashness, and so
-you think you're bold. And Di--oh, you idiot! And on a salary of a
-thousand dollars a year!"
-
-"I suppose Di would help me; but I couldn't explain." The weak face
-puckered, a lifeless kind of tear gathered in the ox-like eyes.
-
-"Yes, she probably would help you. She'd probably give you all she's
-saved to go to Europe with and study, saved from her pictures sold at
-twenty per cent of their value; and she'd mortgage the little income
-she's got to keep her brother out of jail. Of course she would, and of
-course you ought to be ashamed of yourself for thinking of it." Rawley
-lighted his cigar and smoked fiercely.
-
-"It would be better for her than my going to jail," stubbornly replied
-the other. "But I don't want to tell her, or to ask her for money.
-That's why I've come to you. You needn't be so hard, Flood; you've not
-been a saint; and Di knows it."
-
-Rawley took the cheroot from his mouth, threw back his head, and laughed
-mirthlessly, ironically. Then suddenly he stopped and looked round the
-room till his eyes rested on a portrait-drawing which hung on the wall
-opposite the window, through which the sun poured. It was the face of a
-girl with beautiful bronzed hair, and full, fine, beautifully modelled
-face, with brown eyes deep and brooding, which seemed to have time and
-space behind them--not before them. The lips were delicate and full, and
-had the look suggesting a smile which the inward thought has stayed. It
-was like one of the Titian women--like a Titian that hangs on the wall of
-the Gallery at Munich. The head and neck, the whole personality, had an
-air of distinction and destiny. The drawing had been done by a wandering
-duchess who had seen the girl sketching in the foothills, when on a visit
-to that "Wild West" which has such power to refine and inspire minds not
-superior to Nature. Its replica was carried to a castle in Scotland.
-It had been the gift of Diana Welldon on a certain day not long ago, when
-Flood Rawley had made a pledge to her, which was as vital to him and to
-his future as two thousand dollars were vital to Dan Welldon now.
-
-"You've not been a saint, and Di knows it," repeated the weak brother of
-a girl whose fame belonged to the West; whose name was a signal for
-cheerful looks; whose buoyant humour and impartial friendliness gained
-her innumerable friends; and whose talent, understood by few, gave her a
-certain protection, lifting her a little away from the outwardly crude
-and provincial life around her.
-
-When Rawley spoke, it was with quiet deliberation, and even gentleness.
-"I haven't been a saint, and she knows it, as you say, Dan; but the law
-is on my side as yet, and it isn't on yours. There's the difference."
-
-"You used to gamble yourself; you were pretty tough, and you oughtn't to
-walk up my back with hobnailed boots."
-
-"Yes, I gambled, Dan, and I drank, and I raised a dust out here. My
-record was writ pretty big. But I didn't lay my hands on the ark of the
-social covenant, whose inscription is, Thou shalt not steal; and that's
-why I'm poor but proud, and no one's watching for me round the corner,
-same as you."
-
-Welldon's half-defiant petulance disappeared. "What's done can't be
-undone." Then, with a sudden burst of anguish: "Oh, get me out of this
-somehow!"
-
-"How? I've got no money. By speaking to your sister?"
-
-The other was silent.
-
-"Shall I do it?" Rawley peered anxiously into the other's face, and he
-knew that there was no real security against the shameful trouble being
-laid bare to her.
-
-"I want a chance to start straight again."
-
-The voice was fluttered, almost whining; it carried no conviction; but
-the words had in them a reminder of words that Rawley himself had said to
-Diana Welldon but a few months ago, and a new spirit stirred in him. He
-stepped forwards and, gripping Dan's shoulder with a hand of steel, said
-fiercely:
-
-"No, Dan. I'd rather take you to her in your coffin. She's never known
-you, never seen what most of us have seen, that all you have--or nearly
-all--is your lovely looks, and what they call a kind heart. There's only
-you two in your family, and she's got to live with you--awhile, anyhow.
-She couldn't stand this business. She mustn't stand it. She's had
-enough to put up with in me; but at the worst she could pass me by on
-the other side, and there would be an end. It would have been said that
-Flood Rawley had got his deserts. It's different with you." His voice
-changed, softened. "Dan, I made a pledge to her that I'd never play
-cards again for money while I lived, and it wasn't a thing to take on
-without some cogitation. But I cogitated, and took it on, and started
-life over again--me! Began practising law again--barrister, solicitor,
-notary public--at forty. And at last I've got my chance in a big case
-against the Canadian Pacific. It'll make me or break me, Dan. . . .
-There, I wanted you to see where I stand with Di; and now I want you to
-promise me that you'll not leave these rooms till I see you again. I'll
-get you clear; I'll save you, Dan."
-
-"Flood! Oh, my God, Flood!" The voice was broken.
-
-"You've got to stay here, and you're to remember not to get the funk,
-even if I don't come before midnight. I'll be here then, if I'm alive.
-If you don't keep your word--but, there, you will." Both hands gripped
-the graceful shoulders of the miscreant like a vice.
-
-"So help me, Flood," was the frightened, whispered reply, "I'll make it
-up to you somehow, some day. I'll pay you back."
-
-Rawley caught up his cap from the table. "Steady--steady. Don't go at a
-fence till you're sure of your seat, Dan," he said. Then with a long
-look at the portrait on the wall, and an exclamation which the other did
-not hear, he left the room with a set, determined face.
-
- ......................
-
-"Who told you? What brought you, Flood?" the girl asked, her chin in
-her long, white hands, her head turned from the easel to him, a book in
-her lap, the sun breaking through the leaves upon her hat, touching the
-Titian hair with splendour.
-
-"Fate brought me, and didn't tell me," he answered, with a whimsical
-quirk of the mouth, and his trouble lurking behind the sea-deep eyes.
-
-"Wouldn't you have come if you knew I was here?" she urged archly.
-
-"Not for two thousand dollars," he answered, the look of trouble
-deepening in his eyes, but his lips were smiling. He had a quaint sense
-of humour, and at his last gasp would have noted the ridiculous thing.
-And surely it was a droll malignity of Fate to bring him here to her
-whom, in this moment of all moments in his life, he wished far away.
-Fate meant to try him to the uttermost. This hurdle of trial was high
-indeed.
-
-"Two thousand dollars--nothing less?" she inquired gaily. "You are too
-specific for a real lover."
-
-"Fate fixed the amount," he added drily. "Fate--you talk so much of
-Fate," she replied gravely, and her eyes looked into the distance. "You
-make me think of it too, and I don't want to do so. I don't want to feel
-helpless, to be the child of Accident and Destiny."
-
-"Oh, you get the same thing in the 'fore-ordination' that old Minister
-M'Gregor preaches every Sunday. 'Be elect or be damned,' he says to us
-all. Names aren't important; but, anyhow, it was Fate that led me here."
-
-"Are you sure it wasn't me?" she asked softly. "Are you sure I wasn't
-calling you, and you had to come?"
-
-"Well, it was en route, anyhow; and you are always calling, if I must
-tell you," he laughed. Suddenly he became grave. "I hear you call me in
-the night sometimes, and I start up and say 'Yes, Di!' out of my sleep.
-It's a queer hallucination. I've got you on the brain, certainly."
-
-"It seems to vex you--certainly," she said, opening the book that lay in
-her lap, "and your eyes trouble me to-day. They've got a look that used
-to be in them, Flood, before--before you promised; and another look I
-don't understand and don't like. I suppose it's always so. The real
-business of life is trying to understand each other."
-
-"You have wonderful thoughts for one that's had so little chance," he
-said. "That's because you're a genius, I suppose. Teaching can't give
-that sort of thing--the insight."
-
-"What is the matter, Flood?" she asked suddenly again, her breast
-heaving, her delicate, rounded fingers interlacing. "I heard a man say
-once that you were 'as deep as the sea.' He did not mean it kindly, but
-I do. You are in trouble, and I want to share it if I can. Where were
-you going when you came across me here?"
-
-"To see old Busby, the quack-doctor up there," he answered, nodding
-towards a shrubbed and wooded hillock behind them.
-
-"Old Busby!" she rejoined in amazement. "What do you want with him
---not medicine of that old quack, that dreadful man?"
-
-"He cures people sometimes. A good many out here owe him more than
-they'll ever pay him."
-
-"Is he as rich an old miser as they say?"
-
-"He doesn't look rich, does he?" was the enigmatical answer.
-
-"Does any one know his real history? He didn't come from nowhere. He
-must have had friends once. Some one must once have cared for him,
-though he seems such a monster now."
-
-"Yet he cures people sometimes," he rejoined abstractedly. "Probably
-there's some good underneath. I'm going to try and see."
-
-"What is it. What is your business with him? Won't you tell me? Is it
-so secret?"
-
-"I want him to help me in a case I've got in hand. A client of mine is
-in trouble--you mustn't ask about it; and he can help, I think--I think
-so." He got to his feet. "I must be going, Di," he added. Suddenly a
-flush swept over his face, and he reached out and took both her hands.
-"Oh, you are a million times too good for me!" he said. "But if all
-goes well, I'll do my best to make you forget it."
-
-"Wait--wait one moment," she answered. "Before you go, I want you to
-hear what I've been reading over and over to myself just now. It is from
-a book I got from Quebec, called 'When Time Shall Pass'. It is a story
-of two like you and me. The man is writing to the woman, and it has
-things that you have said to me--in a different way."
-
-"No, I don't talk like a book, but I know a star in a dark night when I
-see it," he answered, with a catch in his throat.
-
-"Hush," she said, catching his hand in hers, as she read, while all
-around them the sounds of summer--the distant clack of a reaper, the
-crack of a whip, the locusts droning, the whir of a young partridge, the
-squeak of a chipmunk--were tuned to the harmony of the moment and her
-voice:
-
- "'Night and the sombre silence, oh, my love, and one star shining!
- First, warm, velvety sleep, and then this quick, quiet waking to
- your voice which seems to call me. Is it--is it you that calls?
- Do you sometimes, even in your dreams, speak to me? Far beneath
- unconsciousness is there the summons of your spirit to me? . . .
- I like to think so. I like to think that this thing which has come
- to us is deeper, greater than we are. Sometimes day and night there
- flash before my eyes--my mind's eyes--pictures of you and me in
- places unfamiliar, landscapes never before seen, activities
- uncomprehended and unknown, bright, alluring glimpses of some second
- being, some possible, maybe never-to-be-realised future, alas! Yet
- these swift-moving shutters of the soul, or imagination, or reality
- --who shall say which?-give me a joy never before felt in life. If
- I am not a better man for this love of mine for you, I am more than
- I was, and shall be more than I am. Much of my life in the past was
- mean and small, so much that I have said and done has been unworthy
- --my love for you is too sharp a light for my gross imperfections of
- the past! Come what will, be what must, I stake my life, my heart,
- my soul on you--that beautiful, beloved face; those deep eyes in
- which my being is drowned; those lucid, perfect hands that have
- bound me to the mast of your destiny. I cannot go back, I must go
- forwards: now I must keep on loving you or be shipwrecked. I did
- not know that this was in me, this tide of love, this current of
- devotion. Destiny plays me beyond my ken, beyond my dreams.
- "O Cithaeron!" Turn from me now--or never, O my love! Loose me
- from the mast, and let the storm and wave wash me out into the sea
- of your forgetfulness now--or never! . . . But keep me, keep me,
- if your love is great enough, if I bring you any light or joy; for I
- am yours to my uttermost note of life.'"
-
-"He knew--he knew!" Rawley said, catching her wrists in his hands and
-drawing her to him. "If I could write, that's what I should have said to
-you, beautiful and beloved. How mean and small and ugly my life was till
-you made me over. I was a bad lot."
-
-"So much hung on one little promise," she said, and drew closer to him.
-"You were never bad," she added; then, with an arm sweeping the universe,
-"Oh, isn't it all good, and isn't it all worth living?"
-
-His face lost its glow. Over in the town her brother faced a ruined
-life, and the girl beside him, a dark humiliation and a shame which would
-poison her life hereafter, unless--his look turned to the little house
-where the quack-doctor lived. He loosed her hands.
-
-"Now for Caliban," he said.
-
-"I shall be Ariel and follow you-in my heart," she said. "Be sure and
-make him tell you the story of his life," she added with a laugh, as his
-lips swept the hair behind her ears.
-
-As he moved swiftly away, watching his long strides, she said proudly,
-"As deep as the sea."
-
-After a moment she added: "And he was once a gambler, until, until--"
-she glanced at the open book, then with sweet mockery looked at her
-hands--"until 'those lucid, perfect hands bound me to the mast of your
-destiny.' O vain Diana! But they are rather beautiful," she added
-softly, "and I am rather happy." There was something like a gay little
-chuckle in her throat.
-
-"O vain Diana!" she repeated.
-
- .......................
-
-Rawley entered the door of the but on the hill without ceremony. There
-was no need for courtesy, and the work he had come to do could be easier
-done without it.
-
-Old Busby was crouched over a table, his mouth lapping milk from a full
-bowl on the table. He scarcely raised his head when Rawley entered--
-through the open door he had seen his visitor coming. He sipped on, his
-straggling beard dripping. There was silence for a time.
-
-"What do you want?" he growled at last.
-
-"Finish your swill, and then we can talk," said Rawley carelessly. He
-took a chair near the door, lighted a cheroot and smoked, watching the
-old man, as he tipped the great bowl towards his face, as though it were
-some wild animal feeding. The clothes were patched and worn, the coat-
-front was spattered with stains of all kinds, the hair and beard were
-unkempt and long, giving him what would have been the look of a mangy
-lion, but that the face had the expression of some beast less honourable.
-The eyes, however, were malignantly intelligent, the hands, ill-cared
-for, were long, well-shaped and capable, but of a hateful yellow colour
-like the face. And through all was a sense of power, dark and almost
-mediaeval. Secret, evilly wise and inhuman, he looked a being apart,
-whom men might seek for help in dark purposes.
-
-"What do you want--medicine?" he muttered at last, wiping his beard and
-mouth with the palm of his hand, and the palm on his knees.
-
-Rawley looked at the ominous-looking bottles on the shelves above the old
-man's head; at the forceps, knives, and other surgical instruments on the
-walls--they at least were bright and clean--and, taking the cheroot
-slowly from his mouth, he said:
-
-"Shin-plasters are what I want. A friend of mine has caught his leg in a
-trap."
-
-The old man gave an evil chuckle at the joke, for a "shin-plaster" was a
-money-note worth a quarter of a dollar.
-
-"I've got some," he growled in reply, "but they cost twenty-five cents
-each. You can have them for your friend at the price."
-
-"I want eight thousand of them from you. He's hurt pretty bad," was the
-dogged, dry answer.
-
-The shaggy eyebrows of the quack drew together, and the eyes peered out
-sharply through half-closed lids. "There's plenty of wanting and not
-much getting in this world," he rejoined, with a leer of contempt, and
-spat on the floor, while yet the furtive watchfulness of the eyes
-indicated a mind ill at ease.
-
-Smoke came in placid puffs from the cheroot--Rawley was smoking very
-hard, but with a judicial meditation, as it seemed.
-
-"Yes, but if you want a thing so bad that, to get it, you'll face the
-devil or the Beast of Revelations, it's likely to come to you."
-
-"You call me a beast?" The reddish-brown face grew black like that of a
-Bedouin in his rage.
-
-"I said the Beast of Revelations--don't you know the Scriptures?"
-
-"I know that a fool is to be answered according to his folly," was the
-hoarse reply, and the great head wagged to and fro in its smarting rage.
-
-"Well, I'm doing my best; and perhaps when the folly is all out, we'll
-come to the revelations of the Beast." There was a silence, in which the
-gross impostor shifted heavily in his seat, while a hand twitched across
-the mouth, and then caught at the breast of the threadbare black coat
-abstractedly.
-
-Rawley leaned forward, one elbow on a knee, the cheroot in his fingers.
-He spoke almost confidentially, as to some ignorant and misguided savage
---as he had talked to Indian chiefs in his time, when searching for the
-truth regarding some crime:
-
-"I've had a lot of revelations in my time. A lawyer and a doctor always
-do. And though there are folks who say I'm no lawyer, as there are those
-who say with greater truth that you're no doctor, speaking technically,
-we've both had 'revelations.' You've seen a lot that's seamy, and so
-have I. You're pretty seamy yourself. In fact, you're as bad a man as
-ever saved lives--and lost them. You've had a long tether, and you've
-swung on it--swung wide. But you've had a lot of luck that you haven't
-swung high, too."
-
-He paused and flicked away the ash from his cheroot, while the figure
-before him swayed animal-like from side to side, muttering.
-
-"You've got brains, a great lot of brains of a kind--however you came by
-them," Rawley continued; "and you've kept a lot of people in the West
-from passing in their cheques before their time. You've rooked 'em,
-chiselled 'em out of a lot of cash, too. There was old Lamson--fifteen
-hundred for the goitre on his neck; and Mrs. Gilligan for the cancer--two
-thousand, wasn't it? Tincture of Lebanon leaves you called the medicine,
-didn't you? You must have made fifty thousand or so in the last ten
-years."
-
-"What I've made I'll keep," was the guttural answer, and the talon-like
-fingers clawed the table.
-
-"You've made people pay high for curing them, saving them sometimes; but
-you haven't paid me high for saving you in the courts; and there's one
-case that you haven't paid me for at all. That was when the patient
-died--and you didn't."
-
-The face of the old man became mottled with a sudden fear, but he jerked
-it forwards once or twice with an effort at self-control. Presently he
-steadied to the ordeal of suspense, while he kept saying to himself,
-"What does he know--what--which?"
-
-"Malpractice resulting in death--that was poor Jimmy Tearle; and
-something else resulting in death--that was the switchman's wife. And
-the law is hard in the West where a woman's in the case--quick and hard.
-Yes, you've swung wide on your tether; look out that you don't swing
-high, old man."
-
-"You can prove nothing; it's bluff;" came the reply in a tone of malice
-and of fear.
-
-"You forget. I was your lawyer in Jimmy Tearle's case, and a letter's
-been found written by the switchman's wife to her husband. It reached me
-the night he was killed by the avalanche. It was handed over to me by
-the post-office, as the lawyer acting for the relatives. I've read it.
-I've got it. It gives you away."
-
-"I wasn't alone." Fear had now disappeared, and the old man was
-fighting.
-
-"No, you weren't alone; and if the switchman and the switchman's wife
-weren't dead and out of it all; and if the other man that didn't matter
-any more than you wasn't alive and hadn't a family that does matter,
-I wouldn't be asking you peaceably for two thousand dollars as my fee for
-getting you off two cases that might have sent you to prison for twenty
-years, or, maybe, hung you to the nearest tree."
-
-The heavy body pulled itself together, the hands clinched. "Blackmail-
-you think I'll stand it?"
-
-"Yes, I think you will. I want two thousand dollars to help a friend in
-a hole, and I mean to have it, if you think your neck's worth it."
-
-Teeth, wonderfully white, showed through the shaggy beard. "If I had to
-go to prison--or swing, as you say, do you think I'd go with my mouth
-shut? I'd not pay up alone. The West would crack--holy Heaven, I know
-enough to make it sick. Go on and see! I've got the West in my hand."
-He opened and shut his fingers with a grimace of cruelty which shook
-Rawley in spite of himself.
-
-Rawley had trusted to the inspiration of the moment; he had had no
-clearly defined plan; he had believed that he could frighten the old man,
-and by force of will bend him to his purposes. It had all been more
-difficult than he had expected. He kept cool, imperturbable, and
-determined, however. He knew that what the old quack said was true--the
-West might shake with scandal concerning a few who, no doubt, in remorse
-and secret fear, had more than paid the penalty of their offences. But
-he thought of Di Welldon and of her criminal brother, and every nerve,
-every faculty was screwed to its utmost limit of endurance and capacity.
-
-Suddenly the old man gave a new turn to the event. He got up and,
-rummaging in an old box, drew out a dice-box. Rattling the dice, he
-threw them out on the table before him, a strange, excited look crossing
-his face.
-
-"Play for it," he said in a harsh, croaking voice. "Play for the two
-thousand. Win it if you can. You want it bad. I want to keep it bad.
-It's nice to have; it makes a man feel warm--money does. I'd sleep in
-ten-dollar bills, I'd have my clothes made of them, if I could; I'd have
-my house papered with them; I'd eat 'em. Oh, I know, I know about you--
-and her--Diana Welldon! You've sworn off gambling, and you've kept your
-pledge for near a year. Well, it's twenty years since I gambled--twenty
-years. I gambled with these then." He shook the dice in the box. "I
-gambled everything I had away--more than two thousand dollars, more than
-two thousand dollars." He laughed a raw, mirthless laugh. "Well, you're
-the greatest gambler in the West. So was I-in the East. It pulverised
-me at last, when I'd nothing left--and drink, drink, drink. I gave up
-both one night and came out West.
-
-"I started doctoring here. I've got money, plenty of money--medicine,
-mines, land got it for me. I've been lucky. Now you come to bluff me--
-me! You don't know old Busby." He spat on the floor. "I'm not to be
-bluffed. I know too much. Before they could lynch me I'd talk. But to
-play you, the greatest gambler in the West, for two thousand dollars--
-yes, I'd like the sting of it again. Twos, fours, double-sixes--the
-gentleman's game!" He rattled the dice and threw them with a flourish
-out on the table, his evil face lighting up. "Come! You can't have
-something for nothing," he growled.
-
-As he spoke, a change came over Rawley's face. It lost its cool
-imperturbability, it grew paler, the veins on the fine forehead stood
-out, a new, flaring light came into the eyes. The old gambler's spirit
-was alive. But even as it rose, sweeping him into that area of fiery
-abstraction where every nerve is strung to a fine tension, and the
-surrounding world disappears, he saw the face of Diana Welldon, he
-remembered her words to him not an hour before, and the issue of the
-conflict, other considerations apart, was without doubt. But there was
-her brother and his certain fate, if the two thousand dollars were not
-paid in by midnight. He was desperate. It was in reality for Diana's
-sake. He approached the table, and his old calm returned.
-
-"I have no money to play with," he said quietly. With a gasp of
-satisfaction, the old man fumbled in the inside of his coat and drew out
-layers of ten, fifty, and hundred-dollar bills. It was lined with them.
-He passed a pile over to Rawley--two thousand dollars. He placed a
-similar pile before himself.
-
-As Rawley laid his hand on the bills, the thought rushed through his
-mind, "You have it--keep it!" but he put it away from him. With a
-gentleman he might have done it, with this man before him, it was
-impossible. He must take his chances; and it was the only chance in
-which he had hope now, unless he appealed for humanity's sake, for the
-girl's sake, and told the real truth. It might avail. Well, that would
-be the last resort.
-
-"For small stakes?" said the grimy quack in a gloating voice.
-
-Rawley nodded and then added, "We stop at eleven o'clock, unless I've
-lost or won all before that."
-
-"And stake what's left on the last throw?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-There was silence for a moment, in which Rawley seemed to grow older, and
-a set look came to his mouth--a broken pledge, no matter what the cause,
-brings heavy penalties to the honest mind. He shut his eyes for an
-instant, and, when he opened them, he saw that his fellow-gambler was
-watching him with an enigmatical and furtive smile. Did this Caliban
-have some understanding of what was at stake in his heart and soul?
-
-"Play!" Rawley said sharply, and was himself again. For hour after hour
-there was scarce a sound, save the rattle of the dice and an occasional
-exclamation from the old man as he threw a double-six. As dusk fell, the
-door had been shut, and a lighted lantern was hung over their heads.
-
-Fortune had fluctuated. Once the old man's pile had diminished to two
-notes, then the luck had changed and his pile grew larger; then fell
-again; but, as the hands of the clock on the wall above the blue medicine
-bottles reached a quarter to eleven, it increased steadily throw after
-throw.
-
-Now the player's fever was in Rawley's eyes. His face was deadly pale,
-but his hand threw steadily, calmly, almost negligently, as it might
-seem. All at once, at eight minutes to eleven, the luck turned in his
-favour, and his pile mounted again. Time after time he dropped double-
-sixes. It was almost uncanny. He seemed to see the dice in the box, and
-his hand threw them out with the precision of a machine. Long afterwards
-he had this vivid illusion that he could see the dice in the box. As the
-clock was about to strike eleven he had before him three thousand eight
-hundred dollars. It was his throw.
-
-"Two hundred," he said in a whisper, and threw. He won.
-
-With a gasp of relief, he got to his feet, the money in his hand. He
-stepped backward from the table, then staggered, and a faintness passed
-over him. He had sat so long without moving that his legs bent under
-him. There was a pail of water with a dipper in it on a bench. He
-caught up a dipperful of water, drank it empty, and let it fall in the
-pail again with a clatter.
-
-"Dan," he said abstractedly, "Dan, you're all safe now."
-
-Then he seemed to wake, as from a dream, and looked at the man at the
-table. Busby was leaning on it with both hands, and staring at Rawley
-like some animal jaded and beaten from pursuit. Rawley walked back to
-the table and laid down two thousand dollars.
-
-"I only wanted two thousand," he said, and put the other two thousand in
-his pocket.
-
-The evil eyes gloated, the long fingers clutched the pile, and swept it
-into a great inside pocket. Then the shaggy head bent forwards.
-
-"You said it was for Dan," he said--"Dan Welldon?"
-
-Rawley hesitated. "What is that to you?" he replied at last.
-
-With a sudden impulse the old impostor lurched round, opened a box, drew
-out a roll, and threw it on the table.
-
-"It's got to be known sometime," he said, "and you'll be my lawyer when
-I'm put into the ground--you're clever. They call me a quack.
-Malpractice--bah! There's my diploma--James Clifton Welldon. Right
-enough, isn't it?"
-
-Rawley was petrified. He knew the forgotten story of James Clifton
-Welldon, the specialist, turned gambler, who had almost ruined his own
-brother--the father of Dan and Diana--at cards and dice, and had then
-ruined himself and disappeared. Here, where his brother had died, he had
-come years ago, and practised medicine as a quack.
-
-"Oh, there's plenty of proof, if it's wanted!" he said. "I've got it
-here." He tapped the box behind him. "Why did I do it? Because it's my
-way. And you're going to marry my niece, and 'll have it all some day.
-But not till I've finished with it--not unless you win it from me at dice
-or cards. . . . But no"--something human came into the old,
-degenerate face--"no more gambling for the man that's to marry Diana.
-There's a wonder and a beauty!" He chuckled to himself. "She'll be rich
-when I've done with it. You're a lucky man--ay, you're lucky."
-
-Rawley was about to tell the old man what the two thousand dollars was
-for, but a fresh wave of repugnance passed over him, and, hastily
-drinking another dipperful of water, he opened the door. He looked back.
-The old man was crouching forward, lapping milk from the great bowl, his
-beard dripping. In disgust he swung round again. The fresh, clear air
-caught his face.
-
-With a gasp of relief he stepped out into the night, closing the door
-behind him.
-
-
-
-
-ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
-
-Don't go at a fence till you're sure of your seat
-The real business of life is trying to understand each other
-You've got blind rashness, and so you think you're bold
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS FOR THE ENTIRE "NORTHERN LIGHTS":
-
-Babbling covers a lot of secrets
-Being a man of very few ideas, he cherished those he had
-Beneath it all there was a little touch of ridicule
-Don't go at a fence till you're sure of your seat
-Even bad company's better than no company at all
-Future of those who will not see, because to see is to suffer
-I like when I like, and I like a lot when I like
-I don't think. I'm old enough to know
-It ain't for us to say what we're goin' to be, not always
-Knew when to shut his eyes, and when to keep them open
-Nothing so popular for the moment as the fall of a favourite
-Self-will, self-pride, and self-righteousness were big in him
-That he will find the room empty where I am not
-The temerity and nonchalance of despair
-The real business of life is trying to understand each other
-Things in life git stronger than we are
-Tyranny of the little man, given a power
-We don't live in months and years, but just in minutes
-What'll be the differ a hundred years from now
-You've got blind rashness, and so you think you're bold
-
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NORTHERN LIGHTS, ENTIRE, BY PARKER ***
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