summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-01-28 05:11:55 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-01-28 05:11:55 -0800
commit55fe0648fcd4a8aeb7a1e634efd7370bdfffa8b1 (patch)
tree038bf826033dea44b5dc37477a8dc5e7a77f59c1
parentef5abc493927425ca03e5fc226420cd2812a4706 (diff)
NormalizeHEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/61911-0.txt3912
-rw-r--r--old/61911-0.zipbin75076 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/61911-h.zipbin697521 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/61911-h/61911-h.htm3318
-rw-r--r--old/61911-h/images/cover.jpgbin101272 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/61911-h/images/img-005.jpgbin54678 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/61911-h/images/img-021.jpgbin28672 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/61911-h/images/img-027.jpgbin49293 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/61911-h/images/img-041.jpgbin43244 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/61911-h/images/img-047.jpgbin31831 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/61911-h/images/img-057.jpgbin57333 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/61911-h/images/img-068.jpgbin89351 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/61911-h/images/img-087.jpgbin39342 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/61911-h/images/img-100.jpgbin78853 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/61911-h/images/img-114.jpgbin52119 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/old/61911-h.htm.2020-04-263323
19 files changed, 17 insertions, 10553 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8d4912b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #61911 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/61911)
diff --git a/old/61911-0.txt b/old/61911-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 8725c0d..0000000
--- a/old/61911-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3912 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Oxbow Wizard, by Theodore Goodridge
-Roberts
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: The Oxbow Wizard
-
-
-Author: Theodore Goodridge Roberts
-
-
-
-Release Date: April 24, 2020 [eBook #61911]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE OXBOW WIZARD***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by
-Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 61911-h.htm or 61911-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/61911/61911-h/61911-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/61911/61911-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/oxbowwizard00robe
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-THE OXBOW WIZARD
-
-by
-
-THEODORE GOODRIDGE ROBERTS
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Garden City New York
-Garden City Publishing Co., Inc.
-1924
-
-Copyright, 1924, by
-Doubleday, Page & Company
-
-All Rights Reserved
-
-Copyright, 1920, by the Torbell Company
-
-Printed in the United States
-at
-The Country Life Press, Garden City, N. Y.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- I. The Stranger’s Book
- II. The Nick o’ Time
- III. A Thief With Claws
- IV. The Man in the Bunk
- V. The Stiff Knee
- VI. Fish for Bait
- VII. The One-eyed Injun
- VIII. The Adventure of Sabatis
- IX. The Fight in the Snow
- X. Fear of the Law
-
-
-
-
- THE OXBOW WIZARD
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- THE STRANGER’S BOOK
-
-
-Young Dan Evans lived in the back country on the Oxbow with his parents
-and his brothers and sisters. For as long as he could remember, his
-Uncle Bill Tangler, his mother’s brother, had been an irregular member
-of the household.
-
-Young Dan obtained a meagre and intermittent schooling between his ninth
-and sixteenth years, at the Bend, three miles below his father’s farm.
-His terms were frequently broken by the weather, the conditions of the
-road and matters of domestic economy. Sometimes Uncle Bill helped him
-with his books. There seemed to be nothing that Uncle Bill did not know
-something about.
-
-In October of Young Dan’s last year of school, Uncle Bill brought a
-sportsman from New York or London or Chicago or Montreal—from one of
-those outside places, anyhow—to Dan’l Evans’s house. Uncle Bill and the
-sportsman were on their way in to the former’s camp far up beyond the
-Prongs. They arrived, by canoe, just before dusk and were off again half
-an hour after sun-up.
-
-Young Dan was sent by his mother to the spare bedroom, to make up the
-bed that had been occupied by the sportsman. In five minutes he was due
-to start for school. He had no more than crossed the threshold when he
-exclaimed, “He was smokin’ in bed!” On the chair near the dented pillow,
-about the base of the little lamp, lay two cigar butts and several
-deposits of ashes. Young Dan was distressed, for by what little he had
-seen of the stranger he had considered him to be a very superior person;
-and yet here was proof positive that he was possessed of a habit that
-was looked upon, in that household, as both low and reckless. He
-recollected a few of the words which his mother had addressed to Uncle
-Bill on the occasion of her finding that versatile bachelor smoking in
-bed. “It’s lazy an’ it’s dangerous an’ it ain’t respectable,” she had
-said—among other things.
-
-Young Dan approached the bed.
-
-“And him from a city full of street cars and schools,” he murmured.
-“He’d ought to know better.”
-
-Then something caught his eye and distracted his attention from the
-tell-tale butts and ashes. It was a book with a green cover. It lay open
-and face down on the bright rag-carpet, just beneath the edge of the
-bed. He stared at it for a moment, then snatched it up and thrust it
-inside his coat. At one glance he had seen that it was a story book.
-Good! On the Oxbow story books were almost as rare as ropes of pearls;
-Young Dan was as unacquainted with fiction as a city alley-cat is with
-yellow cream. In this case discovery of the discarded book seemed to
-imply ownership and he appropriated the volume with the intention of
-exploring its pages undisturbed by his younger brothers and sisters who
-would be sure to demand a share in the volume once their eyes fell upon
-its bright cover.
-
-Young Dan hurried through the task that had been set for him and started
-for the schoolhouse at the Bend, accompanied by Molly, aged eleven, and
-Amos, aged nine. His canvas-wrapped school books and the lunch for three
-were in his bag; and the book with the green cover was still inside his
-coat. Here, against his very ribs, lay an unknown treasure—a treasure of
-valuable information concerning far lands or the stars themselves,
-perhaps, or perhaps a treasure of magical entertainment. How was he to
-make an opportunity for investigating it unobserved?
-
-Suddenly he thought of a plan. He suggested a race.
-
-“You two go on to Frenchman’s Spring, and I’ll stop right here,” he
-said. “When you git to the spring, give a holler and keep right on
-a-goin’ as fast as you like and I’ll try to catch you up this side the
-school.”
-
-“You can’t do it, and you know you can’t,” said Molly. “Even Amos will
-git there ahead of you.”
-
-“That’s as may be,” replied Young Dan, with dignity.
-
-So the others left him and hastened forward; and he immediately sat down
-beside the road and fished out the book. He opened it at the title-page
-with fingers a-tremble with eagerness. He began to read, running a
-finger from word to word, from line to line. Here were people of types
-and callings unknown to him, moving in the streets of a city unguessed
-by him, talking in a way foreign to the Oxbow of things unheard of even
-by Uncle Bill; and yet he read in a fever of intensity, with moving lips
-and wrinkled brows. A faint shout of childish voices, touched with a
-note of derision, came back, but it failed to reach the ears of Young
-Dan, whose whole attention was fixed on the magic under his eye. He had
-intended to keep his agreement, but he had completely forgotten Molly
-and Amos; he turned page after page slowly and so at last came to the
-end of the first tale.
-
-“Gee, but that feller was smart!” he whispered.
-
-He glanced up, observed the sun and jumped to his feet. He was late for
-school that morning and accepted the reprimand of Miss Carten, the
-teacher, and the jeers of Molly and Amos without turning a hair. At the
-conclusion of the afternoon session he managed to get away by himself
-and read another story.
-
-With the green-covered book safe in his bosom and the secret of it in
-his heart, a change came over Young Dan. Molly and Amos were the first
-to notice it, but they could make nothing of it.
-
-One evening, within a week of the passing of the sportsman, he appeared
-at the supper-table when the other members of the family were already in
-their chairs. After eating pancakes for a minute or two in silence, he
-said, “You set the table to-night, hey, Lucy?”
-
-Lucy, aged six, replied in the affirmative, with evident pride.
-
-“And Molly fried the pancakes, because Ma was busy writin’ a letter to
-Gran’ma,” continued Young Dan.
-
-“An’ what of it?” asked his father.
-
-“Did you spy on us through the window?” asked his mother.
-
-“No, I was over in the tool-house,” replied the boy; “and when I got
-nigh enough to look in at the window you was all set down to table.”
-
-“Land’s sakes! How d’you know Lucy set the table?”
-
-“Because everything’s so close to the edge. She ain’t tall enough to
-push ’em on very far.”
-
-“But how’d you know Molly fried the pancakes?”
-
-“Because most every one was cracked across, or messed about, when it was
-bein’ turned. You don’t do that, Ma, with the turner—but Molly always
-tries to turn ’em with a knife.”
-
-“Sakes alive! That’s the livin’ truth! But how’d you come to figger out
-about me writin’ to Gran’ma?”
-
-“There’s ink on your finger, Ma; and Gran’ma is the only person you ever
-write to.”
-
-“Land’s sakes! That’s reel smart.”
-
-“Seein’s how you’ve growed so all-fired smart so suddent, maybe you’ll
-tell me who went up the old loggin’ road t’other night and robbed me of
-nigh onto a cord of dry stove-wood?” said Dan’l Evans.
-
-“Maybe I will, Pa. What’ll you give me if I tell you?”
-
-“Give you? Nothin’! You don’t know, anyhow.”
-
-“Don’t I know who’s got a horse that’s lame on the nigh fore-foot and a
-wagon with a hind wheel that wobbles? I see the tracks yesterday and
-studied ’em.”
-
-“You figger it was Tim Swan stole the wood. Well, you’re wrong. I
-suspicioned him myself, the minute I see the wood was gone, because
-Tim’s a born thief an’ lives handy. But it warn’t Tim took the wood. I
-mooched round his place for over an hour an’ couldn’t find a stick of
-it. Maybe it was the tracks of a rabbit you studied so hard.”
-
-“Maybe it was, Pa. Anyhow, I follered them rabbit-tracks along to Tim’s
-gate and past it and clear on to Widow Craig’s yard; and there’s the
-wood in her wood-shed; and she paid the rabbit three dollars for it.”
-
-“Well, I never!” exclaimed Mrs. Evans.
-
-A few days after the frying of the family pancakes by Molly and within
-two weeks after the passing of the sportsman in the care of Uncle Bill
-Tangler, seven of the scholars who attended the little school at the
-Bend came down with the mumps and on Thursday Miss Carten announced that
-the school would close for a week at least—and perhaps longer. The
-Evanses had escaped the epidemic, having been victims of the malady two
-years before. Molly and Amos went racing home, making the echoes repeat
-their whoops of joy. Young Dan walked more soberly behind them, for
-there were many things on his mind and he meant to use his time—while
-the mumps kept the schoolhouse closed—to test several theories that,
-ever since he had read the book with the green cover, had been simmering
-away in the back of his head.
-
-But Young Dan got no leisure in which to test his theories—at least he
-was not able to try them in the exact manner he had planned—for a
-stirring and mysterious event that roused excitement in the whole Oxbow
-region occurred less than twenty-four hours after the vacation began.
-Miss Carten disappeared. She dropped from sight as completely and as
-mysteriously as if a silent airplane had swooped down at night out of a
-dark sky and had carried her aloft like a great-horned owl stealing a
-birdling. On Friday someone asked for Miss Carten at the Troller farm
-where she boarded.
-
-“She went to a party over to Cameron’s las’ night an’ took her suitcase
-with her; I thought as how she’d stop the night with Lizzy Cameron,”
-said Mrs. Troller.
-
-At the Cameron place, two miles away—as it developed later—Miss Carten
-had not been seen. No member of the family, in fact, had heard from her
-in the last twenty-four hours.
-
-There was excitement on the Oxbow which extended down to the main river.
-Search-parties went into the woods, equipped with shotguns and lanterns
-and stimulants and dinner-horns. Ponds and likely pools were dragged.
-Justices of the peace, rural constables and game-wardens awoke to
-official activity from the Bend on the Oxbow all the way down to Harlow
-on the main stream. The days and nights passed—six of each—without
-bringing any degree of reward or encouragement to the searchers. Nothing
-was seen or heard of Miss Stella Carten, dead or alive, and no
-suspicious characters were discovered in the vicinity of the Bend. The
-lost lady had not been remarked on the road or on the river, nor had she
-called at any isolated farmhouse. She had not been seen at the village
-of Bean’s Mill, at the Oxbow’s mouth. She had not bought a railway
-ticket at Harlow. She had vanished, suitcase in hand.
-
-Seven days after the disappearance of Miss Carten, at eight o’clock in
-the morning, Young Dan Evans encountered his Uncle Bill on the portage
-round Old Squaw Falls, seven miles upstream from the Evans clearings.
-Young Dan carried nothing but an axe and a small pack. He had left his
-leaky old basket of a bark canoe in the bushes below the falls, for it
-was too heavy for him to shoulder. Uncle Bill, coming from the other end
-of the portage, was bonneted by his long, green canvas canoe. The
-meeting was unexpected to both, but only Uncle Bill expressed
-astonishment.
-
-“You, Young Dan!” he exclaimed, lowering his canoe to the trail. “What
-brings you ’way up here?”
-
-“Left my canoe below the carry,” replied the boy. “Just moochin’ round
-lookin’ for something.”
-
-“Sit down,” said Uncle Bill.
-
-They sat down, and the man lit his pipe and pushed his big felt hat far
-back from his forehead.
-
-“Looking for anything in particular?” he asked.
-
-“Yep. Miss Carten disappeared a week back and I’m sorter lookin’ round
-for her.”
-
-“You don’t say! Disappeared! And you think she’s maybe up here
-somewheres?”
-
-“That’s how I’m figgerin’ it out, Uncle Bill. She ain’t downstream,
-anyhow. Some folks think she’s lost in the woods or been killed—but I
-don’t; I reckon she’s run away on business of her own; and as she ain’t
-gone downstream I guess she’s come up.”
-
-“You don’t say! What makes you think so?”
-
-“Well, she intended to go somewheres, because she took her suitcase
-packed full, and her money. She wouldn’t do that if she was just meanin’
-to stop a night with Lizzy Cameron. And they ain’t found hide nor hair
-of her down river—but I’ve found her tracks, and more’n her tracks, up
-this way. Yep, I found the tracks two days back, about two miles below
-this, close to the edge of the stream. I knowed ’em by the sharp heels.
-I hunted both sides of the stream for a mile and dug into every pool,
-but didn’t find any more signs. But I found somethin’ else yesterday;
-and now I’m goin’ clear up the Prongs.”
-
-“What did you find yesterday?”
-
-Young Dan untied his blanket and disclosed to his uncle’s view a small
-frying-pan, a loaf of bread, a chunk of bacon, a book with a green cover
-and a cardboard box. He placed the box in the other’s hands. It was
-empty but had once contained chocolates.
-
-“That’s what I found yesterday, just below the falls here,” he said.
-“Miss Carten was a b’ar on chocolates. She et ’em in school.”
-
-Uncle Bill examined the box and returned it. He scratched his
-clean-shaven chin and regarded his nephew with a contemplative and
-calculating eye.
-
-“Young Dan, you’re smart,” he said. “And you’re bold as brass. I am
-smart, too, though that is not the general opinion in these parts. The
-trouble with me is that I am shy. You are all for showing how smart you
-are, but I’ve always been for hiding my light under a peck-measure. You
-are doing something now that I couldn’t do. My natural shyness would
-make it impossible for me to follow a young lady who has run away of her
-own free will. That is how you have reasoned it out yourself—of her own
-free will! Yes, I am talking queer—not the way I talk at home. The truth
-is, Young Dan, I’m not the rube your Pa and Ma think I am; but I’ve
-always been too shy to let them know about it. I know more than which
-side to butter my pancakes on and how to pole a canoe.”
-
-“I guess maybe you do,” admitted Young Dan.
-
-“Your reasons for thinking Miss Carten was up here seem good to
-me!—good, but not conclusive,” continued Uncle Bill. “If she is the only
-person in this country who ever wears high-heeled shoes and eats
-chocolates out of a box, then you are dead right. Hullo! What’s the
-book?”
-
-He reached over, picked up the book with the green cover and opened it.
-
-“This explains your activities,” he continued, smiling. “Come on down
-with me and I’ll go back with you this afternoon—all the way back to my
-camp. And be your Doc Watson, going and coming.”
-
-“Have you read that book, Uncle Bill?”
-
-“Yes, years ago—and several more about the same smart feller. You come
-along down with me while I get some grub and mail a few letters, and
-I’ll buy you all the other books first chance I get. And I’ll bring you
-in again.”
-
-Young Dan shook his head.
-
-“I’m this far, and I’ll keep right on a-goin’ till I’m ready to quit.”
-
-Uncle Bill looked at his nephew and saw determination in his face.
-“Well, then,” he said, “I’ll help you around with your canoe, anyway.
-You can pole right up to the camp—if that’s where you are bound for. I’d
-go back with you but for a couple of important letters I have to post.”
-
-Together they carried Young Dan’s old canoe round the falls. Uncle
-Bill’s lean, dark face wore an unusually thoughtful expression as he
-watched his nephew embark.
-
-“I’ll tell your Ma that I met you and that you will stay in the camp
-over night,” he said.
-
-“But maybe I won’t, Uncle Bill,” said Young Dan. “I didn’t calculate on
-stoppin’ upstream over night unless I found somethin’ to keep me—an
-important clue or somethin’. They’re expectin’ me home.”
-
-“I’ve just been thinking that I might not be able to get back till after
-dark. You promise me that if you go to my camp you’ll stop there until I
-come back, or there’ll be trouble. And the trouble will start now. You
-never saw me in a temper, Young Dan—and you don’t want to. Promise me
-that, or I’ll tie you up and take you downstream with me as helpless as
-a dunnage-bag. I mean it!”
-
-Young Dan looked at his uncle and saw that he meant it.
-
-“I promise cross my heart and honest Injun!—but you got to fix it with
-Ma, Uncle Bill,” he said, in a thin voice.
-
-“Don’t worry about your ma,” replied the man, smiling. “And I’ll get you
-those books. If I find some mail that I have to answer I may not get
-back as soon as I planned. You stay right there at the camp, and don’t
-forget that I am one of the shyest men in the world. Off you go, Young
-Dan—and good luck to you!”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- THE NICK O’ TIME
-
-
-The boy poled slowly up the bright and lively water. Sometimes where the
-stream was very shallow he got out and waded for fifty yards or more,
-pulling the canoe along with him; occasionally he stopped to examine the
-shore for signs, but all the while his thoughts were busy with his
-uncle. He had seen fire in the eye of that merry, kindly man—and he
-hoped never to see it again. Why had he made him promise to stop at the
-camp over night? A vague but frightful suspicion possessed him. Uncle
-Bill had hinted at a mystery concerning his character and pursuits. What
-had he meant? He had said that he was something other, something
-smarter, than people believed him to be around these parts, and that he
-hid his light under a peck-measure because he was shy. Now what had he
-meant by all that? And why had he seemed so queer about his camp? Was he
-a criminal of some sort—and was the secret of his dark career hidden in
-the camp?
-
-Young Dan remembered that he had never known his uncle to be without a
-roll of paper money in his pocket; but what he did to earn money beyond
-guiding a sportsman now and then, was more than the boy knew. Was it
-possible that this mild and entertaining uncle, who had two ways of
-talking and who often vanished from the Oxbow country for months at a
-time, was a robber? And might it not be that he sometimes committed
-robbery with violence? He always carried a pistol in the woods. A
-struggle might lead to a murder now and then! Miss Carten had been up
-here with her money!
-
-Young Dan worked his way slowly up the swift and shallow stream and at
-noon he stopped to fry some bacon, but spent most of the interval
-thinking. For two hours he sat there in the warm sunshine with his back
-against a tree and his eyes gazing off into space. His heart was heavy
-and numb with sinister suspicions of Uncle Bill. He had always admired
-and liked that amiable and versatile relative; but he would go on and
-learn the worst. When he finally went back to his canoe he realized that
-he would have to hurry to reach the camp above the Prongs by sundown.
-
-There were no clearings or human habitations on the Oxbow above Old
-Squaw Falls. The voice of the stream was lonely; the cries of birds in
-the woods were like the very voice of desolation; and the long, yellow
-day was as lonely as a deserted house. The sun was close to the wooded
-hills when Young Dan reached the Prongs. He continued his journey up the
-Right Prong. It was already evening in that narrow, tree-crowded valley.
-The water was so shallow there, and the bed of the stream was so broken
-with mossy boulders, that he ran the canoe ashore and waded forward.
-
-The sun was far below Young Dan’s narrowed field of vision, and the deep
-track of the stream was full of brown twilight when he reached the foot
-of the path that led back through the woods to Uncle Bill’s camp. The
-plaintive cry of a whippoorwill rang from an umber gloom of cedars; an
-owl hooted dismally in the tall spruces beyond; a fox barked on the
-darkening hillside. Night-hawks swooped on twanging wings high overhead
-against a sky of dulling green, and bats wove their flickering black
-threads of flight in the deepening dusk of the valley. Behind and
-through and over all lurked the spirit of the wilderness, watchful,
-waiting, still—a spirit of mystery and menace.
-
-Young Dan’s heart was shaken by a vague dread. He felt fear as he had
-never felt it before, at any hour of the day or night, when alone in the
-woods. He started along the thread of path that was worn among the roots
-of the underbrush. He gripped his axe close to the blade and questioned
-the gulfs of shadow to his right and left with straining eyes. So he
-advanced for fifteen or twenty yards; and then, suddenly, he remembered
-the character in which he had undertaken his journey. He knelt, struck a
-match, cupped the flame in his hands and held it close to the trodden
-earth.
-
-There was a track, fresh and deep, that he had not expected to find—the
-track of big soles thickly studded with blunted calks. Uncle Bill had
-been in moccasins that day; he never wore calked boots in the woods; and
-these tracks pointed only one way—forward.
-
-After a moment of reflection, Young Dan continued to advance. He was
-puzzled. When he reached the edge of the little clearing he saw that the
-camp was occupied. Yellow lamp-light streamed from its one small window.
-He hesitated, staring forward and around, then dropped on his hands and
-knees and crawled from the shelter of the woods. His right hand still
-gripped the axe close up to the heavy blade. So he moved among mossy
-hummocks and blackened stumps toward the lighted window, pausing often
-to listen and peer about him. As he drew near he noticed that the door
-was shut; and as he drew still nearer he heard the murmur of a voice
-from within. He crawled close to the log wall of the cabin, directly
-beneath the open window, and crouched there motionless.
-
-One voice was talking within—a thick, unpleasant voice that he did not
-know. And this is what it was saying:
-
-“So he’ll be home to-night, will he? He’ll be home _to-morrow_, that’s
-when he’ll be home. An’ here I be, an’ you’re goin’ to hand over all the
-money you’ve got tucked away in this shack. Fust of all ye was sassy an’
-now ye’re sulky. Have a drink! This here is good stuff an’ powerful hard
-to git these days. Here, pour yerself a drink an’ swaller it down—or
-I’ll open yer mouth an’ make ye take it.”
-
-“If my husband were here he’d open that door and kick you out!” replied
-another voice—a voice known to Young Dan. “If you belonged to these
-parts and knew him you’d go now before he comes back and kills you, you
-drunken brute!”
-
-“D’ye reckon to scare me?” sneered the other. “Then ye gotter think of
-somethin’ bigger an’ better than this here Mister William Tangler ye’re
-yappin’ about. I reckon I’ll stop right here till he comes home, and
-then ye’ll know who’s the best man of the two of us. But ye ain’t took
-yer drink yet! Take it, d’ye hear! It’ll loosen yer tongue.”
-
-The dazed boy beneath the open window heard a clink of glass, a scream
-and sounds of scuffling. He raised himself and looked into the cabin. A
-lamp stood among dishes on the table in the middle of the little room.
-Beyond the table, against the wall, a man struggled with a woman. The
-man had his back to the window. He was big and a stranger. The woman was
-Miss Carten.
-
-Young Dan’s quick eyes spotted a wooden rolling-pin on a corner of the
-table. He laid his axe on the ground and went through the window as
-quick and as noiseless as thought. Two swift and silent steps brought
-him to the corner of the table. He grasped a handle of the rolling-pin,
-advanced two more paces, judged the distance, swung his arm and struck.
-One strike meant out in that game.
-
-Young Dan bound the unknown and unconscious bushwhacker with thongs from
-a pair of snowshoes on the wall and placed a folded blanket under his
-sore head and let him lie where he had fallen. Then he sat and watched
-his new aunt make coffee and warm up a panful of beans for him. She told
-him of her secret courtship by Uncle Bill, and of their flight and
-marriage by a parson friend whom Bill had sworn to secrecy—all because
-William Tangler was the most bashful man in the world. She told of how
-Bill, who was thought to be so idle and aimless by the people on the
-Oxbow, was in reality an expert in the science of forestry and in the
-employ of the Government as such. Bill had gone out that morning to mail
-an official report and also to mail his young bride’s resignation as
-teacher in the little school at the Bend. In a few days they would go
-out to civilization together.
-
-Every now and then Miss Carten thanked Young Dan for saving her from the
-drunken bushwhacker and she said so many complimentary things that her
-visitor’s face turned the color of ripe choke-cherries. She said among
-other things that she believed he was almost as clever and brave as his
-uncle.
-
-“If I were Uncle Bill I wouldn’t of been so shy,” said Young Dan, who
-felt greatly relieved by the outcome of his activities and very proud of
-himself.
-
-When the coffee and beans were ready, and the big ruffian on the floor
-was beginning to grunt and sigh, Young Dan remarked, “I guess Mister
-Holmes couldn’t of done that job much slicker himself.” Suddenly he
-cocked his head to listen. “I can hear Uncle Bill coming up the trail,”
-he said. “He offered to be my Doctor Watson, but I didn’t need him.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- A THIEF WITH CLAWS
-
-
-Young Dan Evans was done with school; and he had almost decided to hire
-out with Josh Tod, as a “swamper” in the lumberwoods, when a letter from
-Uncle Bill Tangler caused him to change his plans for the winter. The
-letter, which came from Mr. Tangler’s office in a distant city, ran as
-follows:
-
- Dear Young Dan:
-
- Now that the frost is on the punkin (as a leading poet has
- remarked) and the swamps back of your pasture are frozen so
- hard that no woodcock can stick his bill into the mud any
- more this year (a fact overlooked by said leading poet) and
- folk on the Oxbow are frying fresh pork with their buckwheat
- pancakes and making sausages and fattening turkeys, my
- thoughts are with you frequently and enviously. It is a
- great country, Young Dan, and a grand season of the year for
- him who has wild blood in his veins and unimpaired organs of
- digestion. I should like fine to be away up beyond the
- Prongs this very morning, putting an edge to an appetite,
- instead of sitting here at this expensive desk trying to
- look like the only real know-it-all in the Government’s
- service; but now that I have a wife who needs two new hats
- and an evening frock, and a furnace that eats up coal, I
- must sit in tight and steady to this lady-like job. But what
- about you, Young Dan? You have exhausted the educational
- resources of the Bend; you haven’t a wife or a furnace; so
- why don’t you go up beyond the Prongs? You may use the camp
- as if you owned it. As for grub, you’ll find enough there of
- everything except bacon and condensed milk to last till
- spring—enough for two. So you had better go into partnership
- with someone—with old Andy Mace, for choice. He is an honest
- man and was a mighty hunter and fur-taker in his day. You
- will find half a dozen traps in your own garret and a lot
- more in the loft of the camp, all in good shape. You are
- welcome to them, and to my rifle as well, and my snowshoes
- if they are better than your own. Help yourself. That is a
- great country for fox and mink and lynx. You should have a
- prosperous winter—so go to it, with your Uncle Bill’s
- blessing.
-
- P. S. Here is a little check. Take it to Amos Bissing at the
- Bend and you’ll find him willing to swap a few dollars for
- it, I guess. Your Aunt Stella sends her love to you and will
- mail you another book about Mr. S. Holmes as soon as she
- gets it ready for the post.
-
-Young Dan was delighted with the letter. He showed it to his parents.
-Dan’l Evans didn’t think very highly of it as a specimen of epistolary
-art, though he had no objections to make to the advice and suggestions
-which it contained.
-
-“Bill’s reckoned a smart man, an’ educated at that, but if this here
-ain’t the foolishest writ letter ever I read, then I’ll eat it,” he
-said. “I guess them Forestry people have kinder over-rated him. That’s
-the Gover’ment for ye, and always has been. Let a man have a slick way
-with him, an’ slithers of easy talk, an’ the Gover’ment gives him a job
-of work with nothin’ to do. This here’s a plumb foolish letter, anyhow.
-Take this here about his indigestion now, an’ this talk about the
-woodcock! What d’ye reckon he means? I ain’t had much education, but——”
-
-“Ye’re right there, Dan’l Evans,” interrupted Young Dan’s mother, who
-had held a very high opinion of her brother’s abilities ever since he
-had become a successful citizen of the great outside world. “Much
-education! No, indeed. Bill’s clever, an’ always was—an’ I, for one,
-always knew it. I always knew he should be clever, anyhow, seein’ he was
-a Tangler; an’ if I ever acted crusty with him it was his own fault for
-hidin’ his light from me in a bushel-bag, so to speak. He didn’t write
-that letter to you anyhow, Dan’l Evans, so what you think about it don’t
-matter a mite to my brother Bill nor anybody.”
-
-This discussion concerning the letter from a purely literary standpoint
-did not disturb Young Dan in the least, for neither of his parents
-offered any objection to his acceptance of Uncle Bill Tangler’s offers
-and advice. He set out first thing in the morning to put the proposition
-before old Andy Mace, who lived three miles below the Bend, in a log
-house in a small clearing. It was a morning of sun and frost. The road,
-recently deep with mud, was hard as iron; the sky was bluer than at
-midsummer; a flock of geese went over, high up, winging tirelessly
-southward; and there was a skim of black ice along the lips of the
-Oxbow. It was a grand morning to be a-wing or a-foot and Young Dan
-pictured Uncle Bill Tangler seated at his desk in the distant city with
-a twinge of pity. Though there was no wind, red and yellow leaves of
-maple and birch snapped their stems loose in some mysterious way and
-circled down to the frosty moss, and the sounds of their falling came
-out of the woods on both sides of the road like a soft whisper.
-
-Young Dan found Andy Mace splitting stove-wood beside the back-door of
-his primitive habitation. Andy had lived a great many years—eighty or
-perhaps as many as eighty-five—and most of them rough. His joints were
-not as supple as they had been thirty years ago, but he was still an
-able man and a first-class hand at all forms of sylvan activity.
-Experience had taught him the easiest way of doing everything well, and
-his inherent and acquired wisdom saw to it that he made the most of that
-knowledge. This fact was demonstrated even in his present employment.
-The round sticks of dry maple and birch fell apart under the lightest
-strokes of his axe in a manner that suggested magic to Young Dan.
-
-“You do that slick, Mr. Mace,” said the young man.
-
-“Well, I’d ought to, at my time o’ life,” replied Andy, straightening
-his back slowly. “I’ve been splittin’ wood nigh onto a hundred years,
-off and on, so it’s no more’n to be expected that I’d be a purty slick
-hand at the job by now.”
-
-“I got a letter here from Uncle Bill Tangler, and if you’ll read it I
-won’t have to tell you what’s in it,” said Young Dan.
-
-“That sounds reasonable,” replied the old man, taking the letter and
-seating himself on the chopping-block.
-
-He fished a pair of spectacles from a hip-pocket and donned them with
-great care. He chuckled now and again as he read the letter.
-
-“Smart boy. Bill Tangler,” he said at last. “Knows timber and folks, he
-does; and I larned him purty nigh all he knows about timber. We’ve
-cruised the woods together months on end, him and me.”
-
-“Will you be my partner, Mr. Mace, and go up to Uncle Bill’s camp with
-me to trap fur all winter?”
-
-“I sure will, Young Dan. I ain’t got hoof nor claw o’ livestock, and
-this old house is used to bein’ empty, so I cal’late we’d best start
-upstream bright and early to-morrow mornin’. I’ll call at yer place
-about seven o’clock, if that’ll suit ye.”
-
-“It suits me fine.”
-
-“So we’re pardners, you and me. What I got in here will just about
-offset the camp.” Andy pressed a finger-tip to his forehead. “We’ll
-figger out the cost o’ grub come spring, and I’ll pay ye my half in good
-green money. Folks hereabouts name me for a rich miser behind my back,
-as ye’ve heared with yer own ears like enough, Young Dan; and that’s
-because I’m a bach, and live in a log house, and let my whiskers grow.
-Well, boy, they’re dead wrong about me bein’ a miser. I’d smoke ten-cent
-seegars if they tasted as good to me as a pipe, and it ain’t the cost o’
-city life that keeps me from movin’ to Harlow or Centreville or to Noo
-York. No, sir-ee! I live here like I do because it is the place and the
-way that suits my tastes; and I’d still do it if it cost me twenty
-dollars every week. You ask Bill Tangler. We took a ja’nt once to the
-Sportsman’s Show in Noo York, him and me together. Ask yer Uncle Bill
-about me bein’ a miser.”
-
-“Folks round here didn’t have Uncle Bill sized up just right, either,”
-returned Young Dan. “I guess the most of them don’t see much more than
-what hits them plumb in the eye.”
-
-The old man chuckled delightedly at that.
-
-“Come inside and have a go at my ginger cookies,” he invited. “I’ve been
-makin’ ginger cookies nigh onto a hundred years, off and on, and now I
-just naturally turn out the best ye ever tasted.”
-
-By the time Young Dan started on his homeward journey, which wasn’t
-until after dinner, he was full of admiration for his partner—not to
-mention pumpkin pie, Washington pie and ginger cookies.
-
-Old Andy Mace came to the Evans’ place on foot next morning, at the
-stroke of the hour, with a pack of formidable proportions on his
-shoulders and a rifle in his hand. He found Young Dan ready for him,
-with the thin ice broken from the edge of the stream and Bill Tangler’s
-canoe launched and loaded. Young Dan took the post of honor and effort
-aft and plied the long pole. They reached Squaw Falls by half-past ten,
-made the portage, lunched and reembarked by noon. Old Andy Mace took the
-pole then, for three hours. The water, high and swift, humped itself
-over submerged mossy boulders. Andy pushed the loaded canoe up steadily
-and at a good pace, with no more show of effort than an ordinary person
-would make in cutting tobacco for a pipe. The sun went down before they
-reached the Prongs. It was night, with stars in the sky and an aching
-cold over everything, when they unlocked the door of Uncle Bill
-Tangler’s camp.
-
-While Andy lit two fires, one on the open hearth and the other in the
-little cook-stove, and shook out blankets to air, Young Dan carried the
-outfit up from the landing. Then, by lantern-light and firelight, they
-examined the provisions which Bill Tangler had left behind.
-
-“Jumpin’ Josh-ee-phat, look-a here!” exclaimed Andy Mace. “Here’s a box
-been bust open—box o’ prunes—and the prunes took. There’s some dried
-apples gone, too, and some flour, I reckon. Take a look at the windy,
-Young Dan.”
-
-The window was shuttered on the outside when the camp was not occupied.
-The shutter was of plank, hinged to the window-frame at the top and,
-when secured, fastened at the bottom by a hasp and a padlock. But now
-the shutter was not fastened. The long staple had been wrenched from the
-tough plank and now hung uselessly from the log window-sill, together
-with the hasp and padlock.
-
-“A b’ar,” said Andy. “Trust a b’ar to sniff out prunes.”
-
-“A bear wouldn’t take flour,” said Young Dan.
-
-“Ye can’t never tell what a b’ar will do, for b’ars are natural born
-jokers,” replied Andy. “I’ve knowed the critters for nigh onto a hundred
-years, and that’s my opinion of them.”
-
-“It wasn’t done yesterday, nor even the day before,” said the youth.
-“The prunes he’s left in the box are pretty dry. And he has had a go at
-the molasses, too. He’s left the stopper out, see; and look at the track
-of dried molasses down the front of the jug. It’s a wonder he didn’t
-upset it. And he’s ripped the bean-bag open, darn his hide! But how come
-it he didn’t upset the jug? Maybe it wasn’t a bear at all, Mr. Mace. A
-man could have done it, I guess.”
-
-“It be a reg’lar b’ar trick,” replied Andy. “He didn’t upset the jug o’
-molasses, that’s true—and I’m glad he didn’t—but all that shows is some
-b’ars is smarter or more careful nor others. He h’isted the jug in his
-two paws and took a swig, that’s what he done. Look at the beans he’s
-chawed and spit out on the floor. D’ye reckon a man would do that?”
-
-“Some men are smarter and more careful than others,” replied Young Dan.
-
-They closed the inner glazed sash of the window and nailed a strong bar
-of wood across it. Then they cooked and ate their supper and retired to
-their bunks, for they were bone-tired. The affair of the thieving bear
-would keep very well until morning.
-
-They awoke bright and early. Young Dan hopped from his bunk in a lively
-and limber manner, feeling nothing of yesterday’s exertions; but Andy
-Mace grunted a few times as he sat up in his blankets and a few more
-times as he lowered his feet to the floor.
-
-“I ain’t as soupel as I was eighty years ago,” he said.
-
-When Young Dan opened the door the cold fairly caught him by the nose.
-He made a quick trip across the little clearing and down the steep path
-to the landing-place, with two pails in his hands. He found the shallow
-Right Prong shelled in black ice from shore to shore save for a few
-little air-holes. He had to break the ice with a stone before he could
-fill his pails. Then he took a quick and splashy bath right there. Wow!
-Wow! But after it he felt as if he could eat his weight in bacon and
-pancakes and fight his weight in wild-cats.
-
-They went out and examined the ground beneath the window after
-breakfast. Frosts and rains had done much to wipe out the tracks of the
-thief, but they found a few unmistakable claw-marks here and there. Mr.
-Mace put his white beard to the ground in the intensity of his scrutiny;
-but the best he could do was trace the marks for a distance of seven or
-eight paces from the window.
-
-“I cal’late he’s denned himself up somewheres long before this, and lays
-sleepin’ snug as ye please on a bellyful o’ Bill Tangler’s superior
-prunes,” he said. “He’s a big feller, jedgin’ by the claws. I’d like
-fine to happen onto his den.”
-
-“Same here,” replied Young Dan. “I’d sure like to have a look at him. A
-bear as smart as that one ought to be in a circus or teachin’ school.”
-
-They cruised the woods from sunrise to sunset for the next three days,
-choosing the likeliest country for their lines of traps. They spent four
-more days in setting the traps exactly to Andy’s taste in four lines of
-about equal length radiating from the camp. By that time everything that
-wasn’t kept indoors or underground, or that wasn’t clothed in wool, fur,
-or feathers, was frozen stiff. The Right Prong was roofed strongly over,
-except in one spot where the swift water kept itself an open
-breathing-place in some mysterious way. The ice was strong to the very
-edge of that hole; and, to save himself the trouble of keeping another
-hole chopped clear, Young Dan always walked out to it for his morning
-and evening pails of water. There the little river flashed always bright
-and naked and untouched, sliding over mossy rocks as green as in summer.
-
-There were other and lesser streams and half a dozen small ponds within
-the circle of Andy’s and Young Dan’s operations, and these were all
-frozen hard.
-
-Andy arranged the routine of the everyday tasks. They breakfasted before
-sunrise, by lantern-light. Then Young Dan set out on one of the crooked
-six-mile strings of traps, outfitted with rifle, axe, and frozen bait,
-and a pocketful of sandwiches in case of need. Andy cleared away the
-breakfast things and fell to the ever-urgent task of rustling wood; and
-between bouts of chopping and splitting he prepared the dinner and
-sometimes even pulled off such extra stunts as a panful of ginger
-cookies or a pie. Young Dan was usually home, with or without a pelt or
-two, by half-past twelve or one o’clock. After dinner, Andy armed
-himself and lit out on another six-mile string, and Young Dan washed the
-dinner dishes and rustled wood. Andy was usually back, with luck, in
-time to cook supper. In the evening they gave the skins whatever
-attention was necessary and the old partner talked and the young one
-gave ear. In this way, each of the four lines of traps was visited every
-other day.
-
-Snow descended upon that wilderness on the twentieth of November and
-continued to descend for two whole days and nights. It came to stay.
-Owing to the storm, the partners lost touch with their traps for two
-days. The third day was still and clear. The forest was fairly
-smothered, aloft and below. Young Dan set out at the first streak of
-daylight, sinking deep on his wide snowshoes at every step. He traveled
-slowly and experienced a good deal of difficulty in locating some of the
-traps. It was noon when he got to the end of the line, empty-handed. He
-rested there and ate half of his sandwiches of bread and cold bacon. He
-had tramped himself a nest in the snow, and made a little fire of dry
-twigs for the appearance of comfort; and now, having eaten, he continued
-to sit on his snowshoes and feed the fire. He was about to leave this
-retreat and set out on the back-trail when a muffled disturbance of the
-snow-heaped brush on his right attracted his attention. He glanced up in
-time to see a human figure issue from the tangle, its head held low and
-its shoulders hunched against the showers of dislodged snow.
-
-Young Dan was astonished at the sight, but he did nothing to show it.
-The intruder shook himself free of snow, halted and stood straight. He
-was on snowshoes and carried a rifle in a blanket stocking. Young Dan
-noticed that his rough jacket and trousers were old and patched and that
-they appeared to be several sizes too large for him.
-
-“Have you anything to eat?” asked the stranger, in a voice that puzzled
-the trapper. “If you have, please give me a bite.”
-
-Young Dan produced the remaining sandwiches from his pocket and handed
-them over without a word. The stranger crouched by the little fire and
-bit off a very small corner of frozen bread and frosty bacon.
-
-“I was watchin’ you quite a spell,” he said. “When I seen you was only a
-young feller I wasn’t scart.”
-
-“Only a young feller!” exclaimed Young Dan. “Is that so? Well, what of
-it? You don’t look like much of a man yerself.”
-
-“Which I ain’t, nor don’t pretend to be,” replied the stranger,
-swallowing hard on the chilly fare. “I wisht you had yer teakittle
-along. No, I ain’t much of a man. I’m a married woman, with a husband
-sick a-bed not five mile from here, an’ my name is Mrs. May Conley—an’
-me an’ Jim Conley an’ the younguns are jist about starved, if you want
-to know. Whereabouts is yer camp from here?”
-
-“About six mile from this, dead south. I got a partner there, old Andy
-Mace; and we’ve got quite a store of grub, of one kind and
-another—condensed milk, too.”
-
-“We ain’t got a cent to buy grub with. Jim was away till a few weeks
-back, an’ then he come home to us without a dollar of his summer wages
-an’ went sick.”
-
-“That’ll be all right about the money; but what ails yer husband?”
-
-Mrs. Conley’s answer to that was a cheerless smile and a shake of the
-head.
-
-“I suppose you shoot fresh meat, anyhow,” continued Young Dan, feeling
-embarrassed. “You got a rifle, I see.”
-
-“If you mean deer an’ the like by fresh meat, then I tell you I don’t
-shoot it—but I’ve shot at it a few times,” replied the woman. “It’s a
-sight too knowing an’ lively for me to hit.”
-
-“Tell you what I’ll do, m’am,” said Young Dan. “You come to this very
-spot at ten o’clock to-morrow and you’ll find me here with some grub.
-Will tea and canned milk and sugar and fifteen pounds of white flour be
-any use to you?”
-
-“Will spring water quench thirst?” returned the woman, her sad face
-brightening. “But can’t I have it sooner?—some of that there milk,
-anyhow? Young man, my two babies was cryin’ with hungry pains when I
-started out; an’ the biggest of ’em isn’t as long as this here
-snowshoe.”
-
-“If I had it here I’d give it you right now—but all our grub’s back at
-our camp, six mile away. Will you go along with me and carry away what
-you’re in most need of, m’am?”
-
-“Will a duck swim?”
-
-Young Dan meant well, but he did not realize that the mother of two
-children who cry with hunger is almost sure to be weak for want of
-food—he did not realize it until he heard a soft thud behind him and
-turned to find his companion flat on her face in the snow. He raised her
-to a sitting position and pulled her back until she rested against a
-small spruce. He built a big fire in the trail and cut many fir boughs
-to serve her as a couch and covering. He removed her snowshoes.
-
-“Guess I’m all in—till I have a cup of tea,” she said.
-
-“I’ll fetch a kettle,” replied Young Dan. “You stop right there till I
-get back.”
-
-He made the remaining three miles to the camp on Right Prong in record
-time. He told what he knew of Mrs. Conley’s story briefly to Andy, while
-they made up a small pack of provisions in a blanket. He attached a
-small frying-pan and a kettle to the pack.
-
-“Best go all the way home with her, if ye ain’t clean tuckered out,”
-said the old man. “I cal’late it wouldn’t be a bad idee to have a look
-at this here Jim Conley, for he don’t sound to me like a desirable
-neighbor nor a valued citizen. You kin size him up while yer restin’,
-and take yer time on the home-trip. It shapes for a fine night.”
-
-“I’ll do that,” said Young Dan.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- THE MAN IN THE BUNK
-
-
-The sun was on the edge of the western hills when he got back to Mrs.
-Conley. She expressed relief at seeing him and wonder at seeing him so
-soon. He built up the fire, melted snow and made tea. He also fried a
-little bacon and bread. Between them they emptied tea-kettle and
-frying-pan; and the woman was greatly revived by the food and drink.
-
-The woman led the way northward and westward to her home. The distance
-struck Young Dan as being nearer seven miles than five. The small window
-of the cabin glowed a dim yellow. Mrs. Conley pushed open the door and
-entered without waiting to remove her snowshoes. Young Dan kicked off
-his snowshoes and had a foot on the threshold when he heard an
-unpleasant voice shout from somewhere within, demanding to know where
-the woman had been and why she had stayed away so long and why she
-hadn’t brought some food home with her. A few oaths gave color to the
-questions.
-
-Young Dan crossed the threshold, kicked the door shut with a heel and
-lowered his pack to the floor. In one comprehensive glance he saw the
-woman stooped to two clinging children, a man lying in a bunk, a failing
-fire on a rough hearth, a smoky lantern on a table and a worn bear-skin
-on the floor. He had never seen a less cheering interior.
-
-The man in the bunk sat up and stared at Young Dan. His shoulders looked
-very broad in the dim light.
-
-“Who’s thar?” he exclaimed. “Who’s that?”
-
-“Ye needn’t be scart,” said the woman, with a tang of scorn in her
-voice. “It’s a feller from the camp over on Right Prong. He’s fetched in
-some grub for us, in the kindness of his heart.”
-
-The man immediately lay back without another word.
-
-Young Dan felt indignant, so much so that his indignation amounted to
-anger—anger that felt like a lump of something uncomfortably hard and
-hot in his chest. He wanted to say something sharp to the big fellow in
-the bunk—but he didn’t know what to say. So, without a word, he untied
-his blanket, filled an arm with the packages of food and carried all to
-the table.
-
-“No water and no wood,” said Mrs. Conley, looking at the bunk.
-
-Young Dan went outside and found a small pile of wood beside the door,
-under a roof of snow. He carried an armful into the shack; and as he
-laid the sticks beside the hearth he noticed how irregularly and
-unskilfully the severed ends were cut. Even a sick man accustomed to the
-use of an axe would not have hacked the wood so clumsily. He knew it was
-not the work of the man in the bunk. He then took up an empty pail and
-enquired the whereabouts of the water-hole. Mrs. Conley told him that
-there was a spring just back of the shack and a path leading to it which
-he couldn’t miss. She was right; and in a minute he was back with the
-water. As he set the pail down on a bench near the door he looked at the
-man in the bunk, the hot spot of anger and indignation still glowing in
-his chest. The man’s eyes met his for a moment—but he saw more than the
-fellow’s eyes. He crossed the narrow floor to the bunk.
-
-“What’s the matter with you, anyhow?” he asked.
-
-“Matter with me, d’ye say?” returned the fellow in the blankets. “I’m
-sick, that’s what’s the matter. Can’t ye see?”
-
-Young Dan stooped swiftly and drew a high-shouldered, square-faced black
-bottle from beneath the edge of the bunk. There was a sound of clinking
-glass as he brought it forth as if it were in contact with receptacles
-of a like nature and material. He held it aloft.
-
-“Yes, I can see all right,” he cried. “And I guess I’ve got hold of a
-few doses of your medicine.”
-
-“Well, what of it?” demanded the other, his voice at once savage and
-anxious.
-
-Young Dan returned the bottle to its place; and in so doing he caught
-sight of some other articles of interest beneath the bunk. More bottles
-were there, both full and empty—but there were other things of even
-greater interest to the youth. He stood up, however, without word or
-sign of comment.
-
-Mrs. Conley, who was busily engaged in feeding the children with
-condensed milk diluted with hot water, paid keen attention to Young
-Dan’s words and actions, but said nothing.
-
-Young Dan moved away from the bunk and bestowed a brief but enquiring
-glance upon the worn bear-skin on the floor. That article had struck him
-as looking queer, somehow or other, when he had first set eyes on it;
-and now he knew it to be queer. It had grown on a big animal and had
-evidently been a fine pelt in its day. The big, wide head was there—not
-the skull, but the complete skin of head, to the tip of the nose. Yes,
-the head was all there—but all four paws were missing!
-
-Young Dan turned again to the man in the bunk. “Say the word, and I’ll
-get a doctor in to see you,” he said. “Or we’ll haul you out on a sled,
-if you ain’t too sick to be shifted about a bit.”
-
-“I don’t want no cussed doctor p’isonin’ me,” cried the invalid. “Mind
-yer own business, will ye, an’ leave me be to look after mine? I’m able
-for it, without yer help.”
-
-“All right,” retorted Young Dan, his voice shaking with anger and scorn.
-“Well, then, look after yer own business if you’re so able. Get out of
-bed and get to work. I know all I need to about you. I know enough about
-you to run you out of these woods and into jail; and that’s the
-identical thing I intend to do if you don’t get busy. So cut out the gin
-and the bunk and cut into the wood-pile. D’ye get me?”
-
-The man did not answer. The woman continued to feed the children in
-silence. Young Dan glared at the bunk a little longer, then fetched his
-snowshoes and put them on, and took up his rifle, axe and blanket.
-
-“I’m off,” he said. “But I’ll be back in a few days, to see how you’re
-working, Jim Conley. I’ve got your measure, and don’t you forget it!
-Goodnight to you, m’am.”
-
-He had not gone far from the miserable cabin before the woman came
-running after him. He halted.
-
-“What is it ye know about him?” she asked, anxiously.
-
-“I can guess more’n I know, but I reckon what I know is plenty,” he
-replied. “He broke into my Uncle Bill Tangler’s camp a few months back
-an’ stole some grub, with the paws an’ claws of a big bear on his hands
-an’ feet. Guess he reckoned he was smart.”
-
-“How d’ye know that?”
-
-“I’d figgered out it wasn’t a bear long ago; and to-night I spied the
-skinned paws under the bunk. It was easy.”
-
-“Jim wasn’t in the woods when that happened,” she whispered. “It was me
-broke into the camp an’ stole the grub. It was me who cut the paws off
-that old skin an’ used ’em to fool ye with. Jim was away out to the
-settlements that day.”
-
-“You, ma’am!”
-
-“That’s Gospel-true. The babies and me hadn’t a bite to eat but some
-rusty pork. We needed the food bad. It was the first time I ever stole
-anything.”
-
-“Then why didn’t you upset the molasses jug, like a bear would do? A
-bear would of upset it an’ then licked the molasses off the floor. If
-you’d done it that way, m’am—upset the jug, I mean—I wouldn’t of
-suspicioned the thief wasn’t a bear; and so I wouldn’t of examined the
-shutter and spotted how the staple had been pried off with the blade of
-an axe; and so I wouldn’t of taken any stock in the old paws under the
-bunk.”
-
-“I took enough molasses to fill the bottle I had along with me. I hadn’t
-the heart to upset the jug an’ waste what I didn’t want. But I kinder
-thought that’s what a bear would do.”
-
-“Well, that’s all right, anyhow,” said Young Dan. “I don’t blame you a
-mite for rustlin’ grub for your babies; but if you don’t make that big
-bluffer get to work, I’ll land him in jail or bust tryin’—and you can
-bet I won’t bust, m’am!”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- THE STIFF KNEE
-
-
-“Well, I found that bear,” said Young Dan Evans to Andy when he arrived
-at the camp; and then he gave a full account of his experiences with the
-Conley family.
-
-“You done dead right!” exclaimed Andy Mace, at the conclusion of the
-story. “You got brains and use ’em, I do believe; and that’s more’n can
-be said about most folks nowadays. What size was this here Jim Conley?”
-
-“Big. Over six foot high, I guess, and hefty—and no more sick-abed nor
-you or me.”
-
-“What would ye’ve done if he’d clum outer the bunk an’ lammed ye one?”
-
-“I’d of lammed him two or three back—maybe four.”
-
-“I reckon ye would. I was jist sich another at yer age, Young Dan—always
-up an’ doin’, always ready to fight my own weight in minks or men, and
-yet always a thinker an’ a bit of scholard, too.”
-
-“But I don’t go round looking for fights, Mr. Mace. I’m peaceable enough
-by nature.”
-
-“Yes, in course. It’s the same with me. There never was a more peaceable
-citizen on the Oxbow nor Andy Mace—but nobody had to tromp on the tails
-o’ my snowshoes more’n twice to fetch me round with fists in both
-hands.”
-
-A week passed before the partners on Right Prong heard or saw anything
-more of the Conleys. It was a busy week with them, for trails had to be
-beaten out anew in the deep snow and a fresh supply of bait had to be
-obtained for the traps; and, as if these tasks were not enough, Andy
-shot a fat buck deer which had to be skinned and quartered and placed
-out of harm’s way, and Young Dan cracked the frame of one of his
-snowshoes. The partners were full of energy and determination, however.
-They survived that strenuous week breathless but triumphant. They
-obtained the required bait from the depths of a nameless pond which lay
-four miles to the eastward of the camp. This was a big job in itself,
-for the ice was nearly two feet thick on the pond, not to mention the
-three feet of snow which topped the ice. They shovelled snow; then they
-chopped and shovelled ice; and at last old Andy bored with a four-inch
-bit until the clear water welled up into the icy trough from the brown
-depths. He bored two holes; and then they baited their hooks with fat of
-pork and each lowered a line into the unknown. They fished steadily for
-three hours and by the end of that time were too nearly frozen to go on
-with it. The captured trout froze stiff after a jump or two on the snow.
-
-“Reckon it’s a reel chilly day,” remarked Andy, looking from the low
-sun, which glinted as grey and cheerless as a flake of ice, to the
-frozen fish. “Reckon we’d best quit and git home before we’re as stiff
-an’ twisted as these here trout.”
-
-He was right. If there had been a thermometer in the Right Prong country
-it would have marked twenty-five degrees below zero just then. Young Dan
-was agreeable; but he would have stood there and continued the motions
-of fishing, slowly and more slowly until the numbness caught his heart,
-if the old man had not suggested a move. When two good men go into the
-woods together, and one of them is well past four score years of age and
-the other has not yet completed his first score, the spur of competition
-is bound to prod now and then. In this matter of endurance against the
-cold the partners had silently and almost unconsciously competed. No
-rivalry of youth and age had inspired them, but rather the rivalry of
-two widely separated generations of youth; for old Andy Mace considered
-himself as good a man as he had ever been and so a trifle better than
-Young Dan, maybe, because of his birth and training in a period of the
-world’s existence that had marked its very highest point of development.
-He said nothing of all this to Young Dan, of course—even if he thought
-it.
-
-They gathered up their gear and scooped the frozen fish into a couple of
-sacks. Not a word did they exchange until they were both on the warm
-side of their own door; and even then they didn’t exchange many. An hour
-later, however, when the “riz” biscuits, broiled venison steak, and the
-coffee-pot were on the table, they talked “good and plenty.”
-
-Woodsmen are not generally supposed to be talkative folk. If there is
-any truth in this general supposition, then Young Dan and old Andy Mace
-must be the two exceptions that prove it—if suppositions, like rules,
-can be proved by exceptions. However that may be, these two woodsmen
-spent every evening in conversation, crawling into their bunks at last
-only because they couldn’t hear in their sleep. And their talk was not
-all of the woods and the day’s work. Far from it. They had much more to
-say concerning what they thought than what they knew; and so almost
-every subject under the sun was dealt with. Even when Young Dan read
-aloud, Andy capped every paragraph with a comment or an explanation, or
-an objection of equal or greater length. Their library contained only
-three small volumes of fiction, all from one entertaining pen—but under
-their system of reading, three promised to be plenty, for one winter at
-least. In spite of his interruptions, Andy Mace was a hungry listener,
-and so his interest in the adventures and mental processes of Mr.
-Sherlock Holmes soon became almost as keen as his partner’s. No one
-could be more sharply intrigued by an artful combination of significant
-words than that old trapper.
-
-On the night of the day of the cold fishing, after the last fragment of
-steak had been devoured, Young Dan opened one of the treasured books and
-began to read aloud; and, at the same moment, Andy began to cut tobacco
-for his pipe. Andy gave ear intently until the tobacco was shredded,
-rolled, stuffed into the pipe and satisfactorily lighted. He blew three
-large, slow clouds and settled back in his chair.
-
-“I wisht we had that gent here on Right Prong with us,” he said. “He’d
-stand it all right, too, I reckon, in a good coonskin coat. What d’ye
-cal’late he’d of made o’ that thief in claws?”
-
-Young Dan closed the book on a finger.
-
-“I guess he would of known it wasn’t a bear right off,” he said. “I did.
-I suspicioned it wasn’t, anyhow. I guess he would of known for sure,
-right off; and maybe he wouldn’t of figgered it out the way I did,
-neither—not by the molasses jug alone, perhaps.”
-
-“How else could he figger it out? What else was there to figger on?”
-
-“Plenty for him. I can think of some other things myself, now. There
-were the claw-marks. I guess those alone would of been enough for Mr.
-Holmes.”
-
-“What about ’em? They were marks of a b’ar’s claws.”
-
-“Yes—but he’s scientifical, Mr. Holmes is. He would of had a spyin’
-glass handy in his pocket to look at the marks with, and right off he’d
-of seen by the spread from claw to claw that they had been made by a
-mighty big bear. He would study over that a few minutes, somethin’ like
-this: A bear with paws as big as what these must of been must be an
-uncommon big bear; and heavy—four or five hundred pounds in weight,
-maybe, in the fall of the year; and so he would just naturally make
-deeper tracks than these here; and a bear as big as what he must be to
-own these paws and claws would be too darned big to get through that
-little window without spreadin’ the side of the camp or bustin’ himself
-or somethin’. So he would up and say, quick but quiet, ‘This thief is a
-lamb in a wolf’s clothes’—or somethin’ like that. He would know it
-wasn’t a bear, anyway. That’s how Mr. Holmes would of figgered it out, I
-guess.”
-
-Andy withdrew his pipe from his mouth and slowly straightened himself in
-his chair.
-
-“Sufferin’ cats!” he exclaimed. “It don’t sound altogether human comin’
-like that from a young feller who ain’t been to school nowhere but down
-to the Bend. Where’d ye get the trick of it from, Young Dan? Not from
-yer Pa nor yer Ma, I’ll swear an Alfy Davy!”
-
-“That was easy, workin’ it out after I knew, the way I did,” replied
-Young Dan, modestly. “If I had worked it out that way before I
-knew—well, that would of been pretty slick work. That would of been
-scientifical.”
-
-“If Gover’ment hears about it you’ll be one o’ these here boss policemen
-some day,” said Andy.
-
-“I guess not,” retorted Young Dan, with a slight curl of the lips that
-was foreign to his character.
-
-He already shared Sherlock Holmes’ opinion of the mental equipment of
-that stalwart and imperturbable force.
-
-He reopened the book and took up the story at the point of his partner’s
-interruption. He read a paragraph, his voice skidding now and then on a
-word of formidable proportions. He read a page, warming to his work and
-tearing the big words to pieces without so much as a hitch in his
-stride. Two pages—and still not a peep out of Andy Mace. He ceased
-reading and looked up inquiringly, and beheld his aged partner slouched
-in the chair and sunk deep in slumber, his shoulders hunched high, his
-chin tucked in and his grey beard rising and falling peacefully on his
-breast.
-
-Young Dan was up as early as usual next morning. He lit the lantern and
-then the fire in the stove; and it was not until then that he heard any
-signs of life from his partner’s bunk.
-
-“Sufferin’ cant-dogs!” exclaimed Andy. “Warm up the b’ar’s grease for
-me, pardner. This here right leg o’ mine’s stiffer’n King Pharaoh’s
-neck. Must of give it a twist yesterday.”
-
-Young Dan complied with this request, cooked the breakfast and tucked
-into it. He set out on the northward line at the first break of dawn,
-with a sack over his shoulder containing a supply of the new bait and a
-haunch of venison, leaving Andy Mace still rubbing that high-smelling
-cure-all into his right knee and telling how it had been tender ever
-since he had hurt it fifty years ago in an argument with a man from
-Quebec.
-
-It was a fine morning, and a clear finger of light in the east promised
-a fine day. The air was still and not so perishing cold as it had been
-the day before. Young Dan traveled fast. He found a mink in the first
-trap and stowed it away in the sack without waiting to skin it. He
-rebaited the trap with a frozen trout. The second and third traps were
-exactly as he had last seen them; the fourth contained a red fox, which
-he added to the collection in the sack; and the remaining traps were
-undisturbed. He continued northward along the trail that led to the
-Conley cabin.
-
-Young Dan did not find Jim Conley at home, but Mrs. Conley and the
-babies were there. He produced the haunch of deer-meat, for which the
-woman thanked him heartily.
-
-“I’m glad to see that Jim’s able to be up and out,” he said. “He must be
-feeling better.”
-
-“I reckon he’s some better,” she replied. “He lit out for the
-settlements two days back, anyhow.”
-
-“To fetch in some grub?”
-
-“Maybe he’ll fetch in some grub.”
-
-Young Dan’s eyes turned significantly to the floor at the edge of the
-bunk beneath which he had discovered the store of “square-faces” during
-his last visit. The woman observed the glance and sighed. Young Dan felt
-embarrassed.
-
-“I’m glad he has something to buy grub with,” he said.
-
-“He’s got a few skins,” said the woman. “He went out an’ set some traps
-first thing after the tongue-lashin’ ye give him.”
-
-“He must be lucky, to have enough to carry out to the settlements after
-a couple of days’ trapping,” said the youth, astonished.
-
-Mrs. Conley smiled bitterly.
-
-“Jim don’t wait to git a lot before he commences sellin’,” she said.
-“It’s the way he’s built.”
-
-“And he’s left you to attend to the traps?”
-
-“Nope, he told me to let ’em be while he was gone. I don’t know nothin’
-about traps, anyhow. I was born and riz in the settlements.”
-
-“He might lose some good skins that way—have them et up on him; but it’s
-his own business, I guess. Well, I must be getting home. If you need
-anything, m’am, you know where to find my partner and me.”
-
-Young Dan sat down and ate his lunch as soon as he got out of sight of
-the cabin. He felt depressed; and the cold steak and frosty biscuits
-didn’t cheer him.
-
-“That’s a poor outfit,” he said. “I guess that Jim Conley’s no darned
-good. I wonder where he got that gin—and if he’ll get any more? He won’t
-buy much with the price of a few fox skins, that’s sure. He’s big, and
-maybe he’s powerful—but I kind of feel that I’ll light right into him
-next time I see him.”
-
-He made the homeward journey of twelve miles without a stop. It was
-close to three o’clock in the afternoon when he reached camp; and there,
-to his astonishment, he found Andy Mace seated by the stove with his
-right leg cocked up in a chair.
-
-Andy looked ashamed of himself.
-
-“I never knowed it to act so contrary before,” he said. “It’s still
-stiffer’n a ramrod, an’ I’ve rubbed nigh all my b’ar’s grease into it;
-an’ all the fault o’ that gum-heeled feller from Quebec I fit with over
-on the Tobique in the winter o’ eighteen-seventy. It’s nigh enough to
-rile a man’s temper, Young Dan.”
-
-Young Dan was distressed.
-
-“If it hurts you bad, just say the word and I’ll go clean out to Harlow
-and fetch in a doctor,” he offered.
-
-“No!” exclaimed Andy. “It ain’t my knee hurts me, but it’s layin’ down
-on the job to-day, and maybe to-morrow, and leavin’ all the work to you.
-That’s what riles me.”
-
-“Don’t you worry about that,” the youth reassured him. “I am able and
-willing, and you’ll be right as rain in a few days. Now I’ll do a mile
-or two of the south line and be back in time to fry pancakes for
-supper.”
-
-He was as good as his word; and, later, his pancakes proved to be as
-good as any his partner had ever mixed and fried. He told of his visit
-to the Conley cabin, and the old man agreed with him that it would be a
-real pleasure to hand Jim Conley just what he deserved. After supper,
-Young Dan read a complete story, in irregular fragments, and his partner
-talked a bookful.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- FISH FOR BAIT
-
-
-Andy’s knee was worse next morning, but he did not say so. He admitted
-that it didn’t seem to be any more supple, spoke hopefully of another
-day’s rest and a little more bear’s grease as being all that it
-required, and again referred to the fight of fifty years ago in terms of
-regret and acrimony. The truth was that the old fellow had rheumatism;
-and he knew what it was; and he had felt it before, once or twice a
-year, in the very same place. Furthermore, the gritty old sportsman was
-too vain to admit the truth. Of course he had fought with a man from
-Quebec fifty years ago, in a lumber-camp on Tobique River, and twisted a
-knee in the heat of the encounter—but if you had put him on oath and
-asked him to lay a finger on the knee he had wrenched on that distant
-occasion, he couldn’t have done it.
-
-“I hope you walloped that man from Quebec,” said Young Dan.
-
-“I sure did,” replied Andy, brightening. “He was counted a smart fighter
-even for them days—but I was the snag he busted himself on.”
-
-“I betcher! Well, I’ll be back in time to cook dinner, so you just keep
-quiet while I’m gone.”
-
-“No, you take yer grub along and I’ll have supper ready when you git
-back. I ain’t a cripple yet.”
-
-Young Dan put some food in his pockets and went about his day’s work,
-armed as usual with axe and rifle. He set out on the line of traps that
-ran crookedly almost due west, for this was the one that had been
-longest neglected. Andy Mace had been along it last, just before the
-forty-eight-hour storm, and now the tracks of his snowshoes were buried
-deep. Young Dan kept to his course without difficulty, however, though
-the line was not blazed. He worked easily by signs that would have meant
-nothing to a city man. His guides were certain trees and bushes and
-humps and hollows; and the wilderness was full to crowding of such
-things. So much for the line of general direction—but some of the traps
-lay several score of yards to the right and left of that line. A modest
-blaze had been cut in the bark of tree or sapling at several of these
-points of deflection.
-
-Young Dan drew two blanks and then a fine big lynx. He skinned the lynx
-before going on. The fourth trap was empty, but the bait which had been
-placed on and around it so artfully had been snatched away even more
-artfully. He rebaited with frozen trout. The fifth trap was snapped
-tight on the forepaws of a skunk. The skunk itself was gone but Young
-Dan soon discovered odds and ends of hair and bone scattered in the snow
-in the immediate vicinity. Something with an amazing appetite had beaten
-the trapper to that trap, for certain. Young Dan set these things to
-rights and passed on, wondering at the driving power of hunger.
-
-Two more blanks, a red fox and a skunk followed. The last trap on the
-line was empty and evidently undisturbed. The bait was covered with
-snow. Young Dan felt for it with a small stick and twitched a bit of it
-to the surface. He replaced it with a frozen trout, left it lying on the
-snow as an extra lure and turned away. He even took a step away; and
-then he turned back sharply and with the stick drew closer the piece of
-bait which he had twitched out of the snow. He took it up in his
-mittened hands and examined it closely. His eyes rounded and his lips
-parted with astonishment. Then his face took on an expression of blank
-bewilderment. He gazed all around at the crowding underbrush and soaring
-spires of the forest, then straight up at the clear sky, then down again
-at the lump of frozen bait in his hand.
-
-“That’s queer,” he said. “Andy was here last, and that was before we
-went fishing—yes, and before the last snow. We were baiting with
-porcupine that day. I wonder where he got this from.”
-
-He tossed the thing back into the snow and, still wondering, went his
-way. His way now was not by the back trail, but sharp to the right, and
-then more to the right, until his course lay southeast. He traveled by
-the sun. The way was rough and tangled, and the “going” was heavy. He
-struggled over blow-downs and through cedar-twined fastnesses of swamp.
-After a couple of miles of it he sat down to rest and eat his lunch.
-After that he came to a patch of open barren, desolate and flat under
-the colorless sun. He held to his course straight across the level, a
-distance of about two miles, and made good time. Beyond the barren he
-entered a forest of big timber and crossed a wide ridge of maples and
-yellow birches; and far beyond the ridge he came at last to the locality
-of the southernmost trap of the southern line.
-
-Young Dan had traveled close upon fifteen miles since breakfast, and
-here he was still six miles at least from camp as the crow flies—and
-what would have been a laughing matter to a crow was a tough job for
-him. He almost found it in his heart to hope that all the traps between
-him and his supper were empty. No such luck! In that first trap, the
-farthest from home, he found a big bobcat—a cheap pelt on a big body.
-
-It was past eight o’clock when Young Dan pushed open the door, staggered
-into the camp and let his load thump to the floor. He dropped his axe,
-too, stood his rifle against the wall, threw aside his fur cap and
-mittens, and sank into a chair with a grunt of relief.
-
-“That _was_ a day’s work, and I’m darn glad it’s through with!” he
-exclaimed, leaning back in his chair and closing his eyes.
-
-Andy Mace didn’t say a word.
-
-Young Dan sat up and looked all around. He saw the glow of the fire in
-the rusty stove, red embers on the hearth, and the lighted lantern at
-the little window, hooked to a nail in the frame. The room was poorly
-illuminated. Most of it, including Andy Mace’s bunk, was in deep shadow.
-
-“He’s taking a nap,” reflected Young Dan. “I guess his knee hurts him
-more’n he lets on, and maybe it kept him awake last night.”
-
-He hunched forward and untied the frozen thongs of his snowshoes very
-quietly, fearful of disturbing the sleeper. Stealthily he put a few
-sticks of wood in the stove and a log on the red embers in the chimney.
-Next, he pussy-footed over to the window and unhooked the lantern and
-set it down on the table near the stove. He felt bone-tired and sleepy,
-but his spirit was untouched by fatigue. Recalling Andy’s statement
-concerning supper, he decided to cook something good—something
-elaborate, like buckwheat pancakes or bacon—and boil a big pot of
-coffee, without waking the sluggard. He would even go so far as to tuck
-into the grub before arousing the sleeper by clattering a spoon against
-the coffee-pot. It would be a good joke on the old boy.
-
-Owing to the changed position of the lantern, Andy Mace’s bunk was now
-free from shadow. Young Dan glanced at it and instantly forgot the
-contemplated joke. The bunk was empty!
-
-Young Dan felt a sharp sense of unreality, as daunting as it was new to
-him—but in a moment the chill of that gave way before a surge of
-anxiety. He searched through the camp in a minute, all his weariness
-forgotten. Andy Mace was nowhere indoors; his snowshoes were gone, too;
-but his rifle leaned in its usual corner, in its old canvas case. Young
-Dan began to dress for the open with both hands and both feet. His coat,
-cap, mittens and snowshoes all seemed to fall into position and attach
-themselves at once. He took up the lantern and his rifle and went out,
-pulling the door shut behind him.
-
-Young Dan found his partner’s tracks in fifteen seconds. They did not
-lead along any one of the four lines of traps. They told him, as plain
-as print, that the old man’s right leg was still as stiff as a ramrod.
-Why Andy had gone into the woods at such an hour, lame or limber, was
-more than he could even begin to imagine. He reckoned the time of Andy’s
-departure from the camp by the condition of the fire in the stove at the
-time of his return. He put it at something between an hour and a half
-and two hours.
-
-He followed the trail in feverish haste for a hundred yards or so, then
-halted and shouted his partner’s name at the top of his voice. A faint
-shout came back to him. He yelled again and continued his advance,
-holding the lantern high and struggling in the snow-choked underbrush
-like a swimmer in heavy surf. He reflected that Andy had certainly taken
-a bee-line for wherever he was bound, regardless of natural obstacles.
-In his care to keep the lantern from contact with the snow he stumbled
-heavily several times and at last fell flat. The thick, hot glass of the
-lantern cracked like a pistol-shot and fell apart as it plunged into the
-snow, and the flame sizzled to extinction.
-
-Young Dan arose to his knees slowly and in silence, with his rifle in
-one hand and the ring of the chimneyless lantern in the other. In
-silence he struggled to his feet and reset his right snowshoe. What’s
-the use of talking when you know that the words required by your
-emotions don’t exist? Still in silence, he cleared his eyes and neck of
-snow. Then, to his great relief, he saw a yellow glow of fire-light far
-away beyond the tangled screens of the forest. He went straight for the
-light with as much noise and almost as much speed as a bull moose in a
-hurry. He bored ahead, shielding his face with the cased rifle and
-battered lantern, and letting his feet look after themselves. He
-frequently snarled his snowshoes in the brush and took a header, but he
-was never down for more than five seconds at a time.
-
-Young Dan found the distance between the fire and the place of his first
-tumble to be considerably less than he had feared. The fire burned in
-the center of a tiny dell; and beside it, on a mat of spruce boughs, sat
-Andy Mace.
-
-“What’s the matter with you?” cried Young Dan. “What are you doing
-here—and why didn’t you stay home like you said you would?”
-
-“I’m glad you come,” said the old man. “I cal’lated that’s what ye’d do.
-Well, I don’t blame ye a mite for feelin’ riled, Young Dan. But what
-else could I do?”
-
-“What do you mean? You could have stopped home!”
-
-“I clean forgot to tell ye. Look what’s layin’ t’other side the fire,
-Young Dan. So what else could I do but turn out an’ hunt about, when I
-heard him shootin’ off his rifle like a battle. And I thought all along
-it was yerself, until I found him.”
-
-Young Dan stumbled around the fire and saw what the smoke had veiled
-from him—a big man lying prone on a blanket, flat on his back, with a
-lumpy sack partially sunk in the snow near his head. His snowshoes, axe
-and uncased rifle stood upright in a row several paces distant from the
-fire.
-
-“What else was I to do?” asked Andy Mace. “And when I come up on him an’
-seen it wasn’t you I couldn’t leave him to perish, could I now?”
-
-“It’s Jim Conley,” said Young Dan. “What’s the matter with him?”
-
-“Jim Conley, hey? That’s what I suspicioned. Well, pardner, he’s got
-more troubles nor one the matter with him; an’ what laid him there on
-his back the way ye see him now was a clout over the head I handed him
-with the butt o’ his own rifle.”
-
-The youth’s bewilderment increased.
-
-“Did you kill him?” he asked, in awe-stricken tones.
-
-“I reckon not,” replied Andy, casually. “He’s alive—in his own way.”
-
-Young Dan chopped more brush for the fire and heaped it on, then removed
-his snowshoes and reclined beside his partner.
-
-Andy Mace filled and lit his pipe and told his story. He had sat quiet
-all day and rubbed the last of the bear’s grease into his stiff knee. He
-had fallen asleep along about mid-afternoon and slept soundly for hours.
-Waking suddenly, for no particular reason that he knew of, he had found
-the camp in darkness except for the glow of the fallen fire on the
-hearth. He had built up the fires in a hurry and lighted the lantern;
-and he had just opened the door for a look at the weather, before
-concentrating his mind on the preparation of supper, when he heard a
-rifle shot. That shot had been followed quickly by three more. He had
-hung the lantern in the window then and scrambled into his outdoor
-things and hobbled off at the best pace he could manage, feeling quite
-sure that the shots were calls from Young Dan for help. Another had
-sounded before the door was shut behind him, and yet another before he
-had gone fifty yards into the woods. He had bored straight ahead, slap
-through everything except the actual trunks of the big trees, taking the
-rough with the smooth and the hard with the soft—and just how many times
-he had plunged into the snow with his face and swept it up with his
-whiskers he’d hate to try to remember. His ears had been plugged with
-snow most of the time, anyhow, and his stiff knee had received some
-violent shocks, but he had kept going, and after a while he had heard
-someone yelling. He had gone ahead more circumspectly after that,
-knowing that the voice did not belong to his partner; and before long he
-had found Jim Conley trying to light a fire and making a poor job of it.
-
-“Why couldn’t he light it?” asked Young Dan.
-
-“Well, every time he’d get it lit he’d fall down slam on top o’ the
-little flame an’ smother it out.”
-
-“Was he that near froze?”
-
-“That’s what I suspicioned, so I drug him off an’ sot him down an’ lit
-the bit o’ brush an’ bark for him. I cut some dead stuff, an’ some
-chunks o’ green wood, an’ built up a good fire; then I looked round an’
-seen him settin’ back as comfortable as you please sucking away at a
-square-face. That riled me, Young Dan. That would rile a more peaceable
-man nor me—to see him draggin’ at that there bottle, an’ it more’n
-three-quarters empty already—an’ considerin’ how I’d nigh busted my leg
-off to find him, thinkin’ it was yerself shootin’ an’ hollerin’. Yes, I
-reckon even a deacon would of felt kinder sore. So I went up to him an’
-grabbed the bottle an’ hove it away an’ bust it agin a tree; an’ up he
-come, spry’s a cat, an’ lammed me one on the shoulder that laid me flat;
-but up I come on one leg, quicker’n a wink, an’ finished him. I looked
-into his pack—an’ then I wisht I’d hit him harder.”
-
-“Why? What’s in the bag?”
-
-“Considerable baccy, and a pound o’ tea, an’ maybe as much as a whole
-pound o’ bacon, and a box o’ seegars, and a bran’ new razor an’ strop,
-an’ some ca’tridges, and a red weskit, an’ four more square-faces o’
-gin. That’s what’s in his pack!”
-
-Young Dan continued to recline on an elbow and stare at the fire between
-half-closed lids in silence for several minutes.
-
-“I was just thinking he must of had great luck with his few traps,
-considering he didn’t set them out till after that night I saw him,” he
-said, at last.
-
-“Why was ye thinkin’ that?” asked Andy.
-
-“Well, he’d have to pay a lot for the gin, wouldn’t he, for the man who
-sold it to him was risking being sent to jail, wasn’t he? He had as many
-as six bottles when he started for home, or he wouldn’t have four now;
-and I betcher it cost him as much as eight or ten dollars a bottle. He
-must of had great luck with his traps—in the two days they were set.”
-
-“I reckon he must of, Young Dan. What’s on yer mind, anyhow?”
-
-“Jim Conley’s luck, that’s what.”
-
-“He must of caught somethin’ special, that’s a fact.”
-
-“What did you bait with last time you tended the west line?”
-
-“The west line? Lemme think. That was the day before the big snow. I
-baited with porcupine.”
-
-“It’s baited with fish to-day.”
-
-“Sure it be. What o’ that, Young Dan?”
-
-“I mean it was already baited with fish when I got to it. I mean that
-someone had rebaited it—and reset it, too, I guess—since your last
-visit.”
-
-“You don’t say! Someone at our traps! Let’s make a try at gittin’ home,
-pardner. I be that danged hungry an’ oncomfortable my brains won’t
-think.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- THE ONE-EYED INJUN
-
-
-The partners aroused Jim Conley, who grumbled savagely at being
-disturbed.
-
-“We’re going, anyhow,” said Young Dan, upon seeing that the fellow had
-not suffered seriously by Andy Mace’s method of persuasion.
-
-“Stop here all night, if you want to—and freeze to death! You’re old
-enough an’ ugly enough to look after yerself.”
-
-Conley sat up at that and violently demanded immediate information
-concerning his whereabouts.
-
-“You’re in the woods,” replied Young Dan. “In the woods, where you’d be
-froze stiff in the snow by now, but for Andy Mace.”
-
-Conley got slowly to his feet.
-
-“That’s right—lost in the woods,” he said, in a flat voice. “I call it
-to mind now. Kinder lost my way, I reckon.”
-
-He put on his snowshoes with fumbling hands, breathing heavily and
-muttering to himself the while.
-
-“I’ll tote this along for you,” said Young Dan, laying a hand on the
-lumpy sack.
-
-The other snatched it from him and shouldered it.
-
-“Guess I kin carry that myself!” he exclaimed.
-
-Young Dan went in front, sensing the way in the dark. Andy went next,
-making heavy weather of it with his stiff leg. Jim Conley brought up the
-rear, plunging and grumbling and frequently falling. They reached the
-camp at last. Young Dan left the door open behind him and went straight
-to the hearth and stove and fed both with fuel. Andy Mace, exhausted by
-his stiff-legged efforts and the pain of them, sank to the floor and lay
-flat as soon as he had crossed the threshold. Then Jim Conley floundered
-hurriedly and unsteadily from the cold outer gloom into the warm inner
-darkness, sack on shoulder. He tripped over Andy’s prostrate form and
-pitched forward to his hands and knees, and the lumpy sack hurtled from
-his shoulder and struck the floor with a smashing crash.
-
-Young Dan threw a roll of birch bark on the open fire, and in a few
-seconds the camp was luridly illuminated; and then he saw his partner
-and Conley on the floor, Andy sitting bolt-upright and the latter facing
-him on all-fours, glaring in rage and astonishment at each other; and
-beyond them he saw the lumpy sack squashed to half its former bulk and
-leaking puddles of gin. The sight was too much for his sense of humor,
-tired and hungry though he was. He laughed until tears melted the ice on
-his eyelashes and his knees sagged beneath him. He sat down weakly on a
-convenient chair and continued to laugh helplessly until sudden and
-violent action on the floor recalled him to a more serious aspect of the
-affair. Conley had grabbed Andy Mace by the beard with his left hand and
-by the windpipe with his right, at the same time flinging his whole
-weight forward; and the old woodsman had smashed in two life-sized
-wallops on the sides of Conley’s head, one with his right fist and one
-with his left, even as he sank beneath the younger man’s hands.
-
-Young Dan jumped to the struggle. His snowshoes were still on his feet.
-He gripped Conley with both hands by the neck of his several coats and
-shirts, wrenched him clear of Andy and thumped him violently on the
-floor, face-downward.
-
-“Quit it!” cried Conley. “Lemme be, cantcher!”
-
-Young Dan left him without a word and shut the door. He removed his
-snowshoes then, and his cap and outer coat, lit the wick of the lantern
-and placed a new chimney in the battered frame.
-
-“Reckon I’ll stop right here till I git my supper,” said Andy Mace from
-the floor.
-
-Jim Conley turned over on his back, but did not attempt to rise.
-
-Young Dan collected rifles and axes from the floor and stood them in a
-corner, set a big frying-pan on the stove and filled the kettle from a
-pail by the door—all in a grim silence. After slicing venison into the
-pan, along with some fat bacon, he removed his partner’s snowshoes and
-brushed him off with a broom.
-
-“Is everything busted in that there sack?” inquired Conley, anxiously,
-raising himself slowly on an elbow.
-
-Young Dan untied the sack and shook its contents out onto the floor.
-There were fragments of four square-faced black bottles. The other
-articles, the bacon and tea and tobacco, were saturated with gin. Young
-Dan pushed the mess together with his foot, in scornful silence.
-
-“That’s sure a grand outfit o’ grub to take home to a woman an’ two
-childern,” remarked Andy Mace.
-
-Jim Conley swore long and loud and strong.
-
-“Shut up!” snapped Young Dan.
-
-“Someun will pay for that!” cried Conley. “Good an’ plenty.”
-
-Young Dan stepped forward and stooped down and stared into the eyes of
-his unwelcome guest.
-
-“I warn you, Jim Conley, to mend your ways an’ mind your manners, or
-you’ll find yourself crowded for elbow-room in this neck o’ woods,” he
-said, slowly and clearly. “And I warn you that it won’t be me who’ll
-have to clear out when the crowding commences. Think it over; and the
-less you say about your spilt gin and who’s to pay for it—and who has
-already paid for it—the better for you.”
-
-“What’s that ye say?” returned the other, trying unsuccessfully to keep
-his eyes steady and his voice big and careless.
-
-“It was a warning.”
-
-“About who paid for the gin—that’s what I’m askin’ ye. What d’ye mean by
-that? That’s what I want to know, young feller.”
-
-“You know what I mean by that; so keep your mouth shut, or I’ll forget
-about your family and light right into you.”
-
-Conley laughed uneasily and dropped the subject.
-
-“If yer askin’ me to stop to supper, I’ll take off my snowshoes an’
-mitts,” he said.
-
-“We’ll feed you, now that we’ve saved you from freezing to death in the
-snow,” replied Young Dan, ungraciously, returning to the stove.
-
-Two pots of tea were drunk and two pans of venison steak were devoured.
-Then the partners crawled into their bunks and their guest went to sleep
-on the floor.
-
-Jim Conley departed after breakfast next morning, with his reduced,
-high-flavored sack on his shoulder and a reflective and uneasy
-expression in his close-set eyes. The partners were glad to be rid of
-him. They discussed him at considerable length. “You scared him,” said
-Andy—“but I’m thinkin’ ye maybe said a mite too much about who paid for
-the licker. He don’t look overly smart, but I reckon there’s somethin’
-inside his skull, even if it’s only porridge; an’ yer warnin’ was strong
-enough to start porridge a-bubblin’. We ain’t got anythin’ on him the
-law kin touch him for, far’s I kin see. It wasn’t him robbed the camp,
-an’ we can’t swear he was at our traps. You hadn’t ought to give yer
-suspicions away like that, Young Dan.”
-
-“Maybe yer right,” said Young Dan. “I sure did talk kind of out-an’-out.
-But what of it? I want to warn him, because he’s got to feed his wife
-and kids. If he suspicions that we suspicion him of robbing our traps,
-then he’ll quit. If I was tryin’ to jail him I wouldn’t of talked to him
-like that. But I was warnin’ him and throwin’ a scare into him to steady
-him.”
-
-“Ye don’t want to warn a feller like him till after ye catch ’im. He
-don’t look smart—but ye can’t never tell by looks. He knows as how we
-suspicion ’im now, and so he’ll do us all the harm he’s able to. I see
-it in his eye. You had ought to had the goods on ’im before ye warned
-’im, Young Dan. Why, we don’t even know where he’s been to—where he
-traded the skins he took out! An’ we don’t know that he ain’t got a big
-bunch o’ traps set of his own.”
-
-Young Dan smiled.
-
-“He traded his skins at Bean’s Mill, down at the mouth of Oxbow,” he
-said. “I guess he didn’t show up at the Bend at all, though Amos
-Bissing’s store is just as good as Luke Watt’s. He got his tea and
-tobacco and everything he had in his sack from Luke Watt down to Bean’s
-Mill; and I guess Luke’s got his skins; and I guess we’ve got his hide,
-if we want it.”
-
-“Young Dan, yer a smart lad—the smartest I ever see—an’ I won’t say nay
-to nary a one o’ yer propositions—but it do seem to me ye’re doin’ a
-powerful lot o’ guessin’ right now.”
-
-“Honest to goodness, Andy, I’m not guessing. Do you know Luke Watt? Have
-you ever bought goods from him?”
-
-“Sure, I know Luke Watt o’ Bean’s Mill. Yes, I’ve traded with him, too.
-What of it?”
-
-“Then you know his hand-writing. Uncle Bill Tangier took me down to
-Bean’s Mill one day two summers ago, and he bought a lot of stuff for me
-and the youngsters at Watt’s store, and Mr. Watt figgered up the bill on
-one of the parcels. He has a stiff right wrist, as you know—broke it in
-the woods when he was a lad and it wasn’t set right. He used his whole
-arm when he put down the figgers, working from the shoulder like a man
-sawing a board. I don’t believe there’s another man in the world who
-writes or makes figgers just like Luke Watt. And here is the paper Jim
-Conley’s tobacco was wrapped up in. I changed it this morning for
-another piece of brown paper, before Conley was awake. Here’s the
-complete bill all figgered out in Luke Watt’s own original big
-up-an’-down figgers.”
-
-Young Dan unfolded a large, smudged piece of brown paper and passed it
-to his partner. Andy Mace held it in his two corded hands and stared at
-it in amazed silence.
-
-“Look at that nine-fifty multiplied by seven,” said the youth. “Conley
-bought seven bottles. He paid sixty-six dollars and fifty cents for gin;
-and he was well into number five when you found him lost in the woods.
-And Watt soaked him six dollars for fifty bum cigars. He must of had
-some good skins. But of course that bill is no proof that Conley traded
-his skins with Luke Watt. I guess he did, though; for he wasn’t gone
-long enough to travel all the way down to Harlow and back. He did all
-his buying from Luke Watt, anyhow.”
-
-The old woodsman refolded the paper carefully and returned it to his
-partner. Then he filled his pipe and lit it with deliberate motions.
-
-“Young Dan, I was feelin’ kinder fretful a while back when I talked to
-ye that-a-way,” he said at last. “My knee was hurtin’ me cruel. Yer
-guess is as good to me as another man’s oath. What d’ye reckon to do,
-pardner?”
-
-“I reckon to go out and fetch a doctor in to fix your knee for you,
-first thing,” replied Young Dan, as he stowed the paper away safely in a
-breast-pocket.
-
-Andy Mace shook his head.
-
-“This here j’int plays out on me like this every now an’ agin,” he
-returned “and I got medicine for it at home, made for me by Doc Johnston
-down to Harlow—inside medicine. The trouble’s a touch o’ rheumatics in
-my blood, so the Doc said, an’ maybe the fight I had with the Quebecer
-fifty year ago ain’t got as much to do with it as I let on—an’ then
-agin, maybe it has. Anyhow, Doc Johnston’s medicine loosens up the j’int
-every time, an’ I got two bottles in my pantry this minute as good as
-new. If I had them here I’d be right as wheat in a day or two.”
-
-“Why didn’t you tell me so before?” asked Young Dan.
-
-“Well, I reckoned it would sound kinder babyish; an’ I was hopin’ all
-along until yesterday that it would quit hurtin’ an’ loosen up any
-minute. I was bankin’ on the b’ar’s grease. But last night didn’t help
-it none.”
-
-Young Dan went out with his axe to chop wood and at the same time to
-consider the imposing problem which confronted him. Andy Mace must have
-his medicine as soon as possible—and that meant a two-day trip; and Mrs.
-Conley and the two little Conleys must be fed, since the bread-winner
-had brought nothing in for them except a pound of bacon—and that meant a
-day; and Jim Conley’s little game must be investigated at both ends—and
-that might well mean a week or more. What about his traps scattered
-along four six-mile lines? His business was bound to suffer—but that was
-not the thought that worried him most in connection with the traps. He
-fretted at the thought of waste on one hand, and on the other of again
-supplying Jim Conley with the means of acquiring more gin. These things
-were bound to happen, he believed, so long as the traps remained set and
-baited, and unattended by Andy Mace or himself. Animals bearing valuable
-pelts would be caught only to suffer the unprofitable fate of being
-devoured, pelts and all, by other fur-bearers, or to be skinned by Jim
-Conley. The traps must be sprung; and that meant a hard two-day job. But
-to leave Andy Mace without his medicine for four days instead of two was
-out of the question!
-
-“It’s more’n one man can do!” exclaimed Young Dan, sinking his axe deep
-into the prostrate maple upon which he stood. “A man can do two or three
-things at once, maybe, but not all in different places, I guess. I can’t
-anyhow; and that’s all there is to it! Now the question is, what’s to be
-done first? Guess I’ll leave it to chance and toss for it.”
-
-He produced a quarter from a pocket, flipped it into the air off a
-thumb-nail, caught it in his right hand and slapped his left over it.
-
-“Heads I get Andy’s medicine first, tails I don’t,” he said.
-
-The coin lay tails up in his palm.
-
-“That’s too darned bad!” he exclaimed. “Poor Andy!”
-
-“You talkin’ ’bout Andy Mace hey?” asked a voice from the brush on his
-right.
-
-Young Dan turned and beheld a stranger standing within five yards of him
-and regarding him intently with one eye. It was this matter of the one
-eye that made the first and sharpest impression on the youth. The
-stranger’s left eye was covered by a patch of black cloth. In addition
-to these interesting facts, Young Dan saw that he was an Indian and past
-middle-age, that he wore snowshoes and carried a pack and a rifle in a
-blanket case, and that no smoke issued from his lips or from the bowl of
-the short pipe which protruded from a corner of his mouth.
-
-“Sure I’m talking about Andy Mace,” replied Young Dan, recovering
-swiftly from his astonishment.
-
-“Good,” returned the stranger. “Andy Mace the feller I wanter see pretty
-quick. Maybe he got plenty tobac, what?”
-
-Young Dan shouldered his axe and descended from the trunk of the
-prostrate maple. He slipped his feet into the thongs of his snowshoes
-and put on his coat and mittens.
-
-“I guess he has enough,” he said, pleasantly. “Come along with me and
-find out. He’s my partner.”
-
-They found Mr. Mace seated by the stove, with his stiff leg in a chair.
-
-“How do, Andy,” said the stranger. “Long time you no see me.” Mr. Mace
-sat up straight and stared from beneath shaggy eyebrows. Then he smiled
-and relaxed.
-
-“Yer dead right it’s a long time, Pete Sabatis!” he exclaimed. “Yer
-right there, old hoss. Glad to see ye agin at last, anyhow. Set down an’
-make yerself to home. What’s brought ye away acrost into these woods,
-anyhow? Be they crowdin’ ye over on the Tobique country, Pete?”
-
-The visitor cleared himself from his outside things, including his
-snowshoes, discarded his pack and rifle, then sat down close to the
-stove and took the cold pipe from his mouth. He held the pipe up and
-fixed the keen glance of his uncovered eye on Andy.
-
-“He don’t burn no tobac this four-five day,” he said.
-
-Mr. Mace laughed and turned to Young Dan.
-
-“What d’ye think o’ that, pardner?” he asked. “Here’s Pete Sabatis, that
-I ain’t set eyes on this twenty year, come all the way acrost from the
-Tobique country to bum a fill o’ baccy!”
-
-“You got it a’right,” said the Maliseet, without so much as a flicker of
-a smile. “That feller say you got plenty. You make joke jes’ like you
-ust to, hey?”
-
-“I reckon ye’re the reel joker, Pete,” answered Andy, handing over a
-plug of tobacco. “You got the reel face for it, anyhow—the same old
-wooden face an’ the same identical old eye. Well, yer jokes is harmless;
-and if ye come all these hunderds o’ miles for somethin’ more’n a smoke
-I reckon ye’ll spit it out sooner or later. I be right-down glad to see
-ye agin, anyhow.”
-
-“Same here,” said Young Dan. “If you’re a friend of Andy’s I hope you’ll
-stop a while with us.”
-
-“A good idee!” exclaimed Andy. “Sure he’s a friend o’ mine, and one I’d
-trust with my last pound o’ bacon! Where’re ye headin’ for, Pete?
-Anywheres in particular?”
-
-“Dinner,” said Pete Sabatis, lighting his pipe.
-
-“The same old bag o’ tricks,” said Andy to his partner. “I reckon he
-cal’lates to stop right here with us a spell. That’s yer idee, ain’t it,
-Pete?”
-
-“Yep,” replied the Maliseet.
-
-Young Dan was glad, for in this one-eyed Indian he saw the solution of
-the problem that had been causing him such a weight of mental distress
-all day. He said nothing of what was in his mind, however, but put wood
-in the stove, washed his hands and commenced preparations for dinner.
-
-Andy Mace talked and Pete Sabatis watched Young Dan with his lively
-bright eye. Every now and then, Pete uttered a grunt of satisfaction at
-what he saw.
-
-It was a good dinner, a bang-up dinner, by Right Prong and Tobique
-standards. It consisted of baked pork-and-beans in a brown crock, very
-juicy and sweet, and a flock of hot biscuits, and a jar of Mrs. Evans’s
-strawberry preserve, and tea strong enough to be employed in the
-heaviest sort of manual labor.
-
-Pete Sabatis was not a large man; and so Young Dan decided that he must
-have been hollow from his chin clear down to his knees before dinner.
-After clattering the iron spoon all around the inside of the bean-crock
-and lifting the last preserved strawberry to his mouth on the blade of
-his knife, Mr. Sabatis drained the teapot and sat back in his rustic
-chair. He produced his pipe and looked at Andy Mace.
-
-“Tobac,” he said.
-
-“You pocketed a whole plug o’ mine before dinner,” returned Andy. “An’
-ye’ve got a knife to cut it with an’ a pipe to smoke it in. Here’s a
-match. Hope yer breath to puff with ain’t all gone.”
-
-The Maliseet drew forth the cake of tobacco thus delicately referred to
-by his old friend, filled his pipe and lit it.
-
-“I’d like to tell him how we’re fixed, and perhaps he’d lend us a hand,”
-said Young Dan to his partner.
-
-“Sure he’d lend us a hand,” replied Andy. “Tell him our story. Pete
-Sabatis kin be trusted with anything in the world, I reckon, secrets or
-goods—exceptin’ baccy.”
-
-So Young Dan told of their experiences with, and suspicions of, Jim
-Conley, and of the problem which confronted him.
-
-“That a’right,” said Pete. “What do you do first, hey?”
-
-“That depends on you,” replied the youth. “Do you know the way to Andy’s
-house?”
-
-“Know him a’right when you tell me.”
-
-“I’ll draw a map for you, if you’ll get Andy’s medicine.”
-
-“To-morrow.”
-
-“That’s fine. I’m mighty glad you turned up. I’ll go out now and spring
-a few traps, and to-morrow I’ll take some grub back to the Conleys and
-see what’s up. When you get home from Andy’s place with the medicine I
-will light right out for Bean’s Mill.”
-
-During the afternoon Young Dan visited four traps on the eastward line.
-He found a mink in one and nothing in the others, and left all alike
-sprung and harmless. He did not travel as briskly as usual, for he did
-not feel very spry. The exertions of the day before had slowed and
-stiffened even his elastic sinews a little. His spirits were high,
-however, thanks to the mental relief due to the arrival of Pete Sabatis.
-Pete solved the problem which had frozen his immediate actions. With
-Pete’s help, everything seemed possible now: Andy would have his
-medicine, the Conley woman and children would be looked after, Jim
-Conley’s suspicious activities would be investigated and one line of
-traps, at least, would be kept in operation. Apart from all this, the
-Maliseet promised to be an entertaining companion. Young Dan had felt a
-liking for him at the first sound of his voice and a keen interest in
-him at the first glimpse of his patched eye. His arrival had been as
-dramatic as it was opportune; his greeting of and reception by old Andy
-Mace had been decidedly picturesque; his Puckish humor was as unusual as
-his appearance. In short, he made a strong romantic appeal to the young
-trapper.
-
-“He’s queer, like some of the folks in those stories,” reflected Young
-Dan. “Queer as the queerest of them, but real, too—more real than any of
-them. And he’s all right. Andy says so.”
-
-Young Dan exploded two cartridges that afternoon. The bullet of each
-knocked the head off a partridge. Upon his return to camp he skinned the
-birds in half the time it would have taken him to pluck them, and fried
-them for supper with a little pork. After supper he made a map of the
-route to Andy Mace’s house and explained it at length to Pete Sabatis.
-All three retired early to their blankets.
-
-Pete Sabatis was the first to leave the camp next morning. He carried
-food and tobacco in his pockets, a note from Young Dan for Amos Bissing,
-the map of the route, the key to Andy’s door, and his rifle and
-blankets. He moved off swiftly, with the reddening dawn on his
-right-front, leaving an azure trail of smoke on the still air.
-
-“It’s lucky for us that he turned up when he did,” remarked Young Dan to
-his partner, as he made up a modest parcel for the Conleys of tea and
-flour and two tins of condensed milk. “Did he come looking for you, or
-was it just chance?”
-
-“He’ll tell us what he come for when he’s good an’ ready, an’ not a
-minute sooner, Young Dan,” answered Andy. “Maybe he come all the way
-acrost from Tobique to see me, but I reckon that ain’t likely. How would
-he know if I was alive or dead any more’n I knowed if he was alive or
-dead? It was chance landed him right here at this camp, anyhow, for all
-he ever knowed about my whereabouts was that I hailed from the Oxbow—an’
-that was twenty year ago. But we won’t fret ourselves about why he’s
-here or why he come. He is here, an’ he’s a danged good Injun, an’
-that’s enough for us.”
-
-Young Dan took the northern track, which led crookedly to the Conley
-cabin. He inspected the traps to the right and the left as he advanced,
-bagged a fox and left all sprung and harmless behind him. He reached the
-Conley cabin before noon and found Mrs. Conley chopping wood beside the
-door. She said that Jim was off somewhere attending to his traps.
-
-“I don’t want to see him,” said Young Dan. “I came to bring these few
-things for you and the children, from my partner and me, because we know
-that he didn’t bring much grub back from the settlements with him.”
-
-He entered the cabin without removing his snowshoes and placed the
-parcel of provisions on the table. The woman followed him, undid the
-parcel and thanked him. She seemed nervous.
-
-“How d’ye know Jim didn’t fetch in any grub?” she asked.
-
-“We saw what he had,” replied the trapper. “Didn’t he tell you about
-stopping a night at our camp? About losing himself in the woods an’ Andy
-Mace finding him?”
-
-“No, he didn’t. But he’s sure got it in for you and yer old pardner!
-He’s been cussin’ the two o’ ye steady ever since he come home. He says
-how he had lashin’s o’ bacon an’ flour an’ was robbed of everything but
-some bacon an’ tea.”
-
-“I suppose you believed him, m’am.”
-
-“Not so’s ye’d notice—but that’s neither here nor there. What you best
-do now is clear out o’ this before he comes home.”
-
-“Do you think I’m afraid of him?”
-
-“I guess not—but I wisht ye’d beat it.”
-
-Young Dan immediately complied with her wish. As soon as he was out of
-sight of the cabin he left the narrow trail of his own snowshoe tracks
-and broke into the woods and started on a big curve which, if followed
-long enough, would encircle the Conley habitation. Young Dan did not go
-so far as that, however. He found what he was looking for before he had
-made a semicircle of the curve—a line of new snowshoe tracks. He did not
-join this trail or cross it, but backed a few paces from it, changed
-direction and moved parallel with it, keeping an eye on it through the
-intervening screen of brush and branches. This course took him
-southward, mile upon mile, and after a couple of hours of it he found
-himself on his own and Andy Mace’s trapping-ground. He continued to
-parallel Jim Conley’s tracks, moving without sound and parting the
-forest growth before him with the minimum of disturbance; and at last he
-came to a place which he recognized as being on his own eastern line of
-traps. There he halted and squatted to rest, as still as a waiting lynx
-in the snow.
-
-Large white flakes began to circle down from the low sky. The sun, which
-had risen red, was now no more than a small blotch of radiance as
-colorless as clear ice. The snow descended more thickly and swiftly,
-blinding the weak sun and seeming to draw the sky down to the tops of
-the tall spruces—and down even lower than that, until the soaring trees
-were blanketed and hidden by it for half their height. Then Young Dan
-moved again, this time on a straight course for the camp, and at his
-best pace. This flurry of snow was altogether too thick and fast to take
-liberties with. He wondered what Pete Sabatis would make of it with his
-one eye. He was sorry that it had descended so violently as to interfere
-with his investigations before he had actually caught Jim Conley at his
-trapping. He felt reasonably certain, however, of the identity of the
-traps which engaged Mr. Conley’s attentions. That was enough to work
-ahead on. He decided not to spring the traps on the eastern line, but to
-leave them as they were for the thief’s immediate profit and final
-undoing.
-
-Young Dan reached home safely. The snow ceased falling shortly before
-sundown, but with the setting of the sun a wind arose which set the
-feathery flakes drifting and flying.
-
-Andy Mace was in as talkative a mood as ever that night, despite the
-fact that he was very evidently suffering a great deal of pain. He
-admitted the pain, confessing that more joints than his right knee hurt
-him now.
-
-“But that there medicine o’ Doc Johnston’s ’ll melt the misery out o’ me
-all right,” he said. “I’ll be takin’ a dose of it this time to-morrow
-night; and ye’ll see me to work agin within a couple o’ days, Young Dan,
-spry as a cat an’ loose as ashes.”
-
-“Don’t you worry about the work, Andy,” returned Young Dan. “Give the
-medicine a fair chance when you get it. I hope Pete will be back by
-to-morrow night—but he couldn’t of traveled much this afternoon, in that
-storm and in country strange to him.”
-
-“That’s where ye’re wrong,” replied Andy. “I never knowed a likelier man
-nor that same Pete Sabatis to go to wherever he wanted to git to. He
-could do that trip backwards, an’ with both eyes patched instead of only
-one. That flurry o’ snow wouldn’t stop him a minute, in strange country
-or old.”
-
-“What happened to his eye, anyhow?” asked Young Dan.
-
-Andy rubbed his thin knees with his thin hands for several seconds in
-silence, gazing thoughtfully into the red draft of the stove. Then he
-looked at his partner and combed his long whiskers with long fingers.
-
-“Maybe he wouldn’t care for me to tell ye that, lad,” he said. “I reckon
-he wouldn’t yet awhile, till he knows ye better. But I kin tell ye this
-much, pardner—I was with him when he lost it, twenty-four year ago—and
-he is as good a man with one eye as ever he was with two. He lost it in
-a kinder private affair, ye understand: and there ain’t a prouder man
-walkin’ the woods either side the height-o’-land nor him—exceptin’ in
-the matter o’ baccy.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- THE ADVENTURE OF SABATIS
-
-
-The wind was abroad all the next day, sweeping the snow from the broad
-branches and high spires of the forest and shoveling it into drifts
-along the windward edges of all open spaces. Young Dan worked at the
-wood-pile and the pelts all day, and Mr. Mace smoked his pipe and rubbed
-his painful joints and wondered if old age were creeping upon him. Young
-Dan was chopping a stick of dry birch near the door, and the small sun
-was on the edge of the western horizon, when Pete Sabatis appeared. Pete
-was powdered white with snow from the webbed racquets on his feet to the
-crown of his fur cap.
-
-“Howdy,” he said.
-
-Young Dan stared at him in amazement.
-
-“I knew you’d have to give it up,” he said, “and I’m mighty glad you’ve
-found your way back. That’s more’n I could do, with the snow drifting
-like it has all day.”
-
-The old Maliseet smiled and snorted and entered the camp. Young Dan
-followed a few minutes later depressed by the thought of Andy Mace’s
-disappointment and yet relieved to know that the old Indian was safe. By
-the fire-shine and the mild light of a candle on the table, he beheld
-his partner dosing himself with a large spoon from a large bottle and
-Pete Sabatis laying out tea and bacon and tobacco on the floor.
-
-“So you got there!” exclaimed Young Dan. “You got to Andy’s place in
-that storm—and home again!”
-
-Both old men turned to him. Pete’s one eye grew rounder and brighter for
-a second; and Mr. Mace gulped down his medicine, pulled a wry face and
-then chuckled.
-
-“Pete Sabatis never yet started out for anywheres he didn’t git to,”
-said Andy. “Snow nor rain nor wind nor darkness can’t stop him. He
-travels as straight with one eye as ever he did with two.”
-
-“I didn’t know the man was living, or had ever lived, who could hold a
-straight course through new country on such a day as yesterday,” said
-Young Dan. “And now I know I was mistaken,” he added.
-
-Pete Sabatis had nothing to say about his journey. The trip had been
-unadventurous. He had not encountered any difficulties worth mentioning.
-Andy’s key had fitted Andy’s door and he had found the bottles of
-medicine on the very shelf in the pantry which Andy had described to
-him. And he had found the store at the Bend exactly where he had
-expected to find it and the storekeeper had not hesitated a moment in
-the matter of filling the order.
-
-Young Dan cooked the best supper he knew how to with the materials at
-hand; and after supper, when the old men’s pipes were drawing to their
-entire satisfaction, Andy said, “Pete, I’d like fine to tell Young Dan
-Evans here about how ye happened to lose yer eye.”
-
-The Maliseet fixed his remaining eye on the youth with a glance so
-searching that the other remembered something he had read in a book
-about a thing called an X-Ray.
-
-“It ain’t like as if Young Dan was nothin’ more’n my pardner,” continued
-Andy. “He’s like a brother to me; and his heart’s as right as his brains
-is smart.”
-
-“That’s a’right,” said Pete Sabatis. “Go ahead an’ tell ’im.”
-
-“This here’s a kinder personal story,” began Andy, settling back in his
-chair. “Twenty-four years ago this very winter, I was in the woods on
-Pyle’s Brook, over in the Tobique country, choppin’ for Howard Frazer. I
-was restless in them days; and I’ll bet there ain’t a block of woods ten
-mile square in all the Province I ain’t had a foot into, lumberin’ or
-huntin’ or trappin’ fur. Well, I knowed that country pretty nigh as well
-as I know the Oxbow—so I thought. I diskivered later as how I’d thought
-wrong. Pete Sabatis here was choppin’ for Frazer’s gang, too. That was a
-kinder onusual thing, even in them days—a full-blooded Injun working
-hard an’ honest with a crew of lumbermen. But Pete allus was one who
-could do a white man’s job as well as an Injun’s—an’ both a mite
-better’n any other Injun or white man could do it. I’d say the same even
-if he wasn’t right here a-listenin’ to me.
-
-“Well, I didn’t have no better friend in that outfit nor this here Pete
-Sabatis, and it was the same with him—what ye might call visey versus, I
-reckon. But, mind ye, I didn’t know the first darned thing about Pete’s
-private life. He was a jolly feller, though never much of a talker an’
-nothin’ at all of a laugher. But all of a suddent, along about January,
-he begun to study hard on somethin’ deep inside himself. He’d stop still
-as if he was frozen all of a suddent in the middle of choppin’ into the
-butt of a big tree, with his axe sunk to the eye in the yellow wood, an’
-stare kinder across-eyed into himself, with a look on his face like he
-didn’t care much for what he seen. Of course I knowed he wasn’t sick,
-but I asked him if he was; an’ when he said as how he wasn’t, then I
-cal’lated his trouble was somethin’ I’d best not ask him any more
-questions about.
-
-“So it went on for three days, maybe; an’ then one Saturday night, after
-supper, he asks me if I’ll make a trip with him next day.
-
-“‘A trip?’ sez I. ‘What sort o’ trip?’
-
-“‘Snowshoes,’ sez Pete.
-
-“‘Sure, but how far?’ I sez.
-
-“‘Quite a spell,’ he answers back. ‘A long ways an’ rough goin’, an’
-trouble at the end of it.’
-
-“Well, there’s plenty men who’d set back hard in their britchen when
-they’d hear a note like that—but not me, twenty-four year ago, nor
-to-day. We started eastward into the tall timber before sun-up that
-Sunday mornin’, with grub enough for two days maybe, and blankets, and
-our axes. Pete carried a muzzle-loader gun you could shoot bullets out
-of pretty straight up to seventy yards. It was a clear, cold day,
-without so much as a fan of wind abroad. It was Sunday, as I’ve told ye;
-an’ it felt like Sunday—kinder waitin’ an’ uncommon. Pete went slam
-through everything on a straight line all his own as fast as he could
-flop his racquets along, but it didn’t bother me none to keep up to him.
-He didn’t say a word. We halted and et about noon—but even then he
-wouldn’t talk.”
-
-Andy Mace paused to relight his pipe.
-
-“Talk,” said Pete Sabatis. “Too much talk. You lemme tell how that
-happen, so we don’t set up all night. Pretty soon we come to one little
-clearin’ in the woods, with one log shanty on him. We go to door an’
-open him an’ step inside. There we find the folk I look for a’right.
-Andy Mace look at them like he don’t know nothin’ at all—an’ so he
-don’t. I push him back on the door till it shut an’ give him the gun.
-Then I take one step acrost at that half-breed man, an’ the woman grab
-somethin’ from the wall back of him and BANG—an’ Pete Sabatis don’t know
-nothin’ else for quite a spell.”
-
-“I cal’late I’m tellin’ this story!” interrupted Andy. “Young Dan ain’t
-got a notion what yer talkin’ about. He’s smart, but he’s only human.
-Why, he don’t even know yet who them folks was an’ what you had come to
-see them about.”
-
-“An’ you didn’t, neither,” retorted Pete. “So after long while I open
-one eye an’ feel mighty sick. They got me in the bunk then, with head
-all tie up an’ brandy inside me, an’ Andy Mace an’ them two lookin’ down
-like they think I don’t never open one eye any more, maybe. Then that
-woman, who is my daughter, say, ‘I shoot out your eye. What for you come
-here, anyhow?’ Then I say, ‘You shoot my eye clear out, hey?’ Andy say
-then, ‘You got only one eye now, Pete, an’ that’s gospel.’ Then that
-woman, my papoose one time, say, ‘You come to kill Pierre, so I shoot
-quick.’ I feel mighty sick, you bet, for that pain in my head an’ the
-think how I got only one eye left, but I pretty near laugh.”
-
-“That’s right!” exclaimed Andy Mace. “He come about as nigh to laughin’
-real hearty then as ever I see him, durn his old leather face. Ye see,
-pardner, that squaw, Pete’s daughter, had made a mistake. Her husband,
-that there halfbreed, Pierre, had stole fur on Pete years before, till
-Pete had chased him out o’ the country. But they’d come sneakin’ back
-that winter, an’ Pete had heard about it an’ studied on it. He didn’t
-like that feller, Pierre; but he figgered out as how he’d go look the
-two of ’em over an’ kinder give them his blessin’ an’ some money if he
-seen that Pierre was doin’ right by his wife, who was Pete’s own
-daughter. An’ his daughter up an’ shot an eye out o’ him before he could
-say ‘howdy’. An’ what d’ye reckon Pete Sabatis done then, Young Dan? He
-sez, ‘Pretty good breed, that Pierre, if she like him so darn much
-still—an’ he give them some money an’ said how he was glad to see them
-back in the Tobique country even if he had only one eye to see them
-with.’ _And next day he snowshoed back to Howard Frazer’s camp._ That’s
-how he lost his eye, twenty-four years ago this winter; an’ now there’s
-five of us who know about it instead of only four. An’ he quit choppin’
-for only two days after gittin’ back to camp. That’s the sort o’ man
-Pete Sabatis is!”
-
-“Talk, talk, talk! That’s the kind of feller Andy Mace is,” said the
-Maliseet, winking his only eye at Young Dan very deliberately.
-
-Young Dan was greatly impressed by the story of Pete’s just temper and
-amazing physical stamina. He said so. Then, at Andy’s request, he read a
-story of the wizard of Harley Street. Andy interrupted the narrative
-frequently, but the Maliseet listened in keen silence.
-
-“It couldn’t be done, nohow,” said Andy, at the conclusion of the tale.
-“The devil himself couldn’t of worked it out like that.”
-
-“Maybe,” said Pete. “I dunno.”
-
-Young Dan left the camp bright and early next morning with his uncle’s
-rifle, axe and blankets, a pack of fine furs and grub enough to last him
-to Bean’s Mill. He pushed along steadily all day and slept in a hole in
-the snow that night. He crossed the river well above his father’s farm
-and gave it and the village at the Bend a wide offing. He reached the
-outskirts of the settlement of Bean’s Mill about noon and dined well
-beside his own fire in a thicket of young spruces before appearing to
-the settlers. Then he went straight to Luke Watt’s store.
-
-Mr. Watt did a big business in a small store. That’s the kind of
-business man he was, but in character he was a very different sort of
-person. He was small in character and large in body and manner. As a
-storekeeper his activities were larger than his premises, but as a man,
-his chest and legs and arms and skull—yes, and his “lower chest”—were
-much too large for him. He had a stiff right wrist, calculating and
-watchful eyes of no particular color, large hands queerly shaped and a
-large manner of good-fellowship and an unattractive mustache.
-
-Young Dan found Luke Watt behind his counter, in a corner close to one
-of the dirty windows, barricaded into his position by boxes and barrels
-and crates and bags. Young Dan worked his way inward to the counter. He
-saw, as he advanced, that the other did not know him.
-
-“Good morning, Mr. Watt,” he said. “I’m Dan Evans from up past the
-Bend—Young Dan Evans. I got a few skins here I want to sell.”
-
-“Of course ye’re Dan Evans!” exclaimed Luke Watt. “Didn’t I know it the
-minute I see you! Lay it there! How’s tricks up river?”
-
-“Pretty good, I guess,” replied the youth. “It’s been a great winter for
-trapping so far, anyhow.”
-
-He undid his pack on the head of a barrel at his elbow and placed a
-couple of pelts on the counter. A swift glance at Watt’s face told him
-that the storekeeper was finding it difficult to hide his enthusiasm.
-
-“Um—fisher,” said Mr. Watt. “Mighty common skins, ain’t they?”
-
-“They are as good fisher as were ever trapped on the Oxbow,” said Young
-Dan.
-
-“Sure they’re good of their kind—but they’re fisher; and fisher are
-all-fired common this year. And skins ain’t much in my line, anyhow. I
-buy a few—but I’m that good natured an’ easy I always lose money on the
-deal. What d’ye figger these two skins is worth? Three times their real
-value, I’ll bet a dollar!”
-
-“Maybe so,” replied Young Dan slowly and in a puzzled voice. “Yes, just
-about that, I guess. I don’t know as much about selling ’em as I do
-about catching ’em.”
-
-A flicker of a smile, cold and swift, showed beyond the drooping ends of
-Luke Watt’s mustache, and for an instant a light of amusement and
-satisfaction glimmered in his eyes.
-
-“I know you pay a whole lot for black fox,” continued Young Dan.
-
-“Black fox!” exclaimed the other. “You got half a dozen black foxes
-right here with you—I don’t think. Say, Dan, what you been drinkin’?”
-
-“I don’t drink, Mr. Watt—but I trap in a good country for black fox—and
-I know that you gave Jim Conley a mighty good price for his.”
-
-The storekeeper’s eyes became very hard and keen with eagerness and
-caution. He squared his elbows on the counter and leaned across toward
-the youth. So, for several seconds, he stared in silence; and the other
-returned the stare with an innocent and unwavering gaze.
-
-“What d’ye know about Jim Conley?” he asked, in a low voice.
-
-“Never saw him before this winter, but we’re trapping the same line of
-country now,” returned Young Dan. “We’re working ’way up past the
-Prongs.”
-
-“D’ye mean you an’ Jim Conley are pardners?”
-
-“We use the same traps. Guess you might call it a partnership.”
-
-“It wasn’t a first-class skin, that wasn’t, as you know yerself, Dan. It
-was more patch than black. But if you have another like it I’ll pay the
-same price, even if I lose money on it—seein’ it’s you.”
-
-“All in cash, Mr. Watt?”
-
-“Not at the same price. I always figger on making part payment in trade.
-But what’s the matter with that? Wasn’t Conley satisfied last time?”
-
-“I reckon he was—but gin ain’t good for him. He got lost getting home.”
-
-“Not so loud,” whispered Luke Watt. “Call it trade. Didn’t Conley warn
-you to mind yer tongue? You talk like a fool; and if you ain’t more
-careful you’ll land yer pardner in jail. But that’s all right, seein’
-it’s yerself. I’ll buy yer skins—all you have there—an’ give you top
-price. But you got to take part payment in trade. Any kind o’ trade.
-Tea, tobacco, flour—anything you want or yer pardner wants. My prices
-are right.”
-
-“That’s fair, Mr. Watt. Will you pay me forty dollars for these two
-fishers? They are the best fishers I’ve seen this winter, color and
-size.”
-
-The storekeeper stood upright and laughed heartily. He straightened his
-back to it and squared his shoulders to it until Young Dan thought the
-buttons would fly off the straining front of the big waistcoat.
-
-“Forty dollars!” exclaimed the big man at last, like one who sees the
-point of a good joke and immediately repeats it to show that he has seen
-it. “Forty dollars! That’s pretty good, Dan! Darned good!”
-
-“Pretty fair,” returned Young Dan, quietly. “They’re worth more.”
-
-“Are you serious, young fellow? D’ye mean forty real dollars for them
-two skins? You look kinder as if you meant it. You must be crazy!”
-
-Young Dan sighed and removed the pelts from the counter to the rest of
-the pack. Slowly he tied up the pack, watching the storekeeper all the
-while with the tail of his right eye. He shouldered the pack and took up
-the axe and stockinged rifle.
-
-“Not so fast, Dan!” cried Mr. Watt. “That ain’t any way to do business.
-Say, are you crazy? Let’s see them skins again, and maybe I’ll go as
-high as thirty-five. And gimme a look at the rest o’ the lot.”
-
-“I been reading in the papers what furs are worth this year,” replied
-the youth. “You can’t fool me. I ain’t Jim Conley. So long.”
-
-Anger and something of apprehension flamed in Luke Watt’s unpleasant
-eyes and big face. With a muttered oath he started for the door in the
-counter—but before he reached it, Young Dan had closed the door of the
-store at his heels. And by the time the big man had reached that door,
-after squeezing his way through the clutter of barrels and crates, Young
-Dan was half-way down the village street.
-
-Young Dan kept on going along the well-beaten river road, with his
-snowshoes on his back instead of his feet, for half an hour. He paused
-now and again to glance over his shoulder, for he believed that Luke
-Watt would soon be on his tracks with a horse and pung. And in that he
-was right. Looking back from the top of one rise he saw a fast-trotting
-horse come over another rise half a mile behind. Then he turned to the
-right, into a logging road, and ran at top speed for a couple of hundred
-yards. The logging road was crooked, and rough underfoot. After the
-sprint, Young Dan strapped his snowshoes on and hopped into the woods.
-He glanced up at the sun, then went forward on a straight course at a
-fine pace. He felt very well satisfied with his morning’s work. He had
-confirmed his suspicions of Mr. Luke Watt, at least.
-
-“I have the goods on both of them,” he said. “I worked it out just
-right. Now I guess they’ll both have to behave themselves or clear right
-out of this country. I’ve got enough on Conley to scare him into being
-good and looking after his wife and kids, that’s certain.”
-
-He halted for long enough to eat two sandwiches of cold bread and colder
-bacon, standing. Then, steering by the sun, he continued to break
-straight through the woods toward the little town of Harlow.
-
-Luke Watt, in his little red pung behind his leggy trotter, drove
-straight on down the well-beaten river road, intent on reaching the
-upper edge of Harlow ahead of Young Dan. If the trapper held to the road
-and was overtaken on the way, all the better for the storekeeper, of
-course—but the great thing was a meeting this side of Harlow. It was not
-the fear of losing trade that inspired Mr. Watt to this determination
-and this unusual speed. He would regret a loss of trade, sure enough;
-but what he actually feared was the Law. He suspected Young Dan Evans.
-He suspected him of being less simple and ignorant than he seemed to be
-on the surface. He suspected himself of having been dangerously
-indiscreet in so quickly accepting that long-legged youth as nothing but
-a source of profit.
-
-“He worked me for a rube, I do believe,” he reflected. “I must get him
-before he gets me; an’ then, if I can’t scare him off I’ll have to buy
-him off. I reckon he’ll scare easy enough, if he’s mixed up with Jim
-Conley.”
-
-But would that young fellow scare easily? There had been a look in his
-eyes that said “no” to the scare idea.
-
-There was no shorter course between the Bend and Harlow than the river
-road. There was no bee-line through the woods that would cut so much as
-a yard off it. Mr. Watt knew this. He drove straight into the town and
-stabled his horse. Then he walked back beyond the up-river end of the
-town, accompanied by a middle-aged, middle-sized, seedy looking man with
-whom he seemed to be very well acquainted. So narrow is that small town
-that two men could easily keep an eye on all the ways of entrance to it
-at either end. Mr. Watt and his friend took up positions of advantage
-several hundred yards apart and waited.
-
-The sun was low when Young Dan came out of the woods and headed
-slantwise across a wide field beside the highway.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
- THE FIGHT IN THE SNOW
-
-
-Young Dan Evans slanted across the white field, heading for the highroad
-which led smoothly into the little town of Harlow. His journey was
-within a half-mile of its completion. He had worked hard ever since
-leaving Bean’s Mill, through thick timber and untracked snow; and now he
-was tired and hungry but in fine spirits. He had thought much of Andy
-Mace and Pete Sabatis during the journey—of their admiration for one
-another’s qualities of physical and spiritual fiber—and believed that
-they would soon take him as seriously as they now considered each other.
-Of course Andy was his firm friend and already thought highly of his
-“smartness” along certain lines—but he feared that he had not yet made a
-very deep impression on the one-eyed Indian. He suspected that Pete
-Sabatis considered him a trifle too big for his cap and boots. He had
-seen something of the kind in the old man’s one eye that very morning.
-
-“I guess he thinks I’m just a cub playing at something and trying to
-fool folks into thinking I’m a smart man,” he reflected. “But when I
-have that big Luke Watt jumping to my say-so, and that thieving drunkard
-Jim Conley come to heel like a trained partridge-dog, and Mrs. Conley
-and the kids fed and looked after properly, I guess he will have to
-admit that I know what I’m doing.”
-
-Thus engaged with his thoughts, he drew near to an extensive grove of
-swamp-birches and alders which grew along the snow-drifted fence like a
-screen between the field and the highroad. He carried his blankets and
-pack of furs on his back, his axe on his right shoulder and his cased
-rifle hung by its sling on his left shoulder.
-
-He was close to the edge of the tangle of birches and alders, and about
-midway of its length, when a bulky figure in a coonskin coat arose from
-the snow and stepped out in front of him.
-
-Young Dan Evans did so many things all at once then that it is difficult
-to disentangle and describe his actions. Mind and body worked quick as
-thought—quicker, perhaps, for he was scarcely conscious of thinking. As
-he recognized Luke Watt in the very instant of seeing him he let
-everything he carried slip and fall from him into the snow in one
-shrugging motion—pack and rifle and axe—and jumped forward straight and
-hard. Even as he jumped, he saw Luke Watt draw something from a
-side-pocket of the fur coat—but he did not flinch from the mark. He
-struck Watt with his whole body all at once. His knees dug into the big
-man’s middle and his left arm went around the fur-clad thick neck; and
-as they fell he heard the revolver explode twice and felt the jolt of
-the gloved hand that held it against his ribs; and he drew up his left
-knee and stamped a wide snowshoe on Watt’s right arm, and struck the big
-face with his right fist. Thus they sank into the drift, with Luke Watt
-underneath and flat on his back. Young Dan trod the hand that held the
-revolver deep into the snow; and he struck the vanishing face again and
-again, though the snow muffled the blows of his mittened fist; and, all
-the while, his right knee crushed and pounded.
-
-Luke Watt struggled—but what was the use! He was breathless, helpless,
-bound and half smothered by the snow. All this violence had occurred so
-swiftly that he could not fully realize exactly what had happened. He
-had confronted the young trapper with his gun ready and the game in his
-hand; and now, a few seconds later, his mouth was choked with snow, his
-eyes were blinded, his arms and weapon were powerless and he was being
-beaten to death!
-
-Young Dan shook the mitten from his left hand and thrust his bare hand
-deep into the snow. In a moment he stood up and stepped backward a pace
-or two, with Luke Watt’s revolver in his grasp. He looked about him and
-saw a stooped figure on the road walking hastily townward. He turned
-again to his enemy, who was sitting up by this time and struggling
-painfully for breath. He flung the revolver far away and recovered his
-axe, pack and rifle.
-
-“How’re you feeling now?” he asked.
-
-Mr. Watt gulped a mouthful of air but made no attempt to answer. He did
-not even open his eyes. He paid no attention to the other’s departure.
-
-Young Dan found the hotel without difficulty and entered the office
-fully equipped.
-
-“Will you kindly tell me the way to the nearest sheriff?” he asked of
-the man at the desk.
-
-“The nearest sheriff?” repeated the hotel-keeper. “Do I get you, young
-feller? Ye’re askin’ the way to the nearest sheriff?”
-
-There were four other men in that dreary little office of varnished
-brown woodwork, mangey mooseheads and crockery cuspidors. These all
-stared curiously at the young trapper and shifted their positions in
-their chairs. The hotel-keeper leaned far over his little counter.
-
-“D’ye want to give yerself up?” he added, with a rude attempt at wit.
-
-“I have asked you a simple and civil question,” said Young Dan in his
-quietest voice. “If you don’t understand simple questions here and don’t
-answer civil ones, then I’ll ask somewhere else. What about it?”
-
-The hotel-keeper and his chaired patrons exchanged glances.
-
-“Sure, sure,” said the former, hurriedly. “We ain’t got a sheriff in
-this town, but we got a fust-class depity-sheriff by the name of Archie
-Wallace. Maybe ye’ve heared of him; an’ maybe he kin do yer business for
-yer as well as the full-blowed high sheriff of the county. What was it
-you said you wanted to see him about?”
-
-“I didn’t say,” replied Young Dan, with a disarming smile. “Thank you
-very much for the information; and now if you’ll tell me where I can
-find Mr. Wallace I’ll step along and stop troubling you.”
-
-The hotel-keeper reached for his coat, which hung on a hook behind him.
-
-“No trouble at all,” he said. “Glad to oblige. I’ll step along an’ show
-you his very door. I always aim to help strangers all I know how.”
-
-“Ye hadn’t ought to leave yer seegar-stand in the rush hour, Dave,” said
-one of the patrons, getting quickly out of his chair. “I’ll take the
-young man to Archie Wallace. It’s fair on my way home.”
-
-The hotel-keeper paid no attention to this offer but donned coat and cap
-and issued from behind the counter and dusty cigar-stand.
-
-“Follow me, stranger,” he invited, leading the way out. “Me and the
-depity-sheriff are old friends. I’ll make you known to him.”
-
-So Young Dan followed the hotel-keeper, and three of the four patrons
-followed close upon the heels of Young Dan. The deputy-sheriff’s house
-was not more than fifty yards from the hotel; and the young trapper
-smiled politely and said nothing all the way to it. The hotel-keeper
-rang the bell and took up a position on the top step in front of Young
-Dan.
-
-The door was opened by a tall, lean man who looked like a woodsman and
-wore a Cardigan jacket and grey homespun trousers tucked into
-high-legged larrigans of oil-tanned leather.
-
-“Here’s a young feller lookin’ for you on important business, Archie,”
-said the hotel-keeper. “It is so all-fired important that I brought him
-right along to you myself, so there wouldn’t be no possible mistake.”
-
-The deputy-sheriff looked at Young Dan Evans with calm inquiry.
-
-“It is private business,” explained Young Dan, smiling; “and these
-gentlemen don’t know any more about it or me than I do about them. I
-never so much as set eyes on any one of them in my life until five
-minutes ago. What I have to say is for your private hearing, if you are
-really an officer of the law.”
-
-“Step in,” said the tall man to Young Dan; and to the others he said
-drily, “Thanks, boys, for escortin’ the young stranger to the right
-place.” Then he closed the door in the hotel-keeper’s face. He led the
-way into a small room opening off the narrow hall—an untidy, stale
-cigar-scented room poorly illumined by an oil lamp with a green paper
-shade.
-
-“Dump your outfit in the corner and sit down,” he invited.
-
-Young Dan obeyed and removed his cap and mitts and outer coat. The
-deputy-sheriff sat down in his own arm-chair beside the untidy table and
-removed the shade from the lamp so that the light reached his visitor’s
-face. For several seconds he gazed keenly but pleasantly at Young Dan.
-
-“I’ve seen you before, somewheres or other,” he said. “Seems to me I
-have known you pretty well, sometime or other. Who are you an’ where
-from?”
-
-Young Dan answered the questions briefly but clearly.
-
-“You remind me of someone I know well,” said Mr. Wallace. “But it isn’t
-yerself, for I never saw nor heard of you before. A full-grown man—and a
-smart one. You speak like him—whoever he is.”
-
-“Bill Tangler, maybe? You’d know him, I guess. He’s my uncle.”
-
-“Bill Tangler it is! Your uncle, hey? Well, son, you’ve got a smart
-uncle. More than that, he’s able; an’ better still, he’s white. If Bill
-Tangler’s your uncle we don’t need any more introduction—so fire away.”
-
-Young Dan told briefly of his partnership with old Andy Mace, and
-produced from an inner pocket the letter from his uncle containing the
-suggestion of the venture and the partnership and the offer of camp and
-outfit. Archie Wallace chuckled over the letter. Then the trapper told
-of his encounters with Jim Conley, of the rebaited trap, and of the
-night Conley went off his course in the woods with a cargo of gin inside
-and out. He produced and exhibited the piece of paper upon which Mr.
-Luke Watt had figured out Jim Conley’s bill. The deputy-sheriff studied
-that exhibit very intently and slapped his hand on his thigh.
-
-“You’re a winner, Dan Evans!” he exclaimed. “Have a cigar.”
-
-Young Dan shook his head to the cigar and told his adventures of the
-day, up to the very minute of telling. He raised his short coat of
-wool-lined blanketing from the floor and held it up to the other’s view.
-
-“And here I am; and here’s where Luke Watt burnt two holes in my jacket
-with his revolver,” he concluded.
-
-Archie Wallace examined the holes in the coat without a word. Then he
-lit a fresh cigar from the butt of an old one, returned the green shade
-to the lamp and sat well back in his chair. He gazed at the lamp-shade
-in meditative silence. His manner impressed Young Dan. Suddenly he
-turned his glance upon his visitor and asked abruptly, “Can you cook?”
-
-The nature of the question was so unexpected that Young Dan was far too
-astonished to reply. He blushed and stared, wondering if he was being
-made fun of.
-
-“Can you cook?” repeated the deputy-sheriff.
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Then you’ll oblige me by goin’ to the kitchen and gettin’ supper for
-the two of us,” said the official. “Here are matches, and you’ll find a
-lamp on the table. The kettle’s b’ilin’, the coffee-pot an’ fryin’ pan
-are on the back of the stove, and there’s ham and eggs all ready set out
-on the dresser. I’m a bum cook myself. There’s an old hound somewheres
-in the house who is the only person besides myself who can stomach my
-cookery. He won’t bite you if you treat him friendly. While you’re
-gettin’ supper I’ll sit right here an’ study over what you told me. It
-needs some study.”
-
-So Young Dan started for the kitchen. In the narrow hall he met the old
-hound, which seemed delighted with him and followed eagerly into the
-kitchen. It was an extraordinary kitchen. All the dishes were jumbled up
-on the table, and not one of them was clean. But the fire of dry
-hardwood was burning clear in the stove and both pot and kettle were
-full and boiling. He went briskly to work; and in half an hour all the
-dishes were washed, the table was laid and supper was ready.
-
-The deputy-sheriff swallowed his first cup of coffee in silence. Then he
-said, “Jim Conley’s a trap-thief all right, all right—but you can’t
-prove it on him. He’s a liar I reckon, and I know darned well you ain’t
-a liar—but his word about that trap and whatever he took from it is as
-good as yours to the Law. So I can’t round him up—but I can scare all
-the blood and gin in his nose back to his rotten heart.”
-
-“I guess that’ll be all he will need,” replied Young Dan.
-
-Mr. Wallace nodded and devoured ham and eggs for five minutes or so with
-undivided attention.
-
-“As for Luke Watt—well, that feller is nigh as strong as he is
-slippery,” he said, pouring more coffee. “He’s so danged crooked that he
-had ought to’ve been thrown away with all the corkscrews when the
-country went dry. Or he’d ought to of moved over into Quebec. He is
-strong, too—but I reckon we got the goods on him all right, all right.
-Do you think you could find that revolver of his you threw away?—or do
-you reckon he’s maybe picked it up himself?”
-
-“I guess I could find it; and I don’t think he has picked it up because
-his eyes were shut and full of snow when I threw it away,” replied Young
-Dan. “I was mad, you know, what with his shooting at me and everything;
-and it was only the deep snow and my mitts that saved him from getting a
-sight worse than he got.”
-
-“Do you want to arrest him for assault with intent to kill, an’ for
-sellin’ gin; or do you want to run him out of the country on a pair of
-cold feet?” asked the deputy-sheriff. “Take your choice, Dan.”
-
-“Neither,” said the youth. “Neither, if we can scare him enough to
-handle him the way I want to. If we can scare him into keeping the law
-and doing something for Jim Conley’s wife and kids, I’ll be satisfied.”
-
-“But we got him cold,” said the other. “You’ve done a smart piece of
-work, Dan Evans. You’ve caught Luke just how I’ve been tryin’ to catch
-him this six months back. But what’s your idee? What’s this about
-wantin’ that fat lubber to do something for Conley’s wife an’ kids?”
-
-“They need help. Jim Conley’s no good. The way I figger it is, Luke Watt
-cheated Conley on the price of that skin. Whatever the skin was, patch
-or black, we know Conley didn’t get even as much as a third of the right
-price. And if we can’t prove that the skin belonged to Andy Mace and me,
-then it was Conley’s rightful property, in the law. So if we can shoot a
-real scare into Luke Watt—a regular death-cold fright—then we can make
-him hand over the rest of the price of that skin, in groceries and boots
-and clothing, to Jim Conley’s family. I’ll pick out the goods—enough to
-last them till well on in the spring; and Watt’ll have to pay to have
-them packed in to Conley’s camp. That’s my idea.”
-
-The deputy-sheriff drank more coffee, scratched his chin and relit the
-half-smoked cigar.
-
-“You’re a philanthropist, Dan Evans,” he said. “You’re like your uncle
-Bill Tangler in that.”
-
-Young Dan let that pass with a noncommittal smile, for the word was one
-which he had somehow overlooked in his explorations into literature. But
-he felt that it was nothing to be ashamed of if the same could be said
-of his uncle Bill Tangler.
-
-“And maybe you’re right,” continued Mr. Wallace. “You know the situation
-and I don’t, so it’s for you to say. As for the scare—if we find that
-revolver we can scare Watt into totin’ a year’s supply of grub all the
-way in to the Right Prong of Oxbow on his own fat back. And I reckon
-he’ll keep the law after we’ve had a chat with him, for he ain’t a fool.
-He’d sooner keep it along with his freedom than behind stone walls and
-iron bars, you can betcher hat on that. But there are other sides to the
-question to be considered. There’s no sense in jumpin’ before we look
-all round for the dryest place to land. So far you’ve considered nothin’
-but Jim Conley’s family’s need of grub and clothes. Well, that’s all
-right in its way, and as far as it goes—but it will sure encourage Jim
-Conley to sit at home all day and eat his head off. If he can’t drink
-he’ll eat. A feller like him has just got to be doin’ something with his
-mouth all the time; and I reckon he ain’t got brains enough to do much
-talkin’. If feedin’ his wife and children will make a good citizen out
-of him, then you’re dead right. But what about Luke Watt? We can scare
-him into keeping the law as far as bootleggin’ gin is concerned, but we
-can’t stop him cheatin’ in his trade every chance he gets. We couldn’t
-make a good citizen of him in a hundred years. And that ain’t all. Not
-by a long shot! Suppose I nab him in my official capacity, with his
-number right in my pocket? What’ll folks say about Deputy-Sheriff Archie
-Wallace then, d’ye think? They’ll say that Deputy-Sheriff Archie Wallace
-is an all-fired smart, able, slick and deserving officer! Yes, Dan
-Evans, it will sure mean feathers a foot high in my hat. And what will
-be said about the young trapper from ’way back in the woods who did the
-brain-work and took the risk? They’ll say you’re the best detective
-outside the covers of a book they ever heard tell of. You’ll be a big
-man with your name in the newspapers—and I’ll be the next high sheriff
-of this county. That’s _my_ idea.”
-
-“And it is a good idea,” replied Young Dan, reflectively. “It sounds
-mighty good to me, of course. I’d like fine to see my name in the papers
-as a detective, but I wasn’t figgering on anything like that. I want to
-see that woman and her children decently fed. I don’t like her much,
-mind you—but she’s sure a courageous mother, and I pity her, and so
-would you if you knew Jim Conley. If we could scare him into earning a
-living for his family, then I’d certainly like your idea better’n mine.”
-
-“But you ain’t reckonin’ on makin’ Luke Watt support Conley’s wife and
-kids all the rest of their lives, surely?” returned Mr. Wallace. “That
-would be goin’ a mite too far with it. He’d sooner go to jail than do
-that, I wouldn’t wonder. No, that won’t do! You got to make Conley get
-to work. Philanthropy’s a fine thing, but justice is a fine thing, too.”
-
-“You’re right, Mr. Wallace—and you are the deputy-sheriff. I guess
-whatever you say goes. All I want to do is scare Jim Conley off of our
-trap-lines, and help his family, and smash that hound, Luke Watt.”
-
-“Then we’d best sleep on it, an’ have a look for that revolver first
-thing in the morning,” said the other. “Maybe we’ll hit on a way of
-reconciling your hunger for philanthropy with my thirst for fame and
-promotion.”
-
-“They sound as if they’d ought to pull all right in double-harness,”
-remarked the youth, with that smile which reminded the deputy-sheriff of
-Bill Tangler.
-
-The deputy-sheriff wakened his guest at the first peep of day; and after
-breakfast they set out in a red pung behind a long-gaited
-three-year-old. Young Dan left his skins locked securely away in one of
-Mr. Wallace’s closets, with the understanding that Wallace would ship
-them to an honest fur-dealer immediately upon his return from the
-present expedition. This arrangement would be sure to prove advantageous
-to Young Dan and his partner, for Archie Wallace, as deputy-sheriff of
-the county, would obtain a higher price for the furs than a private
-trapper could possibly make any buyer consider reasonable. They stopped
-near the scene of the trapper’s swift and violent encounter with the
-storekeeper from Bean’s Mill, slipped on their snowshoes and entered the
-slanting field. Mr. Wallace regarded the deep marks of the struggle with
-chuckles of satisfaction. Then Young Dan led him about thirty yards away
-to a very small cut in the snow and dug up Luke Watt’s revolver. He
-handed the weapon to Wallace, who wiped it off, tied it up carefully in
-his handkerchief and stowed it away in his pocket.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- FEAR OF THE LAW
-
-
-The road between Harlow and Bean’s Mill was all that hoof and heart
-could wish, and the long-gaited three-year-old was sound in wind and
-limb and as fresh as the frosty morning. It was still early in the day
-when the deputy-sheriff drew rein in front of Luke Watt’s store. He
-jumped out and hitched the strawberry mare to a well-chewed post and
-threw a blanket and a goat-skin robe over her. Then he cleared the frost
-from his eye-lashes, pulled his fur mittens off and threw them into the
-pung and rubbed his bare hands briskly together as if to limber up the
-fingers. Then he sank his hands deep into the roomy side-pockets of his
-fur coat.
-
-“You keep your collar turned up an’ your cap pulled down and sit right
-there till you get the high sign,” he said to Young Dan.
-
-Young Dan nodded his muffled head. He sat stuffily in the pung, very
-bulky and shapeless in an old coonskin coat of the deputy-sheriff’s,
-looking as much like “The World’s Fattest Lady” as anything else in the
-world—much more like that than like a lanky young trapper of fur.
-
-As Archie Wallace pushed open the door of the store he closed his eyes
-tight, the quicker to readjust them to the gloom within from the
-brightness without. As he closed the door behind him with his left
-elbow—for still his right hand was in his pocket—he opened his eyes and
-looked at everything in one wide-eyed glance. He saw, in that first
-comprehensive look, everything in the store—the counter, the fancy
-groceries on the dirty shelves, the barrels and crates, the baskets of
-eggs, the chewing-gum and depressing cigars in the little show-case, the
-boots and suspenders and amazing neckties hanging aloft, and Mrs. Watt
-and three customers—everything which he had expected to see except Luke
-Watt. He made his way to the counter and Mrs. Watt and wished her a
-rather grim good-morning. His professional manner was always uppermost
-when he was actually engaged in the final stages of a piece of
-professional work. He felt that he owed this alike to the Law and to the
-probable offenders against the Law.
-
-“I want to speak to your husband, Luke Watt,” he continued.
-
-Mrs. Watt, who was as like Mr. Watt in appearance and character as a
-woman could be, changed color swiftly and at the same time met the man’s
-grim gaze with a hard and brazen glint in her eyes.
-
-“You sure ain’t forgot my husband’s name, Archie Wallace,” she said.
-“What are you puttin’ on yer depity-sheriff airs for this mornin’? You
-sound like you was huntin’ for trouble.”
-
-“You’ve said it,” returned Mr. Wallace, drily. “Where is Luke?”
-
-“At home in bed, sick with a cold; an’ that’s where he has been since
-yesterday afternoon,” she answered. “You can go over to the house an’
-make a call on him in bed, if yer business is that pressin’”; and then,
-with a swift change from effrontery to curiosity in eyes and voice, she
-leaned across the counter and whispered, “What’s the trouble?”
-
-“Exactly what you suspect, Mrs. Watt—an’ maybe quite a lot more,” he
-replied, whispering in his turn from the force of example rather than by
-intention. “Now I’ll just step over to the house an’ have a talk with
-him.”
-
-“Wait,” she whispered, closing her fingers on the sleeve of his coat.
-“Tell me, have you got his number? Have you caught him? Tell me!”
-
-Wallace withdrew his sleeve from her grasp and turned and left the store
-without another word. His face was drawn for a second with an expression
-of sickening distaste, for he had seen, quick and sure as lightning,
-exactly what the woman had in her mind. He knew that she salted away the
-money which her husband corkscrewed out of the rural population; and he
-had just now seen her as a rat that contemplates the advisability of
-leaving a sinking ship. But she was a cautious sort of rat and wanted to
-make dead sure that the ship was going down before she swarmed down the
-anchor-chain and swam ashore. This nautical figure of thought came pat
-to Mr. Wallace, for he had sailed four deep-sea voyages out of St. John
-in his eighteenth and nineteenth years.
-
-“Mrs. Watt says he’s sick abed with a cold,” he informed Young Dan. “It
-may be so, for what would be the sense of her tellin’ that lie? That’s
-the house. If you’ll stable the mare across there at Murphy’s, I’ll go
-to Watt’s—and you follow me as soon as you’ve stood the mare in the
-stall. Open the front door an’ walk right in and up the stairs.”
-
-The deputy-sheriff found Luke Watt in bed. The store-keeper was very red
-of face and watery of eye, and there were dark bruises on his brow.
-
-“Your wife said I’d find you here, sick abed,” said Wallace.
-
-“Well, she told ye the truth,” replied Watt. “What d’ye want, Archie?”
-
-“You, Luke Watt. This is an official visit I’m makin’ you.”
-
-“Me? Official? Who’s the joke on? Tell me when to laugh, will you?”
-
-“Yes, you; and when the time to laugh comes I’ll do it. You’re done.”
-
-“And you’re crazy! I’m done, am I? Who d’ye reckon did me?”
-
-Wallace heard the front door open and close and then a light, slow step
-on the stairs. He opened the bed-room door and looked out.
-
-“Luke Watt wants to know who did him,” he said. “Come along in and show
-him, an’ then maybe he’ll believe me.”
-
-He returned to the side of the bed; and, a moment later, Young Dan
-entered the room in his bulky muffling of furs and shut the door behind
-him. Luke Watt’s face twitched. The trapper slipped out of his borrowed
-coat and removed his cap and mittens and looked at the man in the bed.
-Watt made a bluff at returning that look—but it was a weak bluff. His
-face twitched again, and he closed his eyes and sneezed. Young Dan
-noticed the bruised forehead and was glad of it.
-
-“I’d of marked you worse than that if it hadn’t been for the snow and
-the mitten on my hand,” he said. “But I guess you got enough!”
-
-“He must of got some snow down his neck an’ caught cold from it,” said
-the deputy-sheriff. “But if you’d killed ’im, Dan Evans, you wouldn’t of
-done more’n I would have done in your place. I wouldn’t of blamed you.”
-
-“What are you two talkin’ about, anyhow?” demanded Watt, in a voice
-husky with cold and emotion. “And who’s this here young jay?”
-
-“Cut it out!” retorted Wallace. “I know the whole story, right back to
-the fox you bought off of Jim Conley, and I’ve seen the piece of paper
-you used to figger out the price of it on—the price, mostly in gin. And
-I’ve got the gun in my pocket you used on Dan Evans here when you tried
-to stop him from gettin’ into Harlow. You ain’t as cute as I thought you
-were, but you’re a long sight more dangerous. I never reckoned on you
-tryin’ murder.”
-
-“It’s a lie!” cried the other. “Git out, or I’ll have the law on you!”
-
-“Not so fast,” continued Wallace, calmly. “I had a talk with your
-friend, Tom Marl, about one o’clock this mornin’, after I’d heard Dan
-Evans’s story. Tom was scared. He thought the two shots you fired had
-hit the mark. He’s quite a talker, Tom Marl is—when fear loosens his
-tongue.”
-
-All the color went from Luke Watt’s face and again he closed his eyes.
-
-“Attempted robbery under arms, and assault with intent to kill—it would
-make an exciting case,” continued Wallace, slowly and clearly. “It would
-give the smart lawyers a fine chance to show their smartness, some
-tryin’ to hang you and others tryin’ to save your neck—but the smartest
-lawyers in the province couldn’t save you from five years in pen. The
-liquor case won’t be near so exciting. We’ve got you so cold there the
-lawyers wouldn’t find anything to argue about.”
-
-Watt continued to lie with his eyes tight shut, breathing heavily.
-
-“I guess I’d have to make a charge against him for the assault and all,
-and for firing two shots at my ribs, wouldn’t I?” said Young Dan, in an
-unsteady voice. He felt unsteady. The sight of the big man’s fear and
-despair shook him strangely.
-
-The storekeeper opened his eyes.
-
-“Ain’t you made the charge agin me?” he cried. “Then don’t do it! Gimme
-a chance! I was scart crazy. All I meant to do was to stop you an’ talk
-you round. The gun kinder went off by accident. I swear it!”
-
-The deputy-sheriff sighed and lit a cigar.
-
-“How much did you get for that skin that you bought from Jim Conley?”
-asked Young Dan.
-
-“That skin?—why, I ain’t sold it yet,” answered Watt, thinking hard and
-speaking slowly and uncertainly.
-
-“In that case, I’ll take a look at it and value it,” said Wallace.
-
-“You needn’t trouble yerself,” said the other, sullenly. “I got five
-hundred dollars for it.”
-
-“Then you still owe the original owner of the skin four hundred an’ some
-odd dollars,” said the trapper.
-
-“Business is business,” protested the man in bed. “I bought the skin an’
-I sold it; an’ now I wisht it had been burnt to a cinder before I ever
-seen it!”
-
-“Give me four hundred dollars for Jim Conley’s wife and kids and I won’t
-make that charge against you,” said Young Dan.
-
-The deputy-sheriff, who had been gazing reflectively out of the window,
-turned at that with an air of decision and regarded the trapper with
-level eyes.
-
-“I’m goin’ to be downright and honest with both of you,” he said. “It’s
-nothing to me if you get four hundred dollars out of Watt for Conley’s
-wife and kids, or if you don’t. It’s no concern of mine. I don’t care
-what dicker you make with him, or if he keeps his end of the bargain or
-goes back on it—but I tell you both that whatever happens, he is pinched
-for selling gin. He is pinched good and hard for selling gin, and he’ll
-go to jail for it, without the option of a fine, as sure as my name is
-Wallace; and I’ll put a constable into this house to guard him until
-he’s fit to go to jail and await his trial.”
-
-“But I won’t make the other charge, if you’ll give me four hundred for
-Jim Conley’s wife and babies,” said the trapper to Watt.
-
-“I’ll do that,” replied Watt. “Go over to the store an’ fetch my wife,
-will you? She takes care of the money.”
-
-Young Dan went to the store and found a young woman with a red head in
-charge. She informed him that Mrs. Watt had gone to the mill on business
-and wouldn’t be back for half an hour, perhaps. He returned to Luke
-Watt’s bedroom with this information.
-
-“She ain’t got no business over to the mill,” said Watt. “Maybe she’s in
-the house somewheres. Take a look round the house for her, will you, an’
-tell her I want to see her quick.”
-
-So Young Dan left the bed-room again and searched the house high and
-low. The only living thing he found in it was a cat in the kitchen; but
-he saw melted snow here and there on the kitchen floor. He looked
-closely at the damp marks and knew them for the tracks of feet shod in
-arctics. He saw that the tracks began at the outer door of the kitchen,
-crossed to the big dresser and returned to the door. He opened the door,
-which was not locked, and looked into the cold shed. He saw a few small
-films of pressed snow on the dusty floor of the shed, between the
-shed-door and the kitchen-door. He went back to the big dresser and
-gazed curiously and eagerly for a few seconds at its dish-laden shelves
-and the closed doors of its cupboards, then returned to the room
-upstairs and said that the house was empty.
-
-“But there’s been a woman in the kitchen,” he added. “In and out again,
-with snow on her feet. She wore arctic overboots, whoever she is.”
-
-“That’s her!” exclaimed Luke Watt weakly.
-
-He got out of bed and put on trousers and coat over his nightshirt and
-thrust his feet into slippers. He shivered and sat down on the edge of
-the bed. His eyes of no particular color were miserable with dread.
-
-“Take a look in the stable,” he whispered. “See if my trottin’ mare’s
-there.”
-
-The trapper went out to the stable, by way of the kitchen and the shed.
-The stall was empty. The harness had gone from its pegs. There were
-fresh tracks of hoofs and runners in the snow in front of the stable
-door.
-
-“She must of tied the bells,” he said. “She seems to know what she’s
-about, whatever it is. And I wonder what it is?”
-
-He went back to Watt and the deputy-sheriff with the news that the
-trotting mare was gone from the stable, harness and pung and all.
-
-Luke Watt turned a tragic, despairing and murderous gaze on Mr. Wallace.
-“You fool!” he cried, hysterically. “Why couldn’t you keep yer silly
-mouth shut! You told her how ye’d come to pinch me, an’ how I hadn’t a
-chance to git clear—an’ so she’s up an’ lit out with all the money!
-That’s what she’s done! Lit out with every dollar!”
-
-With that explosion the storekeeper sank back across the bed and covered
-his face with his hands. The deputy-sheriff and the trapper exchanged
-embarrassed glances.
-
-“He’s lying,” whispered Wallace. “He’s tryin’ to fool you, Dan. There
-ain’t a woman in the world would do a trick like that on her husband;
-and Mrs. Watt couldn’t even if she wanted to.”
-
-He leaned over Luke Watt and shook him roughly by a shoulder.
-
-“Where’d you bank your money?” he asked.
-
-“I didn’t bank it nowhere,” mumbled Watt, still with his face in his
-hands. “She didn’t bank it, neither. She salted it away.”
-
-“Where’d she salt it away?”
-
-“I dunno.”
-
-“You’re lying, Luke Watt—or you’re the biggest an’ softest boob I ever
-heard tell of.”
-
-“I’ll bet she kept it somewhere in the dresser in the kitchen,” said
-Young Dan. “That’s where the tracks led to—to the dresser and out
-again.”
-
-The storekeeper jumped to his feet and ran heavily from the room, crying
-“Let’s go look.” The others followed him close.
-
-Young Dan took charge of the investigation of the dresser. All the
-dishes were removed from the shelves and every inch of woodwork was
-searched for a hidden drawer or sliding panel—but all in vain. Luke Watt
-sat down beside the stove and shivered and wept. Then Young Dan and Mr.
-Wallace emptied the four pot-closets in the bottom of the dresser of
-dozens of pots, pans, sauce-pans and frying-pans, and Young Dan crawled
-into each in turn and rapped here and there and everywhere with
-enquiring knuckles. In the fourth closet he found his reward. Without
-withdrawing his head he passed back and out a section of the bottom of
-the closet. Mr. Wallace took the piece of dry pine board in his hand and
-showed it to Luke Watt. Luke stared at it and ceased his weeping. Then a
-section of board from the floor of the kitchen appeared from beneath the
-trapper’s elbow. He withdrew his head and shoulders from the closet a
-few seconds later and squatted back on his heels.
-
-“Empty,” he said.
-
-Yes, the hiding-place beneath the floor was empty. The deputy-sheriff
-found it empty. Even Luke Watt’s hungry fingers failed to find anything
-in it.
-
-“An’ if there was a dollar in it there was twenty thousand,” whispered
-Watt, in a stunned voice.
-
-“There don’t live another woman in the world would play a trick like
-that on her man,” said Mr. Wallace. “No matter how bad he was, she
-wouldn’t play him down like that. It beats anything I ever heard of.”
-
-“Reckon yer right,” replied the storekeeper, listlessly. “Eliza ain’t no
-ordinary woman. You hadn’t ought to told her yer business with me.”
-
-He sounded like a man talking in his sleep.
-
-“I guess you’re in trouble enough, Luke Watt,” said Young Dan. “Well, as
-far as I’m concerned, you’re no worse off than if you hadn’t tried to
-stop me with a gun. That’s forgotten.”
-
-The dazed storekeeper went back to bed; and Archie Wallace supplied a
-cook and a muscular constable to feed him and hold him until he was in
-fit health to be removed to the county jail.
-
-On their way through to Dan’l Evans’s farm behind the long-gaited
-strawberry mare, the deputy-sheriff and Young Dan bought as much food as
-two good men could pack a day’s journey from Amos Bissing at the Bend.
-Mr. Bissing was deeply impressed by Young Dan’s company and appearance.
-He asked a great many questions and received a good many answers—but not
-a single answer to his questions as to the deputy-sheriff’s reasons for
-touring the country in Young Dan’s company. He could see easily enough
-by the manners of the two that their relations were entirely friendly.
-
-When the strawberry mare passed the kitchen windows of the Evans farm,
-and Young Dan was recognized by every member of the family and Mr.
-Wallace was recognized by the father, amazement and apprehension flamed
-in every heart.
-
-“He’s a policeman, I tell ye!” exclaimed Dan’l for the third time in
-quick succession, flattered by the panicky effect of his words. “He’s
-the sheriff from Harlow. Young Dan’s been too smart for his own good at
-last, I cal’late. Them fool books an’ his Tangler brains has tripped him
-by the heels at last. Wonder what he done?”
-
-Then the kitchen door opened and Young Dan entered with the tall man
-close behind him. He threw aside his cap and embraced his mother; and at
-the first clear glimpse of his face she knew that her Daniel senior had
-been mistaken again.
-
-They remained at the farm for supper, and the night and breakfast. Dan’l
-Evans was greatly relieved, of course, to know that his son was not an
-offender against any law—but he was not happy. Everything was too right
-for his complete enjoyment. There was too much talk on the
-deputy-sheriff’s part to suit him, of the virtues of Bill Tangler and
-the great thing Young Dan had done; and Young Dan, was too well pleased
-with himself and the deputy-sheriff; and Mrs. Evans made altogether too
-much of both the visitors and had more to say about the intellectual
-qualities of her own family than could be expected to please a husband
-of Dan’l’s disposition. When he knocked and belittled and sneered, he
-was either ignored entirely or bluntly contradicted. When he advanced
-the theory that Young Dan had been guilty of an error in judgment in
-jumping so quick at Luke Watt, and cited the two bullet-holes in the
-youth’s coat as proof of the mistake, the deputy-sheriff thought that he
-was joking and laughed heartily.
-
-“You’re a dry humorist, Mr. Evans,” he exclaimed. “The driest I ever
-met. That’s good—that about the holes in Dan’s coat. You sure do give a
-new and uncommon slant to a thing.”
-
-This puzzled Dan’l, giving him food for silent thought to last him for
-the remainder of the evening.
-
-Young Dan and Mr. Wallace set out for the Right Prong country after an
-early breakfast, on their snow-shoes, with forty-pound packs on their
-shoulders, leaving the strawberry mare in Dan’l Evans’s charge. It was a
-windless clear day, and the snow was well settled. Young Dan led the way
-at his best pace—but he did not have to stop once to let Archie Wallace
-catch up to him. The fact was, he had to put on an extra spurt every now
-and then to keep the tails of his snowshoes from being stepped on.
-That’s the kind of man Archie Wallace was.
-
-They found both old men at the camp in fine spirits and Andy Mace’s
-rheumatism greatly improved. Andy cooked a masterpiece of a supper; and
-after supper Archie Wallace told the story of Young Dan’s adventures
-with Luke Watt in his best style. At the conclusion of the narrative,
-Pete Sabatis turned the glance of his single eye from the face of Young
-Dan to that of Andy Mace and slowly nodded his head twice.
-
-“Guess you size ’im up right, Andy,” he said.
-
-Young Dan blushed with pleasure, yet pretended not to have seen or heard
-this passage of intelligence. To be accepted as an able man by Pete
-Sabatis and to measure up to the heroic standards of earlier
-generations, these were triumphs which might well expand the heart and
-redden the cheek of even an older man than Young Dan.
-
-After breakfast the deputy-sheriff and Young Dan went north to Jim
-Conley’s cabin, heavy-laden with their contributions toward the support
-of that worthless fellow’s wife and children. Just before coming into
-view of the cabin, Mr. Wallace halted and the trapper took to the brush
-beside the trail. Wallace stood motionless for five minutes, then
-advanced. Within a second of sighting the little hut of logs he glimpsed
-the swift flash of a face at the little window. He went forward without
-haste and knocked on the door. It was opened to him by the woman.
-
-“Good mornin’, m’am,” he said, standing his rifle against the edge of
-the door and lowering his pack to the threshold. “Here’s some grub for
-you, with the compliments of Dan Evans.”
-
-The woman stared at him, motionless and silent.
-
-“Is Jim round anywheres handy?” he asked. “I’d like to speak to him.”
-
-“It was him sent ye here—that young fool, Dan Evans!” she exclaimed.
-“Why don’t he mind his own business? Can’t ye let Jim be? He’s workin’
-fine now that the gin’s all gone. Can’t ye leave him be?”
-
-“What’s he workin’ at, m’am?”
-
-“Trappin’, that’s what.”
-
-“But whose traps?”
-
-Her face paled. Quick as a flash she reached out an arm, snatched his
-cased rifle from where it stood and stepped back into the room. Mr.
-Wallace smiled, raised the pack of provisions from the threshold,
-carried it into the cabin and closed the door behind him. He crossed the
-room in four strides and opened another door; and there stood Conley,
-facing it, with both hands held high in air and a rifle in one hand.
-Behind him stood Young Dan.
-
-“Come along in,” said the deputy-sheriff.
-
-Conley obeyed; and young Dan came close at his heels and shut the door.
-Wallace took the rifle from Conley and his own from the woman. Then he
-turned to Young Dan and said, “You’ve got something to say to these
-folks, I believe. Fire away.”
-
-“It’s this,” said Young Dan, looking coldly from the man to the woman.
-“I’m just about sick of supplying you with grub. A wolf would feel more
-gratitude than either of you. So this is the last time; and if ever I
-call again with the deputy-sheriff, there’ll be trouble for you. We’ve
-arrested Luke Watt for selling gin, and he is going to jail for it. Oh,
-yes, I know all about that fox skin! Stick to yer own trap-lines from
-now on, Jim Conley, and trade yer furs for food instead of hard liquor,
-and I’ll leave you alone. But make one more break at me or my traps, and
-I’ll land you where you can talk it over with Luke Watt. Here’s more
-grub—the last I bother to tote in to you—and that’s all I’ve got to say.
-Come along, Mr. Wallace. Let’s get out into the fresh air quick.”
-
-They turned away and left the man and woman and bewildered children
-standing silent and motionless.
-
-“I didn’t suspect it was in you to be so sharp with them,” remarked
-Archie Wallace. “What riled you?”
-
-“Conley tried to slip a knife into me after he’d put up his hands,”
-replied Young Dan.
-
-“Well, I reckon they’ll be good from now on, so far as you’re
-concerned,” said Wallace. “You scared ’em. You pretty nigh scared me.”
-
-They were half-way back to Bill Tangler’s camp when the deputy-sheriff
-halted and lit a cigar.
-
-“You’re a wizard, Dan Evans,” he said. “A trapper needs to be smart, but
-not as far-sighted an’ clear-thinkin’ as you. The Government will be
-glad to pay you for anything you do—so will you lend me a hand now an’
-then, when I’m up against something too big for me to swing alone?”
-
-“Sure,” said Young Dan.
-
-“That’s a bargain!” exclaimed Mr. Wallace; and they shook hands there in
-the white trail.
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE OXBOW WIZARD***
-
-
-******* This file should be named 61911-0.txt or 61911-0.zip *******
-
-
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
-http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/6/1/9/1/61911
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
diff --git a/old/61911-0.zip b/old/61911-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 8fee3dd..0000000
--- a/old/61911-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/61911-h.zip b/old/61911-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index a69de14..0000000
--- a/old/61911-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/61911-h/61911-h.htm b/old/61911-h/61911-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index e82f323..0000000
--- a/old/61911-h/61911-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3318 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
-<head>
-<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
-<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Oxbow Wizard, by Theodore Goodridge Roberts</title>
- <link rel='coverpage' href='images/cover.jpg' />
- <style type="text/css">
- body { margin-left:8%;margin-right:8%; }
- p { text-indent:1.15em; margin-top:0.1em; margin-bottom:0.1em; text-align:justify; }
- /* headings */
- h1 { text-align:center; font-weight:normal; page-break-before: always;
- font-size:1.4em; margin:2em auto 1em auto; }
- h2 { text-align:center; font-weight:normal; page-break-before: always;
- font-size:1.2em; margin:2em auto 1em auto; }
- .figcenter { margin:1em auto; }
- /* tables */
- table.toc { }
- table { page-break-inside: avoid; }
- table.tcenter { margin:0.5em auto; border-collapse: collapse; padding:3px; }
- td.c1 { text-align:right; padding-right:0.7em; }
- td.c2 { font-variant:small-caps; }
- /* text divisions */
- div.chapter { page-break-before:always; margin-bottom:3em; }
- div.section { margin-bottom:3em; padding-top:2em; page-break-before:always; }
-
- h1.pgx { text-align: center;
- clear: both;
- font-weight: bold;
- font-size: 190%;
- margin-top: 0em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- word-spacing: 0em;
- letter-spacing: 0em;
- line-height: 1; }
- h2.pgx { text-align: center;
- clear: both;
- font-weight: bold;
- font-size: 135%;
- margin-top: 2em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- word-spacing: 0em;
- letter-spacing: 0em;
- page-break-before: avoid;
- line-height: 1; }
- h3.pgx { text-align: center;
- clear: both;
- font-weight: bold;
- font-size: 110%;
- margin-top: 2em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- word-spacing: 0em;
- letter-spacing: 0em;
- line-height: 1; }
- h4.pgx { text-align: center;
- clear: both;
- font-weight: bold;
- font-size: 100%;
- margin-top: 2em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- word-spacing: 0em;
- letter-spacing: 0em;
- line-height: 1; }
- hr.pgx { width: 100%;
- margin-top: 3em;
- margin-bottom: 0em;
- margin-left: auto;
- margin-right: auto;
- height: 4px;
- border-width: 4px 0 0 0; /* remove all borders except the top one */
- border-style: solid;
- border-color: #000000;
- clear: both; }
-
-
- h1.pgx { text-align: center;
- clear: both;
- font-weight: bold;
- font-size: 190%;
- margin-top: 0em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- word-spacing: 0em;
- letter-spacing: 0em;
- line-height: 1; }
- h2.pgx { text-align: center;
- clear: both;
- font-weight: bold;
- font-size: 135%;
- margin-top: 2em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- word-spacing: 0em;
- letter-spacing: 0em;
- page-break-before: avoid;
- line-height: 1; }
- h3.pgx { text-align: center;
- clear: both;
- font-weight: bold;
- font-size: 110%;
- margin-top: 2em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- word-spacing: 0em;
- letter-spacing: 0em;
- line-height: 1; }
- h4.pgx { text-align: center;
- clear: both;
- font-weight: bold;
- font-size: 100%;
- margin-top: 2em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- word-spacing: 0em;
- letter-spacing: 0em;
- line-height: 1; }
- hr.pgx { width: 100%;
- margin-top: 3em;
- margin-bottom: 0em;
- margin-left: auto;
- margin-right: auto;
- height: 4px;
- border-width: 4px 0 0 0; /* remove all borders except the top one */
- border-style: solid;
- border-color: #000000;
- clear: both; }
- </style>
-</head>
-<body>
-<h1 class="pgx" title="">The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Oxbow Wizard, by Theodore Goodridge
-Roberts</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
-restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: The Oxbow Wizard</p>
-<p>Author: Theodore Goodridge Roberts</p>
-<p>Release Date: April 24, 2020 [eBook #61911]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE OXBOW WIZARD***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4 class="pgx" title="">E-text prepared by Roger Frank<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org">https://archive.org</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/oxbowwizard00robe">
- https://archive.org/details/oxbowwizard00robe</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<h1 style='margin:0; visibility:hidden;'>The Oxbow Wizard</h1>
-<div class='section'>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:50%; max-width:700px;'>
-<img src='images/img-005.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='section'>
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;'>
-<div style='font-size:1.6em;margin-bottom:1em;'>The Oxbow Wizard</div>
-<div style='font-size:0.9em;'>BY</div>
-<div style='font-size:1em;margin-bottom:2em;'>THEODORE GOODRIDGE ROBERTS </div>
-<div style='font-size:0.8em;'>GARDEN CITY&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;NEW YORK</div>
-<div style='font-size:0.8em;'>GARDEN CITY PUBLISHING CO., INC.</div>
-<div>1924</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='section'>
-<div style='font-size:0.8em'>
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;'>
-<div>COPYRIGHT, 1924, BY</div>
-<div style='margin-bottom:1em;'>DOUBLEDAY, PAGE &amp; COMPANY</div>
-<div style='margin-bottom:1em;'>ALL RIGHTS RESERVED</div>
-<div style='margin-bottom:1em;'>COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY THE TORBELL COMPANY</div>
-<div>PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES</div>
-<div>AT</div>
-<div>THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY, N. Y.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='section'>
-<table class='toc tcenter' summary="" style='margin-bottom:3em'>
-<thead>
-<tr>
-<th colspan='2' style='font-weight:normal;padding-bottom:1em;'>CONTENTS</th>
-</tr>
-</thead>
-<tbody>
-<tr><td class='c1'>I.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chI'>The Stranger’s Book</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>II.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chII'>The Nick o’ Time</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>III.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chIII'>A Thief With Claws</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>IV.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chIV'>The Man in the Bunk</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>V.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chV'>The Stiff Knee</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>VI.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chVI'>Fish for Bait</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>VII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chVII'>The One-eyed Injun</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>VIII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chVIII'>The Adventure of Sabatis</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>IX.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chIX'>The Fight in the Snow</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>X.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chX'>Fear of the Law</a></td></tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;'>
-<div style='font-size:1.4em;'>THE OXBOW WIZARD</div>
-</div>
-<h2 id='chI'><span style='font-size:1.1em'>CHAPTER I</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.8em'>THE STRANGER’S BOOK</span></h2>
-<p>Young Dan Evans lived in the back country on the Oxbow with his parents
-and his brothers and sisters. For as long as he could remember, his
-Uncle Bill Tangler, his mother’s brother, had been an irregular member
-of the household.</p>
-<p>Young Dan obtained a meagre and intermittent schooling between his ninth
-and sixteenth years, at the Bend, three miles below his father’s farm.
-His terms were frequently broken by the weather, the conditions of the
-road and matters of domestic economy. Sometimes Uncle Bill helped him
-with his books. There seemed to be nothing that Uncle Bill did not know
-something about.</p>
-<p>In October of Young Dan’s last year of school, Uncle Bill brought a
-sportsman from New York or London or Chicago or Montreal—from one of
-those outside places, anyhow—to Dan’l Evans’s house. Uncle Bill and the
-sportsman were on their way in to the former’s camp far up beyond the
-Prongs. They arrived, by canoe, just before dusk and were off again half
-an hour after sun-up.</p>
-<p>Young Dan was sent by his mother to the spare bedroom, to make up the
-bed that had been occupied by the sportsman. In five minutes he was due
-to start for school. He had no more than crossed the threshold when he
-exclaimed, “He was smokin’ in bed!” On the chair near the dented pillow,
-about the base of the little lamp, lay two cigar butts and several
-deposits of ashes. Young Dan was distressed, for by what little he had
-seen of the stranger he had considered him to be a very superior person;
-and yet here was proof positive that he was possessed of a habit that
-was looked upon, in that household, as both low and reckless. He
-recollected a few of the words which his mother had addressed to Uncle
-Bill on the occasion of her finding that versatile bachelor smoking in
-bed. “It’s lazy an’ it’s dangerous an’ it ain’t respectable,” she had
-said—among other things.</p>
-<p>Young Dan approached the bed.</p>
-<p>“And him from a city full of street cars and schools,” he murmured.
-“He’d ought to know better.”</p>
-<p>Then something caught his eye and distracted his attention from the
-tell-tale butts and ashes. It was a book with a green cover. It lay open
-and face down on the bright rag-carpet, just beneath the edge of the
-bed. He stared at it for a moment, then snatched it up and thrust it
-inside his coat. At one glance he had seen that it was a story book.
-Good! On the Oxbow story books were almost as rare as ropes of pearls;
-Young Dan was as unacquainted with fiction as a city alley-cat is with
-yellow cream. In this case discovery of the discarded book seemed to
-imply ownership and he appropriated the volume with the intention of
-exploring its pages undisturbed by his younger brothers and sisters who
-would be sure to demand a share in the volume once their eyes fell upon
-its bright cover.</p>
-<p>Young Dan hurried through the task that had been set for him and started
-for the schoolhouse at the Bend, accompanied by Molly, aged eleven, and
-Amos, aged nine. His canvas-wrapped school books and the lunch for three
-were in his bag; and the book with the green cover was still inside his
-coat. Here, against his very ribs, lay an unknown treasure—a treasure of
-valuable information concerning far lands or the stars themselves,
-perhaps, or perhaps a treasure of magical entertainment. How was he to
-make an opportunity for investigating it unobserved?</p>
-<p>Suddenly he thought of a plan. He suggested a race.</p>
-<p>“You two go on to Frenchman’s Spring, and I’ll stop right here,” he
-said. “When you git to the spring, give a holler and keep right on
-a-goin’ as fast as you like and I’ll try to catch you up this side the
-school.”</p>
-<p>“You can’t do it, and you know you can’t,” said Molly. “Even Amos will
-git there ahead of you.”</p>
-<p>“That’s as may be,” replied Young Dan, with dignity.</p>
-<p>So the others left him and hastened forward; and he immediately sat down
-beside the road and fished out the book. He opened it at the title-page
-with fingers a-tremble with eagerness. He began to read, running a
-finger from word to word, from line to line. Here were people of types
-and callings unknown to him, moving in the streets of a city unguessed
-by him, talking in a way foreign to the Oxbow of things unheard of even
-by Uncle Bill; and yet he read in a fever of intensity, with moving lips
-and wrinkled brows. A faint shout of childish voices, touched with a
-note of derision, came back, but it failed to reach the ears of Young
-Dan, whose whole attention was fixed on the magic under his eye. He had
-intended to keep his agreement, but he had completely forgotten Molly
-and Amos; he turned page after page slowly and so at last came to the
-end of the first tale.</p>
-<p>“Gee, but that feller was smart!” he whispered.</p>
-<p>He glanced up, observed the sun and jumped to his feet. He was late for
-school that morning and accepted the reprimand of Miss Carten, the
-teacher, and the jeers of Molly and Amos without turning a hair. At the
-conclusion of the afternoon session he managed to get away by himself
-and read another story.</p>
-<p>With the green-covered book safe in his bosom and the secret of it in
-his heart, a change came over Young Dan. Molly and Amos were the first
-to notice it, but they could make nothing of it.</p>
-<p>One evening, within a week of the passing of the sportsman, he appeared
-at the supper-table when the other members of the family were already in
-their chairs. After eating pancakes for a minute or two in silence, he
-said, “You set the table to-night, hey, Lucy?”</p>
-<p>Lucy, aged six, replied in the affirmative, with evident pride.</p>
-<p>“And Molly fried the pancakes, because Ma was busy writin’ a letter to
-Gran’ma,” continued Young Dan.</p>
-<p>“An’ what of it?” asked his father.</p>
-<p>“Did you spy on us through the window?” asked his mother.</p>
-<p>“No, I was over in the tool-house,” replied the boy; “and when I got
-nigh enough to look in at the window you was all set down to table.”</p>
-<p>“Land’s sakes! How d’you know Lucy set the table?”</p>
-<p>“Because everything’s so close to the edge. She ain’t tall enough to
-push ’em on very far.”</p>
-<p>“But how’d you know Molly fried the pancakes?”</p>
-<p>“Because most every one was cracked across, or messed about, when it was
-bein’ turned. You don’t do that, Ma, with the turner—but Molly always
-tries to turn ’em with a knife.”</p>
-<p>“Sakes alive! That’s the livin’ truth! But how’d you come to figger out
-about me writin’ to Gran’ma?”</p>
-<p>“There’s ink on your finger, Ma; and Gran’ma is the only person you ever
-write to.”</p>
-<p>“Land’s sakes! That’s reel smart.”</p>
-<p>“Seein’s how you’ve growed so all-fired smart so suddent, maybe you’ll
-tell me who went up the old loggin’ road t’other night and robbed me of
-nigh onto a cord of dry stove-wood?” said Dan’l Evans.</p>
-<p>“Maybe I will, Pa. What’ll you give me if I tell you?”</p>
-<p>“Give you? Nothin’! You don’t know, anyhow.”</p>
-<p>“Don’t I know who’s got a horse that’s lame on the nigh fore-foot and a
-wagon with a hind wheel that wobbles? I see the tracks yesterday and
-studied ’em.”</p>
-<p>“You figger it was Tim Swan stole the wood. Well, you’re wrong. I
-suspicioned him myself, the minute I see the wood was gone, because
-Tim’s a born thief an’ lives handy. But it warn’t Tim took the wood. I
-mooched round his place for over an hour an’ couldn’t find a stick of
-it. Maybe it was the tracks of a rabbit you studied so hard.”</p>
-<p>“Maybe it was, Pa. Anyhow, I follered them rabbit-tracks along to Tim’s
-gate and past it and clear on to Widow Craig’s yard; and there’s the
-wood in her wood-shed; and she paid the rabbit three dollars for it.”</p>
-<p>“Well, I never!” exclaimed Mrs. Evans.</p>
-<p>A few days after the frying of the family pancakes by Molly and within
-two weeks after the passing of the sportsman in the care of Uncle Bill
-Tangler, seven of the scholars who attended the little school at the
-Bend came down with the mumps and on Thursday Miss Carten announced that
-the school would close for a week at least—and perhaps longer. The
-Evanses had escaped the epidemic, having been victims of the malady two
-years before. Molly and Amos went racing home, making the echoes repeat
-their whoops of joy. Young Dan walked more soberly behind them, for
-there were many things on his mind and he meant to use his time—while
-the mumps kept the schoolhouse closed—to test several theories that,
-ever since he had read the book with the green cover, had been simmering
-away in the back of his head.</p>
-<p>But Young Dan got no leisure in which to test his theories—at least he
-was not able to try them in the exact manner he had planned—for a
-stirring and mysterious event that roused excitement in the whole Oxbow
-region occurred less than twenty-four hours after the vacation began.
-Miss Carten disappeared. She dropped from sight as completely and as
-mysteriously as if a silent airplane had swooped down at night out of a
-dark sky and had carried her aloft like a great-horned owl stealing a
-birdling. On Friday someone asked for Miss Carten at the Troller farm
-where she boarded.</p>
-<p>“She went to a party over to Cameron’s las’ night an’ took her suitcase
-with her; I thought as how she’d stop the night with Lizzy Cameron,”
-said Mrs. Troller.</p>
-<p>At the Cameron place, two miles away—as it developed later—Miss Carten
-had not been seen. No member of the family, in fact, had heard from her
-in the last twenty-four hours.</p>
-<p>There was excitement on the Oxbow which extended down to the main river.
-Search-parties went into the woods, equipped with shotguns and lanterns
-and stimulants and dinner-horns. Ponds and likely pools were dragged.
-Justices of the peace, rural constables and game-wardens awoke to
-official activity from the Bend on the Oxbow all the way down to Harlow
-on the main stream. The days and nights passed—six of each—without
-bringing any degree of reward or encouragement to the searchers. Nothing
-was seen or heard of Miss Stella Carten, dead or alive, and no
-suspicious characters were discovered in the vicinity of the Bend. The
-lost lady had not been remarked on the road or on the river, nor had she
-called at any isolated farmhouse. She had not been seen at the village
-of Bean’s Mill, at the Oxbow’s mouth. She had not bought a railway
-ticket at Harlow. She had vanished, suitcase in hand.</p>
-<p>Seven days after the disappearance of Miss Carten, at eight o’clock in
-the morning, Young Dan Evans encountered his Uncle Bill on the portage
-round Old Squaw Falls, seven miles upstream from the Evans clearings.
-Young Dan carried nothing but an axe and a small pack. He had left his
-leaky old basket of a bark canoe in the bushes below the falls, for it
-was too heavy for him to shoulder. Uncle Bill, coming from the other end
-of the portage, was bonneted by his long, green canvas canoe. The
-meeting was unexpected to both, but only Uncle Bill expressed
-astonishment.</p>
-<p>“You, Young Dan!” he exclaimed, lowering his canoe to the trail. “What
-brings you ’way up here?”</p>
-<p>“Left my canoe below the carry,” replied the boy. “Just moochin’ round
-lookin’ for something.”</p>
-<p>“Sit down,” said Uncle Bill.</p>
-<p>They sat down, and the man lit his pipe and pushed his big felt hat far
-back from his forehead.</p>
-<p>“Looking for anything in particular?” he asked.</p>
-<p>“Yep. Miss Carten disappeared a week back and I’m sorter lookin’ round
-for her.”</p>
-<p>“You don’t say! Disappeared! And you think she’s maybe up here
-somewheres?”</p>
-<p>“That’s how I’m figgerin’ it out, Uncle Bill. She ain’t downstream,
-anyhow. Some folks think she’s lost in the woods or been killed—but I
-don’t; I reckon she’s run away on business of her own; and as she ain’t
-gone downstream I guess she’s come up.”</p>
-<p>“You don’t say! What makes you think so?”</p>
-<p>“Well, she intended to go somewheres, because she took her suitcase
-packed full, and her money. She wouldn’t do that if she was just meanin’
-to stop a night with Lizzy Cameron. And they ain’t found hide nor hair
-of her down river—but I’ve found her tracks, and more’n her tracks, up
-this way. Yep, I found the tracks two days back, about two miles below
-this, close to the edge of the stream. I knowed ’em by the sharp heels.
-I hunted both sides of the stream for a mile and dug into every pool,
-but didn’t find any more signs. But I found somethin’ else yesterday;
-and now I’m goin’ clear up the Prongs.”</p>
-<p>“What did you find yesterday?”</p>
-<p>Young Dan untied his blanket and disclosed to his uncle’s view a small
-frying-pan, a loaf of bread, a chunk of bacon, a book with a green cover
-and a cardboard box. He placed the box in the other’s hands. It was
-empty but had once contained chocolates.</p>
-<p>“That’s what I found yesterday, just below the falls here,” he said.
-“Miss Carten was a b’ar on chocolates. She et ’em in school.”</p>
-<p>Uncle Bill examined the box and returned it. He scratched his
-clean-shaven chin and regarded his nephew with a contemplative and
-calculating eye.</p>
-<p>“Young Dan, you’re smart,” he said. “And you’re bold as brass. I am
-smart, too, though that is not the general opinion in these parts. The
-trouble with me is that I am shy. You are all for showing how smart you
-are, but I’ve always been for hiding my light under a peck-measure. You
-are doing something now that I couldn’t do. My natural shyness would
-make it impossible for me to follow a young lady who has run away of her
-own free will. That is how you have reasoned it out yourself—of her own
-free will! Yes, I am talking queer—not the way I talk at home. The truth
-is, Young Dan, I’m not the rube your Pa and Ma think I am; but I’ve
-always been too shy to let them know about it. I know more than which
-side to butter my pancakes on and how to pole a canoe.”</p>
-<p>“I guess maybe you do,” admitted Young Dan.</p>
-<p>“Your reasons for thinking Miss Carten was up here seem good to
-me!—good, but not conclusive,” continued Uncle Bill. “If she is the only
-person in this country who ever wears high-heeled shoes and eats
-chocolates out of a box, then you are dead right. Hullo! What’s the
-book?”</p>
-<p>He reached over, picked up the book with the green cover and opened it.</p>
-<p>“This explains your activities,” he continued, smiling. “Come on down
-with me and I’ll go back with you this afternoon—all the way back to my
-camp. And be your Doc Watson, going and coming.”</p>
-<p>“Have you read that book, Uncle Bill?”</p>
-<p>“Yes, years ago—and several more about the same smart feller. You come
-along down with me while I get some grub and mail a few letters, and
-I’ll buy you all the other books first chance I get. And I’ll bring you
-in again.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan shook his head.</p>
-<p>“I’m this far, and I’ll keep right on a-goin’ till I’m ready to quit.”</p>
-<p>Uncle Bill looked at his nephew and saw determination in his face.
-“Well, then,” he said, “I’ll help you around with your canoe, anyway.
-You can pole right up to the camp—if that’s where you are bound for. I’d
-go back with you but for a couple of important letters I have to post.”</p>
-<p>Together they carried Young Dan’s old canoe round the falls. Uncle
-Bill’s lean, dark face wore an unusually thoughtful expression as he
-watched his nephew embark.</p>
-<p>“I’ll tell your Ma that I met you and that you will stay in the camp
-over night,” he said.</p>
-<p>“But maybe I won’t, Uncle Bill,” said Young Dan. “I didn’t calculate on
-stoppin’ upstream over night unless I found somethin’ to keep me—an
-important clue or somethin’. They’re expectin’ me home.”</p>
-<p>“I’ve just been thinking that I might not be able to get back till after
-dark. You promise me that if you go to my camp you’ll stop there until I
-come back, or there’ll be trouble. And the trouble will start now. You
-never saw me in a temper, Young Dan—and you don’t want to. Promise me
-that, or I’ll tie you up and take you downstream with me as helpless as
-a dunnage-bag. I mean it!”</p>
-<p>Young Dan looked at his uncle and saw that he meant it.</p>
-<p>“I promise cross my heart and honest Injun!—but you got to fix it with
-Ma, Uncle Bill,” he said, in a thin voice.</p>
-<p>“Don’t worry about your ma,” replied the man, smiling. “And I’ll get you
-those books. If I find some mail that I have to answer I may not get
-back as soon as I planned. You stay right there at the camp, and don’t
-forget that I am one of the shyest men in the world. Off you go, Young
-Dan—and good luck to you!”</p>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:50%; max-width:700px;'>
-<img src='images/img-021.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chII'><span style='font-size:1.1em'>CHAPTER II</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.8em'>THE NICK O’ TIME</span></h2>
-<p>The boy poled slowly up the bright and lively water. Sometimes where the
-stream was very shallow he got out and waded for fifty yards or more,
-pulling the canoe along with him; occasionally he stopped to examine the
-shore for signs, but all the while his thoughts were busy with his
-uncle. He had seen fire in the eye of that merry, kindly man—and he
-hoped never to see it again. Why had he made him promise to stop at the
-camp over night? A vague but frightful suspicion possessed him. Uncle
-Bill had hinted at a mystery concerning his character and pursuits. What
-had he meant? He had said that he was something other, something
-smarter, than people believed him to be around these parts, and that he
-hid his light under a peck-measure because he was shy. Now what had he
-meant by all that? And why had he seemed so queer about his camp? Was he
-a criminal of some sort—and was the secret of his dark career hidden in
-the camp?</p>
-<p>Young Dan remembered that he had never known his uncle to be without a
-roll of paper money in his pocket; but what he did to earn money beyond
-guiding a sportsman now and then, was more than the boy knew. Was it
-possible that this mild and entertaining uncle, who had two ways of
-talking and who often vanished from the Oxbow country for months at a
-time, was a robber? And might it not be that he sometimes committed
-robbery with violence? He always carried a pistol in the woods. A
-struggle might lead to a murder now and then! Miss Carten had been up
-here with her money!</p>
-<p>Young Dan worked his way slowly up the swift and shallow stream and at
-noon he stopped to fry some bacon, but spent most of the interval
-thinking. For two hours he sat there in the warm sunshine with his back
-against a tree and his eyes gazing off into space. His heart was heavy
-and numb with sinister suspicions of Uncle Bill. He had always admired
-and liked that amiable and versatile relative; but he would go on and
-learn the worst. When he finally went back to his canoe he realized that
-he would have to hurry to reach the camp above the Prongs by sundown.</p>
-<p>There were no clearings or human habitations on the Oxbow above Old
-Squaw Falls. The voice of the stream was lonely; the cries of birds in
-the woods were like the very voice of desolation; and the long, yellow
-day was as lonely as a deserted house. The sun was close to the wooded
-hills when Young Dan reached the Prongs. He continued his journey up the
-Right Prong. It was already evening in that narrow, tree-crowded valley.
-The water was so shallow there, and the bed of the stream was so broken
-with mossy boulders, that he ran the canoe ashore and waded forward.</p>
-<p>The sun was far below Young Dan’s narrowed field of vision, and the deep
-track of the stream was full of brown twilight when he reached the foot
-of the path that led back through the woods to Uncle Bill’s camp. The
-plaintive cry of a whippoorwill rang from an umber gloom of cedars; an
-owl hooted dismally in the tall spruces beyond; a fox barked on the
-darkening hillside. Night-hawks swooped on twanging wings high overhead
-against a sky of dulling green, and bats wove their flickering black
-threads of flight in the deepening dusk of the valley. Behind and
-through and over all lurked the spirit of the wilderness, watchful,
-waiting, still—a spirit of mystery and menace.</p>
-<p>Young Dan’s heart was shaken by a vague dread. He felt fear as he had
-never felt it before, at any hour of the day or night, when alone in the
-woods. He started along the thread of path that was worn among the roots
-of the underbrush. He gripped his axe close to the blade and questioned
-the gulfs of shadow to his right and left with straining eyes. So he
-advanced for fifteen or twenty yards; and then, suddenly, he remembered
-the character in which he had undertaken his journey. He knelt, struck a
-match, cupped the flame in his hands and held it close to the trodden
-earth.</p>
-<p>There was a track, fresh and deep, that he had not expected to find—the
-track of big soles thickly studded with blunted calks. Uncle Bill had
-been in moccasins that day; he never wore calked boots in the woods; and
-these tracks pointed only one way—forward.</p>
-<p>After a moment of reflection, Young Dan continued to advance. He was
-puzzled. When he reached the edge of the little clearing he saw that the
-camp was occupied. Yellow lamp-light streamed from its one small window.
-He hesitated, staring forward and around, then dropped on his hands and
-knees and crawled from the shelter of the woods. His right hand still
-gripped the axe close up to the heavy blade. So he moved among mossy
-hummocks and blackened stumps toward the lighted window, pausing often
-to listen and peer about him. As he drew near he noticed that the door
-was shut; and as he drew still nearer he heard the murmur of a voice
-from within. He crawled close to the log wall of the cabin, directly
-beneath the open window, and crouched there motionless.</p>
-<p>One voice was talking within—a thick, unpleasant voice that he did not
-know. And this is what it was saying:</p>
-<p>“So he’ll be home to-night, will he? He’ll be home <i>to-morrow</i>, that’s
-when he’ll be home. An’ here I be, an’ you’re goin’ to hand over all the
-money you’ve got tucked away in this shack. Fust of all ye was sassy an’
-now ye’re sulky. Have a drink! This here is good stuff an’ powerful hard
-to git these days. Here, pour yerself a drink an’ swaller it down—or
-I’ll open yer mouth an’ make ye take it.”</p>
-<p>“If my husband were here he’d open that door and kick you out!” replied
-another voice—a voice known to Young Dan. “If you belonged to these
-parts and knew him you’d go now before he comes back and kills you, you
-drunken brute!”</p>
-<p>“D’ye reckon to scare me?” sneered the other. “Then ye gotter think of
-somethin’ bigger an’ better than this here Mister William Tangler ye’re
-yappin’ about. I reckon I’ll stop right here till he comes home, and
-then ye’ll know who’s the best man of the two of us. But ye ain’t took
-yer drink yet! Take it, d’ye hear! It’ll loosen yer tongue.”</p>
-<p>The dazed boy beneath the open window heard a clink of glass, a scream
-and sounds of scuffling. He raised himself and looked into the cabin. A
-lamp stood among dishes on the table in the middle of the little room.
-Beyond the table, against the wall, a man struggled with a woman. The
-man had his back to the window. He was big and a stranger. The woman was
-Miss Carten.</p>
-<p>Young Dan’s quick eyes spotted a wooden rolling-pin on a corner of the
-table. He laid his axe on the ground and went through the window as
-quick and as noiseless as thought. Two swift and silent steps brought
-him to the corner of the table. He grasped a handle of the rolling-pin,
-advanced two more paces, judged the distance, swung his arm and struck.
-One strike meant out in that game.</p>
-<p>Young Dan bound the unknown and unconscious bushwhacker with thongs from
-a pair of snowshoes on the wall and placed a folded blanket under his
-sore head and let him lie where he had fallen. Then he sat and watched
-his new aunt make coffee and warm up a panful of beans for him. She told
-him of her secret courtship by Uncle Bill, and of their flight and
-marriage by a parson friend whom Bill had sworn to secrecy—all because
-William Tangler was the most bashful man in the world. She told of how
-Bill, who was thought to be so idle and aimless by the people on the
-Oxbow, was in reality an expert in the science of forestry and in the
-employ of the Government as such. Bill had gone out that morning to mail
-an official report and also to mail his young bride’s resignation as
-teacher in the little school at the Bend. In a few days they would go
-out to civilization together.</p>
-<p>Every now and then Miss Carten thanked Young Dan for saving her from the
-drunken bushwhacker and she said so many complimentary things that her
-visitor’s face turned the color of ripe choke-cherries. She said among
-other things that she believed he was almost as clever and brave as his
-uncle.</p>
-<p>“If I were Uncle Bill I wouldn’t of been so shy,” said Young Dan, who
-felt greatly relieved by the outcome of his activities and very proud of
-himself.</p>
-<p>When the coffee and beans were ready, and the big ruffian on the floor
-was beginning to grunt and sigh, Young Dan remarked, “I guess Mister
-Holmes couldn’t of done that job much slicker himself.” Suddenly he
-cocked his head to listen. “I can hear Uncle Bill coming up the trail,”
-he said. “He offered to be my Doctor Watson, but I didn’t need him.”</p>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:50%; max-width:500px;'>
-<img src='images/img-027.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chIII'><span style='font-size:1.1em'>CHAPTER III</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.8em'>A THIEF WITH CLAWS</span></h2>
-<p>Young Dan Evans was done with school; and he had almost decided to hire
-out with Josh Tod, as a “swamper” in the lumberwoods, when a letter from
-Uncle Bill Tangler caused him to change his plans for the winter. The
-letter, which came from Mr. Tangler’s office in a distant city, ran as
-follows:</p>
-<div style='margin:1em 10%;'>
-<p style='text-indent:0'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Dear Young Dan</span>:</p>
-<p>Now that the frost is on the punkin (as a leading poet has remarked) and
-the swamps back of your pasture are frozen so hard that no woodcock can
-stick his bill into the mud any more this year (a fact overlooked by
-said leading poet) and folk on the Oxbow are frying fresh pork with
-their buckwheat pancakes and making sausages and fattening turkeys, my
-thoughts are with you frequently and enviously. It is a great country,
-Young Dan, and a grand season of the year for him who has wild blood in
-his veins and unimpaired organs of digestion. I should like fine to be
-away up beyond the Prongs this very morning, putting an edge to an
-appetite, instead of sitting here at this expensive desk trying to look
-like the only real know-it-all in the Government’s service; but now that
-I have a wife who needs two new hats and an evening frock, and a furnace
-that eats up coal, I must sit in tight and steady to this lady-like job.
-But what about you, Young Dan? You have exhausted the educational
-resources of the Bend; you haven’t a wife or a furnace; so why don’t you
-go up beyond the Prongs? You may use the camp as if you owned it. As for
-grub, you’ll find enough there of everything except bacon and condensed
-milk to last till spring—enough for two. So you had better go into
-partnership with someone—with old Andy Mace, for choice. He is an honest
-man and was a mighty hunter and fur-taker in his day. You will find half
-a dozen traps in your own garret and a lot more in the loft of the camp,
-all in good shape. You are welcome to them, and to my rifle as well, and
-my snowshoes if they are better than your own. Help yourself. That is a
-great country for fox and mink and lynx. You should have a prosperous
-winter—so go to it, with your Uncle Bill’s blessing.</p>
-<p>P. S. Here is a little check. Take it to Amos Bissing at the Bend and
-you’ll find him willing to swap a few dollars for it, I guess. Your Aunt
-Stella sends her love to you and will mail you another book about Mr. S.
-Holmes as soon as she gets it ready for the post.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Young Dan was delighted with the letter. He showed it to his parents.
-Dan’l Evans didn’t think very highly of it as a specimen of epistolary
-art, though he had no objections to make to the advice and suggestions
-which it contained.</p>
-<p>“Bill’s reckoned a smart man, an’ educated at that, but if this here
-ain’t the foolishest writ letter ever I read, then I’ll eat it,” he
-said. “I guess them Forestry people have kinder over-rated him. That’s
-the Gover’ment for ye, and always has been. Let a man have a slick way
-with him, an’ slithers of easy talk, an’ the Gover’ment gives him a job
-of work with nothin’ to do. This here’s a plumb foolish letter, anyhow.
-Take this here about his indigestion now, an’ this talk about the
-woodcock! What d’ye reckon he means? I ain’t had much education, but——”</p>
-<p>“Ye’re right there, Dan’l Evans,” interrupted Young Dan’s mother, who
-had held a very high opinion of her brother’s abilities ever since he
-had become a successful citizen of the great outside world. “Much
-education! No, indeed. Bill’s clever, an’ always was—an’ I, for one,
-always knew it. I always knew he should be clever, anyhow, seein’ he was
-a Tangler; an’ if I ever acted crusty with him it was his own fault for
-hidin’ his light from me in a bushel-bag, so to speak. He didn’t write
-that letter to you anyhow, Dan’l Evans, so what you think about it don’t
-matter a mite to my brother Bill nor anybody.”</p>
-<p>This discussion concerning the letter from a purely literary standpoint
-did not disturb Young Dan in the least, for neither of his parents
-offered any objection to his acceptance of Uncle Bill Tangler’s offers
-and advice. He set out first thing in the morning to put the proposition
-before old Andy Mace, who lived three miles below the Bend, in a log
-house in a small clearing. It was a morning of sun and frost. The road,
-recently deep with mud, was hard as iron; the sky was bluer than at
-midsummer; a flock of geese went over, high up, winging tirelessly
-southward; and there was a skim of black ice along the lips of the
-Oxbow. It was a grand morning to be a-wing or a-foot and Young Dan
-pictured Uncle Bill Tangler seated at his desk in the distant city with
-a twinge of pity. Though there was no wind, red and yellow leaves of
-maple and birch snapped their stems loose in some mysterious way and
-circled down to the frosty moss, and the sounds of their falling came
-out of the woods on both sides of the road like a soft whisper.</p>
-<p>Young Dan found Andy Mace splitting stove-wood beside the back-door of
-his primitive habitation. Andy had lived a great many years—eighty or
-perhaps as many as eighty-five—and most of them rough. His joints were
-not as supple as they had been thirty years ago, but he was still an
-able man and a first-class hand at all forms of sylvan activity.
-Experience had taught him the easiest way of doing everything well, and
-his inherent and acquired wisdom saw to it that he made the most of that
-knowledge. This fact was demonstrated even in his present employment.
-The round sticks of dry maple and birch fell apart under the lightest
-strokes of his axe in a manner that suggested magic to Young Dan.</p>
-<p>“You do that slick, Mr. Mace,” said the young man.</p>
-<p>“Well, I’d ought to, at my time o’ life,” replied Andy, straightening
-his back slowly. “I’ve been splittin’ wood nigh onto a hundred years,
-off and on, so it’s no more’n to be expected that I’d be a purty slick
-hand at the job by now.”</p>
-<p>“I got a letter here from Uncle Bill Tangler, and if you’ll read it I
-won’t have to tell you what’s in it,” said Young Dan.</p>
-<p>“That sounds reasonable,” replied the old man, taking the letter and
-seating himself on the chopping-block.</p>
-<p>He fished a pair of spectacles from a hip-pocket and donned them with
-great care. He chuckled now and again as he read the letter.</p>
-<p>“Smart boy. Bill Tangler,” he said at last. “Knows timber and folks, he
-does; and I larned him purty nigh all he knows about timber. We’ve
-cruised the woods together months on end, him and me.”</p>
-<p>“Will you be my partner, Mr. Mace, and go up to Uncle Bill’s camp with
-me to trap fur all winter?”</p>
-<p>“I sure will, Young Dan. I ain’t got hoof nor claw o’ livestock, and
-this old house is used to bein’ empty, so I cal’late we’d best start
-upstream bright and early to-morrow mornin’. I’ll call at yer place
-about seven o’clock, if that’ll suit ye.”</p>
-<p>“It suits me fine.”</p>
-<p>“So we’re pardners, you and me. What I got in here will just about
-offset the camp.” Andy pressed a finger-tip to his forehead. “We’ll
-figger out the cost o’ grub come spring, and I’ll pay ye my half in good
-green money. Folks hereabouts name me for a rich miser behind my back,
-as ye’ve heared with yer own ears like enough, Young Dan; and that’s
-because I’m a bach, and live in a log house, and let my whiskers grow.
-Well, boy, they’re dead wrong about me bein’ a miser. I’d smoke ten-cent
-seegars if they tasted as good to me as a pipe, and it ain’t the cost o’
-city life that keeps me from movin’ to Harlow or Centreville or to Noo
-York. No, sir-ee! I live here like I do because it is the place and the
-way that suits my tastes; and I’d still do it if it cost me twenty
-dollars every week. You ask Bill Tangler. We took a ja’nt once to the
-Sportsman’s Show in Noo York, him and me together. Ask yer Uncle Bill
-about me bein’ a miser.”</p>
-<p>“Folks round here didn’t have Uncle Bill sized up just right, either,”
-returned Young Dan. “I guess the most of them don’t see much more than
-what hits them plumb in the eye.”</p>
-<p>The old man chuckled delightedly at that.</p>
-<p>“Come inside and have a go at my ginger cookies,” he invited. “I’ve been
-makin’ ginger cookies nigh onto a hundred years, off and on, and now I
-just naturally turn out the best ye ever tasted.”</p>
-<p>By the time Young Dan started on his homeward journey, which wasn’t
-until after dinner, he was full of admiration for his partner—not to
-mention pumpkin pie, Washington pie and ginger cookies.</p>
-<p>Old Andy Mace came to the Evans’ place on foot next morning, at the
-stroke of the hour, with a pack of formidable proportions on his
-shoulders and a rifle in his hand. He found Young Dan ready for him,
-with the thin ice broken from the edge of the stream and Bill Tangler’s
-canoe launched and loaded. Young Dan took the post of honor and effort
-aft and plied the long pole. They reached Squaw Falls by half-past ten,
-made the portage, lunched and reembarked by noon. Old Andy Mace took the
-pole then, for three hours. The water, high and swift, humped itself
-over submerged mossy boulders. Andy pushed the loaded canoe up steadily
-and at a good pace, with no more show of effort than an ordinary person
-would make in cutting tobacco for a pipe. The sun went down before they
-reached the Prongs. It was night, with stars in the sky and an aching
-cold over everything, when they unlocked the door of Uncle Bill
-Tangler’s camp.</p>
-<p>While Andy lit two fires, one on the open hearth and the other in the
-little cook-stove, and shook out blankets to air, Young Dan carried the
-outfit up from the landing. Then, by lantern-light and firelight, they
-examined the provisions which Bill Tangler had left behind.</p>
-<p>“Jumpin’ Josh-ee-phat, look-a here!” exclaimed Andy Mace. “Here’s a box
-been bust open—box o’ prunes—and the prunes took. There’s some dried
-apples gone, too, and some flour, I reckon. Take a look at the windy,
-Young Dan.”</p>
-<p>The window was shuttered on the outside when the camp was not occupied.
-The shutter was of plank, hinged to the window-frame at the top and,
-when secured, fastened at the bottom by a hasp and a padlock. But now
-the shutter was not fastened. The long staple had been wrenched from the
-tough plank and now hung uselessly from the log window-sill, together
-with the hasp and padlock.</p>
-<p>“A b’ar,” said Andy. “Trust a b’ar to sniff out prunes.”</p>
-<p>“A bear wouldn’t take flour,” said Young Dan.</p>
-<p>“Ye can’t never tell what a b’ar will do, for b’ars are natural born
-jokers,” replied Andy. “I’ve knowed the critters for nigh onto a hundred
-years, and that’s my opinion of them.”</p>
-<p>“It wasn’t done yesterday, nor even the day before,” said the youth.
-“The prunes he’s left in the box are pretty dry. And he has had a go at
-the molasses, too. He’s left the stopper out, see; and look at the track
-of dried molasses down the front of the jug. It’s a wonder he didn’t
-upset it. And he’s ripped the bean-bag open, darn his hide! But how come
-it he didn’t upset the jug? Maybe it wasn’t a bear at all, Mr. Mace. A
-man could have done it, I guess.”</p>
-<p>“It be a reg’lar b’ar trick,” replied Andy. “He didn’t upset the jug o’
-molasses, that’s true—and I’m glad he didn’t—but all that shows is some
-b’ars is smarter or more careful nor others. He h’isted the jug in his
-two paws and took a swig, that’s what he done. Look at the beans he’s
-chawed and spit out on the floor. D’ye reckon a man would do that?”</p>
-<p>“Some men are smarter and more careful than others,” replied Young Dan.</p>
-<p>They closed the inner glazed sash of the window and nailed a strong bar
-of wood across it. Then they cooked and ate their supper and retired to
-their bunks, for they were bone-tired. The affair of the thieving bear
-would keep very well until morning.</p>
-<p>They awoke bright and early. Young Dan hopped from his bunk in a lively
-and limber manner, feeling nothing of yesterday’s exertions; but Andy
-Mace grunted a few times as he sat up in his blankets and a few more
-times as he lowered his feet to the floor.</p>
-<p>“I ain’t as soupel as I was eighty years ago,” he said.</p>
-<p>When Young Dan opened the door the cold fairly caught him by the nose.
-He made a quick trip across the little clearing and down the steep path
-to the landing-place, with two pails in his hands. He found the shallow
-Right Prong shelled in black ice from shore to shore save for a few
-little air-holes. He had to break the ice with a stone before he could
-fill his pails. Then he took a quick and splashy bath right there. Wow!
-Wow! But after it he felt as if he could eat his weight in bacon and
-pancakes and fight his weight in wild-cats.</p>
-<p>They went out and examined the ground beneath the window after
-breakfast. Frosts and rains had done much to wipe out the tracks of the
-thief, but they found a few unmistakable claw-marks here and there. Mr.
-Mace put his white beard to the ground in the intensity of his scrutiny;
-but the best he could do was trace the marks for a distance of seven or
-eight paces from the window.</p>
-<p>“I cal’late he’s denned himself up somewheres long before this, and lays
-sleepin’ snug as ye please on a bellyful o’ Bill Tangler’s superior
-prunes,” he said. “He’s a big feller, jedgin’ by the claws. I’d like
-fine to happen onto his den.”</p>
-<p>“Same here,” replied Young Dan. “I’d sure like to have a look at him. A
-bear as smart as that one ought to be in a circus or teachin’ school.”</p>
-<p>They cruised the woods from sunrise to sunset for the next three days,
-choosing the likeliest country for their lines of traps. They spent four
-more days in setting the traps exactly to Andy’s taste in four lines of
-about equal length radiating from the camp. By that time everything that
-wasn’t kept indoors or underground, or that wasn’t clothed in wool, fur,
-or feathers, was frozen stiff. The Right Prong was roofed strongly over,
-except in one spot where the swift water kept itself an open
-breathing-place in some mysterious way. The ice was strong to the very
-edge of that hole; and, to save himself the trouble of keeping another
-hole chopped clear, Young Dan always walked out to it for his morning
-and evening pails of water. There the little river flashed always bright
-and naked and untouched, sliding over mossy rocks as green as in summer.</p>
-<p>There were other and lesser streams and half a dozen small ponds within
-the circle of Andy’s and Young Dan’s operations, and these were all
-frozen hard.</p>
-<p>Andy arranged the routine of the everyday tasks. They breakfasted before
-sunrise, by lantern-light. Then Young Dan set out on one of the crooked
-six-mile strings of traps, outfitted with rifle, axe, and frozen bait,
-and a pocketful of sandwiches in case of need. Andy cleared away the
-breakfast things and fell to the ever-urgent task of rustling wood; and
-between bouts of chopping and splitting he prepared the dinner and
-sometimes even pulled off such extra stunts as a panful of ginger
-cookies or a pie. Young Dan was usually home, with or without a pelt or
-two, by half-past twelve or one o’clock. After dinner, Andy armed
-himself and lit out on another six-mile string, and Young Dan washed the
-dinner dishes and rustled wood. Andy was usually back, with luck, in
-time to cook supper. In the evening they gave the skins whatever
-attention was necessary and the old partner talked and the young one
-gave ear. In this way, each of the four lines of traps was visited every
-other day.</p>
-<p>Snow descended upon that wilderness on the twentieth of November and
-continued to descend for two whole days and nights. It came to stay.
-Owing to the storm, the partners lost touch with their traps for two
-days. The third day was still and clear. The forest was fairly
-smothered, aloft and below. Young Dan set out at the first streak of
-daylight, sinking deep on his wide snowshoes at every step. He traveled
-slowly and experienced a good deal of difficulty in locating some of the
-traps. It was noon when he got to the end of the line, empty-handed. He
-rested there and ate half of his sandwiches of bread and cold bacon. He
-had tramped himself a nest in the snow, and made a little fire of dry
-twigs for the appearance of comfort; and now, having eaten, he continued
-to sit on his snowshoes and feed the fire. He was about to leave this
-retreat and set out on the back-trail when a muffled disturbance of the
-snow-heaped brush on his right attracted his attention. He glanced up in
-time to see a human figure issue from the tangle, its head held low and
-its shoulders hunched against the showers of dislodged snow.</p>
-<p>Young Dan was astonished at the sight, but he did nothing to show it.
-The intruder shook himself free of snow, halted and stood straight. He
-was on snowshoes and carried a rifle in a blanket stocking. Young Dan
-noticed that his rough jacket and trousers were old and patched and that
-they appeared to be several sizes too large for him.</p>
-<p>“Have you anything to eat?” asked the stranger, in a voice that puzzled
-the trapper. “If you have, please give me a bite.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan produced the remaining sandwiches from his pocket and handed
-them over without a word. The stranger crouched by the little fire and
-bit off a very small corner of frozen bread and frosty bacon.</p>
-<p>“I was watchin’ you quite a spell,” he said. “When I seen you was only a
-young feller I wasn’t scart.”</p>
-<p>“Only a young feller!” exclaimed Young Dan. “Is that so? Well, what of
-it? You don’t look like much of a man yerself.”</p>
-<p>“Which I ain’t, nor don’t pretend to be,” replied the stranger,
-swallowing hard on the chilly fare. “I wisht you had yer teakittle
-along. No, I ain’t much of a man. I’m a married woman, with a husband
-sick a-bed not five mile from here, an’ my name is Mrs. May Conley—an’
-me an’ Jim Conley an’ the younguns are jist about starved, if you want
-to know. Whereabouts is yer camp from here?”</p>
-<p>“About six mile from this, dead south. I got a partner there, old Andy
-Mace; and we’ve got quite a store of grub, of one kind and
-another—condensed milk, too.”</p>
-<p>“We ain’t got a cent to buy grub with. Jim was away till a few weeks
-back, an’ then he come home to us without a dollar of his summer wages
-an’ went sick.”</p>
-<p>“That’ll be all right about the money; but what ails yer husband?”</p>
-<p>Mrs. Conley’s answer to that was a cheerless smile and a shake of the
-head.</p>
-<p>“I suppose you shoot fresh meat, anyhow,” continued Young Dan, feeling
-embarrassed. “You got a rifle, I see.”</p>
-<p>“If you mean deer an’ the like by fresh meat, then I tell you I don’t
-shoot it—but I’ve shot at it a few times,” replied the woman. “It’s a
-sight too knowing an’ lively for me to hit.”</p>
-<p>“Tell you what I’ll do, m’am,” said Young Dan. “You come to this very
-spot at ten o’clock to-morrow and you’ll find me here with some grub.
-Will tea and canned milk and sugar and fifteen pounds of white flour be
-any use to you?”</p>
-<p>“Will spring water quench thirst?” returned the woman, her sad face
-brightening. “But can’t I have it sooner?—some of that there milk,
-anyhow? Young man, my two babies was cryin’ with hungry pains when I
-started out; an’ the biggest of ’em isn’t as long as this here
-snowshoe.”</p>
-<p>“If I had it here I’d give it you right now—but all our grub’s back at
-our camp, six mile away. Will you go along with me and carry away what
-you’re in most need of, m’am?”</p>
-<p>“Will a duck swim?”</p>
-<p>Young Dan meant well, but he did not realize that the mother of two
-children who cry with hunger is almost sure to be weak for want of
-food—he did not realize it until he heard a soft thud behind him and
-turned to find his companion flat on her face in the snow. He raised her
-to a sitting position and pulled her back until she rested against a
-small spruce. He built a big fire in the trail and cut many fir boughs
-to serve her as a couch and covering. He removed her snowshoes.</p>
-<p>“Guess I’m all in—till I have a cup of tea,” she said.</p>
-<p>“I’ll fetch a kettle,” replied Young Dan. “You stop right there till I
-get back.”</p>
-<p>He made the remaining three miles to the camp on Right Prong in record
-time. He told what he knew of Mrs. Conley’s story briefly to Andy, while
-they made up a small pack of provisions in a blanket. He attached a
-small frying-pan and a kettle to the pack.</p>
-<p>“Best go all the way home with her, if ye ain’t clean tuckered out,”
-said the old man. “I cal’late it wouldn’t be a bad idee to have a look
-at this here Jim Conley, for he don’t sound to me like a desirable
-neighbor nor a valued citizen. You kin size him up while yer restin’,
-and take yer time on the home-trip. It shapes for a fine night.”</p>
-<p>“I’ll do that,” said Young Dan.</p>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:50%; max-width:700px;'>
-<img src='images/img-041.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chIV'><span style='font-size:1.1em'>CHAPTER IV</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.8em'>THE MAN IN THE BUNK</span></h2>
-<p>The sun was on the edge of the western hills when he got back to Mrs.
-Conley. She expressed relief at seeing him and wonder at seeing him so
-soon. He built up the fire, melted snow and made tea. He also fried a
-little bacon and bread. Between them they emptied tea-kettle and
-frying-pan; and the woman was greatly revived by the food and drink.</p>
-<p>The woman led the way northward and westward to her home. The distance
-struck Young Dan as being nearer seven miles than five. The small window
-of the cabin glowed a dim yellow. Mrs. Conley pushed open the door and
-entered without waiting to remove her snowshoes. Young Dan kicked off
-his snowshoes and had a foot on the threshold when he heard an
-unpleasant voice shout from somewhere within, demanding to know where
-the woman had been and why she had stayed away so long and why she
-hadn’t brought some food home with her. A few oaths gave color to the
-questions.</p>
-<p>Young Dan crossed the threshold, kicked the door shut with a heel and
-lowered his pack to the floor. In one comprehensive glance he saw the
-woman stooped to two clinging children, a man lying in a bunk, a failing
-fire on a rough hearth, a smoky lantern on a table and a worn bear-skin
-on the floor. He had never seen a less cheering interior.</p>
-<p>The man in the bunk sat up and stared at Young Dan. His shoulders looked
-very broad in the dim light.</p>
-<p>“Who’s thar?” he exclaimed. “Who’s that?”</p>
-<p>“Ye needn’t be scart,” said the woman, with a tang of scorn in her
-voice. “It’s a feller from the camp over on Right Prong. He’s fetched in
-some grub for us, in the kindness of his heart.”</p>
-<p>The man immediately lay back without another word.</p>
-<p>Young Dan felt indignant, so much so that his indignation amounted to
-anger—anger that felt like a lump of something uncomfortably hard and
-hot in his chest. He wanted to say something sharp to the big fellow in
-the bunk—but he didn’t know what to say. So, without a word, he untied
-his blanket, filled an arm with the packages of food and carried all to
-the table.</p>
-<p>“No water and no wood,” said Mrs. Conley, looking at the bunk.</p>
-<p>Young Dan went outside and found a small pile of wood beside the door,
-under a roof of snow. He carried an armful into the shack; and as he
-laid the sticks beside the hearth he noticed how irregularly and
-unskilfully the severed ends were cut. Even a sick man accustomed to the
-use of an axe would not have hacked the wood so clumsily. He knew it was
-not the work of the man in the bunk. He then took up an empty pail and
-enquired the whereabouts of the water-hole. Mrs. Conley told him that
-there was a spring just back of the shack and a path leading to it which
-he couldn’t miss. She was right; and in a minute he was back with the
-water. As he set the pail down on a bench near the door he looked at the
-man in the bunk, the hot spot of anger and indignation still glowing in
-his chest. The man’s eyes met his for a moment—but he saw more than the
-fellow’s eyes. He crossed the narrow floor to the bunk.</p>
-<p>“What’s the matter with you, anyhow?” he asked.</p>
-<p>“Matter with me, d’ye say?” returned the fellow in the blankets. “I’m
-sick, that’s what’s the matter. Can’t ye see?”</p>
-<p>Young Dan stooped swiftly and drew a high-shouldered, square-faced black
-bottle from beneath the edge of the bunk. There was a sound of clinking
-glass as he brought it forth as if it were in contact with receptacles
-of a like nature and material. He held it aloft.</p>
-<p>“Yes, I can see all right,” he cried. “And I guess I’ve got hold of a
-few doses of your medicine.”</p>
-<p>“Well, what of it?” demanded the other, his voice at once savage and
-anxious.</p>
-<p>Young Dan returned the bottle to its place; and in so doing he caught
-sight of some other articles of interest beneath the bunk. More bottles
-were there, both full and empty—but there were other things of even
-greater interest to the youth. He stood up, however, without word or
-sign of comment.</p>
-<p>Mrs. Conley, who was busily engaged in feeding the children with
-condensed milk diluted with hot water, paid keen attention to Young
-Dan’s words and actions, but said nothing.</p>
-<p>Young Dan moved away from the bunk and bestowed a brief but enquiring
-glance upon the worn bear-skin on the floor. That article had struck him
-as looking queer, somehow or other, when he had first set eyes on it;
-and now he knew it to be queer. It had grown on a big animal and had
-evidently been a fine pelt in its day. The big, wide head was there—not
-the skull, but the complete skin of head, to the tip of the nose. Yes,
-the head was all there—but all four paws were missing!</p>
-<p>Young Dan turned again to the man in the bunk. “Say the word, and I’ll
-get a doctor in to see you,” he said. “Or we’ll haul you out on a sled,
-if you ain’t too sick to be shifted about a bit.”</p>
-<p>“I don’t want no cussed doctor p’isonin’ me,” cried the invalid. “Mind
-yer own business, will ye, an’ leave me be to look after mine? I’m able
-for it, without yer help.”</p>
-<p>“All right,” retorted Young Dan, his voice shaking with anger and scorn.
-“Well, then, look after yer own business if you’re so able. Get out of
-bed and get to work. I know all I need to about you. I know enough about
-you to run you out of these woods and into jail; and that’s the
-identical thing I intend to do if you don’t get busy. So cut out the gin
-and the bunk and cut into the wood-pile. D’ye get me?”</p>
-<p>The man did not answer. The woman continued to feed the children in
-silence. Young Dan glared at the bunk a little longer, then fetched his
-snowshoes and put them on, and took up his rifle, axe and blanket.</p>
-<p>“I’m off,” he said. “But I’ll be back in a few days, to see how you’re
-working, Jim Conley. I’ve got your measure, and don’t you forget it!
-Goodnight to you, m’am.”</p>
-<p>He had not gone far from the miserable cabin before the woman came
-running after him. He halted.</p>
-<p>“What is it ye know about him?” she asked, anxiously.</p>
-<p>“I can guess more’n I know, but I reckon what I know is plenty,” he
-replied. “He broke into my Uncle Bill Tangler’s camp a few months back
-an’ stole some grub, with the paws an’ claws of a big bear on his hands
-an’ feet. Guess he reckoned he was smart.”</p>
-<p>“How d’ye know that?”</p>
-<p>“I’d figgered out it wasn’t a bear long ago; and to-night I spied the
-skinned paws under the bunk. It was easy.”</p>
-<p>“Jim wasn’t in the woods when that happened,” she whispered. “It was me
-broke into the camp an’ stole the grub. It was me who cut the paws off
-that old skin an’ used ’em to fool ye with. Jim was away out to the
-settlements that day.”</p>
-<p>“You, ma’am!”</p>
-<p>“That’s Gospel-true. The babies and me hadn’t a bite to eat but some
-rusty pork. We needed the food bad. It was the first time I ever stole
-anything.”</p>
-<p>“Then why didn’t you upset the molasses jug, like a bear would do? A
-bear would of upset it an’ then licked the molasses off the floor. If
-you’d done it that way, m’am—upset the jug, I mean—I wouldn’t of
-suspicioned the thief wasn’t a bear; and so I wouldn’t of examined the
-shutter and spotted how the staple had been pried off with the blade of
-an axe; and so I wouldn’t of taken any stock in the old paws under the
-bunk.”</p>
-<p>“I took enough molasses to fill the bottle I had along with me. I hadn’t
-the heart to upset the jug an’ waste what I didn’t want. But I kinder
-thought that’s what a bear would do.”</p>
-<p>“Well, that’s all right, anyhow,” said Young Dan. “I don’t blame you a
-mite for rustlin’ grub for your babies; but if you don’t make that big
-bluffer get to work, I’ll land him in jail or bust tryin’—and you can
-bet I won’t bust, m’am!”</p>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:50%; max-width:500px;'>
-<img src='images/img-047.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chV'><span style='font-size:1.1em'>CHAPTER V</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.8em'>THE STIFF KNEE</span></h2>
-<p>“Well, I found that bear,” said Young Dan Evans to Andy when he arrived
-at the camp; and then he gave a full account of his experiences with the
-Conley family.</p>
-<p>“You done dead right!” exclaimed Andy Mace, at the conclusion of the
-story. “You got brains and use ’em, I do believe; and that’s more’n can
-be said about most folks nowadays. What size was this here Jim Conley?”</p>
-<p>“Big. Over six foot high, I guess, and hefty—and no more sick-abed nor
-you or me.”</p>
-<p>“What would ye’ve done if he’d clum outer the bunk an’ lammed ye one?”</p>
-<p>“I’d of lammed him two or three back—maybe four.”</p>
-<p>“I reckon ye would. I was jist sich another at yer age, Young Dan—always
-up an’ doin’, always ready to fight my own weight in minks or men, and
-yet always a thinker an’ a bit of scholard, too.”</p>
-<p>“But I don’t go round looking for fights, Mr. Mace. I’m peaceable enough
-by nature.”</p>
-<p>“Yes, in course. It’s the same with me. There never was a more peaceable
-citizen on the Oxbow nor Andy Mace—but nobody had to tromp on the tails
-o’ my snowshoes more’n twice to fetch me round with fists in both
-hands.”</p>
-<p>A week passed before the partners on Right Prong heard or saw anything
-more of the Conleys. It was a busy week with them, for trails had to be
-beaten out anew in the deep snow and a fresh supply of bait had to be
-obtained for the traps; and, as if these tasks were not enough, Andy
-shot a fat buck deer which had to be skinned and quartered and placed
-out of harm’s way, and Young Dan cracked the frame of one of his
-snowshoes. The partners were full of energy and determination, however.
-They survived that strenuous week breathless but triumphant. They
-obtained the required bait from the depths of a nameless pond which lay
-four miles to the eastward of the camp. This was a big job in itself,
-for the ice was nearly two feet thick on the pond, not to mention the
-three feet of snow which topped the ice. They shovelled snow; then they
-chopped and shovelled ice; and at last old Andy bored with a four-inch
-bit until the clear water welled up into the icy trough from the brown
-depths. He bored two holes; and then they baited their hooks with fat of
-pork and each lowered a line into the unknown. They fished steadily for
-three hours and by the end of that time were too nearly frozen to go on
-with it. The captured trout froze stiff after a jump or two on the snow.</p>
-<p>“Reckon it’s a reel chilly day,” remarked Andy, looking from the low
-sun, which glinted as grey and cheerless as a flake of ice, to the
-frozen fish. “Reckon we’d best quit and git home before we’re as stiff
-an’ twisted as these here trout.”</p>
-<p>He was right. If there had been a thermometer in the Right Prong country
-it would have marked twenty-five degrees below zero just then. Young Dan
-was agreeable; but he would have stood there and continued the motions
-of fishing, slowly and more slowly until the numbness caught his heart,
-if the old man had not suggested a move. When two good men go into the
-woods together, and one of them is well past four score years of age and
-the other has not yet completed his first score, the spur of competition
-is bound to prod now and then. In this matter of endurance against the
-cold the partners had silently and almost unconsciously competed. No
-rivalry of youth and age had inspired them, but rather the rivalry of
-two widely separated generations of youth; for old Andy Mace considered
-himself as good a man as he had ever been and so a trifle better than
-Young Dan, maybe, because of his birth and training in a period of the
-world’s existence that had marked its very highest point of development.
-He said nothing of all this to Young Dan, of course—even if he thought
-it.</p>
-<p>They gathered up their gear and scooped the frozen fish into a couple of
-sacks. Not a word did they exchange until they were both on the warm
-side of their own door; and even then they didn’t exchange many. An hour
-later, however, when the “riz” biscuits, broiled venison steak, and the
-coffee-pot were on the table, they talked “good and plenty.”</p>
-<p>Woodsmen are not generally supposed to be talkative folk. If there is
-any truth in this general supposition, then Young Dan and old Andy Mace
-must be the two exceptions that prove it—if suppositions, like rules,
-can be proved by exceptions. However that may be, these two woodsmen
-spent every evening in conversation, crawling into their bunks at last
-only because they couldn’t hear in their sleep. And their talk was not
-all of the woods and the day’s work. Far from it. They had much more to
-say concerning what they thought than what they knew; and so almost
-every subject under the sun was dealt with. Even when Young Dan read
-aloud, Andy capped every paragraph with a comment or an explanation, or
-an objection of equal or greater length. Their library contained only
-three small volumes of fiction, all from one entertaining pen—but under
-their system of reading, three promised to be plenty, for one winter at
-least. In spite of his interruptions, Andy Mace was a hungry listener,
-and so his interest in the adventures and mental processes of Mr.
-Sherlock Holmes soon became almost as keen as his partner’s. No one
-could be more sharply intrigued by an artful combination of significant
-words than that old trapper.</p>
-<p>On the night of the day of the cold fishing, after the last fragment of
-steak had been devoured, Young Dan opened one of the treasured books and
-began to read aloud; and, at the same moment, Andy began to cut tobacco
-for his pipe. Andy gave ear intently until the tobacco was shredded,
-rolled, stuffed into the pipe and satisfactorily lighted. He blew three
-large, slow clouds and settled back in his chair.</p>
-<p>“I wisht we had that gent here on Right Prong with us,” he said. “He’d
-stand it all right, too, I reckon, in a good coonskin coat. What d’ye
-cal’late he’d of made o’ that thief in claws?”</p>
-<p>Young Dan closed the book on a finger.</p>
-<p>“I guess he would of known it wasn’t a bear right off,” he said. “I did.
-I suspicioned it wasn’t, anyhow. I guess he would of known for sure,
-right off; and maybe he wouldn’t of figgered it out the way I did,
-neither—not by the molasses jug alone, perhaps.”</p>
-<p>“How else could he figger it out? What else was there to figger on?”</p>
-<p>“Plenty for him. I can think of some other things myself, now. There
-were the claw-marks. I guess those alone would of been enough for Mr.
-Holmes.”</p>
-<p>“What about ’em? They were marks of a b’ar’s claws.”</p>
-<p>“Yes—but he’s scientifical, Mr. Holmes is. He would of had a spyin’
-glass handy in his pocket to look at the marks with, and right off he’d
-of seen by the spread from claw to claw that they had been made by a
-mighty big bear. He would study over that a few minutes, somethin’ like
-this: A bear with paws as big as what these must of been must be an
-uncommon big bear; and heavy—four or five hundred pounds in weight,
-maybe, in the fall of the year; and so he would just naturally make
-deeper tracks than these here; and a bear as big as what he must be to
-own these paws and claws would be too darned big to get through that
-little window without spreadin’ the side of the camp or bustin’ himself
-or somethin’. So he would up and say, quick but quiet, ‘This thief is a
-lamb in a wolf’s clothes’—or somethin’ like that. He would know it
-wasn’t a bear, anyway. That’s how Mr. Holmes would of figgered it out, I
-guess.”</p>
-<p>Andy withdrew his pipe from his mouth and slowly straightened himself in
-his chair.</p>
-<p>“Sufferin’ cats!” he exclaimed. “It don’t sound altogether human comin’
-like that from a young feller who ain’t been to school nowhere but down
-to the Bend. Where’d ye get the trick of it from, Young Dan? Not from
-yer Pa nor yer Ma, I’ll swear an Alfy Davy!”</p>
-<p>“That was easy, workin’ it out after I knew, the way I did,” replied
-Young Dan, modestly. “If I had worked it out that way before I
-knew—well, that would of been pretty slick work. That would of been
-scientifical.”</p>
-<p>“If Gover’ment hears about it you’ll be one o’ these here boss policemen
-some day,” said Andy.</p>
-<p>“I guess not,” retorted Young Dan, with a slight curl of the lips that
-was foreign to his character.</p>
-<p>He already shared Sherlock Holmes’ opinion of the mental equipment of
-that stalwart and imperturbable force.</p>
-<p>He reopened the book and took up the story at the point of his partner’s
-interruption. He read a paragraph, his voice skidding now and then on a
-word of formidable proportions. He read a page, warming to his work and
-tearing the big words to pieces without so much as a hitch in his
-stride. Two pages—and still not a peep out of Andy Mace. He ceased
-reading and looked up inquiringly, and beheld his aged partner slouched
-in the chair and sunk deep in slumber, his shoulders hunched high, his
-chin tucked in and his grey beard rising and falling peacefully on his
-breast.</p>
-<p>Young Dan was up as early as usual next morning. He lit the lantern and
-then the fire in the stove; and it was not until then that he heard any
-signs of life from his partner’s bunk.</p>
-<p>“Sufferin’ cant-dogs!” exclaimed Andy. “Warm up the b’ar’s grease for
-me, pardner. This here right leg o’ mine’s stiffer’n King Pharaoh’s
-neck. Must of give it a twist yesterday.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan complied with this request, cooked the breakfast and tucked
-into it. He set out on the northward line at the first break of dawn,
-with a sack over his shoulder containing a supply of the new bait and a
-haunch of venison, leaving Andy Mace still rubbing that high-smelling
-cure-all into his right knee and telling how it had been tender ever
-since he had hurt it fifty years ago in an argument with a man from
-Quebec.</p>
-<p>It was a fine morning, and a clear finger of light in the east promised
-a fine day. The air was still and not so perishing cold as it had been
-the day before. Young Dan traveled fast. He found a mink in the first
-trap and stowed it away in the sack without waiting to skin it. He
-rebaited the trap with a frozen trout. The second and third traps were
-exactly as he had last seen them; the fourth contained a red fox, which
-he added to the collection in the sack; and the remaining traps were
-undisturbed. He continued northward along the trail that led to the
-Conley cabin.</p>
-<p>Young Dan did not find Jim Conley at home, but Mrs. Conley and the
-babies were there. He produced the haunch of deer-meat, for which the
-woman thanked him heartily.</p>
-<p>“I’m glad to see that Jim’s able to be up and out,” he said. “He must be
-feeling better.”</p>
-<p>“I reckon he’s some better,” she replied. “He lit out for the
-settlements two days back, anyhow.”</p>
-<p>“To fetch in some grub?”</p>
-<p>“Maybe he’ll fetch in some grub.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan’s eyes turned significantly to the floor at the edge of the
-bunk beneath which he had discovered the store of “square-faces” during
-his last visit. The woman observed the glance and sighed. Young Dan felt
-embarrassed.</p>
-<p>“I’m glad he has something to buy grub with,” he said.</p>
-<p>“He’s got a few skins,” said the woman. “He went out an’ set some traps
-first thing after the tongue-lashin’ ye give him.”</p>
-<p>“He must be lucky, to have enough to carry out to the settlements after
-a couple of days’ trapping,” said the youth, astonished.</p>
-<p>Mrs. Conley smiled bitterly.</p>
-<p>“Jim don’t wait to git a lot before he commences sellin’,” she said.
-“It’s the way he’s built.”</p>
-<p>“And he’s left you to attend to the traps?”</p>
-<p>“Nope, he told me to let ’em be while he was gone. I don’t know nothin’
-about traps, anyhow. I was born and riz in the settlements.”</p>
-<p>“He might lose some good skins that way—have them et up on him; but it’s
-his own business, I guess. Well, I must be getting home. If you need
-anything, m’am, you know where to find my partner and me.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan sat down and ate his lunch as soon as he got out of sight of
-the cabin. He felt depressed; and the cold steak and frosty biscuits
-didn’t cheer him.</p>
-<p>“That’s a poor outfit,” he said. “I guess that Jim Conley’s no darned
-good. I wonder where he got that gin—and if he’ll get any more? He won’t
-buy much with the price of a few fox skins, that’s sure. He’s big, and
-maybe he’s powerful—but I kind of feel that I’ll light right into him
-next time I see him.”</p>
-<p>He made the homeward journey of twelve miles without a stop. It was
-close to three o’clock in the afternoon when he reached camp; and there,
-to his astonishment, he found Andy Mace seated by the stove with his
-right leg cocked up in a chair.</p>
-<p>Andy looked ashamed of himself.</p>
-<p>“I never knowed it to act so contrary before,” he said. “It’s still
-stiffer’n a ramrod, an’ I’ve rubbed nigh all my b’ar’s grease into it;
-an’ all the fault o’ that gum-heeled feller from Quebec I fit with over
-on the Tobique in the winter o’ eighteen-seventy. It’s nigh enough to
-rile a man’s temper, Young Dan.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan was distressed.</p>
-<p>“If it hurts you bad, just say the word and I’ll go clean out to Harlow
-and fetch in a doctor,” he offered.</p>
-<p>“No!” exclaimed Andy. “It ain’t my knee hurts me, but it’s layin’ down
-on the job to-day, and maybe to-morrow, and leavin’ all the work to you.
-That’s what riles me.”</p>
-<p>“Don’t you worry about that,” the youth reassured him. “I am able and
-willing, and you’ll be right as rain in a few days. Now I’ll do a mile
-or two of the south line and be back in time to fry pancakes for
-supper.”</p>
-<p>He was as good as his word; and, later, his pancakes proved to be as
-good as any his partner had ever mixed and fried. He told of his visit
-to the Conley cabin, and the old man agreed with him that it would be a
-real pleasure to hand Jim Conley just what he deserved. After supper,
-Young Dan read a complete story, in irregular fragments, and his partner
-talked a bookful.</p>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:50%; max-width:479px;'>
-<img src='images/img-057.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chVI'><span style='font-size:1.1em'>CHAPTER VI</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.8em'>FISH FOR BAIT</span></h2>
-<p>Andy’s knee was worse next morning, but he did not say so. He admitted
-that it didn’t seem to be any more supple, spoke hopefully of another
-day’s rest and a little more bear’s grease as being all that it
-required, and again referred to the fight of fifty years ago in terms of
-regret and acrimony. The truth was that the old fellow had rheumatism;
-and he knew what it was; and he had felt it before, once or twice a
-year, in the very same place. Furthermore, the gritty old sportsman was
-too vain to admit the truth. Of course he had fought with a man from
-Quebec fifty years ago, in a lumber-camp on Tobique River, and twisted a
-knee in the heat of the encounter—but if you had put him on oath and
-asked him to lay a finger on the knee he had wrenched on that distant
-occasion, he couldn’t have done it.</p>
-<p>“I hope you walloped that man from Quebec,” said Young Dan.</p>
-<p>“I sure did,” replied Andy, brightening. “He was counted a smart fighter
-even for them days—but I was the snag he busted himself on.”</p>
-<p>“I betcher! Well, I’ll be back in time to cook dinner, so you just keep
-quiet while I’m gone.”</p>
-<p>“No, you take yer grub along and I’ll have supper ready when you git
-back. I ain’t a cripple yet.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan put some food in his pockets and went about his day’s work,
-armed as usual with axe and rifle. He set out on the line of traps that
-ran crookedly almost due west, for this was the one that had been
-longest neglected. Andy Mace had been along it last, just before the
-forty-eight-hour storm, and now the tracks of his snowshoes were buried
-deep. Young Dan kept to his course without difficulty, however, though
-the line was not blazed. He worked easily by signs that would have meant
-nothing to a city man. His guides were certain trees and bushes and
-humps and hollows; and the wilderness was full to crowding of such
-things. So much for the line of general direction—but some of the traps
-lay several score of yards to the right and left of that line. A modest
-blaze had been cut in the bark of tree or sapling at several of these
-points of deflection.</p>
-<p>Young Dan drew two blanks and then a fine big lynx. He skinned the lynx
-before going on. The fourth trap was empty, but the bait which had been
-placed on and around it so artfully had been snatched away even more
-artfully. He rebaited with frozen trout. The fifth trap was snapped
-tight on the forepaws of a skunk. The skunk itself was gone but Young
-Dan soon discovered odds and ends of hair and bone scattered in the snow
-in the immediate vicinity. Something with an amazing appetite had beaten
-the trapper to that trap, for certain. Young Dan set these things to
-rights and passed on, wondering at the driving power of hunger.</p>
-<p>Two more blanks, a red fox and a skunk followed. The last trap on the
-line was empty and evidently undisturbed. The bait was covered with
-snow. Young Dan felt for it with a small stick and twitched a bit of it
-to the surface. He replaced it with a frozen trout, left it lying on the
-snow as an extra lure and turned away. He even took a step away; and
-then he turned back sharply and with the stick drew closer the piece of
-bait which he had twitched out of the snow. He took it up in his
-mittened hands and examined it closely. His eyes rounded and his lips
-parted with astonishment. Then his face took on an expression of blank
-bewilderment. He gazed all around at the crowding underbrush and soaring
-spires of the forest, then straight up at the clear sky, then down again
-at the lump of frozen bait in his hand.</p>
-<p>“That’s queer,” he said. “Andy was here last, and that was before we
-went fishing—yes, and before the last snow. We were baiting with
-porcupine that day. I wonder where he got this from.”</p>
-<p>He tossed the thing back into the snow and, still wondering, went his
-way. His way now was not by the back trail, but sharp to the right, and
-then more to the right, until his course lay southeast. He traveled by
-the sun. The way was rough and tangled, and the “going” was heavy. He
-struggled over blow-downs and through cedar-twined fastnesses of swamp.
-After a couple of miles of it he sat down to rest and eat his lunch.
-After that he came to a patch of open barren, desolate and flat under
-the colorless sun. He held to his course straight across the level, a
-distance of about two miles, and made good time. Beyond the barren he
-entered a forest of big timber and crossed a wide ridge of maples and
-yellow birches; and far beyond the ridge he came at last to the locality
-of the southernmost trap of the southern line.</p>
-<p>Young Dan had traveled close upon fifteen miles since breakfast, and
-here he was still six miles at least from camp as the crow flies—and
-what would have been a laughing matter to a crow was a tough job for
-him. He almost found it in his heart to hope that all the traps between
-him and his supper were empty. No such luck! In that first trap, the
-farthest from home, he found a big bobcat—a cheap pelt on a big body.</p>
-<p>It was past eight o’clock when Young Dan pushed open the door, staggered
-into the camp and let his load thump to the floor. He dropped his axe,
-too, stood his rifle against the wall, threw aside his fur cap and
-mittens, and sank into a chair with a grunt of relief.</p>
-<p>“That <i>was</i> a day’s work, and I’m darn glad it’s through with!” he
-exclaimed, leaning back in his chair and closing his eyes.</p>
-<p>Andy Mace didn’t say a word.</p>
-<p>Young Dan sat up and looked all around. He saw the glow of the fire in
-the rusty stove, red embers on the hearth, and the lighted lantern at
-the little window, hooked to a nail in the frame. The room was poorly
-illuminated. Most of it, including Andy Mace’s bunk, was in deep shadow.</p>
-<p>“He’s taking a nap,” reflected Young Dan. “I guess his knee hurts him
-more’n he lets on, and maybe it kept him awake last night.”</p>
-<p>He hunched forward and untied the frozen thongs of his snowshoes very
-quietly, fearful of disturbing the sleeper. Stealthily he put a few
-sticks of wood in the stove and a log on the red embers in the chimney.
-Next, he pussy-footed over to the window and unhooked the lantern and
-set it down on the table near the stove. He felt bone-tired and sleepy,
-but his spirit was untouched by fatigue. Recalling Andy’s statement
-concerning supper, he decided to cook something good—something
-elaborate, like buckwheat pancakes or bacon—and boil a big pot of
-coffee, without waking the sluggard. He would even go so far as to tuck
-into the grub before arousing the sleeper by clattering a spoon against
-the coffee-pot. It would be a good joke on the old boy.</p>
-<p>Owing to the changed position of the lantern, Andy Mace’s bunk was now
-free from shadow. Young Dan glanced at it and instantly forgot the
-contemplated joke. The bunk was empty!</p>
-<p>Young Dan felt a sharp sense of unreality, as daunting as it was new to
-him—but in a moment the chill of that gave way before a surge of
-anxiety. He searched through the camp in a minute, all his weariness
-forgotten. Andy Mace was nowhere indoors; his snowshoes were gone, too;
-but his rifle leaned in its usual corner, in its old canvas case. Young
-Dan began to dress for the open with both hands and both feet. His coat,
-cap, mittens and snowshoes all seemed to fall into position and attach
-themselves at once. He took up the lantern and his rifle and went out,
-pulling the door shut behind him.</p>
-<p>Young Dan found his partner’s tracks in fifteen seconds. They did not
-lead along any one of the four lines of traps. They told him, as plain
-as print, that the old man’s right leg was still as stiff as a ramrod.
-Why Andy had gone into the woods at such an hour, lame or limber, was
-more than he could even begin to imagine. He reckoned the time of Andy’s
-departure from the camp by the condition of the fire in the stove at the
-time of his return. He put it at something between an hour and a half
-and two hours.</p>
-<p>He followed the trail in feverish haste for a hundred yards or so, then
-halted and shouted his partner’s name at the top of his voice. A faint
-shout came back to him. He yelled again and continued his advance,
-holding the lantern high and struggling in the snow-choked underbrush
-like a swimmer in heavy surf. He reflected that Andy had certainly taken
-a bee-line for wherever he was bound, regardless of natural obstacles.
-In his care to keep the lantern from contact with the snow he stumbled
-heavily several times and at last fell flat. The thick, hot glass of the
-lantern cracked like a pistol-shot and fell apart as it plunged into the
-snow, and the flame sizzled to extinction.</p>
-<p>Young Dan arose to his knees slowly and in silence, with his rifle in
-one hand and the ring of the chimneyless lantern in the other. In
-silence he struggled to his feet and reset his right snowshoe. What’s
-the use of talking when you know that the words required by your
-emotions don’t exist? Still in silence, he cleared his eyes and neck of
-snow. Then, to his great relief, he saw a yellow glow of fire-light far
-away beyond the tangled screens of the forest. He went straight for the
-light with as much noise and almost as much speed as a bull moose in a
-hurry. He bored ahead, shielding his face with the cased rifle and
-battered lantern, and letting his feet look after themselves. He
-frequently snarled his snowshoes in the brush and took a header, but he
-was never down for more than five seconds at a time.</p>
-<p>Young Dan found the distance between the fire and the place of his first
-tumble to be considerably less than he had feared. The fire burned in
-the center of a tiny dell; and beside it, on a mat of spruce boughs, sat
-Andy Mace.</p>
-<p>“What’s the matter with you?” cried Young Dan. “What are you doing
-here—and why didn’t you stay home like you said you would?”</p>
-<p>“I’m glad you come,” said the old man. “I cal’lated that’s what ye’d do.
-Well, I don’t blame ye a mite for feelin’ riled, Young Dan. But what
-else could I do?”</p>
-<p>“What do you mean? You could have stopped home!”</p>
-<p>“I clean forgot to tell ye. Look what’s layin’ t’other side the fire,
-Young Dan. So what else could I do but turn out an’ hunt about, when I
-heard him shootin’ off his rifle like a battle. And I thought all along
-it was yerself, until I found him.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan stumbled around the fire and saw what the smoke had veiled
-from him—a big man lying prone on a blanket, flat on his back, with a
-lumpy sack partially sunk in the snow near his head. His snowshoes, axe
-and uncased rifle stood upright in a row several paces distant from the
-fire.</p>
-<p>“What else was I to do?” asked Andy Mace. “And when I come up on him an’
-seen it wasn’t you I couldn’t leave him to perish, could I now?”</p>
-<p>“It’s Jim Conley,” said Young Dan. “What’s the matter with him?”</p>
-<p>“Jim Conley, hey? That’s what I suspicioned. Well, pardner, he’s got
-more troubles nor one the matter with him; an’ what laid him there on
-his back the way ye see him now was a clout over the head I handed him
-with the butt o’ his own rifle.”</p>
-<p>The youth’s bewilderment increased.</p>
-<p>“Did you kill him?” he asked, in awe-stricken tones.</p>
-<p>“I reckon not,” replied Andy, casually. “He’s alive—in his own way.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan chopped more brush for the fire and heaped it on, then removed
-his snowshoes and reclined beside his partner.</p>
-<p>Andy Mace filled and lit his pipe and told his story. He had sat quiet
-all day and rubbed the last of the bear’s grease into his stiff knee. He
-had fallen asleep along about mid-afternoon and slept soundly for hours.
-Waking suddenly, for no particular reason that he knew of, he had found
-the camp in darkness except for the glow of the fallen fire on the
-hearth. He had built up the fires in a hurry and lighted the lantern;
-and he had just opened the door for a look at the weather, before
-concentrating his mind on the preparation of supper, when he heard a
-rifle shot. That shot had been followed quickly by three more. He had
-hung the lantern in the window then and scrambled into his outdoor
-things and hobbled off at the best pace he could manage, feeling quite
-sure that the shots were calls from Young Dan for help. Another had
-sounded before the door was shut behind him, and yet another before he
-had gone fifty yards into the woods. He had bored straight ahead, slap
-through everything except the actual trunks of the big trees, taking the
-rough with the smooth and the hard with the soft—and just how many times
-he had plunged into the snow with his face and swept it up with his
-whiskers he’d hate to try to remember. His ears had been plugged with
-snow most of the time, anyhow, and his stiff knee had received some
-violent shocks, but he had kept going, and after a while he had heard
-someone yelling. He had gone ahead more circumspectly after that,
-knowing that the voice did not belong to his partner; and before long he
-had found Jim Conley trying to light a fire and making a poor job of it.</p>
-<p>“Why couldn’t he light it?” asked Young Dan.</p>
-<p>“Well, every time he’d get it lit he’d fall down slam on top o’ the
-little flame an’ smother it out.”</p>
-<p>“Was he that near froze?”</p>
-<p>“That’s what I suspicioned, so I drug him off an’ sot him down an’ lit
-the bit o’ brush an’ bark for him. I cut some dead stuff, an’ some
-chunks o’ green wood, an’ built up a good fire; then I looked round an’
-seen him settin’ back as comfortable as you please sucking away at a
-square-face. That riled me, Young Dan. That would rile a more peaceable
-man nor me—to see him draggin’ at that there bottle, an’ it more’n
-three-quarters empty already—an’ considerin’ how I’d nigh busted my leg
-off to find him, thinkin’ it was yerself shootin’ an’ hollerin’. Yes, I
-reckon even a deacon would of felt kinder sore. So I went up to him an’
-grabbed the bottle an’ hove it away an’ bust it agin a tree; an’ up he
-come, spry’s a cat, an’ lammed me one on the shoulder that laid me flat;
-but up I come on one leg, quicker’n a wink, an’ finished him. I looked
-into his pack—an’ then I wisht I’d hit him harder.”</p>
-<p>“Why? What’s in the bag?”</p>
-<p>“Considerable baccy, and a pound o’ tea, an’ maybe as much as a whole
-pound o’ bacon, and a box o’ seegars, and a bran’ new razor an’ strop,
-an’ some ca’tridges, and a red weskit, an’ four more square-faces o’
-gin. That’s what’s in his pack!”</p>
-<p>Young Dan continued to recline on an elbow and stare at the fire between
-half-closed lids in silence for several minutes.</p>
-<p>“I was just thinking he must of had great luck with his few traps,
-considering he didn’t set them out till after that night I saw him,” he
-said, at last.</p>
-<p>“Why was ye thinkin’ that?” asked Andy.</p>
-<p>“Well, he’d have to pay a lot for the gin, wouldn’t he, for the man who
-sold it to him was risking being sent to jail, wasn’t he? He had as many
-as six bottles when he started for home, or he wouldn’t have four now;
-and I betcher it cost him as much as eight or ten dollars a bottle. He
-must of had great luck with his traps—in the two days they were set.”</p>
-<p>“I reckon he must of, Young Dan. What’s on yer mind, anyhow?”</p>
-<p>“Jim Conley’s luck, that’s what.”</p>
-<p>“He must of caught somethin’ special, that’s a fact.”</p>
-<p>“What did you bait with last time you tended the west line?”</p>
-<p>“The west line? Lemme think. That was the day before the big snow. I
-baited with porcupine.”</p>
-<p>“It’s baited with fish to-day.”</p>
-<p>“Sure it be. What o’ that, Young Dan?”</p>
-<p>“I mean it was already baited with fish when I got to it. I mean that
-someone had rebaited it—and reset it, too, I guess—since your last
-visit.”</p>
-<p>“You don’t say! Someone at our traps! Let’s make a try at gittin’ home,
-pardner. I be that danged hungry an’ oncomfortable my brains won’t
-think.”</p>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:50%; max-width:700px;'>
-<img src='images/img-068.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chVII'><span style='font-size:1.1em'>CHAPTER VII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.8em'>THE ONE-EYED INJUN</span></h2>
-<p>The partners aroused Jim Conley, who grumbled savagely at being
-disturbed.</p>
-<p>“We’re going, anyhow,” said Young Dan, upon seeing that the fellow had
-not suffered seriously by Andy Mace’s method of persuasion.</p>
-<p>“Stop here all night, if you want to—and freeze to death! You’re old
-enough an’ ugly enough to look after yerself.”</p>
-<p>Conley sat up at that and violently demanded immediate information
-concerning his whereabouts.</p>
-<p>“You’re in the woods,” replied Young Dan. “In the woods, where you’d be
-froze stiff in the snow by now, but for Andy Mace.”</p>
-<p>Conley got slowly to his feet.</p>
-<p>“That’s right—lost in the woods,” he said, in a flat voice. “I call it
-to mind now. Kinder lost my way, I reckon.”</p>
-<p>He put on his snowshoes with fumbling hands, breathing heavily and
-muttering to himself the while.</p>
-<p>“I’ll tote this along for you,” said Young Dan, laying a hand on the
-lumpy sack.</p>
-<p>The other snatched it from him and shouldered it.</p>
-<p>“Guess I kin carry that myself!” he exclaimed.</p>
-<p>Young Dan went in front, sensing the way in the dark. Andy went next,
-making heavy weather of it with his stiff leg. Jim Conley brought up the
-rear, plunging and grumbling and frequently falling. They reached the
-camp at last. Young Dan left the door open behind him and went straight
-to the hearth and stove and fed both with fuel. Andy Mace, exhausted by
-his stiff-legged efforts and the pain of them, sank to the floor and lay
-flat as soon as he had crossed the threshold. Then Jim Conley floundered
-hurriedly and unsteadily from the cold outer gloom into the warm inner
-darkness, sack on shoulder. He tripped over Andy’s prostrate form and
-pitched forward to his hands and knees, and the lumpy sack hurtled from
-his shoulder and struck the floor with a smashing crash.</p>
-<p>Young Dan threw a roll of birch bark on the open fire, and in a few
-seconds the camp was luridly illuminated; and then he saw his partner
-and Conley on the floor, Andy sitting bolt-upright and the latter facing
-him on all-fours, glaring in rage and astonishment at each other; and
-beyond them he saw the lumpy sack squashed to half its former bulk and
-leaking puddles of gin. The sight was too much for his sense of humor,
-tired and hungry though he was. He laughed until tears melted the ice on
-his eyelashes and his knees sagged beneath him. He sat down weakly on a
-convenient chair and continued to laugh helplessly until sudden and
-violent action on the floor recalled him to a more serious aspect of the
-affair. Conley had grabbed Andy Mace by the beard with his left hand and
-by the windpipe with his right, at the same time flinging his whole
-weight forward; and the old woodsman had smashed in two life-sized
-wallops on the sides of Conley’s head, one with his right fist and one
-with his left, even as he sank beneath the younger man’s hands.</p>
-<p>Young Dan jumped to the struggle. His snowshoes were still on his feet.
-He gripped Conley with both hands by the neck of his several coats and
-shirts, wrenched him clear of Andy and thumped him violently on the
-floor, face-downward.</p>
-<p>“Quit it!” cried Conley. “Lemme be, cantcher!”</p>
-<p>Young Dan left him without a word and shut the door. He removed his
-snowshoes then, and his cap and outer coat, lit the wick of the lantern
-and placed a new chimney in the battered frame.</p>
-<p>“Reckon I’ll stop right here till I git my supper,” said Andy Mace from
-the floor.</p>
-<p>Jim Conley turned over on his back, but did not attempt to rise.</p>
-<p>Young Dan collected rifles and axes from the floor and stood them in a
-corner, set a big frying-pan on the stove and filled the kettle from a
-pail by the door—all in a grim silence. After slicing venison into the
-pan, along with some fat bacon, he removed his partner’s snowshoes and
-brushed him off with a broom.</p>
-<p>“Is everything busted in that there sack?” inquired Conley, anxiously,
-raising himself slowly on an elbow.</p>
-<p>Young Dan untied the sack and shook its contents out onto the floor.
-There were fragments of four square-faced black bottles. The other
-articles, the bacon and tea and tobacco, were saturated with gin. Young
-Dan pushed the mess together with his foot, in scornful silence.</p>
-<p>“That’s sure a grand outfit o’ grub to take home to a woman an’ two
-childern,” remarked Andy Mace.</p>
-<p>Jim Conley swore long and loud and strong.</p>
-<p>“Shut up!” snapped Young Dan.</p>
-<p>“Someun will pay for that!” cried Conley. “Good an’ plenty.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan stepped forward and stooped down and stared into the eyes of
-his unwelcome guest.</p>
-<p>“I warn you, Jim Conley, to mend your ways an’ mind your manners, or
-you’ll find yourself crowded for elbow-room in this neck o’ woods,” he
-said, slowly and clearly. “And I warn you that it won’t be me who’ll
-have to clear out when the crowding commences. Think it over; and the
-less you say about your spilt gin and who’s to pay for it—and who has
-already paid for it—the better for you.”</p>
-<p>“What’s that ye say?” returned the other, trying unsuccessfully to keep
-his eyes steady and his voice big and careless.</p>
-<p>“It was a warning.”</p>
-<p>“About who paid for the gin—that’s what I’m askin’ ye. What d’ye mean by
-that? That’s what I want to know, young feller.”</p>
-<p>“You know what I mean by that; so keep your mouth shut, or I’ll forget
-about your family and light right into you.”</p>
-<p>Conley laughed uneasily and dropped the subject.</p>
-<p>“If yer askin’ me to stop to supper, I’ll take off my snowshoes an’
-mitts,” he said.</p>
-<p>“We’ll feed you, now that we’ve saved you from freezing to death in the
-snow,” replied Young Dan, ungraciously, returning to the stove.</p>
-<p>Two pots of tea were drunk and two pans of venison steak were devoured.
-Then the partners crawled into their bunks and their guest went to sleep
-on the floor.</p>
-<p>Jim Conley departed after breakfast next morning, with his reduced,
-high-flavored sack on his shoulder and a reflective and uneasy
-expression in his close-set eyes. The partners were glad to be rid of
-him. They discussed him at considerable length. “You scared him,” said
-Andy—“but I’m thinkin’ ye maybe said a mite too much about who paid for
-the licker. He don’t look overly smart, but I reckon there’s somethin’
-inside his skull, even if it’s only porridge; an’ yer warnin’ was strong
-enough to start porridge a-bubblin’. We ain’t got anythin’ on him the
-law kin touch him for, far’s I kin see. It wasn’t him robbed the camp,
-an’ we can’t swear he was at our traps. You hadn’t ought to give yer
-suspicions away like that, Young Dan.”</p>
-<p>“Maybe yer right,” said Young Dan. “I sure did talk kind of out-an’-out.
-But what of it? I want to warn him, because he’s got to feed his wife
-and kids. If he suspicions that we suspicion him of robbing our traps,
-then he’ll quit. If I was tryin’ to jail him I wouldn’t of talked to him
-like that. But I was warnin’ him and throwin’ a scare into him to steady
-him.”</p>
-<p>“Ye don’t want to warn a feller like him till after ye catch ’im. He
-don’t look smart—but ye can’t never tell by looks. He knows as how we
-suspicion ’im now, and so he’ll do us all the harm he’s able to. I see
-it in his eye. You had ought to had the goods on ’im before ye warned
-’im, Young Dan. Why, we don’t even know where he’s been to—where he
-traded the skins he took out! An’ we don’t know that he ain’t got a big
-bunch o’ traps set of his own.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan smiled.</p>
-<p>“He traded his skins at Bean’s Mill, down at the mouth of Oxbow,” he
-said. “I guess he didn’t show up at the Bend at all, though Amos
-Bissing’s store is just as good as Luke Watt’s. He got his tea and
-tobacco and everything he had in his sack from Luke Watt down to Bean’s
-Mill; and I guess Luke’s got his skins; and I guess we’ve got his hide,
-if we want it.”</p>
-<p>“Young Dan, yer a smart lad—the smartest I ever see—an’ I won’t say nay
-to nary a one o’ yer propositions—but it do seem to me ye’re doin’ a
-powerful lot o’ guessin’ right now.”</p>
-<p>“Honest to goodness, Andy, I’m not guessing. Do you know Luke Watt? Have
-you ever bought goods from him?”</p>
-<p>“Sure, I know Luke Watt o’ Bean’s Mill. Yes, I’ve traded with him, too.
-What of it?”</p>
-<p>“Then you know his hand-writing. Uncle Bill Tangier took me down to
-Bean’s Mill one day two summers ago, and he bought a lot of stuff for me
-and the youngsters at Watt’s store, and Mr. Watt figgered up the bill on
-one of the parcels. He has a stiff right wrist, as you know—broke it in
-the woods when he was a lad and it wasn’t set right. He used his whole
-arm when he put down the figgers, working from the shoulder like a man
-sawing a board. I don’t believe there’s another man in the world who
-writes or makes figgers just like Luke Watt. And here is the paper Jim
-Conley’s tobacco was wrapped up in. I changed it this morning for
-another piece of brown paper, before Conley was awake. Here’s the
-complete bill all figgered out in Luke Watt’s own original big
-up-an’-down figgers.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan unfolded a large, smudged piece of brown paper and passed it
-to his partner. Andy Mace held it in his two corded hands and stared at
-it in amazed silence.</p>
-<p>“Look at that nine-fifty multiplied by seven,” said the youth. “Conley
-bought seven bottles. He paid sixty-six dollars and fifty cents for gin;
-and he was well into number five when you found him lost in the woods.
-And Watt soaked him six dollars for fifty bum cigars. He must of had
-some good skins. But of course that bill is no proof that Conley traded
-his skins with Luke Watt. I guess he did, though; for he wasn’t gone
-long enough to travel all the way down to Harlow and back. He did all
-his buying from Luke Watt, anyhow.”</p>
-<p>The old woodsman refolded the paper carefully and returned it to his
-partner. Then he filled his pipe and lit it with deliberate motions.</p>
-<p>“Young Dan, I was feelin’ kinder fretful a while back when I talked to
-ye that-a-way,” he said at last. “My knee was hurtin’ me cruel. Yer
-guess is as good to me as another man’s oath. What d’ye reckon to do,
-pardner?”</p>
-<p>“I reckon to go out and fetch a doctor in to fix your knee for you,
-first thing,” replied Young Dan, as he stowed the paper away safely in a
-breast-pocket.</p>
-<p>Andy Mace shook his head.</p>
-<p>“This here j’int plays out on me like this every now an’ agin,” he
-returned “and I got medicine for it at home, made for me by Doc Johnston
-down to Harlow—inside medicine. The trouble’s a touch o’ rheumatics in
-my blood, so the Doc said, an’ maybe the fight I had with the Quebecer
-fifty year ago ain’t got as much to do with it as I let on—an’ then
-agin, maybe it has. Anyhow, Doc Johnston’s medicine loosens up the j’int
-every time, an’ I got two bottles in my pantry this minute as good as
-new. If I had them here I’d be right as wheat in a day or two.”</p>
-<p>“Why didn’t you tell me so before?” asked Young Dan.</p>
-<p>“Well, I reckoned it would sound kinder babyish; an’ I was hopin’ all
-along until yesterday that it would quit hurtin’ an’ loosen up any
-minute. I was bankin’ on the b’ar’s grease. But last night didn’t help
-it none.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan went out with his axe to chop wood and at the same time to
-consider the imposing problem which confronted him. Andy Mace must have
-his medicine as soon as possible—and that meant a two-day trip; and Mrs.
-Conley and the two little Conleys must be fed, since the bread-winner
-had brought nothing in for them except a pound of bacon—and that meant a
-day; and Jim Conley’s little game must be investigated at both ends—and
-that might well mean a week or more. What about his traps scattered
-along four six-mile lines? His business was bound to suffer—but that was
-not the thought that worried him most in connection with the traps. He
-fretted at the thought of waste on one hand, and on the other of again
-supplying Jim Conley with the means of acquiring more gin. These things
-were bound to happen, he believed, so long as the traps remained set and
-baited, and unattended by Andy Mace or himself. Animals bearing valuable
-pelts would be caught only to suffer the unprofitable fate of being
-devoured, pelts and all, by other fur-bearers, or to be skinned by Jim
-Conley. The traps must be sprung; and that meant a hard two-day job. But
-to leave Andy Mace without his medicine for four days instead of two was
-out of the question!</p>
-<p>“It’s more’n one man can do!” exclaimed Young Dan, sinking his axe deep
-into the prostrate maple upon which he stood. “A man can do two or three
-things at once, maybe, but not all in different places, I guess. I can’t
-anyhow; and that’s all there is to it! Now the question is, what’s to be
-done first? Guess I’ll leave it to chance and toss for it.”</p>
-<p>He produced a quarter from a pocket, flipped it into the air off a
-thumb-nail, caught it in his right hand and slapped his left over it.</p>
-<p>“Heads I get Andy’s medicine first, tails I don’t,” he said.</p>
-<p>The coin lay tails up in his palm.</p>
-<p>“That’s too darned bad!” he exclaimed. “Poor Andy!”</p>
-<p>“You talkin’ ’bout Andy Mace hey?” asked a voice from the brush on his
-right.</p>
-<p>Young Dan turned and beheld a stranger standing within five yards of him
-and regarding him intently with one eye. It was this matter of the one
-eye that made the first and sharpest impression on the youth. The
-stranger’s left eye was covered by a patch of black cloth. In addition
-to these interesting facts, Young Dan saw that he was an Indian and past
-middle-age, that he wore snowshoes and carried a pack and a rifle in a
-blanket case, and that no smoke issued from his lips or from the bowl of
-the short pipe which protruded from a corner of his mouth.</p>
-<p>“Sure I’m talking about Andy Mace,” replied Young Dan, recovering
-swiftly from his astonishment.</p>
-<p>“Good,” returned the stranger. “Andy Mace the feller I wanter see pretty
-quick. Maybe he got plenty tobac, what?”</p>
-<p>Young Dan shouldered his axe and descended from the trunk of the
-prostrate maple. He slipped his feet into the thongs of his snowshoes
-and put on his coat and mittens.</p>
-<p>“I guess he has enough,” he said, pleasantly. “Come along with me and
-find out. He’s my partner.”</p>
-<p>They found Mr. Mace seated by the stove, with his stiff leg in a chair.</p>
-<p>“How do, Andy,” said the stranger. “Long time you no see me.” Mr. Mace
-sat up straight and stared from beneath shaggy eyebrows. Then he smiled
-and relaxed.</p>
-<p>“Yer dead right it’s a long time, Pete Sabatis!” he exclaimed. “Yer
-right there, old hoss. Glad to see ye agin at last, anyhow. Set down an’
-make yerself to home. What’s brought ye away acrost into these woods,
-anyhow? Be they crowdin’ ye over on the Tobique country, Pete?”</p>
-<p>The visitor cleared himself from his outside things, including his
-snowshoes, discarded his pack and rifle, then sat down close to the
-stove and took the cold pipe from his mouth. He held the pipe up and
-fixed the keen glance of his uncovered eye on Andy.</p>
-<p>“He don’t burn no tobac this four-five day,” he said.</p>
-<p>Mr. Mace laughed and turned to Young Dan.</p>
-<p>“What d’ye think o’ that, pardner?” he asked. “Here’s Pete Sabatis, that
-I ain’t set eyes on this twenty year, come all the way acrost from the
-Tobique country to bum a fill o’ baccy!”</p>
-<p>“You got it a’right,” said the Maliseet, without so much as a flicker of
-a smile. “That feller say you got plenty. You make joke jes’ like you
-ust to, hey?”</p>
-<p>“I reckon ye’re the reel joker, Pete,” answered Andy, handing over a
-plug of tobacco. “You got the reel face for it, anyhow—the same old
-wooden face an’ the same identical old eye. Well, yer jokes is harmless;
-and if ye come all these hunderds o’ miles for somethin’ more’n a smoke
-I reckon ye’ll spit it out sooner or later. I be right-down glad to see
-ye agin, anyhow.”</p>
-<p>“Same here,” said Young Dan. “If you’re a friend of Andy’s I hope you’ll
-stop a while with us.”</p>
-<p>“A good idee!” exclaimed Andy. “Sure he’s a friend o’ mine, and one I’d
-trust with my last pound o’ bacon! Where’re ye headin’ for, Pete?
-Anywheres in particular?”</p>
-<p>“Dinner,” said Pete Sabatis, lighting his pipe.</p>
-<p>“The same old bag o’ tricks,” said Andy to his partner. “I reckon he
-cal’lates to stop right here with us a spell. That’s yer idee, ain’t it,
-Pete?”</p>
-<p>“Yep,” replied the Maliseet.</p>
-<p>Young Dan was glad, for in this one-eyed Indian he saw the solution of
-the problem that had been causing him such a weight of mental distress
-all day. He said nothing of what was in his mind, however, but put wood
-in the stove, washed his hands and commenced preparations for dinner.</p>
-<p>Andy Mace talked and Pete Sabatis watched Young Dan with his lively
-bright eye. Every now and then, Pete uttered a grunt of satisfaction at
-what he saw.</p>
-<p>It was a good dinner, a bang-up dinner, by Right Prong and Tobique
-standards. It consisted of baked pork-and-beans in a brown crock, very
-juicy and sweet, and a flock of hot biscuits, and a jar of Mrs. Evans’s
-strawberry preserve, and tea strong enough to be employed in the
-heaviest sort of manual labor.</p>
-<p>Pete Sabatis was not a large man; and so Young Dan decided that he must
-have been hollow from his chin clear down to his knees before dinner.
-After clattering the iron spoon all around the inside of the bean-crock
-and lifting the last preserved strawberry to his mouth on the blade of
-his knife, Mr. Sabatis drained the teapot and sat back in his rustic
-chair. He produced his pipe and looked at Andy Mace.</p>
-<p>“Tobac,” he said.</p>
-<p>“You pocketed a whole plug o’ mine before dinner,” returned Andy. “An’
-ye’ve got a knife to cut it with an’ a pipe to smoke it in. Here’s a
-match. Hope yer breath to puff with ain’t all gone.”</p>
-<p>The Maliseet drew forth the cake of tobacco thus delicately referred to
-by his old friend, filled his pipe and lit it.</p>
-<p>“I’d like to tell him how we’re fixed, and perhaps he’d lend us a hand,”
-said Young Dan to his partner.</p>
-<p>“Sure he’d lend us a hand,” replied Andy. “Tell him our story. Pete
-Sabatis kin be trusted with anything in the world, I reckon, secrets or
-goods—exceptin’ baccy.”</p>
-<p>So Young Dan told of their experiences with, and suspicions of, Jim
-Conley, and of the problem which confronted him.</p>
-<p>“That a’right,” said Pete. “What do you do first, hey?”</p>
-<p>“That depends on you,” replied the youth. “Do you know the way to Andy’s
-house?”</p>
-<p>“Know him a’right when you tell me.”</p>
-<p>“I’ll draw a map for you, if you’ll get Andy’s medicine.”</p>
-<p>“To-morrow.”</p>
-<p>“That’s fine. I’m mighty glad you turned up. I’ll go out now and spring
-a few traps, and to-morrow I’ll take some grub back to the Conleys and
-see what’s up. When you get home from Andy’s place with the medicine I
-will light right out for Bean’s Mill.”</p>
-<p>During the afternoon Young Dan visited four traps on the eastward line.
-He found a mink in one and nothing in the others, and left all alike
-sprung and harmless. He did not travel as briskly as usual, for he did
-not feel very spry. The exertions of the day before had slowed and
-stiffened even his elastic sinews a little. His spirits were high,
-however, thanks to the mental relief due to the arrival of Pete Sabatis.
-Pete solved the problem which had frozen his immediate actions. With
-Pete’s help, everything seemed possible now: Andy would have his
-medicine, the Conley woman and children would be looked after, Jim
-Conley’s suspicious activities would be investigated and one line of
-traps, at least, would be kept in operation. Apart from all this, the
-Maliseet promised to be an entertaining companion. Young Dan had felt a
-liking for him at the first sound of his voice and a keen interest in
-him at the first glimpse of his patched eye. His arrival had been as
-dramatic as it was opportune; his greeting of and reception by old Andy
-Mace had been decidedly picturesque; his Puckish humor was as unusual as
-his appearance. In short, he made a strong romantic appeal to the young
-trapper.</p>
-<p>“He’s queer, like some of the folks in those stories,” reflected Young
-Dan. “Queer as the queerest of them, but real, too—more real than any of
-them. And he’s all right. Andy says so.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan exploded two cartridges that afternoon. The bullet of each
-knocked the head off a partridge. Upon his return to camp he skinned the
-birds in half the time it would have taken him to pluck them, and fried
-them for supper with a little pork. After supper he made a map of the
-route to Andy Mace’s house and explained it at length to Pete Sabatis.
-All three retired early to their blankets.</p>
-<p>Pete Sabatis was the first to leave the camp next morning. He carried
-food and tobacco in his pockets, a note from Young Dan for Amos Bissing,
-the map of the route, the key to Andy’s door, and his rifle and
-blankets. He moved off swiftly, with the reddening dawn on his
-right-front, leaving an azure trail of smoke on the still air.</p>
-<p>“It’s lucky for us that he turned up when he did,” remarked Young Dan to
-his partner, as he made up a modest parcel for the Conleys of tea and
-flour and two tins of condensed milk. “Did he come looking for you, or
-was it just chance?”</p>
-<p>“He’ll tell us what he come for when he’s good an’ ready, an’ not a
-minute sooner, Young Dan,” answered Andy. “Maybe he come all the way
-acrost from Tobique to see me, but I reckon that ain’t likely. How would
-he know if I was alive or dead any more’n I knowed if he was alive or
-dead? It was chance landed him right here at this camp, anyhow, for all
-he ever knowed about my whereabouts was that I hailed from the Oxbow—an’
-that was twenty year ago. But we won’t fret ourselves about why he’s
-here or why he come. He is here, an’ he’s a danged good Injun, an’
-that’s enough for us.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan took the northern track, which led crookedly to the Conley
-cabin. He inspected the traps to the right and the left as he advanced,
-bagged a fox and left all sprung and harmless behind him. He reached the
-Conley cabin before noon and found Mrs. Conley chopping wood beside the
-door. She said that Jim was off somewhere attending to his traps.</p>
-<p>“I don’t want to see him,” said Young Dan. “I came to bring these few
-things for you and the children, from my partner and me, because we know
-that he didn’t bring much grub back from the settlements with him.”</p>
-<p>He entered the cabin without removing his snowshoes and placed the
-parcel of provisions on the table. The woman followed him, undid the
-parcel and thanked him. She seemed nervous.</p>
-<p>“How d’ye know Jim didn’t fetch in any grub?” she asked.</p>
-<p>“We saw what he had,” replied the trapper. “Didn’t he tell you about
-stopping a night at our camp? About losing himself in the woods an’ Andy
-Mace finding him?”</p>
-<p>“No, he didn’t. But he’s sure got it in for you and yer old pardner!
-He’s been cussin’ the two o’ ye steady ever since he come home. He says
-how he had lashin’s o’ bacon an’ flour an’ was robbed of everything but
-some bacon an’ tea.”</p>
-<p>“I suppose you believed him, m’am.”</p>
-<p>“Not so’s ye’d notice—but that’s neither here nor there. What you best
-do now is clear out o’ this before he comes home.”</p>
-<p>“Do you think I’m afraid of him?”</p>
-<p>“I guess not—but I wisht ye’d beat it.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan immediately complied with her wish. As soon as he was out of
-sight of the cabin he left the narrow trail of his own snowshoe tracks
-and broke into the woods and started on a big curve which, if followed
-long enough, would encircle the Conley habitation. Young Dan did not go
-so far as that, however. He found what he was looking for before he had
-made a semicircle of the curve—a line of new snowshoe tracks. He did not
-join this trail or cross it, but backed a few paces from it, changed
-direction and moved parallel with it, keeping an eye on it through the
-intervening screen of brush and branches. This course took him
-southward, mile upon mile, and after a couple of hours of it he found
-himself on his own and Andy Mace’s trapping-ground. He continued to
-parallel Jim Conley’s tracks, moving without sound and parting the
-forest growth before him with the minimum of disturbance; and at last he
-came to a place which he recognized as being on his own eastern line of
-traps. There he halted and squatted to rest, as still as a waiting lynx
-in the snow.</p>
-<p>Large white flakes began to circle down from the low sky. The sun, which
-had risen red, was now no more than a small blotch of radiance as
-colorless as clear ice. The snow descended more thickly and swiftly,
-blinding the weak sun and seeming to draw the sky down to the tops of
-the tall spruces—and down even lower than that, until the soaring trees
-were blanketed and hidden by it for half their height. Then Young Dan
-moved again, this time on a straight course for the camp, and at his
-best pace. This flurry of snow was altogether too thick and fast to take
-liberties with. He wondered what Pete Sabatis would make of it with his
-one eye. He was sorry that it had descended so violently as to interfere
-with his investigations before he had actually caught Jim Conley at his
-trapping. He felt reasonably certain, however, of the identity of the
-traps which engaged Mr. Conley’s attentions. That was enough to work
-ahead on. He decided not to spring the traps on the eastern line, but to
-leave them as they were for the thief’s immediate profit and final
-undoing.</p>
-<p>Young Dan reached home safely. The snow ceased falling shortly before
-sundown, but with the setting of the sun a wind arose which set the
-feathery flakes drifting and flying.</p>
-<p>Andy Mace was in as talkative a mood as ever that night, despite the
-fact that he was very evidently suffering a great deal of pain. He
-admitted the pain, confessing that more joints than his right knee hurt
-him now.</p>
-<p>“But that there medicine o’ Doc Johnston’s ’ll melt the misery out o’ me
-all right,” he said. “I’ll be takin’ a dose of it this time to-morrow
-night; and ye’ll see me to work agin within a couple o’ days, Young Dan,
-spry as a cat an’ loose as ashes.”</p>
-<p>“Don’t you worry about the work, Andy,” returned Young Dan. “Give the
-medicine a fair chance when you get it. I hope Pete will be back by
-to-morrow night—but he couldn’t of traveled much this afternoon, in that
-storm and in country strange to him.”</p>
-<p>“That’s where ye’re wrong,” replied Andy. “I never knowed a likelier man
-nor that same Pete Sabatis to go to wherever he wanted to git to. He
-could do that trip backwards, an’ with both eyes patched instead of only
-one. That flurry o’ snow wouldn’t stop him a minute, in strange country
-or old.”</p>
-<p>“What happened to his eye, anyhow?” asked Young Dan.</p>
-<p>Andy rubbed his thin knees with his thin hands for several seconds in
-silence, gazing thoughtfully into the red draft of the stove. Then he
-looked at his partner and combed his long whiskers with long fingers.</p>
-<p>“Maybe he wouldn’t care for me to tell ye that, lad,” he said. “I reckon
-he wouldn’t yet awhile, till he knows ye better. But I kin tell ye this
-much, pardner—I was with him when he lost it, twenty-four year ago—and
-he is as good a man with one eye as ever he was with two. He lost it in
-a kinder private affair, ye understand: and there ain’t a prouder man
-walkin’ the woods either side the height-o’-land nor him—exceptin’ in
-the matter o’ baccy.”</p>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:50%; max-width:500px;'>
-<img src='images/img-087.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chVIII'><span style='font-size:1.1em'>CHAPTER VIII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.8em'>THE ADVENTURE OF SABATIS</span></h2>
-<p>The wind was abroad all the next day, sweeping the snow from the broad
-branches and high spires of the forest and shoveling it into drifts
-along the windward edges of all open spaces. Young Dan worked at the
-wood-pile and the pelts all day, and Mr. Mace smoked his pipe and rubbed
-his painful joints and wondered if old age were creeping upon him. Young
-Dan was chopping a stick of dry birch near the door, and the small sun
-was on the edge of the western horizon, when Pete Sabatis appeared. Pete
-was powdered white with snow from the webbed racquets on his feet to the
-crown of his fur cap.</p>
-<p>“Howdy,” he said.</p>
-<p>Young Dan stared at him in amazement.</p>
-<p>“I knew you’d have to give it up,” he said, “and I’m mighty glad you’ve
-found your way back. That’s more’n I could do, with the snow drifting
-like it has all day.”</p>
-<p>The old Maliseet smiled and snorted and entered the camp. Young Dan
-followed a few minutes later depressed by the thought of Andy Mace’s
-disappointment and yet relieved to know that the old Indian was safe. By
-the fire-shine and the mild light of a candle on the table, he beheld
-his partner dosing himself with a large spoon from a large bottle and
-Pete Sabatis laying out tea and bacon and tobacco on the floor.</p>
-<p>“So you got there!” exclaimed Young Dan. “You got to Andy’s place in
-that storm—and home again!”</p>
-<p>Both old men turned to him. Pete’s one eye grew rounder and brighter for
-a second; and Mr. Mace gulped down his medicine, pulled a wry face and
-then chuckled.</p>
-<p>“Pete Sabatis never yet started out for anywheres he didn’t git to,”
-said Andy. “Snow nor rain nor wind nor darkness can’t stop him. He
-travels as straight with one eye as ever he did with two.”</p>
-<p>“I didn’t know the man was living, or had ever lived, who could hold a
-straight course through new country on such a day as yesterday,” said
-Young Dan. “And now I know I was mistaken,” he added.</p>
-<p>Pete Sabatis had nothing to say about his journey. The trip had been
-unadventurous. He had not encountered any difficulties worth mentioning.
-Andy’s key had fitted Andy’s door and he had found the bottles of
-medicine on the very shelf in the pantry which Andy had described to
-him. And he had found the store at the Bend exactly where he had
-expected to find it and the storekeeper had not hesitated a moment in
-the matter of filling the order.</p>
-<p>Young Dan cooked the best supper he knew how to with the materials at
-hand; and after supper, when the old men’s pipes were drawing to their
-entire satisfaction, Andy said, “Pete, I’d like fine to tell Young Dan
-Evans here about how ye happened to lose yer eye.”</p>
-<p>The Maliseet fixed his remaining eye on the youth with a glance so
-searching that the other remembered something he had read in a book
-about a thing called an X-Ray.</p>
-<p>“It ain’t like as if Young Dan was nothin’ more’n my pardner,” continued
-Andy. “He’s like a brother to me; and his heart’s as right as his brains
-is smart.”</p>
-<p>“That’s a’right,” said Pete Sabatis. “Go ahead an’ tell ’im.”</p>
-<p>“This here’s a kinder personal story,” began Andy, settling back in his
-chair. “Twenty-four years ago this very winter, I was in the woods on
-Pyle’s Brook, over in the Tobique country, choppin’ for Howard Frazer. I
-was restless in them days; and I’ll bet there ain’t a block of woods ten
-mile square in all the Province I ain’t had a foot into, lumberin’ or
-huntin’ or trappin’ fur. Well, I knowed that country pretty nigh as well
-as I know the Oxbow—so I thought. I diskivered later as how I’d thought
-wrong. Pete Sabatis here was choppin’ for Frazer’s gang, too. That was a
-kinder onusual thing, even in them days—a full-blooded Injun working
-hard an’ honest with a crew of lumbermen. But Pete allus was one who
-could do a white man’s job as well as an Injun’s—an’ both a mite
-better’n any other Injun or white man could do it. I’d say the same even
-if he wasn’t right here a-listenin’ to me.</p>
-<p>“Well, I didn’t have no better friend in that outfit nor this here Pete
-Sabatis, and it was the same with him—what ye might call visey versus, I
-reckon. But, mind ye, I didn’t know the first darned thing about Pete’s
-private life. He was a jolly feller, though never much of a talker an’
-nothin’ at all of a laugher. But all of a suddent, along about January,
-he begun to study hard on somethin’ deep inside himself. He’d stop still
-as if he was frozen all of a suddent in the middle of choppin’ into the
-butt of a big tree, with his axe sunk to the eye in the yellow wood, an’
-stare kinder across-eyed into himself, with a look on his face like he
-didn’t care much for what he seen. Of course I knowed he wasn’t sick,
-but I asked him if he was; an’ when he said as how he wasn’t, then I
-cal’lated his trouble was somethin’ I’d best not ask him any more
-questions about.</p>
-<p>“So it went on for three days, maybe; an’ then one Saturday night, after
-supper, he asks me if I’ll make a trip with him next day.</p>
-<p>“‘A trip?’ sez I. ‘What sort o’ trip?’</p>
-<p>“‘Snowshoes,’ sez Pete.</p>
-<p>“‘Sure, but how far?’ I sez.</p>
-<p>“‘Quite a spell,’ he answers back. ‘A long ways an’ rough goin’, an’
-trouble at the end of it.’</p>
-<p>“Well, there’s plenty men who’d set back hard in their britchen when
-they’d hear a note like that—but not me, twenty-four year ago, nor
-to-day. We started eastward into the tall timber before sun-up that
-Sunday mornin’, with grub enough for two days maybe, and blankets, and
-our axes. Pete carried a muzzle-loader gun you could shoot bullets out
-of pretty straight up to seventy yards. It was a clear, cold day,
-without so much as a fan of wind abroad. It was Sunday, as I’ve told ye;
-an’ it felt like Sunday—kinder waitin’ an’ uncommon. Pete went slam
-through everything on a straight line all his own as fast as he could
-flop his racquets along, but it didn’t bother me none to keep up to him.
-He didn’t say a word. We halted and et about noon—but even then he
-wouldn’t talk.”</p>
-<p>Andy Mace paused to relight his pipe.</p>
-<p>“Talk,” said Pete Sabatis. “Too much talk. You lemme tell how that
-happen, so we don’t set up all night. Pretty soon we come to one little
-clearin’ in the woods, with one log shanty on him. We go to door an’
-open him an’ step inside. There we find the folk I look for a’right.
-Andy Mace look at them like he don’t know nothin’ at all—an’ so he
-don’t. I push him back on the door till it shut an’ give him the gun.
-Then I take one step acrost at that half-breed man, an’ the woman grab
-somethin’ from the wall back of him and BANG—an’ Pete Sabatis don’t know
-nothin’ else for quite a spell.”</p>
-<p>“I cal’late I’m tellin’ this story!” interrupted Andy. “Young Dan ain’t
-got a notion what yer talkin’ about. He’s smart, but he’s only human.
-Why, he don’t even know yet who them folks was an’ what you had come to
-see them about.”</p>
-<p>“An’ you didn’t, neither,” retorted Pete. “So after long while I open
-one eye an’ feel mighty sick. They got me in the bunk then, with head
-all tie up an’ brandy inside me, an’ Andy Mace an’ them two lookin’ down
-like they think I don’t never open one eye any more, maybe. Then that
-woman, who is my daughter, say, ‘I shoot out your eye. What for you come
-here, anyhow?’ Then I say, ‘You shoot my eye clear out, hey?’ Andy say
-then, ‘You got only one eye now, Pete, an’ that’s gospel.’ Then that
-woman, my papoose one time, say, ‘You come to kill Pierre, so I shoot
-quick.’ I feel mighty sick, you bet, for that pain in my head an’ the
-think how I got only one eye left, but I pretty near laugh.”</p>
-<p>“That’s right!” exclaimed Andy Mace. “He come about as nigh to laughin’
-real hearty then as ever I see him, durn his old leather face. Ye see,
-pardner, that squaw, Pete’s daughter, had made a mistake. Her husband,
-that there halfbreed, Pierre, had stole fur on Pete years before, till
-Pete had chased him out o’ the country. But they’d come sneakin’ back
-that winter, an’ Pete had heard about it an’ studied on it. He didn’t
-like that feller, Pierre; but he figgered out as how he’d go look the
-two of ’em over an’ kinder give them his blessin’ an’ some money if he
-seen that Pierre was doin’ right by his wife, who was Pete’s own
-daughter. An’ his daughter up an’ shot an eye out o’ him before he could
-say ‘howdy’. An’ what d’ye reckon Pete Sabatis done then, Young Dan? He
-sez, ‘Pretty good breed, that Pierre, if she like him so darn much
-still—an’ he give them some money an’ said how he was glad to see them
-back in the Tobique country even if he had only one eye to see them
-with.’ <i>And next day he snowshoed back to Howard Frazer’s camp.</i> That’s
-how he lost his eye, twenty-four years ago this winter; an’ now there’s
-five of us who know about it instead of only four. An’ he quit choppin’
-for only two days after gittin’ back to camp. That’s the sort o’ man
-Pete Sabatis is!”</p>
-<p>“Talk, talk, talk! That’s the kind of feller Andy Mace is,” said the
-Maliseet, winking his only eye at Young Dan very deliberately.</p>
-<p>Young Dan was greatly impressed by the story of Pete’s just temper and
-amazing physical stamina. He said so. Then, at Andy’s request, he read a
-story of the wizard of Harley Street. Andy interrupted the narrative
-frequently, but the Maliseet listened in keen silence.</p>
-<p>“It couldn’t be done, nohow,” said Andy, at the conclusion of the tale.
-“The devil himself couldn’t of worked it out like that.”</p>
-<p>“Maybe,” said Pete. “I dunno.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan left the camp bright and early next morning with his uncle’s
-rifle, axe and blankets, a pack of fine furs and grub enough to last him
-to Bean’s Mill. He pushed along steadily all day and slept in a hole in
-the snow that night. He crossed the river well above his father’s farm
-and gave it and the village at the Bend a wide offing. He reached the
-outskirts of the settlement of Bean’s Mill about noon and dined well
-beside his own fire in a thicket of young spruces before appearing to
-the settlers. Then he went straight to Luke Watt’s store.</p>
-<p>Mr. Watt did a big business in a small store. That’s the kind of
-business man he was, but in character he was a very different sort of
-person. He was small in character and large in body and manner. As a
-storekeeper his activities were larger than his premises, but as a man,
-his chest and legs and arms and skull—yes, and his “lower chest”—were
-much too large for him. He had a stiff right wrist, calculating and
-watchful eyes of no particular color, large hands queerly shaped and a
-large manner of good-fellowship and an unattractive mustache.</p>
-<p>Young Dan found Luke Watt behind his counter, in a corner close to one
-of the dirty windows, barricaded into his position by boxes and barrels
-and crates and bags. Young Dan worked his way inward to the counter. He
-saw, as he advanced, that the other did not know him.</p>
-<p>“Good morning, Mr. Watt,” he said. “I’m Dan Evans from up past the
-Bend—Young Dan Evans. I got a few skins here I want to sell.”</p>
-<p>“Of course ye’re Dan Evans!” exclaimed Luke Watt. “Didn’t I know it the
-minute I see you! Lay it there! How’s tricks up river?”</p>
-<p>“Pretty good, I guess,” replied the youth. “It’s been a great winter for
-trapping so far, anyhow.”</p>
-<p>He undid his pack on the head of a barrel at his elbow and placed a
-couple of pelts on the counter. A swift glance at Watt’s face told him
-that the storekeeper was finding it difficult to hide his enthusiasm.</p>
-<p>“Um—fisher,” said Mr. Watt. “Mighty common skins, ain’t they?”</p>
-<p>“They are as good fisher as were ever trapped on the Oxbow,” said Young
-Dan.</p>
-<p>“Sure they’re good of their kind—but they’re fisher; and fisher are
-all-fired common this year. And skins ain’t much in my line, anyhow. I
-buy a few—but I’m that good natured an’ easy I always lose money on the
-deal. What d’ye figger these two skins is worth? Three times their real
-value, I’ll bet a dollar!”</p>
-<p>“Maybe so,” replied Young Dan slowly and in a puzzled voice. “Yes, just
-about that, I guess. I don’t know as much about selling ’em as I do
-about catching ’em.”</p>
-<p>A flicker of a smile, cold and swift, showed beyond the drooping ends of
-Luke Watt’s mustache, and for an instant a light of amusement and
-satisfaction glimmered in his eyes.</p>
-<p>“I know you pay a whole lot for black fox,” continued Young Dan.</p>
-<p>“Black fox!” exclaimed the other. “You got half a dozen black foxes
-right here with you—I don’t think. Say, Dan, what you been drinkin’?”</p>
-<p>“I don’t drink, Mr. Watt—but I trap in a good country for black fox—and
-I know that you gave Jim Conley a mighty good price for his.”</p>
-<p>The storekeeper’s eyes became very hard and keen with eagerness and
-caution. He squared his elbows on the counter and leaned across toward
-the youth. So, for several seconds, he stared in silence; and the other
-returned the stare with an innocent and unwavering gaze.</p>
-<p>“What d’ye know about Jim Conley?” he asked, in a low voice.</p>
-<p>“Never saw him before this winter, but we’re trapping the same line of
-country now,” returned Young Dan. “We’re working ’way up past the
-Prongs.”</p>
-<p>“D’ye mean you an’ Jim Conley are pardners?”</p>
-<p>“We use the same traps. Guess you might call it a partnership.”</p>
-<p>“It wasn’t a first-class skin, that wasn’t, as you know yerself, Dan. It
-was more patch than black. But if you have another like it I’ll pay the
-same price, even if I lose money on it—seein’ it’s you.”</p>
-<p>“All in cash, Mr. Watt?”</p>
-<p>“Not at the same price. I always figger on making part payment in trade.
-But what’s the matter with that? Wasn’t Conley satisfied last time?”</p>
-<p>“I reckon he was—but gin ain’t good for him. He got lost getting home.”</p>
-<p>“Not so loud,” whispered Luke Watt. “Call it trade. Didn’t Conley warn
-you to mind yer tongue? You talk like a fool; and if you ain’t more
-careful you’ll land yer pardner in jail. But that’s all right, seein’
-it’s yerself. I’ll buy yer skins—all you have there—an’ give you top
-price. But you got to take part payment in trade. Any kind o’ trade.
-Tea, tobacco, flour—anything you want or yer pardner wants. My prices
-are right.”</p>
-<p>“That’s fair, Mr. Watt. Will you pay me forty dollars for these two
-fishers? They are the best fishers I’ve seen this winter, color and
-size.”</p>
-<p>The storekeeper stood upright and laughed heartily. He straightened his
-back to it and squared his shoulders to it until Young Dan thought the
-buttons would fly off the straining front of the big waistcoat.</p>
-<p>“Forty dollars!” exclaimed the big man at last, like one who sees the
-point of a good joke and immediately repeats it to show that he has seen
-it. “Forty dollars! That’s pretty good, Dan! Darned good!”</p>
-<p>“Pretty fair,” returned Young Dan, quietly. “They’re worth more.”</p>
-<p>“Are you serious, young fellow? D’ye mean forty real dollars for them
-two skins? You look kinder as if you meant it. You must be crazy!”</p>
-<p>Young Dan sighed and removed the pelts from the counter to the rest of
-the pack. Slowly he tied up the pack, watching the storekeeper all the
-while with the tail of his right eye. He shouldered the pack and took up
-the axe and stockinged rifle.</p>
-<p>“Not so fast, Dan!” cried Mr. Watt. “That ain’t any way to do business.
-Say, are you crazy? Let’s see them skins again, and maybe I’ll go as
-high as thirty-five. And gimme a look at the rest o’ the lot.”</p>
-<p>“I been reading in the papers what furs are worth this year,” replied
-the youth. “You can’t fool me. I ain’t Jim Conley. So long.”</p>
-<p>Anger and something of apprehension flamed in Luke Watt’s unpleasant
-eyes and big face. With a muttered oath he started for the door in the
-counter—but before he reached it, Young Dan had closed the door of the
-store at his heels. And by the time the big man had reached that door,
-after squeezing his way through the clutter of barrels and crates, Young
-Dan was half-way down the village street.</p>
-<p>Young Dan kept on going along the well-beaten river road, with his
-snowshoes on his back instead of his feet, for half an hour. He paused
-now and again to glance over his shoulder, for he believed that Luke
-Watt would soon be on his tracks with a horse and pung. And in that he
-was right. Looking back from the top of one rise he saw a fast-trotting
-horse come over another rise half a mile behind. Then he turned to the
-right, into a logging road, and ran at top speed for a couple of hundred
-yards. The logging road was crooked, and rough underfoot. After the
-sprint, Young Dan strapped his snowshoes on and hopped into the woods.
-He glanced up at the sun, then went forward on a straight course at a
-fine pace. He felt very well satisfied with his morning’s work. He had
-confirmed his suspicions of Mr. Luke Watt, at least.</p>
-<p>“I have the goods on both of them,” he said. “I worked it out just
-right. Now I guess they’ll both have to behave themselves or clear right
-out of this country. I’ve got enough on Conley to scare him into being
-good and looking after his wife and kids, that’s certain.”</p>
-<p>He halted for long enough to eat two sandwiches of cold bread and colder
-bacon, standing. Then, steering by the sun, he continued to break
-straight through the woods toward the little town of Harlow.</p>
-<p>Luke Watt, in his little red pung behind his leggy trotter, drove
-straight on down the well-beaten river road, intent on reaching the
-upper edge of Harlow ahead of Young Dan. If the trapper held to the road
-and was overtaken on the way, all the better for the storekeeper, of
-course—but the great thing was a meeting this side of Harlow. It was not
-the fear of losing trade that inspired Mr. Watt to this determination
-and this unusual speed. He would regret a loss of trade, sure enough;
-but what he actually feared was the Law. He suspected Young Dan Evans.
-He suspected him of being less simple and ignorant than he seemed to be
-on the surface. He suspected himself of having been dangerously
-indiscreet in so quickly accepting that long-legged youth as nothing but
-a source of profit.</p>
-<p>“He worked me for a rube, I do believe,” he reflected. “I must get him
-before he gets me; an’ then, if I can’t scare him off I’ll have to buy
-him off. I reckon he’ll scare easy enough, if he’s mixed up with Jim
-Conley.”</p>
-<p>But would that young fellow scare easily? There had been a look in his
-eyes that said “no” to the scare idea.</p>
-<p>There was no shorter course between the Bend and Harlow than the river
-road. There was no bee-line through the woods that would cut so much as
-a yard off it. Mr. Watt knew this. He drove straight into the town and
-stabled his horse. Then he walked back beyond the up-river end of the
-town, accompanied by a middle-aged, middle-sized, seedy looking man with
-whom he seemed to be very well acquainted. So narrow is that small town
-that two men could easily keep an eye on all the ways of entrance to it
-at either end. Mr. Watt and his friend took up positions of advantage
-several hundred yards apart and waited.</p>
-<p>The sun was low when Young Dan came out of the woods and headed
-slantwise across a wide field beside the highway.</p>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:50%; max-width:700px;'>
-<img src='images/img-100.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chIX'><span style='font-size:1.1em'>CHAPTER IX</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.8em'>THE FIGHT IN THE SNOW</span></h2>
-<p>Young Dan Evans slanted across the white field, heading for the highroad
-which led smoothly into the little town of Harlow. His journey was
-within a half-mile of its completion. He had worked hard ever since
-leaving Bean’s Mill, through thick timber and untracked snow; and now he
-was tired and hungry but in fine spirits. He had thought much of Andy
-Mace and Pete Sabatis during the journey—of their admiration for one
-another’s qualities of physical and spiritual fiber—and believed that
-they would soon take him as seriously as they now considered each other.
-Of course Andy was his firm friend and already thought highly of his
-“smartness” along certain lines—but he feared that he had not yet made a
-very deep impression on the one-eyed Indian. He suspected that Pete
-Sabatis considered him a trifle too big for his cap and boots. He had
-seen something of the kind in the old man’s one eye that very morning.</p>
-<p>“I guess he thinks I’m just a cub playing at something and trying to
-fool folks into thinking I’m a smart man,” he reflected. “But when I
-have that big Luke Watt jumping to my say-so, and that thieving drunkard
-Jim Conley come to heel like a trained partridge-dog, and Mrs. Conley
-and the kids fed and looked after properly, I guess he will have to
-admit that I know what I’m doing.”</p>
-<p>Thus engaged with his thoughts, he drew near to an extensive grove of
-swamp-birches and alders which grew along the snow-drifted fence like a
-screen between the field and the highroad. He carried his blankets and
-pack of furs on his back, his axe on his right shoulder and his cased
-rifle hung by its sling on his left shoulder.</p>
-<p>He was close to the edge of the tangle of birches and alders, and about
-midway of its length, when a bulky figure in a coonskin coat arose from
-the snow and stepped out in front of him.</p>
-<p>Young Dan Evans did so many things all at once then that it is difficult
-to disentangle and describe his actions. Mind and body worked quick as
-thought—quicker, perhaps, for he was scarcely conscious of thinking. As
-he recognized Luke Watt in the very instant of seeing him he let
-everything he carried slip and fall from him into the snow in one
-shrugging motion—pack and rifle and axe—and jumped forward straight and
-hard. Even as he jumped, he saw Luke Watt draw something from a
-side-pocket of the fur coat—but he did not flinch from the mark. He
-struck Watt with his whole body all at once. His knees dug into the big
-man’s middle and his left arm went around the fur-clad thick neck; and
-as they fell he heard the revolver explode twice and felt the jolt of
-the gloved hand that held it against his ribs; and he drew up his left
-knee and stamped a wide snowshoe on Watt’s right arm, and struck the big
-face with his right fist. Thus they sank into the drift, with Luke Watt
-underneath and flat on his back. Young Dan trod the hand that held the
-revolver deep into the snow; and he struck the vanishing face again and
-again, though the snow muffled the blows of his mittened fist; and, all
-the while, his right knee crushed and pounded.</p>
-<p>Luke Watt struggled—but what was the use! He was breathless, helpless,
-bound and half smothered by the snow. All this violence had occurred so
-swiftly that he could not fully realize exactly what had happened. He
-had confronted the young trapper with his gun ready and the game in his
-hand; and now, a few seconds later, his mouth was choked with snow, his
-eyes were blinded, his arms and weapon were powerless and he was being
-beaten to death!</p>
-<p>Young Dan shook the mitten from his left hand and thrust his bare hand
-deep into the snow. In a moment he stood up and stepped backward a pace
-or two, with Luke Watt’s revolver in his grasp. He looked about him and
-saw a stooped figure on the road walking hastily townward. He turned
-again to his enemy, who was sitting up by this time and struggling
-painfully for breath. He flung the revolver far away and recovered his
-axe, pack and rifle.</p>
-<p>“How’re you feeling now?” he asked.</p>
-<p>Mr. Watt gulped a mouthful of air but made no attempt to answer. He did
-not even open his eyes. He paid no attention to the other’s departure.</p>
-<p>Young Dan found the hotel without difficulty and entered the office
-fully equipped.</p>
-<p>“Will you kindly tell me the way to the nearest sheriff?” he asked of
-the man at the desk.</p>
-<p>“The nearest sheriff?” repeated the hotel-keeper. “Do I get you, young
-feller? Ye’re askin’ the way to the nearest sheriff?”</p>
-<p>There were four other men in that dreary little office of varnished
-brown woodwork, mangey mooseheads and crockery cuspidors. These all
-stared curiously at the young trapper and shifted their positions in
-their chairs. The hotel-keeper leaned far over his little counter.</p>
-<p>“D’ye want to give yerself up?” he added, with a rude attempt at wit.</p>
-<p>“I have asked you a simple and civil question,” said Young Dan in his
-quietest voice. “If you don’t understand simple questions here and don’t
-answer civil ones, then I’ll ask somewhere else. What about it?”</p>
-<p>The hotel-keeper and his chaired patrons exchanged glances.</p>
-<p>“Sure, sure,” said the former, hurriedly. “We ain’t got a sheriff in
-this town, but we got a fust-class depity-sheriff by the name of Archie
-Wallace. Maybe ye’ve heared of him; an’ maybe he kin do yer business for
-yer as well as the full-blowed high sheriff of the county. What was it
-you said you wanted to see him about?”</p>
-<p>“I didn’t say,” replied Young Dan, with a disarming smile. “Thank you
-very much for the information; and now if you’ll tell me where I can
-find Mr. Wallace I’ll step along and stop troubling you.”</p>
-<p>The hotel-keeper reached for his coat, which hung on a hook behind him.</p>
-<p>“No trouble at all,” he said. “Glad to oblige. I’ll step along an’ show
-you his very door. I always aim to help strangers all I know how.”</p>
-<p>“Ye hadn’t ought to leave yer seegar-stand in the rush hour, Dave,” said
-one of the patrons, getting quickly out of his chair. “I’ll take the
-young man to Archie Wallace. It’s fair on my way home.”</p>
-<p>The hotel-keeper paid no attention to this offer but donned coat and cap
-and issued from behind the counter and dusty cigar-stand.</p>
-<p>“Follow me, stranger,” he invited, leading the way out. “Me and the
-depity-sheriff are old friends. I’ll make you known to him.”</p>
-<p>So Young Dan followed the hotel-keeper, and three of the four patrons
-followed close upon the heels of Young Dan. The deputy-sheriff’s house
-was not more than fifty yards from the hotel; and the young trapper
-smiled politely and said nothing all the way to it. The hotel-keeper
-rang the bell and took up a position on the top step in front of Young
-Dan.</p>
-<p>The door was opened by a tall, lean man who looked like a woodsman and
-wore a Cardigan jacket and grey homespun trousers tucked into
-high-legged larrigans of oil-tanned leather.</p>
-<p>“Here’s a young feller lookin’ for you on important business, Archie,”
-said the hotel-keeper. “It is so all-fired important that I brought him
-right along to you myself, so there wouldn’t be no possible mistake.”</p>
-<p>The deputy-sheriff looked at Young Dan Evans with calm inquiry.</p>
-<p>“It is private business,” explained Young Dan, smiling; “and these
-gentlemen don’t know any more about it or me than I do about them. I
-never so much as set eyes on any one of them in my life until five
-minutes ago. What I have to say is for your private hearing, if you are
-really an officer of the law.”</p>
-<p>“Step in,” said the tall man to Young Dan; and to the others he said
-drily, “Thanks, boys, for escortin’ the young stranger to the right
-place.” Then he closed the door in the hotel-keeper’s face. He led the
-way into a small room opening off the narrow hall—an untidy, stale
-cigar-scented room poorly illumined by an oil lamp with a green paper
-shade.</p>
-<p>“Dump your outfit in the corner and sit down,” he invited.</p>
-<p>Young Dan obeyed and removed his cap and mitts and outer coat. The
-deputy-sheriff sat down in his own arm-chair beside the untidy table and
-removed the shade from the lamp so that the light reached his visitor’s
-face. For several seconds he gazed keenly but pleasantly at Young Dan.</p>
-<p>“I’ve seen you before, somewheres or other,” he said. “Seems to me I
-have known you pretty well, sometime or other. Who are you an’ where
-from?”</p>
-<p>Young Dan answered the questions briefly but clearly.</p>
-<p>“You remind me of someone I know well,” said Mr. Wallace. “But it isn’t
-yerself, for I never saw nor heard of you before. A full-grown man—and a
-smart one. You speak like him—whoever he is.”</p>
-<p>“Bill Tangler, maybe? You’d know him, I guess. He’s my uncle.”</p>
-<p>“Bill Tangler it is! Your uncle, hey? Well, son, you’ve got a smart
-uncle. More than that, he’s able; an’ better still, he’s white. If Bill
-Tangler’s your uncle we don’t need any more introduction—so fire away.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan told briefly of his partnership with old Andy Mace, and
-produced from an inner pocket the letter from his uncle containing the
-suggestion of the venture and the partnership and the offer of camp and
-outfit. Archie Wallace chuckled over the letter. Then the trapper told
-of his encounters with Jim Conley, of the rebaited trap, and of the
-night Conley went off his course in the woods with a cargo of gin inside
-and out. He produced and exhibited the piece of paper upon which Mr.
-Luke Watt had figured out Jim Conley’s bill. The deputy-sheriff studied
-that exhibit very intently and slapped his hand on his thigh.</p>
-<p>“You’re a winner, Dan Evans!” he exclaimed. “Have a cigar.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan shook his head to the cigar and told his adventures of the
-day, up to the very minute of telling. He raised his short coat of
-wool-lined blanketing from the floor and held it up to the other’s view.</p>
-<p>“And here I am; and here’s where Luke Watt burnt two holes in my jacket
-with his revolver,” he concluded.</p>
-<p>Archie Wallace examined the holes in the coat without a word. Then he
-lit a fresh cigar from the butt of an old one, returned the green shade
-to the lamp and sat well back in his chair. He gazed at the lamp-shade
-in meditative silence. His manner impressed Young Dan. Suddenly he
-turned his glance upon his visitor and asked abruptly, “Can you cook?”</p>
-<p>The nature of the question was so unexpected that Young Dan was far too
-astonished to reply. He blushed and stared, wondering if he was being
-made fun of.</p>
-<p>“Can you cook?” repeated the deputy-sheriff.</p>
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-<p>“Then you’ll oblige me by goin’ to the kitchen and gettin’ supper for
-the two of us,” said the official. “Here are matches, and you’ll find a
-lamp on the table. The kettle’s b’ilin’, the coffee-pot an’ fryin’ pan
-are on the back of the stove, and there’s ham and eggs all ready set out
-on the dresser. I’m a bum cook myself. There’s an old hound somewheres
-in the house who is the only person besides myself who can stomach my
-cookery. He won’t bite you if you treat him friendly. While you’re
-gettin’ supper I’ll sit right here an’ study over what you told me. It
-needs some study.”</p>
-<p>So Young Dan started for the kitchen. In the narrow hall he met the old
-hound, which seemed delighted with him and followed eagerly into the
-kitchen. It was an extraordinary kitchen. All the dishes were jumbled up
-on the table, and not one of them was clean. But the fire of dry
-hardwood was burning clear in the stove and both pot and kettle were
-full and boiling. He went briskly to work; and in half an hour all the
-dishes were washed, the table was laid and supper was ready.</p>
-<p>The deputy-sheriff swallowed his first cup of coffee in silence. Then he
-said, “Jim Conley’s a trap-thief all right, all right—but you can’t
-prove it on him. He’s a liar I reckon, and I know darned well you ain’t
-a liar—but his word about that trap and whatever he took from it is as
-good as yours to the Law. So I can’t round him up—but I can scare all
-the blood and gin in his nose back to his rotten heart.”</p>
-<p>“I guess that’ll be all he will need,” replied Young Dan.</p>
-<p>Mr. Wallace nodded and devoured ham and eggs for five minutes or so with
-undivided attention.</p>
-<p>“As for Luke Watt—well, that feller is nigh as strong as he is
-slippery,” he said, pouring more coffee. “He’s so danged crooked that he
-had ought to’ve been thrown away with all the corkscrews when the
-country went dry. Or he’d ought to of moved over into Quebec. He is
-strong, too—but I reckon we got the goods on him all right, all right.
-Do you think you could find that revolver of his you threw away?—or do
-you reckon he’s maybe picked it up himself?”</p>
-<p>“I guess I could find it; and I don’t think he has picked it up because
-his eyes were shut and full of snow when I threw it away,” replied Young
-Dan. “I was mad, you know, what with his shooting at me and everything;
-and it was only the deep snow and my mitts that saved him from getting a
-sight worse than he got.”</p>
-<p>“Do you want to arrest him for assault with intent to kill, an’ for
-sellin’ gin; or do you want to run him out of the country on a pair of
-cold feet?” asked the deputy-sheriff. “Take your choice, Dan.”</p>
-<p>“Neither,” said the youth. “Neither, if we can scare him enough to
-handle him the way I want to. If we can scare him into keeping the law
-and doing something for Jim Conley’s wife and kids, I’ll be satisfied.”</p>
-<p>“But we got him cold,” said the other. “You’ve done a smart piece of
-work, Dan Evans. You’ve caught Luke just how I’ve been tryin’ to catch
-him this six months back. But what’s your idee? What’s this about
-wantin’ that fat lubber to do something for Conley’s wife an’ kids?”</p>
-<p>“They need help. Jim Conley’s no good. The way I figger it is, Luke Watt
-cheated Conley on the price of that skin. Whatever the skin was, patch
-or black, we know Conley didn’t get even as much as a third of the right
-price. And if we can’t prove that the skin belonged to Andy Mace and me,
-then it was Conley’s rightful property, in the law. So if we can shoot a
-real scare into Luke Watt—a regular death-cold fright—then we can make
-him hand over the rest of the price of that skin, in groceries and boots
-and clothing, to Jim Conley’s family. I’ll pick out the goods—enough to
-last them till well on in the spring; and Watt’ll have to pay to have
-them packed in to Conley’s camp. That’s my idea.”</p>
-<p>The deputy-sheriff drank more coffee, scratched his chin and relit the
-half-smoked cigar.</p>
-<p>“You’re a philanthropist, Dan Evans,” he said. “You’re like your uncle
-Bill Tangler in that.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan let that pass with a noncommittal smile, for the word was one
-which he had somehow overlooked in his explorations into literature. But
-he felt that it was nothing to be ashamed of if the same could be said
-of his uncle Bill Tangler.</p>
-<p>“And maybe you’re right,” continued Mr. Wallace. “You know the situation
-and I don’t, so it’s for you to say. As for the scare—if we find that
-revolver we can scare Watt into totin’ a year’s supply of grub all the
-way in to the Right Prong of Oxbow on his own fat back. And I reckon
-he’ll keep the law after we’ve had a chat with him, for he ain’t a fool.
-He’d sooner keep it along with his freedom than behind stone walls and
-iron bars, you can betcher hat on that. But there are other sides to the
-question to be considered. There’s no sense in jumpin’ before we look
-all round for the dryest place to land. So far you’ve considered nothin’
-but Jim Conley’s family’s need of grub and clothes. Well, that’s all
-right in its way, and as far as it goes—but it will sure encourage Jim
-Conley to sit at home all day and eat his head off. If he can’t drink
-he’ll eat. A feller like him has just got to be doin’ something with his
-mouth all the time; and I reckon he ain’t got brains enough to do much
-talkin’. If feedin’ his wife and children will make a good citizen out
-of him, then you’re dead right. But what about Luke Watt? We can scare
-him into keeping the law as far as bootleggin’ gin is concerned, but we
-can’t stop him cheatin’ in his trade every chance he gets. We couldn’t
-make a good citizen of him in a hundred years. And that ain’t all. Not
-by a long shot! Suppose I nab him in my official capacity, with his
-number right in my pocket? What’ll folks say about Deputy-Sheriff Archie
-Wallace then, d’ye think? They’ll say that Deputy-Sheriff Archie Wallace
-is an all-fired smart, able, slick and deserving officer! Yes, Dan
-Evans, it will sure mean feathers a foot high in my hat. And what will
-be said about the young trapper from ’way back in the woods who did the
-brain-work and took the risk? They’ll say you’re the best detective
-outside the covers of a book they ever heard tell of. You’ll be a big
-man with your name in the newspapers—and I’ll be the next high sheriff
-of this county. That’s <i>my</i> idea.”</p>
-<p>“And it is a good idea,” replied Young Dan, reflectively. “It sounds
-mighty good to me, of course. I’d like fine to see my name in the papers
-as a detective, but I wasn’t figgering on anything like that. I want to
-see that woman and her children decently fed. I don’t like her much,
-mind you—but she’s sure a courageous mother, and I pity her, and so
-would you if you knew Jim Conley. If we could scare him into earning a
-living for his family, then I’d certainly like your idea better’n mine.”</p>
-<p>“But you ain’t reckonin’ on makin’ Luke Watt support Conley’s wife and
-kids all the rest of their lives, surely?” returned Mr. Wallace. “That
-would be goin’ a mite too far with it. He’d sooner go to jail than do
-that, I wouldn’t wonder. No, that won’t do! You got to make Conley get
-to work. Philanthropy’s a fine thing, but justice is a fine thing, too.”</p>
-<p>“You’re right, Mr. Wallace—and you are the deputy-sheriff. I guess
-whatever you say goes. All I want to do is scare Jim Conley off of our
-trap-lines, and help his family, and smash that hound, Luke Watt.”</p>
-<p>“Then we’d best sleep on it, an’ have a look for that revolver first
-thing in the morning,” said the other. “Maybe we’ll hit on a way of
-reconciling your hunger for philanthropy with my thirst for fame and
-promotion.”</p>
-<p>“They sound as if they’d ought to pull all right in double-harness,”
-remarked the youth, with that smile which reminded the deputy-sheriff of
-Bill Tangler.</p>
-<p>The deputy-sheriff wakened his guest at the first peep of day; and after
-breakfast they set out in a red pung behind a long-gaited
-three-year-old. Young Dan left his skins locked securely away in one of
-Mr. Wallace’s closets, with the understanding that Wallace would ship
-them to an honest fur-dealer immediately upon his return from the
-present expedition. This arrangement would be sure to prove advantageous
-to Young Dan and his partner, for Archie Wallace, as deputy-sheriff of
-the county, would obtain a higher price for the furs than a private
-trapper could possibly make any buyer consider reasonable. They stopped
-near the scene of the trapper’s swift and violent encounter with the
-storekeeper from Bean’s Mill, slipped on their snowshoes and entered the
-slanting field. Mr. Wallace regarded the deep marks of the struggle with
-chuckles of satisfaction. Then Young Dan led him about thirty yards away
-to a very small cut in the snow and dug up Luke Watt’s revolver. He
-handed the weapon to Wallace, who wiped it off, tied it up carefully in
-his handkerchief and stowed it away in his pocket.</p>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:50%; max-width:500px;'>
-<img src='images/img-114.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chX'><span style='font-size:1.1em'>CHAPTER X</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.8em'>FEAR OF THE LAW</span></h2>
-<p>The road between Harlow and Bean’s Mill was all that hoof and heart
-could wish, and the long-gaited three-year-old was sound in wind and
-limb and as fresh as the frosty morning. It was still early in the day
-when the deputy-sheriff drew rein in front of Luke Watt’s store. He
-jumped out and hitched the strawberry mare to a well-chewed post and
-threw a blanket and a goat-skin robe over her. Then he cleared the frost
-from his eye-lashes, pulled his fur mittens off and threw them into the
-pung and rubbed his bare hands briskly together as if to limber up the
-fingers. Then he sank his hands deep into the roomy side-pockets of his
-fur coat.</p>
-<p>“You keep your collar turned up an’ your cap pulled down and sit right
-there till you get the high sign,” he said to Young Dan.</p>
-<p>Young Dan nodded his muffled head. He sat stuffily in the pung, very
-bulky and shapeless in an old coonskin coat of the deputy-sheriff’s,
-looking as much like “The World’s Fattest Lady” as anything else in the
-world—much more like that than like a lanky young trapper of fur.</p>
-<p>As Archie Wallace pushed open the door of the store he closed his eyes
-tight, the quicker to readjust them to the gloom within from the
-brightness without. As he closed the door behind him with his left
-elbow—for still his right hand was in his pocket—he opened his eyes and
-looked at everything in one wide-eyed glance. He saw, in that first
-comprehensive look, everything in the store—the counter, the fancy
-groceries on the dirty shelves, the barrels and crates, the baskets of
-eggs, the chewing-gum and depressing cigars in the little show-case, the
-boots and suspenders and amazing neckties hanging aloft, and Mrs. Watt
-and three customers—everything which he had expected to see except Luke
-Watt. He made his way to the counter and Mrs. Watt and wished her a
-rather grim good-morning. His professional manner was always uppermost
-when he was actually engaged in the final stages of a piece of
-professional work. He felt that he owed this alike to the Law and to the
-probable offenders against the Law.</p>
-<p>“I want to speak to your husband, Luke Watt,” he continued.</p>
-<p>Mrs. Watt, who was as like Mr. Watt in appearance and character as a
-woman could be, changed color swiftly and at the same time met the man’s
-grim gaze with a hard and brazen glint in her eyes.</p>
-<p>“You sure ain’t forgot my husband’s name, Archie Wallace,” she said.
-“What are you puttin’ on yer depity-sheriff airs for this mornin’? You
-sound like you was huntin’ for trouble.”</p>
-<p>“You’ve said it,” returned Mr. Wallace, drily. “Where is Luke?”</p>
-<p>“At home in bed, sick with a cold; an’ that’s where he has been since
-yesterday afternoon,” she answered. “You can go over to the house an’
-make a call on him in bed, if yer business is that pressin’”; and then,
-with a swift change from effrontery to curiosity in eyes and voice, she
-leaned across the counter and whispered, “What’s the trouble?”</p>
-<p>“Exactly what you suspect, Mrs. Watt—an’ maybe quite a lot more,” he
-replied, whispering in his turn from the force of example rather than by
-intention. “Now I’ll just step over to the house an’ have a talk with
-him.”</p>
-<p>“Wait,” she whispered, closing her fingers on the sleeve of his coat.
-“Tell me, have you got his number? Have you caught him? Tell me!”</p>
-<p>Wallace withdrew his sleeve from her grasp and turned and left the store
-without another word. His face was drawn for a second with an expression
-of sickening distaste, for he had seen, quick and sure as lightning,
-exactly what the woman had in her mind. He knew that she salted away the
-money which her husband corkscrewed out of the rural population; and he
-had just now seen her as a rat that contemplates the advisability of
-leaving a sinking ship. But she was a cautious sort of rat and wanted to
-make dead sure that the ship was going down before she swarmed down the
-anchor-chain and swam ashore. This nautical figure of thought came pat
-to Mr. Wallace, for he had sailed four deep-sea voyages out of St. John
-in his eighteenth and nineteenth years.</p>
-<p>“Mrs. Watt says he’s sick abed with a cold,” he informed Young Dan. “It
-may be so, for what would be the sense of her tellin’ that lie? That’s
-the house. If you’ll stable the mare across there at Murphy’s, I’ll go
-to Watt’s—and you follow me as soon as you’ve stood the mare in the
-stall. Open the front door an’ walk right in and up the stairs.”</p>
-<p>The deputy-sheriff found Luke Watt in bed. The store-keeper was very red
-of face and watery of eye, and there were dark bruises on his brow.</p>
-<p>“Your wife said I’d find you here, sick abed,” said Wallace.</p>
-<p>“Well, she told ye the truth,” replied Watt. “What d’ye want, Archie?”</p>
-<p>“You, Luke Watt. This is an official visit I’m makin’ you.”</p>
-<p>“Me? Official? Who’s the joke on? Tell me when to laugh, will you?”</p>
-<p>“Yes, you; and when the time to laugh comes I’ll do it. You’re done.”</p>
-<p>“And you’re crazy! I’m done, am I? Who d’ye reckon did me?”</p>
-<p>Wallace heard the front door open and close and then a light, slow step
-on the stairs. He opened the bed-room door and looked out.</p>
-<p>“Luke Watt wants to know who did him,” he said. “Come along in and show
-him, an’ then maybe he’ll believe me.”</p>
-<p>He returned to the side of the bed; and, a moment later, Young Dan
-entered the room in his bulky muffling of furs and shut the door behind
-him. Luke Watt’s face twitched. The trapper slipped out of his borrowed
-coat and removed his cap and mittens and looked at the man in the bed.
-Watt made a bluff at returning that look—but it was a weak bluff. His
-face twitched again, and he closed his eyes and sneezed. Young Dan
-noticed the bruised forehead and was glad of it.</p>
-<p>“I’d of marked you worse than that if it hadn’t been for the snow and
-the mitten on my hand,” he said. “But I guess you got enough!”</p>
-<p>“He must of got some snow down his neck an’ caught cold from it,” said
-the deputy-sheriff. “But if you’d killed ’im, Dan Evans, you wouldn’t of
-done more’n I would have done in your place. I wouldn’t of blamed you.”</p>
-<p>“What are you two talkin’ about, anyhow?” demanded Watt, in a voice
-husky with cold and emotion. “And who’s this here young jay?”</p>
-<p>“Cut it out!” retorted Wallace. “I know the whole story, right back to
-the fox you bought off of Jim Conley, and I’ve seen the piece of paper
-you used to figger out the price of it on—the price, mostly in gin. And
-I’ve got the gun in my pocket you used on Dan Evans here when you tried
-to stop him from gettin’ into Harlow. You ain’t as cute as I thought you
-were, but you’re a long sight more dangerous. I never reckoned on you
-tryin’ murder.”</p>
-<p>“It’s a lie!” cried the other. “Git out, or I’ll have the law on you!”</p>
-<p>“Not so fast,” continued Wallace, calmly. “I had a talk with your
-friend, Tom Marl, about one o’clock this mornin’, after I’d heard Dan
-Evans’s story. Tom was scared. He thought the two shots you fired had
-hit the mark. He’s quite a talker, Tom Marl is—when fear loosens his
-tongue.”</p>
-<p>All the color went from Luke Watt’s face and again he closed his eyes.</p>
-<p>“Attempted robbery under arms, and assault with intent to kill—it would
-make an exciting case,” continued Wallace, slowly and clearly. “It would
-give the smart lawyers a fine chance to show their smartness, some
-tryin’ to hang you and others tryin’ to save your neck—but the smartest
-lawyers in the province couldn’t save you from five years in pen. The
-liquor case won’t be near so exciting. We’ve got you so cold there the
-lawyers wouldn’t find anything to argue about.”</p>
-<p>Watt continued to lie with his eyes tight shut, breathing heavily.</p>
-<p>“I guess I’d have to make a charge against him for the assault and all,
-and for firing two shots at my ribs, wouldn’t I?” said Young Dan, in an
-unsteady voice. He felt unsteady. The sight of the big man’s fear and
-despair shook him strangely.</p>
-<p>The storekeeper opened his eyes.</p>
-<p>“Ain’t you made the charge agin me?” he cried. “Then don’t do it! Gimme
-a chance! I was scart crazy. All I meant to do was to stop you an’ talk
-you round. The gun kinder went off by accident. I swear it!”</p>
-<p>The deputy-sheriff sighed and lit a cigar.</p>
-<p>“How much did you get for that skin that you bought from Jim Conley?”
-asked Young Dan.</p>
-<p>“That skin?—why, I ain’t sold it yet,” answered Watt, thinking hard and
-speaking slowly and uncertainly.</p>
-<p>“In that case, I’ll take a look at it and value it,” said Wallace.</p>
-<p>“You needn’t trouble yerself,” said the other, sullenly. “I got five
-hundred dollars for it.”</p>
-<p>“Then you still owe the original owner of the skin four hundred an’ some
-odd dollars,” said the trapper.</p>
-<p>“Business is business,” protested the man in bed. “I bought the skin an’
-I sold it; an’ now I wisht it had been burnt to a cinder before I ever
-seen it!”</p>
-<p>“Give me four hundred dollars for Jim Conley’s wife and kids and I won’t
-make that charge against you,” said Young Dan.</p>
-<p>The deputy-sheriff, who had been gazing reflectively out of the window,
-turned at that with an air of decision and regarded the trapper with
-level eyes.</p>
-<p>“I’m goin’ to be downright and honest with both of you,” he said. “It’s
-nothing to me if you get four hundred dollars out of Watt for Conley’s
-wife and kids, or if you don’t. It’s no concern of mine. I don’t care
-what dicker you make with him, or if he keeps his end of the bargain or
-goes back on it—but I tell you both that whatever happens, he is pinched
-for selling gin. He is pinched good and hard for selling gin, and he’ll
-go to jail for it, without the option of a fine, as sure as my name is
-Wallace; and I’ll put a constable into this house to guard him until
-he’s fit to go to jail and await his trial.”</p>
-<p>“But I won’t make the other charge, if you’ll give me four hundred for
-Jim Conley’s wife and babies,” said the trapper to Watt.</p>
-<p>“I’ll do that,” replied Watt. “Go over to the store an’ fetch my wife,
-will you? She takes care of the money.”</p>
-<p>Young Dan went to the store and found a young woman with a red head in
-charge. She informed him that Mrs. Watt had gone to the mill on business
-and wouldn’t be back for half an hour, perhaps. He returned to Luke
-Watt’s bedroom with this information.</p>
-<p>“She ain’t got no business over to the mill,” said Watt. “Maybe she’s in
-the house somewheres. Take a look round the house for her, will you, an’
-tell her I want to see her quick.”</p>
-<p>So Young Dan left the bed-room again and searched the house high and
-low. The only living thing he found in it was a cat in the kitchen; but
-he saw melted snow here and there on the kitchen floor. He looked
-closely at the damp marks and knew them for the tracks of feet shod in
-arctics. He saw that the tracks began at the outer door of the kitchen,
-crossed to the big dresser and returned to the door. He opened the door,
-which was not locked, and looked into the cold shed. He saw a few small
-films of pressed snow on the dusty floor of the shed, between the
-shed-door and the kitchen-door. He went back to the big dresser and
-gazed curiously and eagerly for a few seconds at its dish-laden shelves
-and the closed doors of its cupboards, then returned to the room
-upstairs and said that the house was empty.</p>
-<p>“But there’s been a woman in the kitchen,” he added. “In and out again,
-with snow on her feet. She wore arctic overboots, whoever she is.”</p>
-<p>“That’s her!” exclaimed Luke Watt weakly.</p>
-<p>He got out of bed and put on trousers and coat over his nightshirt and
-thrust his feet into slippers. He shivered and sat down on the edge of
-the bed. His eyes of no particular color were miserable with dread.</p>
-<p>“Take a look in the stable,” he whispered. “See if my trottin’ mare’s
-there.”</p>
-<p>The trapper went out to the stable, by way of the kitchen and the shed.
-The stall was empty. The harness had gone from its pegs. There were
-fresh tracks of hoofs and runners in the snow in front of the stable
-door.</p>
-<p>“She must of tied the bells,” he said. “She seems to know what she’s
-about, whatever it is. And I wonder what it is?”</p>
-<p>He went back to Watt and the deputy-sheriff with the news that the
-trotting mare was gone from the stable, harness and pung and all.</p>
-<p>Luke Watt turned a tragic, despairing and murderous gaze on Mr. Wallace.
-“You fool!” he cried, hysterically. “Why couldn’t you keep yer silly
-mouth shut! You told her how ye’d come to pinch me, an’ how I hadn’t a
-chance to git clear—an’ so she’s up an’ lit out with all the money!
-That’s what she’s done! Lit out with every dollar!”</p>
-<p>With that explosion the storekeeper sank back across the bed and covered
-his face with his hands. The deputy-sheriff and the trapper exchanged
-embarrassed glances.</p>
-<p>“He’s lying,” whispered Wallace. “He’s tryin’ to fool you, Dan. There
-ain’t a woman in the world would do a trick like that on her husband;
-and Mrs. Watt couldn’t even if she wanted to.”</p>
-<p>He leaned over Luke Watt and shook him roughly by a shoulder.</p>
-<p>“Where’d you bank your money?” he asked.</p>
-<p>“I didn’t bank it nowhere,” mumbled Watt, still with his face in his
-hands. “She didn’t bank it, neither. She salted it away.”</p>
-<p>“Where’d she salt it away?”</p>
-<p>“I dunno.”</p>
-<p>“You’re lying, Luke Watt—or you’re the biggest an’ softest boob I ever
-heard tell of.”</p>
-<p>“I’ll bet she kept it somewhere in the dresser in the kitchen,” said
-Young Dan. “That’s where the tracks led to—to the dresser and out
-again.”</p>
-<p>The storekeeper jumped to his feet and ran heavily from the room, crying
-“Let’s go look.” The others followed him close.</p>
-<p>Young Dan took charge of the investigation of the dresser. All the
-dishes were removed from the shelves and every inch of woodwork was
-searched for a hidden drawer or sliding panel—but all in vain. Luke Watt
-sat down beside the stove and shivered and wept. Then Young Dan and Mr.
-Wallace emptied the four pot-closets in the bottom of the dresser of
-dozens of pots, pans, sauce-pans and frying-pans, and Young Dan crawled
-into each in turn and rapped here and there and everywhere with
-enquiring knuckles. In the fourth closet he found his reward. Without
-withdrawing his head he passed back and out a section of the bottom of
-the closet. Mr. Wallace took the piece of dry pine board in his hand and
-showed it to Luke Watt. Luke stared at it and ceased his weeping. Then a
-section of board from the floor of the kitchen appeared from beneath the
-trapper’s elbow. He withdrew his head and shoulders from the closet a
-few seconds later and squatted back on his heels.</p>
-<p>“Empty,” he said.</p>
-<p>Yes, the hiding-place beneath the floor was empty. The deputy-sheriff
-found it empty. Even Luke Watt’s hungry fingers failed to find anything
-in it.</p>
-<p>“An’ if there was a dollar in it there was twenty thousand,” whispered
-Watt, in a stunned voice.</p>
-<p>“There don’t live another woman in the world would play a trick like
-that on her man,” said Mr. Wallace. “No matter how bad he was, she
-wouldn’t play him down like that. It beats anything I ever heard of.”</p>
-<p>“Reckon yer right,” replied the storekeeper, listlessly. “Eliza ain’t no
-ordinary woman. You hadn’t ought to told her yer business with me.”</p>
-<p>He sounded like a man talking in his sleep.</p>
-<p>“I guess you’re in trouble enough, Luke Watt,” said Young Dan. “Well, as
-far as I’m concerned, you’re no worse off than if you hadn’t tried to
-stop me with a gun. That’s forgotten.”</p>
-<p>The dazed storekeeper went back to bed; and Archie Wallace supplied a
-cook and a muscular constable to feed him and hold him until he was in
-fit health to be removed to the county jail.</p>
-<p>On their way through to Dan’l Evans’s farm behind the long-gaited
-strawberry mare, the deputy-sheriff and Young Dan bought as much food as
-two good men could pack a day’s journey from Amos Bissing at the Bend.
-Mr. Bissing was deeply impressed by Young Dan’s company and appearance.
-He asked a great many questions and received a good many answers—but not
-a single answer to his questions as to the deputy-sheriff’s reasons for
-touring the country in Young Dan’s company. He could see easily enough
-by the manners of the two that their relations were entirely friendly.</p>
-<p>When the strawberry mare passed the kitchen windows of the Evans farm,
-and Young Dan was recognized by every member of the family and Mr.
-Wallace was recognized by the father, amazement and apprehension flamed
-in every heart.</p>
-<p>“He’s a policeman, I tell ye!” exclaimed Dan’l for the third time in
-quick succession, flattered by the panicky effect of his words. “He’s
-the sheriff from Harlow. Young Dan’s been too smart for his own good at
-last, I cal’late. Them fool books an’ his Tangler brains has tripped him
-by the heels at last. Wonder what he done?”</p>
-<p>Then the kitchen door opened and Young Dan entered with the tall man
-close behind him. He threw aside his cap and embraced his mother; and at
-the first clear glimpse of his face she knew that her Daniel senior had
-been mistaken again.</p>
-<p>They remained at the farm for supper, and the night and breakfast. Dan’l
-Evans was greatly relieved, of course, to know that his son was not an
-offender against any law—but he was not happy. Everything was too right
-for his complete enjoyment. There was too much talk on the
-deputy-sheriff’s part to suit him, of the virtues of Bill Tangler and
-the great thing Young Dan had done; and Young Dan, was too well pleased
-with himself and the deputy-sheriff; and Mrs. Evans made altogether too
-much of both the visitors and had more to say about the intellectual
-qualities of her own family than could be expected to please a husband
-of Dan’l’s disposition. When he knocked and belittled and sneered, he
-was either ignored entirely or bluntly contradicted. When he advanced
-the theory that Young Dan had been guilty of an error in judgment in
-jumping so quick at Luke Watt, and cited the two bullet-holes in the
-youth’s coat as proof of the mistake, the deputy-sheriff thought that he
-was joking and laughed heartily.</p>
-<p>“You’re a dry humorist, Mr. Evans,” he exclaimed. “The driest I ever
-met. That’s good—that about the holes in Dan’s coat. You sure do give a
-new and uncommon slant to a thing.”</p>
-<p>This puzzled Dan’l, giving him food for silent thought to last him for
-the remainder of the evening.</p>
-<p>Young Dan and Mr. Wallace set out for the Right Prong country after an
-early breakfast, on their snow-shoes, with forty-pound packs on their
-shoulders, leaving the strawberry mare in Dan’l Evans’s charge. It was a
-windless clear day, and the snow was well settled. Young Dan led the way
-at his best pace—but he did not have to stop once to let Archie Wallace
-catch up to him. The fact was, he had to put on an extra spurt every now
-and then to keep the tails of his snowshoes from being stepped on.
-That’s the kind of man Archie Wallace was.</p>
-<p>They found both old men at the camp in fine spirits and Andy Mace’s
-rheumatism greatly improved. Andy cooked a masterpiece of a supper; and
-after supper Archie Wallace told the story of Young Dan’s adventures
-with Luke Watt in his best style. At the conclusion of the narrative,
-Pete Sabatis turned the glance of his single eye from the face of Young
-Dan to that of Andy Mace and slowly nodded his head twice.</p>
-<p>“Guess you size ’im up right, Andy,” he said.</p>
-<p>Young Dan blushed with pleasure, yet pretended not to have seen or heard
-this passage of intelligence. To be accepted as an able man by Pete
-Sabatis and to measure up to the heroic standards of earlier
-generations, these were triumphs which might well expand the heart and
-redden the cheek of even an older man than Young Dan.</p>
-<p>After breakfast the deputy-sheriff and Young Dan went north to Jim
-Conley’s cabin, heavy-laden with their contributions toward the support
-of that worthless fellow’s wife and children. Just before coming into
-view of the cabin, Mr. Wallace halted and the trapper took to the brush
-beside the trail. Wallace stood motionless for five minutes, then
-advanced. Within a second of sighting the little hut of logs he glimpsed
-the swift flash of a face at the little window. He went forward without
-haste and knocked on the door. It was opened to him by the woman.</p>
-<p>“Good mornin’, m’am,” he said, standing his rifle against the edge of
-the door and lowering his pack to the threshold. “Here’s some grub for
-you, with the compliments of Dan Evans.”</p>
-<p>The woman stared at him, motionless and silent.</p>
-<p>“Is Jim round anywheres handy?” he asked. “I’d like to speak to him.”</p>
-<p>“It was him sent ye here—that young fool, Dan Evans!” she exclaimed.
-“Why don’t he mind his own business? Can’t ye let Jim be? He’s workin’
-fine now that the gin’s all gone. Can’t ye leave him be?”</p>
-<p>“What’s he workin’ at, m’am?”</p>
-<p>“Trappin’, that’s what.”</p>
-<p>“But whose traps?”</p>
-<p>Her face paled. Quick as a flash she reached out an arm, snatched his
-cased rifle from where it stood and stepped back into the room. Mr.
-Wallace smiled, raised the pack of provisions from the threshold,
-carried it into the cabin and closed the door behind him. He crossed the
-room in four strides and opened another door; and there stood Conley,
-facing it, with both hands held high in air and a rifle in one hand.
-Behind him stood Young Dan.</p>
-<p>“Come along in,” said the deputy-sheriff.</p>
-<p>Conley obeyed; and young Dan came close at his heels and shut the door.
-Wallace took the rifle from Conley and his own from the woman. Then he
-turned to Young Dan and said, “You’ve got something to say to these
-folks, I believe. Fire away.”</p>
-<p>“It’s this,” said Young Dan, looking coldly from the man to the woman.
-“I’m just about sick of supplying you with grub. A wolf would feel more
-gratitude than either of you. So this is the last time; and if ever I
-call again with the deputy-sheriff, there’ll be trouble for you. We’ve
-arrested Luke Watt for selling gin, and he is going to jail for it. Oh,
-yes, I know all about that fox skin! Stick to yer own trap-lines from
-now on, Jim Conley, and trade yer furs for food instead of hard liquor,
-and I’ll leave you alone. But make one more break at me or my traps, and
-I’ll land you where you can talk it over with Luke Watt. Here’s more
-grub—the last I bother to tote in to you—and that’s all I’ve got to say.
-Come along, Mr. Wallace. Let’s get out into the fresh air quick.”</p>
-<p>They turned away and left the man and woman and bewildered children
-standing silent and motionless.</p>
-<p>“I didn’t suspect it was in you to be so sharp with them,” remarked
-Archie Wallace. “What riled you?”</p>
-<p>“Conley tried to slip a knife into me after he’d put up his hands,”
-replied Young Dan.</p>
-<p>“Well, I reckon they’ll be good from now on, so far as you’re
-concerned,” said Wallace. “You scared ’em. You pretty nigh scared me.”</p>
-<p>They were half-way back to Bill Tangler’s camp when the deputy-sheriff
-halted and lit a cigar.</p>
-<p>“You’re a wizard, Dan Evans,” he said. “A trapper needs to be smart, but
-not as far-sighted an’ clear-thinkin’ as you. The Government will be
-glad to pay you for anything you do—so will you lend me a hand now an’
-then, when I’m up against something too big for me to swing alone?”</p>
-<p>“Sure,” said Young Dan.</p>
-<p>“That’s a bargain!” exclaimed Mr. Wallace; and they shook hands there in
-the white trail.</p>
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;'>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE OXBOW WIZARD***</p>
-<p>******* This file should be named 61911-h.htm or 61911-h.zip *******</p>
-<p>This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:<br />
-<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/6/1/9/1/61911">http://www.gutenberg.org/6/1/9/1/61911</a></p>
-<p>
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.</p>
-
-<p>Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-</p>
-
-<h2 class="pgx" title="">START: FULL LICENSE<br />
-<br />
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE<br />
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK</h2>
-
-<p>To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.</p>
-
-<h3 class="pgx" title="">Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works</h3>
-
-<p>1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.</p>
-
-<p>1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.</p>
-
-<p>1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.</p>
-
-<p>1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.</p>
-
-<p>1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:</p>
-
-<p>1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:</p>
-
-<blockquote><p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United
- States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost
- no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use
- it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with
- this eBook or online
- at <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
- are not located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws
- of the country where you are located before using this
- ebook.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."</li>
-
-<li>You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.</li>
-
-<li>You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.</li>
-
-<li>You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause. </p>
-
-<h3 class="pgx" title="">Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm</h3>
-
-<p>Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.</p>
-
-<p>Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org.</p>
-
-<h3 class="pgx" title="">Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation</h3>
-
-<p>The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.</p>
-
-<p>The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact</p>
-
-<p>For additional contact information:</p>
-
-<p> Dr. Gregory B. Newby<br />
- Chief Executive and Director<br />
- gbnewby@pglaf.org</p>
-
-<h3 class="pgx" title="">Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation</h3>
-
-<p>Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.</p>
-
-<p>The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/donate">www.gutenberg.org/donate</a>.</p>
-
-<p>While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.</p>
-
-<p>International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.</p>
-
-<p>Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate</p>
-
-<h3 class="pgx" title="">Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.</h3>
-
-<p>Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.</p>
-
-<p>Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.</p>
-
-<p>Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org</p>
-
-<p>This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.</p>
-
-</body>
-</html>
-
diff --git a/old/61911-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/61911-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index a439b4a..0000000
--- a/old/61911-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/61911-h/images/img-005.jpg b/old/61911-h/images/img-005.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 8cf330a..0000000
--- a/old/61911-h/images/img-005.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/61911-h/images/img-021.jpg b/old/61911-h/images/img-021.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 43a7519..0000000
--- a/old/61911-h/images/img-021.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/61911-h/images/img-027.jpg b/old/61911-h/images/img-027.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 2792353..0000000
--- a/old/61911-h/images/img-027.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/61911-h/images/img-041.jpg b/old/61911-h/images/img-041.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 7f53402..0000000
--- a/old/61911-h/images/img-041.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/61911-h/images/img-047.jpg b/old/61911-h/images/img-047.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 1217152..0000000
--- a/old/61911-h/images/img-047.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/61911-h/images/img-057.jpg b/old/61911-h/images/img-057.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 6a34744..0000000
--- a/old/61911-h/images/img-057.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/61911-h/images/img-068.jpg b/old/61911-h/images/img-068.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index c1933dc..0000000
--- a/old/61911-h/images/img-068.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/61911-h/images/img-087.jpg b/old/61911-h/images/img-087.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index ec94ca4..0000000
--- a/old/61911-h/images/img-087.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/61911-h/images/img-100.jpg b/old/61911-h/images/img-100.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index d7ac2f3..0000000
--- a/old/61911-h/images/img-100.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/61911-h/images/img-114.jpg b/old/61911-h/images/img-114.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 87feece..0000000
--- a/old/61911-h/images/img-114.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/old/61911-h.htm.2020-04-26 b/old/old/61911-h.htm.2020-04-26
deleted file mode 100644
index 17d1e4f..0000000
--- a/old/old/61911-h.htm.2020-04-26
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3323 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
-<head>
-<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
-<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Oxbow Wizard, by Theodore Goodridge Roberts</title>
- <link rel='coverpage' href='images/cover.jpg' />
- <style type="text/css">
- body { margin-left:8%;margin-right:8%; }
- p { text-indent:1.15em; margin-top:0.1em; margin-bottom:0.1em; text-align:justify; }
- /* headings */
- h1 { text-align:center; font-weight:normal; page-break-before: always;
- font-size:1.4em; margin:2em auto 1em auto; }
- h2 { text-align:center; font-weight:normal; page-break-before: always;
- font-size:1.2em; margin:2em auto 1em auto; }
- .figcenter { margin:1em auto; }
- /* tables */
- table.toc { }
- table { page-break-inside: avoid; }
- table.tcenter { margin:0.5em auto; border-collapse: collapse; padding:3px; }
- td.c1 { text-align:right; padding-right:0.7em; }
- td.c2 { font-variant:small-caps; }
- /* text divisions */
- div.chapter { page-break-before:always; margin-bottom:3em; }
- div.section { margin-bottom:3em; padding-top:2em; page-break-before:always; }
- /* quotes */
- q { quotes:"“" "”" "‘" "’" "“" "”" }
- q.cq { quotes:"“" "" "‘" "’"; }
- q.oq { quotes:"" "”" "‘" "’"; }
-
-
- h1.pgx { text-align: center;
- clear: both;
- font-weight: bold;
- font-size: 190%;
- margin-top: 0em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- word-spacing: 0em;
- letter-spacing: 0em;
- line-height: 1; }
- h2.pgx { text-align: center;
- clear: both;
- font-weight: bold;
- font-size: 135%;
- margin-top: 2em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- word-spacing: 0em;
- letter-spacing: 0em;
- page-break-before: avoid;
- line-height: 1; }
- h3.pgx { text-align: center;
- clear: both;
- font-weight: bold;
- font-size: 110%;
- margin-top: 2em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- word-spacing: 0em;
- letter-spacing: 0em;
- line-height: 1; }
- h4.pgx { text-align: center;
- clear: both;
- font-weight: bold;
- font-size: 100%;
- margin-top: 2em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- word-spacing: 0em;
- letter-spacing: 0em;
- line-height: 1; }
- hr.pgx { width: 100%;
- margin-top: 3em;
- margin-bottom: 0em;
- margin-left: auto;
- margin-right: auto;
- height: 4px;
- border-width: 4px 0 0 0; /* remove all borders except the top one */
- border-style: solid;
- border-color: #000000;
- clear: both; }
-
-
- h1.pgx { text-align: center;
- clear: both;
- font-weight: bold;
- font-size: 190%;
- margin-top: 0em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- word-spacing: 0em;
- letter-spacing: 0em;
- line-height: 1; }
- h2.pgx { text-align: center;
- clear: both;
- font-weight: bold;
- font-size: 135%;
- margin-top: 2em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- word-spacing: 0em;
- letter-spacing: 0em;
- page-break-before: avoid;
- line-height: 1; }
- h3.pgx { text-align: center;
- clear: both;
- font-weight: bold;
- font-size: 110%;
- margin-top: 2em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- word-spacing: 0em;
- letter-spacing: 0em;
- line-height: 1; }
- h4.pgx { text-align: center;
- clear: both;
- font-weight: bold;
- font-size: 100%;
- margin-top: 2em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- word-spacing: 0em;
- letter-spacing: 0em;
- line-height: 1; }
- hr.pgx { width: 100%;
- margin-top: 3em;
- margin-bottom: 0em;
- margin-left: auto;
- margin-right: auto;
- height: 4px;
- border-width: 4px 0 0 0; /* remove all borders except the top one */
- border-style: solid;
- border-color: #000000;
- clear: both; }
- </style>
-</head>
-<body>
-<h1 class="pgx" title="">The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Oxbow Wizard, by Theodore Goodridge
-Roberts</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
-restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: The Oxbow Wizard</p>
-<p>Author: Theodore Goodridge Roberts</p>
-<p>Release Date: April 24, 2020 [eBook #61911]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE OXBOW WIZARD***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4 class="pgx" title="">E-text prepared by Roger Frank<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org">https://archive.org</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/oxbowwizard00robe">
- https://archive.org/details/oxbowwizard00robe</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<h1 style='margin:0; visibility:hidden;'>The Oxbow Wizard</h1>
-<div class='section'>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:50%; max-width:700px;'>
-<img src='images/img-005.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='section'>
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;'>
-<div style='font-size:1.6em;margin-bottom:1em;'>The Oxbow Wizard</div>
-<div style='font-size:0.9em;'>BY</div>
-<div style='font-size:1em;margin-bottom:2em;'>THEODORE GOODRIDGE ROBERTS </div>
-<div style='font-size:0.8em;'>GARDEN CITY&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;NEW YORK</div>
-<div style='font-size:0.8em;'>GARDEN CITY PUBLISHING CO., INC.</div>
-<div>1924</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='section'>
-<div style='font-size:0.8em'>
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;'>
-<div>COPYRIGHT, 1924, BY</div>
-<div style='margin-bottom:1em;'>DOUBLEDAY, PAGE &amp; COMPANY</div>
-<div style='margin-bottom:1em;'>ALL RIGHTS RESERVED</div>
-<div style='margin-bottom:1em;'>COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY THE TORBELL COMPANY</div>
-<div>PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES</div>
-<div>AT</div>
-<div>THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY, N. Y.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='section'>
-<table class='toc tcenter' summary="" style='margin-bottom:3em'>
-<thead>
-<tr>
-<th colspan='2' style='font-weight:normal;padding-bottom:1em;'>CONTENTS</th>
-</tr>
-</thead>
-<tbody>
-<tr><td class='c1'>I.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chI'>The Stranger’s Book</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>II.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chII'>The Nick o’ Time</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>III.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chIII'>A Thief With Claws</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>IV.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chIV'>The Man in the Bunk</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>V.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chV'>The Stiff Knee</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>VI.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chVI'>Fish for Bait</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>VII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chVII'>The One-eyed Injun</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>VIII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chVIII'>The Adventure of Sabatis</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>IX.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chIX'>The Fight in the Snow</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='c1'>X.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chX'>Fear of the Law</a></td></tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;'>
-<div style='font-size:1.4em;'>THE OXBOW WIZARD</div>
-</div>
-<h2 id='chI'><span style='font-size:1.1em'>CHAPTER I</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.8em'>THE STRANGER’S BOOK</span></h2>
-<p>Young Dan Evans lived in the back country on the Oxbow with his parents
-and his brothers and sisters. For as long as he could remember, his
-Uncle Bill Tangler, his mother’s brother, had been an irregular member
-of the household.</p>
-<p>Young Dan obtained a meagre and intermittent schooling between his ninth
-and sixteenth years, at the Bend, three miles below his father’s farm.
-His terms were frequently broken by the weather, the conditions of the
-road and matters of domestic economy. Sometimes Uncle Bill helped him
-with his books. There seemed to be nothing that Uncle Bill did not know
-something about.</p>
-<p>In October of Young Dan’s last year of school, Uncle Bill brought a
-sportsman from New York or London or Chicago or Montreal—from one of
-those outside places, anyhow—to Dan’l Evans’s house. Uncle Bill and the
-sportsman were on their way in to the former’s camp far up beyond the
-Prongs. They arrived, by canoe, just before dusk and were off again half
-an hour after sun-up.</p>
-<p>Young Dan was sent by his mother to the spare bedroom, to make up the
-bed that had been occupied by the sportsman. In five minutes he was due
-to start for school. He had no more than crossed the threshold when he
-exclaimed, <q>He was smokin’ in bed!</q> On the chair near the dented pillow,
-about the base of the little lamp, lay two cigar butts and several
-deposits of ashes. Young Dan was distressed, for by what little he had
-seen of the stranger he had considered him to be a very superior person;
-and yet here was proof positive that he was possessed of a habit that
-was looked upon, in that household, as both low and reckless. He
-recollected a few of the words which his mother had addressed to Uncle
-Bill on the occasion of her finding that versatile bachelor smoking in
-bed. <q>It’s lazy an’ it’s dangerous an’ it ain’t respectable,</q> she had
-said—among other things.</p>
-<p>Young Dan approached the bed.</p>
-<p><q>And him from a city full of street cars and schools,</q> he murmured.
-<q>He’d ought to know better.</q></p>
-<p>Then something caught his eye and distracted his attention from the
-tell-tale butts and ashes. It was a book with a green cover. It lay open
-and face down on the bright rag-carpet, just beneath the edge of the
-bed. He stared at it for a moment, then snatched it up and thrust it
-inside his coat. At one glance he had seen that it was a story book.
-Good! On the Oxbow story books were almost as rare as ropes of pearls;
-Young Dan was as unacquainted with fiction as a city alley-cat is with
-yellow cream. In this case discovery of the discarded book seemed to
-imply ownership and he appropriated the volume with the intention of
-exploring its pages undisturbed by his younger brothers and sisters who
-would be sure to demand a share in the volume once their eyes fell upon
-its bright cover.</p>
-<p>Young Dan hurried through the task that had been set for him and started
-for the schoolhouse at the Bend, accompanied by Molly, aged eleven, and
-Amos, aged nine. His canvas-wrapped school books and the lunch for three
-were in his bag; and the book with the green cover was still inside his
-coat. Here, against his very ribs, lay an unknown treasure—a treasure of
-valuable information concerning far lands or the stars themselves,
-perhaps, or perhaps a treasure of magical entertainment. How was he to
-make an opportunity for investigating it unobserved?</p>
-<p>Suddenly he thought of a plan. He suggested a race.</p>
-<p><q>You two go on to Frenchman’s Spring, and I’ll stop right here,</q> he
-said. <q>When you git to the spring, give a holler and keep right on
-a-goin’ as fast as you like and I’ll try to catch you up this side the
-school.</q></p>
-<p><q>You can’t do it, and you know you can’t,</q> said Molly. <q>Even Amos will
-git there ahead of you.</q></p>
-<p><q>That’s as may be,</q> replied Young Dan, with dignity.</p>
-<p>So the others left him and hastened forward; and he immediately sat down
-beside the road and fished out the book. He opened it at the title-page
-with fingers a-tremble with eagerness. He began to read, running a
-finger from word to word, from line to line. Here were people of types
-and callings unknown to him, moving in the streets of a city unguessed
-by him, talking in a way foreign to the Oxbow of things unheard of even
-by Uncle Bill; and yet he read in a fever of intensity, with moving lips
-and wrinkled brows. A faint shout of childish voices, touched with a
-note of derision, came back, but it failed to reach the ears of Young
-Dan, whose whole attention was fixed on the magic under his eye. He had
-intended to keep his agreement, but he had completely forgotten Molly
-and Amos; he turned page after page slowly and so at last came to the
-end of the first tale.</p>
-<p><q>Gee, but that feller was smart!</q> he whispered.</p>
-<p>He glanced up, observed the sun and jumped to his feet. He was late for
-school that morning and accepted the reprimand of Miss Carten, the
-teacher, and the jeers of Molly and Amos without turning a hair. At the
-conclusion of the afternoon session he managed to get away by himself
-and read another story.</p>
-<p>With the green-covered book safe in his bosom and the secret of it in
-his heart, a change came over Young Dan. Molly and Amos were the first
-to notice it, but they could make nothing of it.</p>
-<p>One evening, within a week of the passing of the sportsman, he appeared
-at the supper-table when the other members of the family were already in
-their chairs. After eating pancakes for a minute or two in silence, he
-said, <q>You set the table to-night, hey, Lucy?</q></p>
-<p>Lucy, aged six, replied in the affirmative, with evident pride.</p>
-<p><q>And Molly fried the pancakes, because Ma was busy writin’ a letter to
-Gran’ma,</q> continued Young Dan.</p>
-<p><q>An’ what of it?</q> asked his father.</p>
-<p><q>Did you spy on us through the window?</q> asked his mother.</p>
-<p><q>No, I was over in the tool-house,</q> replied the boy; <q>and when I got
-nigh enough to look in at the window you was all set down to table.</q></p>
-<p><q>Land’s sakes! How d’you know Lucy set the table?</q></p>
-<p><q>Because everything’s so close to the edge. She ain’t tall enough to
-push ’em on very far.</q></p>
-<p><q>But how’d you know Molly fried the pancakes?</q></p>
-<p><q>Because most every one was cracked across, or messed about, when it was
-bein’ turned. You don’t do that, Ma, with the turner—but Molly always
-tries to turn ’em with a knife.</q></p>
-<p><q>Sakes alive! That’s the livin’ truth! But how’d you come to figger out
-about me writin’ to Gran’ma?</q></p>
-<p><q>There’s ink on your finger, Ma; and Gran’ma is the only person you ever
-write to.</q></p>
-<p><q>Land’s sakes! That’s reel smart.</q></p>
-<p><q>Seein’s how you’ve growed so all-fired smart so suddent, maybe you’ll
-tell me who went up the old loggin’ road t’other night and robbed me of
-nigh onto a cord of dry stove-wood?</q> said Dan’l Evans.</p>
-<p><q>Maybe I will, Pa. What’ll you give me if I tell you?</q></p>
-<p><q>Give you? Nothin’! You don’t know, anyhow.</q></p>
-<p><q>Don’t I know who’s got a horse that’s lame on the nigh fore-foot and a
-wagon with a hind wheel that wobbles? I see the tracks yesterday and
-studied ’em.</q></p>
-<p><q>You figger it was Tim Swan stole the wood. Well, you’re wrong. I
-suspicioned him myself, the minute I see the wood was gone, because
-Tim’s a born thief an’ lives handy. But it warn’t Tim took the wood. I
-mooched round his place for over an hour an’ couldn’t find a stick of
-it. Maybe it was the tracks of a rabbit you studied so hard.</q></p>
-<p><q>Maybe it was, Pa. Anyhow, I follered them rabbit-tracks along to Tim’s
-gate and past it and clear on to Widow Craig’s yard; and there’s the
-wood in her wood-shed; and she paid the rabbit three dollars for it.</q></p>
-<p><q>Well, I never!</q> exclaimed Mrs. Evans.</p>
-<p>A few days after the frying of the family pancakes by Molly and within
-two weeks after the passing of the sportsman in the care of Uncle Bill
-Tangler, seven of the scholars who attended the little school at the
-Bend came down with the mumps and on Thursday Miss Carten announced that
-the school would close for a week at least—and perhaps longer. The
-Evanses had escaped the epidemic, having been victims of the malady two
-years before. Molly and Amos went racing home, making the echoes repeat
-their whoops of joy. Young Dan walked more soberly behind them, for
-there were many things on his mind and he meant to use his time—while
-the mumps kept the schoolhouse closed—to test several theories that,
-ever since he had read the book with the green cover, had been simmering
-away in the back of his head.</p>
-<p>But Young Dan got no leisure in which to test his theories—at least he
-was not able to try them in the exact manner he had planned—for a
-stirring and mysterious event that roused excitement in the whole Oxbow
-region occurred less than twenty-four hours after the vacation began.
-Miss Carten disappeared. She dropped from sight as completely and as
-mysteriously as if a silent airplane had swooped down at night out of a
-dark sky and had carried her aloft like a great-horned owl stealing a
-birdling. On Friday someone asked for Miss Carten at the Troller farm
-where she boarded.</p>
-<p><q>She went to a party over to Cameron’s las’ night an’ took her suitcase
-with her; I thought as how she’d stop the night with Lizzy Cameron,</q>
-said Mrs. Troller.</p>
-<p>At the Cameron place, two miles away—as it developed later—Miss Carten
-had not been seen. No member of the family, in fact, had heard from her
-in the last twenty-four hours.</p>
-<p>There was excitement on the Oxbow which extended down to the main river.
-Search-parties went into the woods, equipped with shotguns and lanterns
-and stimulants and dinner-horns. Ponds and likely pools were dragged.
-Justices of the peace, rural constables and game-wardens awoke to
-official activity from the Bend on the Oxbow all the way down to Harlow
-on the main stream. The days and nights passed—six of each—without
-bringing any degree of reward or encouragement to the searchers. Nothing
-was seen or heard of Miss Stella Carten, dead or alive, and no
-suspicious characters were discovered in the vicinity of the Bend. The
-lost lady had not been remarked on the road or on the river, nor had she
-called at any isolated farmhouse. She had not been seen at the village
-of Bean’s Mill, at the Oxbow’s mouth. She had not bought a railway
-ticket at Harlow. She had vanished, suitcase in hand.</p>
-<p>Seven days after the disappearance of Miss Carten, at eight o’clock in
-the morning, Young Dan Evans encountered his Uncle Bill on the portage
-round Old Squaw Falls, seven miles upstream from the Evans clearings.
-Young Dan carried nothing but an axe and a small pack. He had left his
-leaky old basket of a bark canoe in the bushes below the falls, for it
-was too heavy for him to shoulder. Uncle Bill, coming from the other end
-of the portage, was bonneted by his long, green canvas canoe. The
-meeting was unexpected to both, but only Uncle Bill expressed
-astonishment.</p>
-<p><q>You, Young Dan!</q> he exclaimed, lowering his canoe to the trail. <q>What
-brings you ’way up here?</q></p>
-<p><q>Left my canoe below the carry,</q> replied the boy. <q>Just moochin’ round
-lookin’ for something.</q></p>
-<p><q>Sit down,</q> said Uncle Bill.</p>
-<p>They sat down, and the man lit his pipe and pushed his big felt hat far
-back from his forehead.</p>
-<p><q>Looking for anything in particular?</q> he asked.</p>
-<p><q>Yep. Miss Carten disappeared a week back and I’m sorter lookin’ round
-for her.</q></p>
-<p><q>You don’t say! Disappeared! And you think she’s maybe up here
-somewheres?</q></p>
-<p><q>That’s how I’m figgerin’ it out, Uncle Bill. She ain’t downstream,
-anyhow. Some folks think she’s lost in the woods or been killed—but I
-don’t; I reckon she’s run away on business of her own; and as she ain’t
-gone downstream I guess she’s come up.</q></p>
-<p><q>You don’t say! What makes you think so?</q></p>
-<p><q>Well, she intended to go somewheres, because she took her suitcase
-packed full, and her money. She wouldn’t do that if she was just meanin’
-to stop a night with Lizzy Cameron. And they ain’t found hide nor hair
-of her down river—but I’ve found her tracks, and more’n her tracks, up
-this way. Yep, I found the tracks two days back, about two miles below
-this, close to the edge of the stream. I knowed ’em by the sharp heels.
-I hunted both sides of the stream for a mile and dug into every pool,
-but didn’t find any more signs. But I found somethin’ else yesterday;
-and now I’m goin’ clear up the Prongs.</q></p>
-<p><q>What did you find yesterday?</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan untied his blanket and disclosed to his uncle’s view a small
-frying-pan, a loaf of bread, a chunk of bacon, a book with a green cover
-and a cardboard box. He placed the box in the other’s hands. It was
-empty but had once contained chocolates.</p>
-<p><q>That’s what I found yesterday, just below the falls here,</q> he said.
-<q>Miss Carten was a b’ar on chocolates. She et ’em in school.</q></p>
-<p>Uncle Bill examined the box and returned it. He scratched his
-clean-shaven chin and regarded his nephew with a contemplative and
-calculating eye.</p>
-<p><q>Young Dan, you’re smart,</q> he said. <q>And you’re bold as brass. I am
-smart, too, though that is not the general opinion in these parts. The
-trouble with me is that I am shy. You are all for showing how smart you
-are, but I’ve always been for hiding my light under a peck-measure. You
-are doing something now that I couldn’t do. My natural shyness would
-make it impossible for me to follow a young lady who has run away of her
-own free will. That is how you have reasoned it out yourself—of her own
-free will! Yes, I am talking queer—not the way I talk at home. The truth
-is, Young Dan, I’m not the rube your Pa and Ma think I am; but I’ve
-always been too shy to let them know about it. I know more than which
-side to butter my pancakes on and how to pole a canoe.</q></p>
-<p><q>I guess maybe you do,</q> admitted Young Dan.</p>
-<p><q>Your reasons for thinking Miss Carten was up here seem good to
-me!—good, but not conclusive,</q> continued Uncle Bill. <q>If she is the only
-person in this country who ever wears high-heeled shoes and eats
-chocolates out of a box, then you are dead right. Hullo! What’s the
-book?</q></p>
-<p>He reached over, picked up the book with the green cover and opened it.</p>
-<p><q>This explains your activities,</q> he continued, smiling. <q>Come on down
-with me and I’ll go back with you this afternoon—all the way back to my
-camp. And be your Doc Watson, going and coming.</q></p>
-<p><q>Have you read that book, Uncle Bill?</q></p>
-<p><q>Yes, years ago—and several more about the same smart feller. You come
-along down with me while I get some grub and mail a few letters, and
-I’ll buy you all the other books first chance I get. And I’ll bring you
-in again.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan shook his head.</p>
-<p><q>I’m this far, and I’ll keep right on a-goin’ till I’m ready to quit.</q></p>
-<p>Uncle Bill looked at his nephew and saw determination in his face.
-<q>Well, then,</q> he said, <q>I’ll help you around with your canoe, anyway.
-You can pole right up to the camp—if that’s where you are bound for. I’d
-go back with you but for a couple of important letters I have to post.</q></p>
-<p>Together they carried Young Dan’s old canoe round the falls. Uncle
-Bill’s lean, dark face wore an unusually thoughtful expression as he
-watched his nephew embark.</p>
-<p><q>I’ll tell your Ma that I met you and that you will stay in the camp
-over night,</q> he said.</p>
-<p><q>But maybe I won’t, Uncle Bill,</q> said Young Dan. <q>I didn’t calculate on
-stoppin’ upstream over night unless I found somethin’ to keep me—an
-important clue or somethin’. They’re expectin’ me home.</q></p>
-<p><q>I’ve just been thinking that I might not be able to get back till after
-dark. You promise me that if you go to my camp you’ll stop there until I
-come back, or there’ll be trouble. And the trouble will start now. You
-never saw me in a temper, Young Dan—and you don’t want to. Promise me
-that, or I’ll tie you up and take you downstream with me as helpless as
-a dunnage-bag. I mean it!</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan looked at his uncle and saw that he meant it.</p>
-<p><q>I promise cross my heart and honest Injun!—but you got to fix it with
-Ma, Uncle Bill,</q> he said, in a thin voice.</p>
-<p><q>Don’t worry about your ma,</q> replied the man, smiling. <q>And I’ll get you
-those books. If I find some mail that I have to answer I may not get
-back as soon as I planned. You stay right there at the camp, and don’t
-forget that I am one of the shyest men in the world. Off you go, Young
-Dan—and good luck to you!</q></p>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:50%; max-width:700px;'>
-<img src='images/img-021.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chII'><span style='font-size:1.1em'>CHAPTER II</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.8em'>THE NICK O’ TIME</span></h2>
-<p>The boy poled slowly up the bright and lively water. Sometimes where the
-stream was very shallow he got out and waded for fifty yards or more,
-pulling the canoe along with him; occasionally he stopped to examine the
-shore for signs, but all the while his thoughts were busy with his
-uncle. He had seen fire in the eye of that merry, kindly man—and he
-hoped never to see it again. Why had he made him promise to stop at the
-camp over night? A vague but frightful suspicion possessed him. Uncle
-Bill had hinted at a mystery concerning his character and pursuits. What
-had he meant? He had said that he was something other, something
-smarter, than people believed him to be around these parts, and that he
-hid his light under a peck-measure because he was shy. Now what had he
-meant by all that? And why had he seemed so queer about his camp? Was he
-a criminal of some sort—and was the secret of his dark career hidden in
-the camp?</p>
-<p>Young Dan remembered that he had never known his uncle to be without a
-roll of paper money in his pocket; but what he did to earn money beyond
-guiding a sportsman now and then, was more than the boy knew. Was it
-possible that this mild and entertaining uncle, who had two ways of
-talking and who often vanished from the Oxbow country for months at a
-time, was a robber? And might it not be that he sometimes committed
-robbery with violence? He always carried a pistol in the woods. A
-struggle might lead to a murder now and then! Miss Carten had been up
-here with her money!</p>
-<p>Young Dan worked his way slowly up the swift and shallow stream and at
-noon he stopped to fry some bacon, but spent most of the interval
-thinking. For two hours he sat there in the warm sunshine with his back
-against a tree and his eyes gazing off into space. His heart was heavy
-and numb with sinister suspicions of Uncle Bill. He had always admired
-and liked that amiable and versatile relative; but he would go on and
-learn the worst. When he finally went back to his canoe he realized that
-he would have to hurry to reach the camp above the Prongs by sundown.</p>
-<p>There were no clearings or human habitations on the Oxbow above Old
-Squaw Falls. The voice of the stream was lonely; the cries of birds in
-the woods were like the very voice of desolation; and the long, yellow
-day was as lonely as a deserted house. The sun was close to the wooded
-hills when Young Dan reached the Prongs. He continued his journey up the
-Right Prong. It was already evening in that narrow, tree-crowded valley.
-The water was so shallow there, and the bed of the stream was so broken
-with mossy boulders, that he ran the canoe ashore and waded forward.</p>
-<p>The sun was far below Young Dan’s narrowed field of vision, and the deep
-track of the stream was full of brown twilight when he reached the foot
-of the path that led back through the woods to Uncle Bill’s camp. The
-plaintive cry of a whippoorwill rang from an umber gloom of cedars; an
-owl hooted dismally in the tall spruces beyond; a fox barked on the
-darkening hillside. Night-hawks swooped on twanging wings high overhead
-against a sky of dulling green, and bats wove their flickering black
-threads of flight in the deepening dusk of the valley. Behind and
-through and over all lurked the spirit of the wilderness, watchful,
-waiting, still—a spirit of mystery and menace.</p>
-<p>Young Dan’s heart was shaken by a vague dread. He felt fear as he had
-never felt it before, at any hour of the day or night, when alone in the
-woods. He started along the thread of path that was worn among the roots
-of the underbrush. He gripped his axe close to the blade and questioned
-the gulfs of shadow to his right and left with straining eyes. So he
-advanced for fifteen or twenty yards; and then, suddenly, he remembered
-the character in which he had undertaken his journey. He knelt, struck a
-match, cupped the flame in his hands and held it close to the trodden
-earth.</p>
-<p>There was a track, fresh and deep, that he had not expected to find—the
-track of big soles thickly studded with blunted calks. Uncle Bill had
-been in moccasins that day; he never wore calked boots in the woods; and
-these tracks pointed only one way—forward.</p>
-<p>After a moment of reflection, Young Dan continued to advance. He was
-puzzled. When he reached the edge of the little clearing he saw that the
-camp was occupied. Yellow lamp-light streamed from its one small window.
-He hesitated, staring forward and around, then dropped on his hands and
-knees and crawled from the shelter of the woods. His right hand still
-gripped the axe close up to the heavy blade. So he moved among mossy
-hummocks and blackened stumps toward the lighted window, pausing often
-to listen and peer about him. As he drew near he noticed that the door
-was shut; and as he drew still nearer he heard the murmur of a voice
-from within. He crawled close to the log wall of the cabin, directly
-beneath the open window, and crouched there motionless.</p>
-<p>One voice was talking within—a thick, unpleasant voice that he did not
-know. And this is what it was saying:</p>
-<p><q>So he’ll be home to-night, will he? He’ll be home <i>to-morrow</i>, that’s
-when he’ll be home. An’ here I be, an’ you’re goin’ to hand over all the
-money you’ve got tucked away in this shack. Fust of all ye was sassy an’
-now ye’re sulky. Have a drink! This here is good stuff an’ powerful hard
-to git these days. Here, pour yerself a drink an’ swaller it down—or
-I’ll open yer mouth an’ make ye take it.</q></p>
-<p><q>If my husband were here he’d open that door and kick you out!</q> replied
-another voice—a voice known to Young Dan. <q>If you belonged to these
-parts and knew him you’d go now before he comes back and kills you, you
-drunken brute!</q></p>
-<p><q>D’ye reckon to scare me?</q> sneered the other. <q>Then ye gotter think of
-somethin’ bigger an’ better than this here Mister William Tangler ye’re
-yappin’ about. I reckon I’ll stop right here till he comes home, and
-then ye’ll know who’s the best man of the two of us. But ye ain’t took
-yer drink yet! Take it, d’ye hear! It’ll loosen yer tongue.</q></p>
-<p>The dazed boy beneath the open window heard a clink of glass, a scream
-and sounds of scuffling. He raised himself and looked into the cabin. A
-lamp stood among dishes on the table in the middle of the little room.
-Beyond the table, against the wall, a man struggled with a woman. The
-man had his back to the window. He was big and a stranger. The woman was
-Miss Carten.</p>
-<p>Young Dan’s quick eyes spotted a wooden rolling-pin on a corner of the
-table. He laid his axe on the ground and went through the window as
-quick and as noiseless as thought. Two swift and silent steps brought
-him to the corner of the table. He grasped a handle of the rolling-pin,
-advanced two more paces, judged the distance, swung his arm and struck.
-One strike meant out in that game.</p>
-<p>Young Dan bound the unknown and unconscious bushwhacker with thongs from
-a pair of snowshoes on the wall and placed a folded blanket under his
-sore head and let him lie where he had fallen. Then he sat and watched
-his new aunt make coffee and warm up a panful of beans for him. She told
-him of her secret courtship by Uncle Bill, and of their flight and
-marriage by a parson friend whom Bill had sworn to secrecy—all because
-William Tangler was the most bashful man in the world. She told of how
-Bill, who was thought to be so idle and aimless by the people on the
-Oxbow, was in reality an expert in the science of forestry and in the
-employ of the Government as such. Bill had gone out that morning to mail
-an official report and also to mail his young bride’s resignation as
-teacher in the little school at the Bend. In a few days they would go
-out to civilization together.</p>
-<p>Every now and then Miss Carten thanked Young Dan for saving her from the
-drunken bushwhacker and she said so many complimentary things that her
-visitor’s face turned the color of ripe choke-cherries. She said among
-other things that she believed he was almost as clever and brave as his
-uncle.</p>
-<p><q>If I were Uncle Bill I wouldn’t of been so shy,</q> said Young Dan, who
-felt greatly relieved by the outcome of his activities and very proud of
-himself.</p>
-<p>When the coffee and beans were ready, and the big ruffian on the floor
-was beginning to grunt and sigh, Young Dan remarked, <q>I guess Mister
-Holmes couldn’t of done that job much slicker himself.</q> Suddenly he
-cocked his head to listen. <q>I can hear Uncle Bill coming up the trail,</q>
-he said. <q>He offered to be my Doctor Watson, but I didn’t need him.</q></p>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:50%; max-width:500px;'>
-<img src='images/img-027.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chIII'><span style='font-size:1.1em'>CHAPTER III</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.8em'>A THIEF WITH CLAWS</span></h2>
-<p>Young Dan Evans was done with school; and he had almost decided to hire
-out with Josh Tod, as a <q>swamper</q> in the lumberwoods, when a letter from
-Uncle Bill Tangler caused him to change his plans for the winter. The
-letter, which came from Mr. Tangler’s office in a distant city, ran as
-follows:</p>
-<div style='margin:1em 10%;'>
-<p style='text-indent:0'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Dear Young Dan</span>:</p>
-<p>Now that the frost is on the punkin (as a leading poet has remarked) and
-the swamps back of your pasture are frozen so hard that no woodcock can
-stick his bill into the mud any more this year (a fact overlooked by
-said leading poet) and folk on the Oxbow are frying fresh pork with
-their buckwheat pancakes and making sausages and fattening turkeys, my
-thoughts are with you frequently and enviously. It is a great country,
-Young Dan, and a grand season of the year for him who has wild blood in
-his veins and unimpaired organs of digestion. I should like fine to be
-away up beyond the Prongs this very morning, putting an edge to an
-appetite, instead of sitting here at this expensive desk trying to look
-like the only real know-it-all in the Government’s service; but now that
-I have a wife who needs two new hats and an evening frock, and a furnace
-that eats up coal, I must sit in tight and steady to this lady-like job.
-But what about you, Young Dan? You have exhausted the educational
-resources of the Bend; you haven’t a wife or a furnace; so why don’t you
-go up beyond the Prongs? You may use the camp as if you owned it. As for
-grub, you’ll find enough there of everything except bacon and condensed
-milk to last till spring—enough for two. So you had better go into
-partnership with someone—with old Andy Mace, for choice. He is an honest
-man and was a mighty hunter and fur-taker in his day. You will find half
-a dozen traps in your own garret and a lot more in the loft of the camp,
-all in good shape. You are welcome to them, and to my rifle as well, and
-my snowshoes if they are better than your own. Help yourself. That is a
-great country for fox and mink and lynx. You should have a prosperous
-winter—so go to it, with your Uncle Bill’s blessing.</p>
-<p>P. S. Here is a little check. Take it to Amos Bissing at the Bend and
-you’ll find him willing to swap a few dollars for it, I guess. Your Aunt
-Stella sends her love to you and will mail you another book about Mr. S.
-Holmes as soon as she gets it ready for the post.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Young Dan was delighted with the letter. He showed it to his parents.
-Dan’l Evans didn’t think very highly of it as a specimen of epistolary
-art, though he had no objections to make to the advice and suggestions
-which it contained.</p>
-<p><q>Bill’s reckoned a smart man, an’ educated at that, but if this here
-ain’t the foolishest writ letter ever I read, then I’ll eat it,</q> he
-said. <q>I guess them Forestry people have kinder over-rated him. That’s
-the Gover’ment for ye, and always has been. Let a man have a slick way
-with him, an’ slithers of easy talk, an’ the Gover’ment gives him a job
-of work with nothin’ to do. This here’s a plumb foolish letter, anyhow.
-Take this here about his indigestion now, an’ this talk about the
-woodcock! What d’ye reckon he means? I ain’t had much education, but——</q></p>
-<p><q>Ye’re right there, Dan’l Evans,</q> interrupted Young Dan’s mother, who
-had held a very high opinion of her brother’s abilities ever since he
-had become a successful citizen of the great outside world. <q>Much
-education! No, indeed. Bill’s clever, an’ always was—an’ I, for one,
-always knew it. I always knew he should be clever, anyhow, seein’ he was
-a Tangler; an’ if I ever acted crusty with him it was his own fault for
-hidin’ his light from me in a bushel-bag, so to speak. He didn’t write
-that letter to you anyhow, Dan’l Evans, so what you think about it don’t
-matter a mite to my brother Bill nor anybody.</q></p>
-<p>This discussion concerning the letter from a purely literary standpoint
-did not disturb Young Dan in the least, for neither of his parents
-offered any objection to his acceptance of Uncle Bill Tangler’s offers
-and advice. He set out first thing in the morning to put the proposition
-before old Andy Mace, who lived three miles below the Bend, in a log
-house in a small clearing. It was a morning of sun and frost. The road,
-recently deep with mud, was hard as iron; the sky was bluer than at
-midsummer; a flock of geese went over, high up, winging tirelessly
-southward; and there was a skim of black ice along the lips of the
-Oxbow. It was a grand morning to be a-wing or a-foot and Young Dan
-pictured Uncle Bill Tangler seated at his desk in the distant city with
-a twinge of pity. Though there was no wind, red and yellow leaves of
-maple and birch snapped their stems loose in some mysterious way and
-circled down to the frosty moss, and the sounds of their falling came
-out of the woods on both sides of the road like a soft whisper.</p>
-<p>Young Dan found Andy Mace splitting stove-wood beside the back-door of
-his primitive habitation. Andy had lived a great many years—eighty or
-perhaps as many as eighty-five—and most of them rough. His joints were
-not as supple as they had been thirty years ago, but he was still an
-able man and a first-class hand at all forms of sylvan activity.
-Experience had taught him the easiest way of doing everything well, and
-his inherent and acquired wisdom saw to it that he made the most of that
-knowledge. This fact was demonstrated even in his present employment.
-The round sticks of dry maple and birch fell apart under the lightest
-strokes of his axe in a manner that suggested magic to Young Dan.</p>
-<p><q>You do that slick, Mr. Mace,</q> said the young man.</p>
-<p><q>Well, I’d ought to, at my time o’ life,</q> replied Andy, straightening
-his back slowly. <q>I’ve been splittin’ wood nigh onto a hundred years,
-off and on, so it’s no more’n to be expected that I’d be a purty slick
-hand at the job by now.</q></p>
-<p><q>I got a letter here from Uncle Bill Tangler, and if you’ll read it I
-won’t have to tell you what’s in it,</q> said Young Dan.</p>
-<p><q>That sounds reasonable,</q> replied the old man, taking the letter and
-seating himself on the chopping-block.</p>
-<p>He fished a pair of spectacles from a hip-pocket and donned them with
-great care. He chuckled now and again as he read the letter.</p>
-<p><q>Smart boy. Bill Tangler,</q> he said at last. <q>Knows timber and folks, he
-does; and I larned him purty nigh all he knows about timber. We’ve
-cruised the woods together months on end, him and me.</q></p>
-<p><q>Will you be my partner, Mr. Mace, and go up to Uncle Bill’s camp with
-me to trap fur all winter?</q></p>
-<p><q>I sure will, Young Dan. I ain’t got hoof nor claw o’ livestock, and
-this old house is used to bein’ empty, so I cal’late we’d best start
-upstream bright and early to-morrow mornin’. I’ll call at yer place
-about seven o’clock, if that’ll suit ye.</q></p>
-<p><q>It suits me fine.</q></p>
-<p><q>So we’re pardners, you and me. What I got in here will just about
-offset the camp.</q> Andy pressed a finger-tip to his forehead. <q>We’ll
-figger out the cost o’ grub come spring, and I’ll pay ye my half in good
-green money. Folks hereabouts name me for a rich miser behind my back,
-as ye’ve heared with yer own ears like enough, Young Dan; and that’s
-because I’m a bach, and live in a log house, and let my whiskers grow.
-Well, boy, they’re dead wrong about me bein’ a miser. I’d smoke ten-cent
-seegars if they tasted as good to me as a pipe, and it ain’t the cost o’
-city life that keeps me from movin’ to Harlow or Centreville or to Noo
-York. No, sir-ee! I live here like I do because it is the place and the
-way that suits my tastes; and I’d still do it if it cost me twenty
-dollars every week. You ask Bill Tangler. We took a ja’nt once to the
-Sportsman’s Show in Noo York, him and me together. Ask yer Uncle Bill
-about me bein’ a miser.</q></p>
-<p><q>Folks round here didn’t have Uncle Bill sized up just right, either,</q>
-returned Young Dan. <q>I guess the most of them don’t see much more than
-what hits them plumb in the eye.</q></p>
-<p>The old man chuckled delightedly at that.</p>
-<p><q>Come inside and have a go at my ginger cookies,</q> he invited. <q>I’ve been
-makin’ ginger cookies nigh onto a hundred years, off and on, and now I
-just naturally turn out the best ye ever tasted.</q></p>
-<p>By the time Young Dan started on his homeward journey, which wasn’t
-until after dinner, he was full of admiration for his partner—not to
-mention pumpkin pie, Washington pie and ginger cookies.</p>
-<p>Old Andy Mace came to the Evans’ place on foot next morning, at the
-stroke of the hour, with a pack of formidable proportions on his
-shoulders and a rifle in his hand. He found Young Dan ready for him,
-with the thin ice broken from the edge of the stream and Bill Tangler’s
-canoe launched and loaded. Young Dan took the post of honor and effort
-aft and plied the long pole. They reached Squaw Falls by half-past ten,
-made the portage, lunched and reembarked by noon. Old Andy Mace took the
-pole then, for three hours. The water, high and swift, humped itself
-over submerged mossy boulders. Andy pushed the loaded canoe up steadily
-and at a good pace, with no more show of effort than an ordinary person
-would make in cutting tobacco for a pipe. The sun went down before they
-reached the Prongs. It was night, with stars in the sky and an aching
-cold over everything, when they unlocked the door of Uncle Bill
-Tangler’s camp.</p>
-<p>While Andy lit two fires, one on the open hearth and the other in the
-little cook-stove, and shook out blankets to air, Young Dan carried the
-outfit up from the landing. Then, by lantern-light and firelight, they
-examined the provisions which Bill Tangler had left behind.</p>
-<p><q>Jumpin’ Josh-ee-phat, look-a here!</q> exclaimed Andy Mace. <q>Here’s a box
-been bust open—box o’ prunes—and the prunes took. There’s some dried
-apples gone, too, and some flour, I reckon. Take a look at the windy,
-Young Dan.</q></p>
-<p>The window was shuttered on the outside when the camp was not occupied.
-The shutter was of plank, hinged to the window-frame at the top and,
-when secured, fastened at the bottom by a hasp and a padlock. But now
-the shutter was not fastened. The long staple had been wrenched from the
-tough plank and now hung uselessly from the log window-sill, together
-with the hasp and padlock.</p>
-<p><q>A b’ar,</q> said Andy. <q>Trust a b’ar to sniff out prunes.</q></p>
-<p><q>A bear wouldn’t take flour,</q> said Young Dan.</p>
-<p><q>Ye can’t never tell what a b’ar will do, for b’ars are natural born
-jokers,</q> replied Andy. <q>I’ve knowed the critters for nigh onto a hundred
-years, and that’s my opinion of them.</q></p>
-<p><q>It wasn’t done yesterday, nor even the day before,</q> said the youth.
-<q>The prunes he’s left in the box are pretty dry. And he has had a go at
-the molasses, too. He’s left the stopper out, see; and look at the track
-of dried molasses down the front of the jug. It’s a wonder he didn’t
-upset it. And he’s ripped the bean-bag open, darn his hide! But how come
-it he didn’t upset the jug? Maybe it wasn’t a bear at all, Mr. Mace. A
-man could have done it, I guess.</q></p>
-<p><q>It be a reg’lar b’ar trick,</q> replied Andy. <q>He didn’t upset the jug o’
-molasses, that’s true—and I’m glad he didn’t—but all that shows is some
-b’ars is smarter or more careful nor others. He h’isted the jug in his
-two paws and took a swig, that’s what he done. Look at the beans he’s
-chawed and spit out on the floor. D’ye reckon a man would do that?</q></p>
-<p><q>Some men are smarter and more careful than others,</q> replied Young Dan.</p>
-<p>They closed the inner glazed sash of the window and nailed a strong bar
-of wood across it. Then they cooked and ate their supper and retired to
-their bunks, for they were bone-tired. The affair of the thieving bear
-would keep very well until morning.</p>
-<p>They awoke bright and early. Young Dan hopped from his bunk in a lively
-and limber manner, feeling nothing of yesterday’s exertions; but Andy
-Mace grunted a few times as he sat up in his blankets and a few more
-times as he lowered his feet to the floor.</p>
-<p><q>I ain’t as soupel as I was eighty years ago,</q> he said.</p>
-<p>When Young Dan opened the door the cold fairly caught him by the nose.
-He made a quick trip across the little clearing and down the steep path
-to the landing-place, with two pails in his hands. He found the shallow
-Right Prong shelled in black ice from shore to shore save for a few
-little air-holes. He had to break the ice with a stone before he could
-fill his pails. Then he took a quick and splashy bath right there. Wow!
-Wow! But after it he felt as if he could eat his weight in bacon and
-pancakes and fight his weight in wild-cats.</p>
-<p>They went out and examined the ground beneath the window after
-breakfast. Frosts and rains had done much to wipe out the tracks of the
-thief, but they found a few unmistakable claw-marks here and there. Mr.
-Mace put his white beard to the ground in the intensity of his scrutiny;
-but the best he could do was trace the marks for a distance of seven or
-eight paces from the window.</p>
-<p><q>I cal’late he’s denned himself up somewheres long before this, and lays
-sleepin’ snug as ye please on a bellyful o’ Bill Tangler’s superior
-prunes,</q> he said. <q>He’s a big feller, jedgin’ by the claws. I’d like
-fine to happen onto his den.</q></p>
-<p><q>Same here,</q> replied Young Dan. <q>I’d sure like to have a look at him. A
-bear as smart as that one ought to be in a circus or teachin’ school.</q></p>
-<p>They cruised the woods from sunrise to sunset for the next three days,
-choosing the likeliest country for their lines of traps. They spent four
-more days in setting the traps exactly to Andy’s taste in four lines of
-about equal length radiating from the camp. By that time everything that
-wasn’t kept indoors or underground, or that wasn’t clothed in wool, fur,
-or feathers, was frozen stiff. The Right Prong was roofed strongly over,
-except in one spot where the swift water kept itself an open
-breathing-place in some mysterious way. The ice was strong to the very
-edge of that hole; and, to save himself the trouble of keeping another
-hole chopped clear, Young Dan always walked out to it for his morning
-and evening pails of water. There the little river flashed always bright
-and naked and untouched, sliding over mossy rocks as green as in summer.</p>
-<p>There were other and lesser streams and half a dozen small ponds within
-the circle of Andy’s and Young Dan’s operations, and these were all
-frozen hard.</p>
-<p>Andy arranged the routine of the everyday tasks. They breakfasted before
-sunrise, by lantern-light. Then Young Dan set out on one of the crooked
-six-mile strings of traps, outfitted with rifle, axe, and frozen bait,
-and a pocketful of sandwiches in case of need. Andy cleared away the
-breakfast things and fell to the ever-urgent task of rustling wood; and
-between bouts of chopping and splitting he prepared the dinner and
-sometimes even pulled off such extra stunts as a panful of ginger
-cookies or a pie. Young Dan was usually home, with or without a pelt or
-two, by half-past twelve or one o’clock. After dinner, Andy armed
-himself and lit out on another six-mile string, and Young Dan washed the
-dinner dishes and rustled wood. Andy was usually back, with luck, in
-time to cook supper. In the evening they gave the skins whatever
-attention was necessary and the old partner talked and the young one
-gave ear. In this way, each of the four lines of traps was visited every
-other day.</p>
-<p>Snow descended upon that wilderness on the twentieth of November and
-continued to descend for two whole days and nights. It came to stay.
-Owing to the storm, the partners lost touch with their traps for two
-days. The third day was still and clear. The forest was fairly
-smothered, aloft and below. Young Dan set out at the first streak of
-daylight, sinking deep on his wide snowshoes at every step. He traveled
-slowly and experienced a good deal of difficulty in locating some of the
-traps. It was noon when he got to the end of the line, empty-handed. He
-rested there and ate half of his sandwiches of bread and cold bacon. He
-had tramped himself a nest in the snow, and made a little fire of dry
-twigs for the appearance of comfort; and now, having eaten, he continued
-to sit on his snowshoes and feed the fire. He was about to leave this
-retreat and set out on the back-trail when a muffled disturbance of the
-snow-heaped brush on his right attracted his attention. He glanced up in
-time to see a human figure issue from the tangle, its head held low and
-its shoulders hunched against the showers of dislodged snow.</p>
-<p>Young Dan was astonished at the sight, but he did nothing to show it.
-The intruder shook himself free of snow, halted and stood straight. He
-was on snowshoes and carried a rifle in a blanket stocking. Young Dan
-noticed that his rough jacket and trousers were old and patched and that
-they appeared to be several sizes too large for him.</p>
-<p><q>Have you anything to eat?</q> asked the stranger, in a voice that puzzled
-the trapper. <q>If you have, please give me a bite.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan produced the remaining sandwiches from his pocket and handed
-them over without a word. The stranger crouched by the little fire and
-bit off a very small corner of frozen bread and frosty bacon.</p>
-<p><q>I was watchin’ you quite a spell,</q> he said. <q>When I seen you was only a
-young feller I wasn’t scart.</q></p>
-<p><q>Only a young feller!</q> exclaimed Young Dan. <q>Is that so? Well, what of
-it? You don’t look like much of a man yerself.</q></p>
-<p><q>Which I ain’t, nor don’t pretend to be,</q> replied the stranger,
-swallowing hard on the chilly fare. <q>I wisht you had yer teakittle
-along. No, I ain’t much of a man. I’m a married woman, with a husband
-sick a-bed not five mile from here, an’ my name is Mrs. May Conley—an’
-me an’ Jim Conley an’ the younguns are jist about starved, if you want
-to know. Whereabouts is yer camp from here?</q></p>
-<p><q>About six mile from this, dead south. I got a partner there, old Andy
-Mace; and we’ve got quite a store of grub, of one kind and
-another—condensed milk, too.</q></p>
-<p><q>We ain’t got a cent to buy grub with. Jim was away till a few weeks
-back, an’ then he come home to us without a dollar of his summer wages
-an’ went sick.</q></p>
-<p><q>That’ll be all right about the money; but what ails yer husband?</q></p>
-<p>Mrs. Conley’s answer to that was a cheerless smile and a shake of the
-head.</p>
-<p><q>I suppose you shoot fresh meat, anyhow,</q> continued Young Dan, feeling
-embarrassed. <q>You got a rifle, I see.</q></p>
-<p><q>If you mean deer an’ the like by fresh meat, then I tell you I don’t
-shoot it—but I’ve shot at it a few times,</q> replied the woman. <q>It’s a
-sight too knowing an’ lively for me to hit.</q></p>
-<p><q>Tell you what I’ll do, m’am,</q> said Young Dan. <q>You come to this very
-spot at ten o’clock to-morrow and you’ll find me here with some grub.
-Will tea and canned milk and sugar and fifteen pounds of white flour be
-any use to you?</q></p>
-<p><q>Will spring water quench thirst?</q> returned the woman, her sad face
-brightening. <q>But can’t I have it sooner?—some of that there milk,
-anyhow? Young man, my two babies was cryin’ with hungry pains when I
-started out; an’ the biggest of ’em isn’t as long as this here
-snowshoe.</q></p>
-<p><q>If I had it here I’d give it you right now—but all our grub’s back at
-our camp, six mile away. Will you go along with me and carry away what
-you’re in most need of, m’am?</q></p>
-<p><q>Will a duck swim?</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan meant well, but he did not realize that the mother of two
-children who cry with hunger is almost sure to be weak for want of
-food—he did not realize it until he heard a soft thud behind him and
-turned to find his companion flat on her face in the snow. He raised her
-to a sitting position and pulled her back until she rested against a
-small spruce. He built a big fire in the trail and cut many fir boughs
-to serve her as a couch and covering. He removed her snowshoes.</p>
-<p><q>Guess I’m all in—till I have a cup of tea,</q> she said.</p>
-<p><q>I’ll fetch a kettle,</q> replied Young Dan. <q>You stop right there till I
-get back.</q></p>
-<p>He made the remaining three miles to the camp on Right Prong in record
-time. He told what he knew of Mrs. Conley’s story briefly to Andy, while
-they made up a small pack of provisions in a blanket. He attached a
-small frying-pan and a kettle to the pack.</p>
-<p><q>Best go all the way home with her, if ye ain’t clean tuckered out,</q>
-said the old man. <q>I cal’late it wouldn’t be a bad idee to have a look
-at this here Jim Conley, for he don’t sound to me like a desirable
-neighbor nor a valued citizen. You kin size him up while yer restin’,
-and take yer time on the home-trip. It shapes for a fine night.</q></p>
-<p><q>I’ll do that,</q> said Young Dan.</p>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:50%; max-width:700px;'>
-<img src='images/img-041.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chIV'><span style='font-size:1.1em'>CHAPTER IV</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.8em'>THE MAN IN THE BUNK</span></h2>
-<p>The sun was on the edge of the western hills when he got back to Mrs.
-Conley. She expressed relief at seeing him and wonder at seeing him so
-soon. He built up the fire, melted snow and made tea. He also fried a
-little bacon and bread. Between them they emptied tea-kettle and
-frying-pan; and the woman was greatly revived by the food and drink.</p>
-<p>The woman led the way northward and westward to her home. The distance
-struck Young Dan as being nearer seven miles than five. The small window
-of the cabin glowed a dim yellow. Mrs. Conley pushed open the door and
-entered without waiting to remove her snowshoes. Young Dan kicked off
-his snowshoes and had a foot on the threshold when he heard an
-unpleasant voice shout from somewhere within, demanding to know where
-the woman had been and why she had stayed away so long and why she
-hadn’t brought some food home with her. A few oaths gave color to the
-questions.</p>
-<p>Young Dan crossed the threshold, kicked the door shut with a heel and
-lowered his pack to the floor. In one comprehensive glance he saw the
-woman stooped to two clinging children, a man lying in a bunk, a failing
-fire on a rough hearth, a smoky lantern on a table and a worn bear-skin
-on the floor. He had never seen a less cheering interior.</p>
-<p>The man in the bunk sat up and stared at Young Dan. His shoulders looked
-very broad in the dim light.</p>
-<p><q>Who’s thar?</q> he exclaimed. <q>Who’s that?</q></p>
-<p><q>Ye needn’t be scart,</q> said the woman, with a tang of scorn in her
-voice. <q>It’s a feller from the camp over on Right Prong. He’s fetched in
-some grub for us, in the kindness of his heart.</q></p>
-<p>The man immediately lay back without another word.</p>
-<p>Young Dan felt indignant, so much so that his indignation amounted to
-anger—anger that felt like a lump of something uncomfortably hard and
-hot in his chest. He wanted to say something sharp to the big fellow in
-the bunk—but he didn’t know what to say. So, without a word, he untied
-his blanket, filled an arm with the packages of food and carried all to
-the table.</p>
-<p><q>No water and no wood,</q> said Mrs. Conley, looking at the bunk.</p>
-<p>Young Dan went outside and found a small pile of wood beside the door,
-under a roof of snow. He carried an armful into the shack; and as he
-laid the sticks beside the hearth he noticed how irregularly and
-unskilfully the severed ends were cut. Even a sick man accustomed to the
-use of an axe would not have hacked the wood so clumsily. He knew it was
-not the work of the man in the bunk. He then took up an empty pail and
-enquired the whereabouts of the water-hole. Mrs. Conley told him that
-there was a spring just back of the shack and a path leading to it which
-he couldn’t miss. She was right; and in a minute he was back with the
-water. As he set the pail down on a bench near the door he looked at the
-man in the bunk, the hot spot of anger and indignation still glowing in
-his chest. The man’s eyes met his for a moment—but he saw more than the
-fellow’s eyes. He crossed the narrow floor to the bunk.</p>
-<p><q>What’s the matter with you, anyhow?</q> he asked.</p>
-<p><q>Matter with me, d’ye say?</q> returned the fellow in the blankets. <q>I’m
-sick, that’s what’s the matter. Can’t ye see?</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan stooped swiftly and drew a high-shouldered, square-faced black
-bottle from beneath the edge of the bunk. There was a sound of clinking
-glass as he brought it forth as if it were in contact with receptacles
-of a like nature and material. He held it aloft.</p>
-<p><q>Yes, I can see all right,</q> he cried. <q>And I guess I’ve got hold of a
-few doses of your medicine.</q></p>
-<p><q>Well, what of it?</q> demanded the other, his voice at once savage and
-anxious.</p>
-<p>Young Dan returned the bottle to its place; and in so doing he caught
-sight of some other articles of interest beneath the bunk. More bottles
-were there, both full and empty—but there were other things of even
-greater interest to the youth. He stood up, however, without word or
-sign of comment.</p>
-<p>Mrs. Conley, who was busily engaged in feeding the children with
-condensed milk diluted with hot water, paid keen attention to Young
-Dan’s words and actions, but said nothing.</p>
-<p>Young Dan moved away from the bunk and bestowed a brief but enquiring
-glance upon the worn bear-skin on the floor. That article had struck him
-as looking queer, somehow or other, when he had first set eyes on it;
-and now he knew it to be queer. It had grown on a big animal and had
-evidently been a fine pelt in its day. The big, wide head was there—not
-the skull, but the complete skin of head, to the tip of the nose. Yes,
-the head was all there—but all four paws were missing!</p>
-<p>Young Dan turned again to the man in the bunk. <q>Say the word, and I’ll
-get a doctor in to see you,</q> he said. <q>Or we’ll haul you out on a sled,
-if you ain’t too sick to be shifted about a bit.</q></p>
-<p><q>I don’t want no cussed doctor p’isonin’ me,</q> cried the invalid. <q>Mind
-yer own business, will ye, an’ leave me be to look after mine? I’m able
-for it, without yer help.</q></p>
-<p><q>All right,</q> retorted Young Dan, his voice shaking with anger and scorn.
-<q>Well, then, look after yer own business if you’re so able. Get out of
-bed and get to work. I know all I need to about you. I know enough about
-you to run you out of these woods and into jail; and that’s the
-identical thing I intend to do if you don’t get busy. So cut out the gin
-and the bunk and cut into the wood-pile. D’ye get me?</q></p>
-<p>The man did not answer. The woman continued to feed the children in
-silence. Young Dan glared at the bunk a little longer, then fetched his
-snowshoes and put them on, and took up his rifle, axe and blanket.</p>
-<p><q>I’m off,</q> he said. <q>But I’ll be back in a few days, to see how you’re
-working, Jim Conley. I’ve got your measure, and don’t you forget it!
-Goodnight to you, m’am.</q></p>
-<p>He had not gone far from the miserable cabin before the woman came
-running after him. He halted.</p>
-<p><q>What is it ye know about him?</q> she asked, anxiously.</p>
-<p><q>I can guess more’n I know, but I reckon what I know is plenty,</q> he
-replied. <q>He broke into my Uncle Bill Tangler’s camp a few months back
-an’ stole some grub, with the paws an’ claws of a big bear on his hands
-an’ feet. Guess he reckoned he was smart.</q></p>
-<p><q>How d’ye know that?</q></p>
-<p><q>I’d figgered out it wasn’t a bear long ago; and to-night I spied the
-skinned paws under the bunk. It was easy.</q></p>
-<p><q>Jim wasn’t in the woods when that happened,</q> she whispered. <q>It was me
-broke into the camp an’ stole the grub. It was me who cut the paws off
-that old skin an’ used ’em to fool ye with. Jim was away out to the
-settlements that day.</q></p>
-<p><q>You, ma’am!</q></p>
-<p><q>That’s Gospel-true. The babies and me hadn’t a bite to eat but some
-rusty pork. We needed the food bad. It was the first time I ever stole
-anything.</q></p>
-<p><q>Then why didn’t you upset the molasses jug, like a bear would do? A
-bear would of upset it an’ then licked the molasses off the floor. If
-you’d done it that way, m’am—upset the jug, I mean—I wouldn’t of
-suspicioned the thief wasn’t a bear; and so I wouldn’t of examined the
-shutter and spotted how the staple had been pried off with the blade of
-an axe; and so I wouldn’t of taken any stock in the old paws under the
-bunk.</q></p>
-<p><q>I took enough molasses to fill the bottle I had along with me. I hadn’t
-the heart to upset the jug an’ waste what I didn’t want. But I kinder
-thought that’s what a bear would do.</q></p>
-<p><q>Well, that’s all right, anyhow,</q> said Young Dan. <q>I don’t blame you a
-mite for rustlin’ grub for your babies; but if you don’t make that big
-bluffer get to work, I’ll land him in jail or bust tryin’—and you can
-bet I won’t bust, m’am!</q></p>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:50%; max-width:500px;'>
-<img src='images/img-047.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chV'><span style='font-size:1.1em'>CHAPTER V</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.8em'>THE STIFF KNEE</span></h2>
-<p><q>Well, I found that bear,</q> said Young Dan Evans to Andy when he arrived
-at the camp; and then he gave a full account of his experiences with the
-Conley family.</p>
-<p><q>You done dead right!</q> exclaimed Andy Mace, at the conclusion of the
-story. <q>You got brains and use ’em, I do believe; and that’s more’n can
-be said about most folks nowadays. What size was this here Jim Conley?</q></p>
-<p><q>Big. Over six foot high, I guess, and hefty—and no more sick-abed nor
-you or me.</q></p>
-<p><q>What would ye’ve done if he’d clum outer the bunk an’ lammed ye one?</q></p>
-<p><q>I’d of lammed him two or three back—maybe four.</q></p>
-<p><q>I reckon ye would. I was jist sich another at yer age, Young Dan—always
-up an’ doin’, always ready to fight my own weight in minks or men, and
-yet always a thinker an’ a bit of scholard, too.</q></p>
-<p><q>But I don’t go round looking for fights, Mr. Mace. I’m peaceable enough
-by nature.</q></p>
-<p><q>Yes, in course. It’s the same with me. There never was a more peaceable
-citizen on the Oxbow nor Andy Mace—but nobody had to tromp on the tails
-o’ my snowshoes more’n twice to fetch me round with fists in both
-hands.</q></p>
-<p>A week passed before the partners on Right Prong heard or saw anything
-more of the Conleys. It was a busy week with them, for trails had to be
-beaten out anew in the deep snow and a fresh supply of bait had to be
-obtained for the traps; and, as if these tasks were not enough, Andy
-shot a fat buck deer which had to be skinned and quartered and placed
-out of harm’s way, and Young Dan cracked the frame of one of his
-snowshoes. The partners were full of energy and determination, however.
-They survived that strenuous week breathless but triumphant. They
-obtained the required bait from the depths of a nameless pond which lay
-four miles to the eastward of the camp. This was a big job in itself,
-for the ice was nearly two feet thick on the pond, not to mention the
-three feet of snow which topped the ice. They shovelled snow; then they
-chopped and shovelled ice; and at last old Andy bored with a four-inch
-bit until the clear water welled up into the icy trough from the brown
-depths. He bored two holes; and then they baited their hooks with fat of
-pork and each lowered a line into the unknown. They fished steadily for
-three hours and by the end of that time were too nearly frozen to go on
-with it. The captured trout froze stiff after a jump or two on the snow.</p>
-<p><q>Reckon it’s a reel chilly day,</q> remarked Andy, looking from the low
-sun, which glinted as grey and cheerless as a flake of ice, to the
-frozen fish. <q>Reckon we’d best quit and git home before we’re as stiff
-an’ twisted as these here trout.</q></p>
-<p>He was right. If there had been a thermometer in the Right Prong country
-it would have marked twenty-five degrees below zero just then. Young Dan
-was agreeable; but he would have stood there and continued the motions
-of fishing, slowly and more slowly until the numbness caught his heart,
-if the old man had not suggested a move. When two good men go into the
-woods together, and one of them is well past four score years of age and
-the other has not yet completed his first score, the spur of competition
-is bound to prod now and then. In this matter of endurance against the
-cold the partners had silently and almost unconsciously competed. No
-rivalry of youth and age had inspired them, but rather the rivalry of
-two widely separated generations of youth; for old Andy Mace considered
-himself as good a man as he had ever been and so a trifle better than
-Young Dan, maybe, because of his birth and training in a period of the
-world’s existence that had marked its very highest point of development.
-He said nothing of all this to Young Dan, of course—even if he thought
-it.</p>
-<p>They gathered up their gear and scooped the frozen fish into a couple of
-sacks. Not a word did they exchange until they were both on the warm
-side of their own door; and even then they didn’t exchange many. An hour
-later, however, when the <q>riz</q> biscuits, broiled venison steak, and the
-coffee-pot were on the table, they talked <q>good and plenty.</q></p>
-<p>Woodsmen are not generally supposed to be talkative folk. If there is
-any truth in this general supposition, then Young Dan and old Andy Mace
-must be the two exceptions that prove it—if suppositions, like rules,
-can be proved by exceptions. However that may be, these two woodsmen
-spent every evening in conversation, crawling into their bunks at last
-only because they couldn’t hear in their sleep. And their talk was not
-all of the woods and the day’s work. Far from it. They had much more to
-say concerning what they thought than what they knew; and so almost
-every subject under the sun was dealt with. Even when Young Dan read
-aloud, Andy capped every paragraph with a comment or an explanation, or
-an objection of equal or greater length. Their library contained only
-three small volumes of fiction, all from one entertaining pen—but under
-their system of reading, three promised to be plenty, for one winter at
-least. In spite of his interruptions, Andy Mace was a hungry listener,
-and so his interest in the adventures and mental processes of Mr.
-Sherlock Holmes soon became almost as keen as his partner’s. No one
-could be more sharply intrigued by an artful combination of significant
-words than that old trapper.</p>
-<p>On the night of the day of the cold fishing, after the last fragment of
-steak had been devoured, Young Dan opened one of the treasured books and
-began to read aloud; and, at the same moment, Andy began to cut tobacco
-for his pipe. Andy gave ear intently until the tobacco was shredded,
-rolled, stuffed into the pipe and satisfactorily lighted. He blew three
-large, slow clouds and settled back in his chair.</p>
-<p><q>I wisht we had that gent here on Right Prong with us,</q> he said. <q>He’d
-stand it all right, too, I reckon, in a good coonskin coat. What d’ye
-cal’late he’d of made o’ that thief in claws?</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan closed the book on a finger.</p>
-<p><q>I guess he would of known it wasn’t a bear right off,</q> he said. <q>I did.
-I suspicioned it wasn’t, anyhow. I guess he would of known for sure,
-right off; and maybe he wouldn’t of figgered it out the way I did,
-neither—not by the molasses jug alone, perhaps.</q></p>
-<p><q>How else could he figger it out? What else was there to figger on?</q></p>
-<p><q>Plenty for him. I can think of some other things myself, now. There
-were the claw-marks. I guess those alone would of been enough for Mr.
-Holmes.</q></p>
-<p><q>What about ’em? They were marks of a b’ar’s claws.</q></p>
-<p><q>Yes—but he’s scientifical, Mr. Holmes is. He would of had a spyin’
-glass handy in his pocket to look at the marks with, and right off he’d
-of seen by the spread from claw to claw that they had been made by a
-mighty big bear. He would study over that a few minutes, somethin’ like
-this: A bear with paws as big as what these must of been must be an
-uncommon big bear; and heavy—four or five hundred pounds in weight,
-maybe, in the fall of the year; and so he would just naturally make
-deeper tracks than these here; and a bear as big as what he must be to
-own these paws and claws would be too darned big to get through that
-little window without spreadin’ the side of the camp or bustin’ himself
-or somethin’. So he would up and say, quick but quiet, <q>This thief is a
-lamb in a wolf’s clothes</q>—or somethin’ like that. He would know it
-wasn’t a bear, anyway. That’s how Mr. Holmes would of figgered it out, I
-guess.</q></p>
-<p>Andy withdrew his pipe from his mouth and slowly straightened himself in
-his chair.</p>
-<p><q>Sufferin’ cats!</q> he exclaimed. <q>It don’t sound altogether human comin’
-like that from a young feller who ain’t been to school nowhere but down
-to the Bend. Where’d ye get the trick of it from, Young Dan? Not from
-yer Pa nor yer Ma, I’ll swear an Alfy Davy!</q></p>
-<p><q>That was easy, workin’ it out after I knew, the way I did,</q> replied
-Young Dan, modestly. <q>If I had worked it out that way before I
-knew—well, that would of been pretty slick work. That would of been
-scientifical.</q></p>
-<p><q>If Gover’ment hears about it you’ll be one o’ these here boss policemen
-some day,</q> said Andy.</p>
-<p><q>I guess not,</q> retorted Young Dan, with a slight curl of the lips that
-was foreign to his character.</p>
-<p>He already shared Sherlock Holmes’ opinion of the mental equipment of
-that stalwart and imperturbable force.</p>
-<p>He reopened the book and took up the story at the point of his partner’s
-interruption. He read a paragraph, his voice skidding now and then on a
-word of formidable proportions. He read a page, warming to his work and
-tearing the big words to pieces without so much as a hitch in his
-stride. Two pages—and still not a peep out of Andy Mace. He ceased
-reading and looked up inquiringly, and beheld his aged partner slouched
-in the chair and sunk deep in slumber, his shoulders hunched high, his
-chin tucked in and his grey beard rising and falling peacefully on his
-breast.</p>
-<p>Young Dan was up as early as usual next morning. He lit the lantern and
-then the fire in the stove; and it was not until then that he heard any
-signs of life from his partner’s bunk.</p>
-<p><q>Sufferin’ cant-dogs!</q> exclaimed Andy. <q>Warm up the b’ar’s grease for
-me, pardner. This here right leg o’ mine’s stiffer’n King Pharaoh’s
-neck. Must of give it a twist yesterday.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan complied with this request, cooked the breakfast and tucked
-into it. He set out on the northward line at the first break of dawn,
-with a sack over his shoulder containing a supply of the new bait and a
-haunch of venison, leaving Andy Mace still rubbing that high-smelling
-cure-all into his right knee and telling how it had been tender ever
-since he had hurt it fifty years ago in an argument with a man from
-Quebec.</p>
-<p>It was a fine morning, and a clear finger of light in the east promised
-a fine day. The air was still and not so perishing cold as it had been
-the day before. Young Dan traveled fast. He found a mink in the first
-trap and stowed it away in the sack without waiting to skin it. He
-rebaited the trap with a frozen trout. The second and third traps were
-exactly as he had last seen them; the fourth contained a red fox, which
-he added to the collection in the sack; and the remaining traps were
-undisturbed. He continued northward along the trail that led to the
-Conley cabin.</p>
-<p>Young Dan did not find Jim Conley at home, but Mrs. Conley and the
-babies were there. He produced the haunch of deer-meat, for which the
-woman thanked him heartily.</p>
-<p><q>I’m glad to see that Jim’s able to be up and out,</q> he said. <q>He must be
-feeling better.</q></p>
-<p><q>I reckon he’s some better,</q> she replied. <q>He lit out for the
-settlements two days back, anyhow.</q></p>
-<p><q>To fetch in some grub?</q></p>
-<p><q>Maybe he’ll fetch in some grub.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan’s eyes turned significantly to the floor at the edge of the
-bunk beneath which he had discovered the store of <q>square-faces</q> during
-his last visit. The woman observed the glance and sighed. Young Dan felt
-embarrassed.</p>
-<p><q>I’m glad he has something to buy grub with,</q> he said.</p>
-<p><q>He’s got a few skins,</q> said the woman. <q>He went out an’ set some traps
-first thing after the tongue-lashin’ ye give him.</q></p>
-<p><q>He must be lucky, to have enough to carry out to the settlements after
-a couple of days’ trapping,</q> said the youth, astonished.</p>
-<p>Mrs. Conley smiled bitterly.</p>
-<p><q>Jim don’t wait to git a lot before he commences sellin’,</q> she said.
-<q>It’s the way he’s built.</q></p>
-<p><q>And he’s left you to attend to the traps?</q></p>
-<p><q>Nope, he told me to let ’em be while he was gone. I don’t know nothin’
-about traps, anyhow. I was born and riz in the settlements.</q></p>
-<p><q>He might lose some good skins that way—have them et up on him; but it’s
-his own business, I guess. Well, I must be getting home. If you need
-anything, m’am, you know where to find my partner and me.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan sat down and ate his lunch as soon as he got out of sight of
-the cabin. He felt depressed; and the cold steak and frosty biscuits
-didn’t cheer him.</p>
-<p><q>That’s a poor outfit,</q> he said. <q>I guess that Jim Conley’s no darned
-good. I wonder where he got that gin—and if he’ll get any more? He won’t
-buy much with the price of a few fox skins, that’s sure. He’s big, and
-maybe he’s powerful—but I kind of feel that I’ll light right into him
-next time I see him.</q></p>
-<p>He made the homeward journey of twelve miles without a stop. It was
-close to three o’clock in the afternoon when he reached camp; and there,
-to his astonishment, he found Andy Mace seated by the stove with his
-right leg cocked up in a chair.</p>
-<p>Andy looked ashamed of himself.</p>
-<p><q>I never knowed it to act so contrary before,</q> he said. <q>It’s still
-stiffer’n a ramrod, an’ I’ve rubbed nigh all my b’ar’s grease into it;
-an’ all the fault o’ that gum-heeled feller from Quebec I fit with over
-on the Tobique in the winter o’ eighteen-seventy. It’s nigh enough to
-rile a man’s temper, Young Dan.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan was distressed.</p>
-<p><q>If it hurts you bad, just say the word and I’ll go clean out to Harlow
-and fetch in a doctor,</q> he offered.</p>
-<p><q>No!</q> exclaimed Andy. <q>It ain’t my knee hurts me, but it’s layin’ down
-on the job to-day, and maybe to-morrow, and leavin’ all the work to you.
-That’s what riles me.</q></p>
-<p><q>Don’t you worry about that,</q> the youth reassured him. <q>I am able and
-willing, and you’ll be right as rain in a few days. Now I’ll do a mile
-or two of the south line and be back in time to fry pancakes for
-supper.</q></p>
-<p>He was as good as his word; and, later, his pancakes proved to be as
-good as any his partner had ever mixed and fried. He told of his visit
-to the Conley cabin, and the old man agreed with him that it would be a
-real pleasure to hand Jim Conley just what he deserved. After supper,
-Young Dan read a complete story, in irregular fragments, and his partner
-talked a bookful.</p>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:50%; max-width:479px;'>
-<img src='images/img-057.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chVI'><span style='font-size:1.1em'>CHAPTER VI</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.8em'>FISH FOR BAIT</span></h2>
-<p>Andy’s knee was worse next morning, but he did not say so. He admitted
-that it didn’t seem to be any more supple, spoke hopefully of another
-day’s rest and a little more bear’s grease as being all that it
-required, and again referred to the fight of fifty years ago in terms of
-regret and acrimony. The truth was that the old fellow had rheumatism;
-and he knew what it was; and he had felt it before, once or twice a
-year, in the very same place. Furthermore, the gritty old sportsman was
-too vain to admit the truth. Of course he had fought with a man from
-Quebec fifty years ago, in a lumber-camp on Tobique River, and twisted a
-knee in the heat of the encounter—but if you had put him on oath and
-asked him to lay a finger on the knee he had wrenched on that distant
-occasion, he couldn’t have done it.</p>
-<p><q>I hope you walloped that man from Quebec,</q> said Young Dan.</p>
-<p><q>I sure did,</q> replied Andy, brightening. <q>He was counted a smart fighter
-even for them days—but I was the snag he busted himself on.</q></p>
-<p><q>I betcher! Well, I’ll be back in time to cook dinner, so you just keep
-quiet while I’m gone.</q></p>
-<p><q>No, you take yer grub along and I’ll have supper ready when you git
-back. I ain’t a cripple yet.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan put some food in his pockets and went about his day’s work,
-armed as usual with axe and rifle. He set out on the line of traps that
-ran crookedly almost due west, for this was the one that had been
-longest neglected. Andy Mace had been along it last, just before the
-forty-eight-hour storm, and now the tracks of his snowshoes were buried
-deep. Young Dan kept to his course without difficulty, however, though
-the line was not blazed. He worked easily by signs that would have meant
-nothing to a city man. His guides were certain trees and bushes and
-humps and hollows; and the wilderness was full to crowding of such
-things. So much for the line of general direction—but some of the traps
-lay several score of yards to the right and left of that line. A modest
-blaze had been cut in the bark of tree or sapling at several of these
-points of deflection.</p>
-<p>Young Dan drew two blanks and then a fine big lynx. He skinned the lynx
-before going on. The fourth trap was empty, but the bait which had been
-placed on and around it so artfully had been snatched away even more
-artfully. He rebaited with frozen trout. The fifth trap was snapped
-tight on the forepaws of a skunk. The skunk itself was gone but Young
-Dan soon discovered odds and ends of hair and bone scattered in the snow
-in the immediate vicinity. Something with an amazing appetite had beaten
-the trapper to that trap, for certain. Young Dan set these things to
-rights and passed on, wondering at the driving power of hunger.</p>
-<p>Two more blanks, a red fox and a skunk followed. The last trap on the
-line was empty and evidently undisturbed. The bait was covered with
-snow. Young Dan felt for it with a small stick and twitched a bit of it
-to the surface. He replaced it with a frozen trout, left it lying on the
-snow as an extra lure and turned away. He even took a step away; and
-then he turned back sharply and with the stick drew closer the piece of
-bait which he had twitched out of the snow. He took it up in his
-mittened hands and examined it closely. His eyes rounded and his lips
-parted with astonishment. Then his face took on an expression of blank
-bewilderment. He gazed all around at the crowding underbrush and soaring
-spires of the forest, then straight up at the clear sky, then down again
-at the lump of frozen bait in his hand.</p>
-<p><q>That’s queer,</q> he said. <q>Andy was here last, and that was before we
-went fishing—yes, and before the last snow. We were baiting with
-porcupine that day. I wonder where he got this from.</q></p>
-<p>He tossed the thing back into the snow and, still wondering, went his
-way. His way now was not by the back trail, but sharp to the right, and
-then more to the right, until his course lay southeast. He traveled by
-the sun. The way was rough and tangled, and the <q>going</q> was heavy. He
-struggled over blow-downs and through cedar-twined fastnesses of swamp.
-After a couple of miles of it he sat down to rest and eat his lunch.
-After that he came to a patch of open barren, desolate and flat under
-the colorless sun. He held to his course straight across the level, a
-distance of about two miles, and made good time. Beyond the barren he
-entered a forest of big timber and crossed a wide ridge of maples and
-yellow birches; and far beyond the ridge he came at last to the locality
-of the southernmost trap of the southern line.</p>
-<p>Young Dan had traveled close upon fifteen miles since breakfast, and
-here he was still six miles at least from camp as the crow flies—and
-what would have been a laughing matter to a crow was a tough job for
-him. He almost found it in his heart to hope that all the traps between
-him and his supper were empty. No such luck! In that first trap, the
-farthest from home, he found a big bobcat—a cheap pelt on a big body.</p>
-<p>It was past eight o’clock when Young Dan pushed open the door, staggered
-into the camp and let his load thump to the floor. He dropped his axe,
-too, stood his rifle against the wall, threw aside his fur cap and
-mittens, and sank into a chair with a grunt of relief.</p>
-<p><q>That <i>was</i> a day’s work, and I’m darn glad it’s through with!</q> he
-exclaimed, leaning back in his chair and closing his eyes.</p>
-<p>Andy Mace didn’t say a word.</p>
-<p>Young Dan sat up and looked all around. He saw the glow of the fire in
-the rusty stove, red embers on the hearth, and the lighted lantern at
-the little window, hooked to a nail in the frame. The room was poorly
-illuminated. Most of it, including Andy Mace’s bunk, was in deep shadow.</p>
-<p><q>He’s taking a nap,</q> reflected Young Dan. <q>I guess his knee hurts him
-more’n he lets on, and maybe it kept him awake last night.</q></p>
-<p>He hunched forward and untied the frozen thongs of his snowshoes very
-quietly, fearful of disturbing the sleeper. Stealthily he put a few
-sticks of wood in the stove and a log on the red embers in the chimney.
-Next, he pussy-footed over to the window and unhooked the lantern and
-set it down on the table near the stove. He felt bone-tired and sleepy,
-but his spirit was untouched by fatigue. Recalling Andy’s statement
-concerning supper, he decided to cook something good—something
-elaborate, like buckwheat pancakes or bacon—and boil a big pot of
-coffee, without waking the sluggard. He would even go so far as to tuck
-into the grub before arousing the sleeper by clattering a spoon against
-the coffee-pot. It would be a good joke on the old boy.</p>
-<p>Owing to the changed position of the lantern, Andy Mace’s bunk was now
-free from shadow. Young Dan glanced at it and instantly forgot the
-contemplated joke. The bunk was empty!</p>
-<p>Young Dan felt a sharp sense of unreality, as daunting as it was new to
-him—but in a moment the chill of that gave way before a surge of
-anxiety. He searched through the camp in a minute, all his weariness
-forgotten. Andy Mace was nowhere indoors; his snowshoes were gone, too;
-but his rifle leaned in its usual corner, in its old canvas case. Young
-Dan began to dress for the open with both hands and both feet. His coat,
-cap, mittens and snowshoes all seemed to fall into position and attach
-themselves at once. He took up the lantern and his rifle and went out,
-pulling the door shut behind him.</p>
-<p>Young Dan found his partner’s tracks in fifteen seconds. They did not
-lead along any one of the four lines of traps. They told him, as plain
-as print, that the old man’s right leg was still as stiff as a ramrod.
-Why Andy had gone into the woods at such an hour, lame or limber, was
-more than he could even begin to imagine. He reckoned the time of Andy’s
-departure from the camp by the condition of the fire in the stove at the
-time of his return. He put it at something between an hour and a half
-and two hours.</p>
-<p>He followed the trail in feverish haste for a hundred yards or so, then
-halted and shouted his partner’s name at the top of his voice. A faint
-shout came back to him. He yelled again and continued his advance,
-holding the lantern high and struggling in the snow-choked underbrush
-like a swimmer in heavy surf. He reflected that Andy had certainly taken
-a bee-line for wherever he was bound, regardless of natural obstacles.
-In his care to keep the lantern from contact with the snow he stumbled
-heavily several times and at last fell flat. The thick, hot glass of the
-lantern cracked like a pistol-shot and fell apart as it plunged into the
-snow, and the flame sizzled to extinction.</p>
-<p>Young Dan arose to his knees slowly and in silence, with his rifle in
-one hand and the ring of the chimneyless lantern in the other. In
-silence he struggled to his feet and reset his right snowshoe. What’s
-the use of talking when you know that the words required by your
-emotions don’t exist? Still in silence, he cleared his eyes and neck of
-snow. Then, to his great relief, he saw a yellow glow of fire-light far
-away beyond the tangled screens of the forest. He went straight for the
-light with as much noise and almost as much speed as a bull moose in a
-hurry. He bored ahead, shielding his face with the cased rifle and
-battered lantern, and letting his feet look after themselves. He
-frequently snarled his snowshoes in the brush and took a header, but he
-was never down for more than five seconds at a time.</p>
-<p>Young Dan found the distance between the fire and the place of his first
-tumble to be considerably less than he had feared. The fire burned in
-the center of a tiny dell; and beside it, on a mat of spruce boughs, sat
-Andy Mace.</p>
-<p><q>What’s the matter with you?</q> cried Young Dan. <q>What are you doing
-here—and why didn’t you stay home like you said you would?</q></p>
-<p><q>I’m glad you come,</q> said the old man. <q>I cal’lated that’s what ye’d do.
-Well, I don’t blame ye a mite for feelin’ riled, Young Dan. But what
-else could I do?</q></p>
-<p><q>What do you mean? You could have stopped home!</q></p>
-<p><q>I clean forgot to tell ye. Look what’s layin’ t’other side the fire,
-Young Dan. So what else could I do but turn out an’ hunt about, when I
-heard him shootin’ off his rifle like a battle. And I thought all along
-it was yerself, until I found him.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan stumbled around the fire and saw what the smoke had veiled
-from him—a big man lying prone on a blanket, flat on his back, with a
-lumpy sack partially sunk in the snow near his head. His snowshoes, axe
-and uncased rifle stood upright in a row several paces distant from the
-fire.</p>
-<p><q>What else was I to do?</q> asked Andy Mace. <q>And when I come up on him an’
-seen it wasn’t you I couldn’t leave him to perish, could I now?</q></p>
-<p><q>It’s Jim Conley,</q> said Young Dan. <q>What’s the matter with him?</q></p>
-<p><q>Jim Conley, hey? That’s what I suspicioned. Well, pardner, he’s got
-more troubles nor one the matter with him; an’ what laid him there on
-his back the way ye see him now was a clout over the head I handed him
-with the butt o’ his own rifle.</q></p>
-<p>The youth’s bewilderment increased.</p>
-<p><q>Did you kill him?</q> he asked, in awe-stricken tones.</p>
-<p><q>I reckon not,</q> replied Andy, casually. <q>He’s alive—in his own way.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan chopped more brush for the fire and heaped it on, then removed
-his snowshoes and reclined beside his partner.</p>
-<p>Andy Mace filled and lit his pipe and told his story. He had sat quiet
-all day and rubbed the last of the bear’s grease into his stiff knee. He
-had fallen asleep along about mid-afternoon and slept soundly for hours.
-Waking suddenly, for no particular reason that he knew of, he had found
-the camp in darkness except for the glow of the fallen fire on the
-hearth. He had built up the fires in a hurry and lighted the lantern;
-and he had just opened the door for a look at the weather, before
-concentrating his mind on the preparation of supper, when he heard a
-rifle shot. That shot had been followed quickly by three more. He had
-hung the lantern in the window then and scrambled into his outdoor
-things and hobbled off at the best pace he could manage, feeling quite
-sure that the shots were calls from Young Dan for help. Another had
-sounded before the door was shut behind him, and yet another before he
-had gone fifty yards into the woods. He had bored straight ahead, slap
-through everything except the actual trunks of the big trees, taking the
-rough with the smooth and the hard with the soft—and just how many times
-he had plunged into the snow with his face and swept it up with his
-whiskers he’d hate to try to remember. His ears had been plugged with
-snow most of the time, anyhow, and his stiff knee had received some
-violent shocks, but he had kept going, and after a while he had heard
-someone yelling. He had gone ahead more circumspectly after that,
-knowing that the voice did not belong to his partner; and before long he
-had found Jim Conley trying to light a fire and making a poor job of it.</p>
-<p><q>Why couldn’t he light it?</q> asked Young Dan.</p>
-<p><q>Well, every time he’d get it lit he’d fall down slam on top o’ the
-little flame an’ smother it out.</q></p>
-<p><q>Was he that near froze?</q></p>
-<p><q>That’s what I suspicioned, so I drug him off an’ sot him down an’ lit
-the bit o’ brush an’ bark for him. I cut some dead stuff, an’ some
-chunks o’ green wood, an’ built up a good fire; then I looked round an’
-seen him settin’ back as comfortable as you please sucking away at a
-square-face. That riled me, Young Dan. That would rile a more peaceable
-man nor me—to see him draggin’ at that there bottle, an’ it more’n
-three-quarters empty already—an’ considerin’ how I’d nigh busted my leg
-off to find him, thinkin’ it was yerself shootin’ an’ hollerin’. Yes, I
-reckon even a deacon would of felt kinder sore. So I went up to him an’
-grabbed the bottle an’ hove it away an’ bust it agin a tree; an’ up he
-come, spry’s a cat, an’ lammed me one on the shoulder that laid me flat;
-but up I come on one leg, quicker’n a wink, an’ finished him. I looked
-into his pack—an’ then I wisht I’d hit him harder.</q></p>
-<p><q>Why? What’s in the bag?</q></p>
-<p><q>Considerable baccy, and a pound o’ tea, an’ maybe as much as a whole
-pound o’ bacon, and a box o’ seegars, and a bran’ new razor an’ strop,
-an’ some ca’tridges, and a red weskit, an’ four more square-faces o’
-gin. That’s what’s in his pack!</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan continued to recline on an elbow and stare at the fire between
-half-closed lids in silence for several minutes.</p>
-<p><q>I was just thinking he must of had great luck with his few traps,
-considering he didn’t set them out till after that night I saw him,</q> he
-said, at last.</p>
-<p><q>Why was ye thinkin’ that?</q> asked Andy.</p>
-<p><q>Well, he’d have to pay a lot for the gin, wouldn’t he, for the man who
-sold it to him was risking being sent to jail, wasn’t he? He had as many
-as six bottles when he started for home, or he wouldn’t have four now;
-and I betcher it cost him as much as eight or ten dollars a bottle. He
-must of had great luck with his traps—in the two days they were set.</q></p>
-<p><q>I reckon he must of, Young Dan. What’s on yer mind, anyhow?</q></p>
-<p><q>Jim Conley’s luck, that’s what.</q></p>
-<p><q>He must of caught somethin’ special, that’s a fact.</q></p>
-<p><q>What did you bait with last time you tended the west line?</q></p>
-<p><q>The west line? Lemme think. That was the day before the big snow. I
-baited with porcupine.</q></p>
-<p><q>It’s baited with fish to-day.</q></p>
-<p><q>Sure it be. What o’ that, Young Dan?</q></p>
-<p><q>I mean it was already baited with fish when I got to it. I mean that
-someone had rebaited it—and reset it, too, I guess—since your last
-visit.</q></p>
-<p><q>You don’t say! Someone at our traps! Let’s make a try at gittin’ home,
-pardner. I be that danged hungry an’ oncomfortable my brains won’t
-think.</q></p>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:50%; max-width:700px;'>
-<img src='images/img-068.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chVII'><span style='font-size:1.1em'>CHAPTER VII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.8em'>THE ONE-EYED INJUN</span></h2>
-<p>The partners aroused Jim Conley, who grumbled savagely at being
-disturbed.</p>
-<p><q>We’re going, anyhow,</q> said Young Dan, upon seeing that the fellow had
-not suffered seriously by Andy Mace’s method of persuasion.</p>
-<p><q>Stop here all night, if you want to—and freeze to death! You’re old
-enough an’ ugly enough to look after yerself.</q></p>
-<p>Conley sat up at that and violently demanded immediate information
-concerning his whereabouts.</p>
-<p><q>You’re in the woods,</q> replied Young Dan. <q>In the woods, where you’d be
-froze stiff in the snow by now, but for Andy Mace.</q></p>
-<p>Conley got slowly to his feet.</p>
-<p><q>That’s right—lost in the woods,</q> he said, in a flat voice. <q>I call it
-to mind now. Kinder lost my way, I reckon.</q></p>
-<p>He put on his snowshoes with fumbling hands, breathing heavily and
-muttering to himself the while.</p>
-<p><q>I’ll tote this along for you,</q> said Young Dan, laying a hand on the
-lumpy sack.</p>
-<p>The other snatched it from him and shouldered it.</p>
-<p><q>Guess I kin carry that myself!</q> he exclaimed.</p>
-<p>Young Dan went in front, sensing the way in the dark. Andy went next,
-making heavy weather of it with his stiff leg. Jim Conley brought up the
-rear, plunging and grumbling and frequently falling. They reached the
-camp at last. Young Dan left the door open behind him and went straight
-to the hearth and stove and fed both with fuel. Andy Mace, exhausted by
-his stiff-legged efforts and the pain of them, sank to the floor and lay
-flat as soon as he had crossed the threshold. Then Jim Conley floundered
-hurriedly and unsteadily from the cold outer gloom into the warm inner
-darkness, sack on shoulder. He tripped over Andy’s prostrate form and
-pitched forward to his hands and knees, and the lumpy sack hurtled from
-his shoulder and struck the floor with a smashing crash.</p>
-<p>Young Dan threw a roll of birch bark on the open fire, and in a few
-seconds the camp was luridly illuminated; and then he saw his partner
-and Conley on the floor, Andy sitting bolt-upright and the latter facing
-him on all-fours, glaring in rage and astonishment at each other; and
-beyond them he saw the lumpy sack squashed to half its former bulk and
-leaking puddles of gin. The sight was too much for his sense of humor,
-tired and hungry though he was. He laughed until tears melted the ice on
-his eyelashes and his knees sagged beneath him. He sat down weakly on a
-convenient chair and continued to laugh helplessly until sudden and
-violent action on the floor recalled him to a more serious aspect of the
-affair. Conley had grabbed Andy Mace by the beard with his left hand and
-by the windpipe with his right, at the same time flinging his whole
-weight forward; and the old woodsman had smashed in two life-sized
-wallops on the sides of Conley’s head, one with his right fist and one
-with his left, even as he sank beneath the younger man’s hands.</p>
-<p>Young Dan jumped to the struggle. His snowshoes were still on his feet.
-He gripped Conley with both hands by the neck of his several coats and
-shirts, wrenched him clear of Andy and thumped him violently on the
-floor, face-downward.</p>
-<p><q>Quit it!</q> cried Conley. <q>Lemme be, cantcher!</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan left him without a word and shut the door. He removed his
-snowshoes then, and his cap and outer coat, lit the wick of the lantern
-and placed a new chimney in the battered frame.</p>
-<p><q>Reckon I’ll stop right here till I git my supper,</q> said Andy Mace from
-the floor.</p>
-<p>Jim Conley turned over on his back, but did not attempt to rise.</p>
-<p>Young Dan collected rifles and axes from the floor and stood them in a
-corner, set a big frying-pan on the stove and filled the kettle from a
-pail by the door—all in a grim silence. After slicing venison into the
-pan, along with some fat bacon, he removed his partner’s snowshoes and
-brushed him off with a broom.</p>
-<p><q>Is everything busted in that there sack?</q> inquired Conley, anxiously,
-raising himself slowly on an elbow.</p>
-<p>Young Dan untied the sack and shook its contents out onto the floor.
-There were fragments of four square-faced black bottles. The other
-articles, the bacon and tea and tobacco, were saturated with gin. Young
-Dan pushed the mess together with his foot, in scornful silence.</p>
-<p><q>That’s sure a grand outfit o’ grub to take home to a woman an’ two
-childern,</q> remarked Andy Mace.</p>
-<p>Jim Conley swore long and loud and strong.</p>
-<p><q>Shut up!</q> snapped Young Dan.</p>
-<p><q>Someun will pay for that!</q> cried Conley. <q>Good an’ plenty.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan stepped forward and stooped down and stared into the eyes of
-his unwelcome guest.</p>
-<p><q>I warn you, Jim Conley, to mend your ways an’ mind your manners, or
-you’ll find yourself crowded for elbow-room in this neck o’ woods,</q> he
-said, slowly and clearly. <q>And I warn you that it won’t be me who’ll
-have to clear out when the crowding commences. Think it over; and the
-less you say about your spilt gin and who’s to pay for it—and who has
-already paid for it—the better for you.</q></p>
-<p><q>What’s that ye say?</q> returned the other, trying unsuccessfully to keep
-his eyes steady and his voice big and careless.</p>
-<p><q>It was a warning.</q></p>
-<p><q>About who paid for the gin—that’s what I’m askin’ ye. What d’ye mean by
-that? That’s what I want to know, young feller.</q></p>
-<p><q>You know what I mean by that; so keep your mouth shut, or I’ll forget
-about your family and light right into you.</q></p>
-<p>Conley laughed uneasily and dropped the subject.</p>
-<p><q>If yer askin’ me to stop to supper, I’ll take off my snowshoes an’
-mitts,</q> he said.</p>
-<p><q>We’ll feed you, now that we’ve saved you from freezing to death in the
-snow,</q> replied Young Dan, ungraciously, returning to the stove.</p>
-<p>Two pots of tea were drunk and two pans of venison steak were devoured.
-Then the partners crawled into their bunks and their guest went to sleep
-on the floor.</p>
-<p>Jim Conley departed after breakfast next morning, with his reduced,
-high-flavored sack on his shoulder and a reflective and uneasy
-expression in his close-set eyes. The partners were glad to be rid of
-him. They discussed him at considerable length. <q>You scared him,</q> said
-Andy—<q>but I’m thinkin’ ye maybe said a mite too much about who paid for
-the licker. He don’t look overly smart, but I reckon there’s somethin’
-inside his skull, even if it’s only porridge; an’ yer warnin’ was strong
-enough to start porridge a-bubblin’. We ain’t got anythin’ on him the
-law kin touch him for, far’s I kin see. It wasn’t him robbed the camp,
-an’ we can’t swear he was at our traps. You hadn’t ought to give yer
-suspicions away like that, Young Dan.</q></p>
-<p><q>Maybe yer right,</q> said Young Dan. <q>I sure did talk kind of out-an’-out.
-But what of it? I want to warn him, because he’s got to feed his wife
-and kids. If he suspicions that we suspicion him of robbing our traps,
-then he’ll quit. If I was tryin’ to jail him I wouldn’t of talked to him
-like that. But I was warnin’ him and throwin’ a scare into him to steady
-him.</q></p>
-<p><q>Ye don’t want to warn a feller like him till after ye catch ’im. He
-don’t look smart—but ye can’t never tell by looks. He knows as how we
-suspicion ’im now, and so he’ll do us all the harm he’s able to. I see
-it in his eye. You had ought to had the goods on ’im before ye warned
-’im, Young Dan. Why, we don’t even know where he’s been to—where he
-traded the skins he took out! An’ we don’t know that he ain’t got a big
-bunch o’ traps set of his own.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan smiled.</p>
-<p><q>He traded his skins at Bean’s Mill, down at the mouth of Oxbow,</q> he
-said. <q>I guess he didn’t show up at the Bend at all, though Amos
-Bissing’s store is just as good as Luke Watt’s. He got his tea and
-tobacco and everything he had in his sack from Luke Watt down to Bean’s
-Mill; and I guess Luke’s got his skins; and I guess we’ve got his hide,
-if we want it.</q></p>
-<p><q>Young Dan, yer a smart lad—the smartest I ever see—an’ I won’t say nay
-to nary a one o’ yer propositions—but it do seem to me ye’re doin’ a
-powerful lot o’ guessin’ right now.</q></p>
-<p><q>Honest to goodness, Andy, I’m not guessing. Do you know Luke Watt? Have
-you ever bought goods from him?</q></p>
-<p><q>Sure, I know Luke Watt o’ Bean’s Mill. Yes, I’ve traded with him, too.
-What of it?</q></p>
-<p><q>Then you know his hand-writing. Uncle Bill Tangier took me down to
-Bean’s Mill one day two summers ago, and he bought a lot of stuff for me
-and the youngsters at Watt’s store, and Mr. Watt figgered up the bill on
-one of the parcels. He has a stiff right wrist, as you know—broke it in
-the woods when he was a lad and it wasn’t set right. He used his whole
-arm when he put down the figgers, working from the shoulder like a man
-sawing a board. I don’t believe there’s another man in the world who
-writes or makes figgers just like Luke Watt. And here is the paper Jim
-Conley’s tobacco was wrapped up in. I changed it this morning for
-another piece of brown paper, before Conley was awake. Here’s the
-complete bill all figgered out in Luke Watt’s own original big
-up-an’-down figgers.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan unfolded a large, smudged piece of brown paper and passed it
-to his partner. Andy Mace held it in his two corded hands and stared at
-it in amazed silence.</p>
-<p><q>Look at that nine-fifty multiplied by seven,</q> said the youth. <q>Conley
-bought seven bottles. He paid sixty-six dollars and fifty cents for gin;
-and he was well into number five when you found him lost in the woods.
-And Watt soaked him six dollars for fifty bum cigars. He must of had
-some good skins. But of course that bill is no proof that Conley traded
-his skins with Luke Watt. I guess he did, though; for he wasn’t gone
-long enough to travel all the way down to Harlow and back. He did all
-his buying from Luke Watt, anyhow.</q></p>
-<p>The old woodsman refolded the paper carefully and returned it to his
-partner. Then he filled his pipe and lit it with deliberate motions.</p>
-<p><q>Young Dan, I was feelin’ kinder fretful a while back when I talked to
-ye that-a-way,</q> he said at last. <q>My knee was hurtin’ me cruel. Yer
-guess is as good to me as another man’s oath. What d’ye reckon to do,
-pardner?</q></p>
-<p><q>I reckon to go out and fetch a doctor in to fix your knee for you,
-first thing,</q> replied Young Dan, as he stowed the paper away safely in a
-breast-pocket.</p>
-<p>Andy Mace shook his head.</p>
-<p><q>This here j’int plays out on me like this every now an’ agin,</q> he
-returned <q>and I got medicine for it at home, made for me by Doc Johnston
-down to Harlow—inside medicine. The trouble’s a touch o’ rheumatics in
-my blood, so the Doc said, an’ maybe the fight I had with the Quebecer
-fifty year ago ain’t got as much to do with it as I let on—an’ then
-agin, maybe it has. Anyhow, Doc Johnston’s medicine loosens up the j’int
-every time, an’ I got two bottles in my pantry this minute as good as
-new. If I had them here I’d be right as wheat in a day or two.</q></p>
-<p><q>Why didn’t you tell me so before?</q> asked Young Dan.</p>
-<p><q>Well, I reckoned it would sound kinder babyish; an’ I was hopin’ all
-along until yesterday that it would quit hurtin’ an’ loosen up any
-minute. I was bankin’ on the b’ar’s grease. But last night didn’t help
-it none.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan went out with his axe to chop wood and at the same time to
-consider the imposing problem which confronted him. Andy Mace must have
-his medicine as soon as possible—and that meant a two-day trip; and Mrs.
-Conley and the two little Conleys must be fed, since the bread-winner
-had brought nothing in for them except a pound of bacon—and that meant a
-day; and Jim Conley’s little game must be investigated at both ends—and
-that might well mean a week or more. What about his traps scattered
-along four six-mile lines? His business was bound to suffer—but that was
-not the thought that worried him most in connection with the traps. He
-fretted at the thought of waste on one hand, and on the other of again
-supplying Jim Conley with the means of acquiring more gin. These things
-were bound to happen, he believed, so long as the traps remained set and
-baited, and unattended by Andy Mace or himself. Animals bearing valuable
-pelts would be caught only to suffer the unprofitable fate of being
-devoured, pelts and all, by other fur-bearers, or to be skinned by Jim
-Conley. The traps must be sprung; and that meant a hard two-day job. But
-to leave Andy Mace without his medicine for four days instead of two was
-out of the question!</p>
-<p><q>It’s more’n one man can do!</q> exclaimed Young Dan, sinking his axe deep
-into the prostrate maple upon which he stood. <q>A man can do two or three
-things at once, maybe, but not all in different places, I guess. I can’t
-anyhow; and that’s all there is to it! Now the question is, what’s to be
-done first? Guess I’ll leave it to chance and toss for it.</q></p>
-<p>He produced a quarter from a pocket, flipped it into the air off a
-thumb-nail, caught it in his right hand and slapped his left over it.</p>
-<p><q>Heads I get Andy’s medicine first, tails I don’t,</q> he said.</p>
-<p>The coin lay tails up in his palm.</p>
-<p><q>That’s too darned bad!</q> he exclaimed. <q>Poor Andy!</q></p>
-<p><q>You talkin’ ’bout Andy Mace hey?</q> asked a voice from the brush on his
-right.</p>
-<p>Young Dan turned and beheld a stranger standing within five yards of him
-and regarding him intently with one eye. It was this matter of the one
-eye that made the first and sharpest impression on the youth. The
-stranger’s left eye was covered by a patch of black cloth. In addition
-to these interesting facts, Young Dan saw that he was an Indian and past
-middle-age, that he wore snowshoes and carried a pack and a rifle in a
-blanket case, and that no smoke issued from his lips or from the bowl of
-the short pipe which protruded from a corner of his mouth.</p>
-<p><q>Sure I’m talking about Andy Mace,</q> replied Young Dan, recovering
-swiftly from his astonishment.</p>
-<p><q>Good,</q> returned the stranger. <q>Andy Mace the feller I wanter see pretty
-quick. Maybe he got plenty tobac, what?</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan shouldered his axe and descended from the trunk of the
-prostrate maple. He slipped his feet into the thongs of his snowshoes
-and put on his coat and mittens.</p>
-<p><q>I guess he has enough,</q> he said, pleasantly. <q>Come along with me and
-find out. He’s my partner.</q></p>
-<p>They found Mr. Mace seated by the stove, with his stiff leg in a chair.</p>
-<p><q>How do, Andy,</q> said the stranger. <q>Long time you no see me.</q> Mr. Mace
-sat up straight and stared from beneath shaggy eyebrows. Then he smiled
-and relaxed.</p>
-<p><q>Yer dead right it’s a long time, Pete Sabatis!</q> he exclaimed. <q>Yer
-right there, old hoss. Glad to see ye agin at last, anyhow. Set down an’
-make yerself to home. What’s brought ye away acrost into these woods,
-anyhow? Be they crowdin’ ye over on the Tobique country, Pete?</q></p>
-<p>The visitor cleared himself from his outside things, including his
-snowshoes, discarded his pack and rifle, then sat down close to the
-stove and took the cold pipe from his mouth. He held the pipe up and
-fixed the keen glance of his uncovered eye on Andy.</p>
-<p><q>He don’t burn no tobac this four-five day,</q> he said.</p>
-<p>Mr. Mace laughed and turned to Young Dan.</p>
-<p><q>What d’ye think o’ that, pardner?</q> he asked. <q>Here’s Pete Sabatis, that
-I ain’t set eyes on this twenty year, come all the way acrost from the
-Tobique country to bum a fill o’ baccy!</q></p>
-<p><q>You got it a’right,</q> said the Maliseet, without so much as a flicker of
-a smile. <q>That feller say you got plenty. You make joke jes’ like you
-ust to, hey?</q></p>
-<p><q>I reckon ye’re the reel joker, Pete,</q> answered Andy, handing over a
-plug of tobacco. <q>You got the reel face for it, anyhow—the same old
-wooden face an’ the same identical old eye. Well, yer jokes is harmless;
-and if ye come all these hunderds o’ miles for somethin’ more’n a smoke
-I reckon ye’ll spit it out sooner or later. I be right-down glad to see
-ye agin, anyhow.</q></p>
-<p><q>Same here,</q> said Young Dan. <q>If you’re a friend of Andy’s I hope you’ll
-stop a while with us.</q></p>
-<p><q>A good idee!</q> exclaimed Andy. <q>Sure he’s a friend o’ mine, and one I’d
-trust with my last pound o’ bacon! Where’re ye headin’ for, Pete?
-Anywheres in particular?</q></p>
-<p><q>Dinner,</q> said Pete Sabatis, lighting his pipe.</p>
-<p><q>The same old bag o’ tricks,</q> said Andy to his partner. <q>I reckon he
-cal’lates to stop right here with us a spell. That’s yer idee, ain’t it,
-Pete?</q></p>
-<p><q>Yep,</q> replied the Maliseet.</p>
-<p>Young Dan was glad, for in this one-eyed Indian he saw the solution of
-the problem that had been causing him such a weight of mental distress
-all day. He said nothing of what was in his mind, however, but put wood
-in the stove, washed his hands and commenced preparations for dinner.</p>
-<p>Andy Mace talked and Pete Sabatis watched Young Dan with his lively
-bright eye. Every now and then, Pete uttered a grunt of satisfaction at
-what he saw.</p>
-<p>It was a good dinner, a bang-up dinner, by Right Prong and Tobique
-standards. It consisted of baked pork-and-beans in a brown crock, very
-juicy and sweet, and a flock of hot biscuits, and a jar of Mrs. Evans’s
-strawberry preserve, and tea strong enough to be employed in the
-heaviest sort of manual labor.</p>
-<p>Pete Sabatis was not a large man; and so Young Dan decided that he must
-have been hollow from his chin clear down to his knees before dinner.
-After clattering the iron spoon all around the inside of the bean-crock
-and lifting the last preserved strawberry to his mouth on the blade of
-his knife, Mr. Sabatis drained the teapot and sat back in his rustic
-chair. He produced his pipe and looked at Andy Mace.</p>
-<p><q>Tobac,</q> he said.</p>
-<p><q>You pocketed a whole plug o’ mine before dinner,</q> returned Andy. <q>An’
-ye’ve got a knife to cut it with an’ a pipe to smoke it in. Here’s a
-match. Hope yer breath to puff with ain’t all gone.</q></p>
-<p>The Maliseet drew forth the cake of tobacco thus delicately referred to
-by his old friend, filled his pipe and lit it.</p>
-<p><q>I’d like to tell him how we’re fixed, and perhaps he’d lend us a hand,</q>
-said Young Dan to his partner.</p>
-<p><q>Sure he’d lend us a hand,</q> replied Andy. <q>Tell him our story. Pete
-Sabatis kin be trusted with anything in the world, I reckon, secrets or
-goods—exceptin’ baccy.</q></p>
-<p>So Young Dan told of their experiences with, and suspicions of, Jim
-Conley, and of the problem which confronted him.</p>
-<p><q>That a’right,</q> said Pete. <q>What do you do first, hey?</q></p>
-<p><q>That depends on you,</q> replied the youth. <q>Do you know the way to Andy’s
-house?</q></p>
-<p><q>Know him a’right when you tell me.</q></p>
-<p><q>I’ll draw a map for you, if you’ll get Andy’s medicine.</q></p>
-<p><q>To-morrow.</q></p>
-<p><q>That’s fine. I’m mighty glad you turned up. I’ll go out now and spring
-a few traps, and to-morrow I’ll take some grub back to the Conleys and
-see what’s up. When you get home from Andy’s place with the medicine I
-will light right out for Bean’s Mill.</q></p>
-<p>During the afternoon Young Dan visited four traps on the eastward line.
-He found a mink in one and nothing in the others, and left all alike
-sprung and harmless. He did not travel as briskly as usual, for he did
-not feel very spry. The exertions of the day before had slowed and
-stiffened even his elastic sinews a little. His spirits were high,
-however, thanks to the mental relief due to the arrival of Pete Sabatis.
-Pete solved the problem which had frozen his immediate actions. With
-Pete’s help, everything seemed possible now: Andy would have his
-medicine, the Conley woman and children would be looked after, Jim
-Conley’s suspicious activities would be investigated and one line of
-traps, at least, would be kept in operation. Apart from all this, the
-Maliseet promised to be an entertaining companion. Young Dan had felt a
-liking for him at the first sound of his voice and a keen interest in
-him at the first glimpse of his patched eye. His arrival had been as
-dramatic as it was opportune; his greeting of and reception by old Andy
-Mace had been decidedly picturesque; his Puckish humor was as unusual as
-his appearance. In short, he made a strong romantic appeal to the young
-trapper.</p>
-<p><q>He’s queer, like some of the folks in those stories,</q> reflected Young
-Dan. <q>Queer as the queerest of them, but real, too—more real than any of
-them. And he’s all right. Andy says so.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan exploded two cartridges that afternoon. The bullet of each
-knocked the head off a partridge. Upon his return to camp he skinned the
-birds in half the time it would have taken him to pluck them, and fried
-them for supper with a little pork. After supper he made a map of the
-route to Andy Mace’s house and explained it at length to Pete Sabatis.
-All three retired early to their blankets.</p>
-<p>Pete Sabatis was the first to leave the camp next morning. He carried
-food and tobacco in his pockets, a note from Young Dan for Amos Bissing,
-the map of the route, the key to Andy’s door, and his rifle and
-blankets. He moved off swiftly, with the reddening dawn on his
-right-front, leaving an azure trail of smoke on the still air.</p>
-<p><q>It’s lucky for us that he turned up when he did,</q> remarked Young Dan to
-his partner, as he made up a modest parcel for the Conleys of tea and
-flour and two tins of condensed milk. <q>Did he come looking for you, or
-was it just chance?</q></p>
-<p><q>He’ll tell us what he come for when he’s good an’ ready, an’ not a
-minute sooner, Young Dan,</q> answered Andy. <q>Maybe he come all the way
-acrost from Tobique to see me, but I reckon that ain’t likely. How would
-he know if I was alive or dead any more’n I knowed if he was alive or
-dead? It was chance landed him right here at this camp, anyhow, for all
-he ever knowed about my whereabouts was that I hailed from the Oxbow—an’
-that was twenty year ago. But we won’t fret ourselves about why he’s
-here or why he come. He is here, an’ he’s a danged good Injun, an’
-that’s enough for us.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan took the northern track, which led crookedly to the Conley
-cabin. He inspected the traps to the right and the left as he advanced,
-bagged a fox and left all sprung and harmless behind him. He reached the
-Conley cabin before noon and found Mrs. Conley chopping wood beside the
-door. She said that Jim was off somewhere attending to his traps.</p>
-<p><q>I don’t want to see him,</q> said Young Dan. <q>I came to bring these few
-things for you and the children, from my partner and me, because we know
-that he didn’t bring much grub back from the settlements with him.</q></p>
-<p>He entered the cabin without removing his snowshoes and placed the
-parcel of provisions on the table. The woman followed him, undid the
-parcel and thanked him. She seemed nervous.</p>
-<p><q>How d’ye know Jim didn’t fetch in any grub?</q> she asked.</p>
-<p><q>We saw what he had,</q> replied the trapper. <q>Didn’t he tell you about
-stopping a night at our camp? About losing himself in the woods an’ Andy
-Mace finding him?</q></p>
-<p><q>No, he didn’t. But he’s sure got it in for you and yer old pardner!
-He’s been cussin’ the two o’ ye steady ever since he come home. He says
-how he had lashin’s o’ bacon an’ flour an’ was robbed of everything but
-some bacon an’ tea.</q></p>
-<p><q>I suppose you believed him, m’am.</q></p>
-<p><q>Not so’s ye’d notice—but that’s neither here nor there. What you best
-do now is clear out o’ this before he comes home.</q></p>
-<p><q>Do you think I’m afraid of him?</q></p>
-<p><q>I guess not—but I wisht ye’d beat it.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan immediately complied with her wish. As soon as he was out of
-sight of the cabin he left the narrow trail of his own snowshoe tracks
-and broke into the woods and started on a big curve which, if followed
-long enough, would encircle the Conley habitation. Young Dan did not go
-so far as that, however. He found what he was looking for before he had
-made a semicircle of the curve—a line of new snowshoe tracks. He did not
-join this trail or cross it, but backed a few paces from it, changed
-direction and moved parallel with it, keeping an eye on it through the
-intervening screen of brush and branches. This course took him
-southward, mile upon mile, and after a couple of hours of it he found
-himself on his own and Andy Mace’s trapping-ground. He continued to
-parallel Jim Conley’s tracks, moving without sound and parting the
-forest growth before him with the minimum of disturbance; and at last he
-came to a place which he recognized as being on his own eastern line of
-traps. There he halted and squatted to rest, as still as a waiting lynx
-in the snow.</p>
-<p>Large white flakes began to circle down from the low sky. The sun, which
-had risen red, was now no more than a small blotch of radiance as
-colorless as clear ice. The snow descended more thickly and swiftly,
-blinding the weak sun and seeming to draw the sky down to the tops of
-the tall spruces—and down even lower than that, until the soaring trees
-were blanketed and hidden by it for half their height. Then Young Dan
-moved again, this time on a straight course for the camp, and at his
-best pace. This flurry of snow was altogether too thick and fast to take
-liberties with. He wondered what Pete Sabatis would make of it with his
-one eye. He was sorry that it had descended so violently as to interfere
-with his investigations before he had actually caught Jim Conley at his
-trapping. He felt reasonably certain, however, of the identity of the
-traps which engaged Mr. Conley’s attentions. That was enough to work
-ahead on. He decided not to spring the traps on the eastern line, but to
-leave them as they were for the thief’s immediate profit and final
-undoing.</p>
-<p>Young Dan reached home safely. The snow ceased falling shortly before
-sundown, but with the setting of the sun a wind arose which set the
-feathery flakes drifting and flying.</p>
-<p>Andy Mace was in as talkative a mood as ever that night, despite the
-fact that he was very evidently suffering a great deal of pain. He
-admitted the pain, confessing that more joints than his right knee hurt
-him now.</p>
-<p><q>But that there medicine o’ Doc Johnston’s ’ll melt the misery out o’ me
-all right,</q> he said. <q>I’ll be takin’ a dose of it this time to-morrow
-night; and ye’ll see me to work agin within a couple o’ days, Young Dan,
-spry as a cat an’ loose as ashes.</q></p>
-<p><q>Don’t you worry about the work, Andy,</q> returned Young Dan. <q>Give the
-medicine a fair chance when you get it. I hope Pete will be back by
-to-morrow night—but he couldn’t of traveled much this afternoon, in that
-storm and in country strange to him.</q></p>
-<p><q>That’s where ye’re wrong,</q> replied Andy. <q>I never knowed a likelier man
-nor that same Pete Sabatis to go to wherever he wanted to git to. He
-could do that trip backwards, an’ with both eyes patched instead of only
-one. That flurry o’ snow wouldn’t stop him a minute, in strange country
-or old.</q></p>
-<p><q>What happened to his eye, anyhow?</q> asked Young Dan.</p>
-<p>Andy rubbed his thin knees with his thin hands for several seconds in
-silence, gazing thoughtfully into the red draft of the stove. Then he
-looked at his partner and combed his long whiskers with long fingers.</p>
-<p><q>Maybe he wouldn’t care for me to tell ye that, lad,</q> he said. <q>I reckon
-he wouldn’t yet awhile, till he knows ye better. But I kin tell ye this
-much, pardner—I was with him when he lost it, twenty-four year ago—and
-he is as good a man with one eye as ever he was with two. He lost it in
-a kinder private affair, ye understand: and there ain’t a prouder man
-walkin’ the woods either side the height-o’-land nor him—exceptin’ in
-the matter o’ baccy.</q></p>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:50%; max-width:500px;'>
-<img src='images/img-087.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chVIII'><span style='font-size:1.1em'>CHAPTER VIII</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.8em'>THE ADVENTURE OF SABATIS</span></h2>
-<p>The wind was abroad all the next day, sweeping the snow from the broad
-branches and high spires of the forest and shoveling it into drifts
-along the windward edges of all open spaces. Young Dan worked at the
-wood-pile and the pelts all day, and Mr. Mace smoked his pipe and rubbed
-his painful joints and wondered if old age were creeping upon him. Young
-Dan was chopping a stick of dry birch near the door, and the small sun
-was on the edge of the western horizon, when Pete Sabatis appeared. Pete
-was powdered white with snow from the webbed racquets on his feet to the
-crown of his fur cap.</p>
-<p><q>Howdy,</q> he said.</p>
-<p>Young Dan stared at him in amazement.</p>
-<p><q>I knew you’d have to give it up,</q> he said, <q>and I’m mighty glad you’ve
-found your way back. That’s more’n I could do, with the snow drifting
-like it has all day.</q></p>
-<p>The old Maliseet smiled and snorted and entered the camp. Young Dan
-followed a few minutes later depressed by the thought of Andy Mace’s
-disappointment and yet relieved to know that the old Indian was safe. By
-the fire-shine and the mild light of a candle on the table, he beheld
-his partner dosing himself with a large spoon from a large bottle and
-Pete Sabatis laying out tea and bacon and tobacco on the floor.</p>
-<p><q>So you got there!</q> exclaimed Young Dan. <q>You got to Andy’s place in
-that storm—and home again!</q></p>
-<p>Both old men turned to him. Pete’s one eye grew rounder and brighter for
-a second; and Mr. Mace gulped down his medicine, pulled a wry face and
-then chuckled.</p>
-<p><q>Pete Sabatis never yet started out for anywheres he didn’t git to,</q>
-said Andy. <q>Snow nor rain nor wind nor darkness can’t stop him. He
-travels as straight with one eye as ever he did with two.</q></p>
-<p><q>I didn’t know the man was living, or had ever lived, who could hold a
-straight course through new country on such a day as yesterday,</q> said
-Young Dan. <q>And now I know I was mistaken,</q> he added.</p>
-<p>Pete Sabatis had nothing to say about his journey. The trip had been
-unadventurous. He had not encountered any difficulties worth mentioning.
-Andy’s key had fitted Andy’s door and he had found the bottles of
-medicine on the very shelf in the pantry which Andy had described to
-him. And he had found the store at the Bend exactly where he had
-expected to find it and the storekeeper had not hesitated a moment in
-the matter of filling the order.</p>
-<p>Young Dan cooked the best supper he knew how to with the materials at
-hand; and after supper, when the old men’s pipes were drawing to their
-entire satisfaction, Andy said, <q>Pete, I’d like fine to tell Young Dan
-Evans here about how ye happened to lose yer eye.</q></p>
-<p>The Maliseet fixed his remaining eye on the youth with a glance so
-searching that the other remembered something he had read in a book
-about a thing called an X-Ray.</p>
-<p><q>It ain’t like as if Young Dan was nothin’ more’n my pardner,</q> continued
-Andy. <q>He’s like a brother to me; and his heart’s as right as his brains
-is smart.</q></p>
-<p><q>That’s a’right,</q> said Pete Sabatis. <q>Go ahead an’ tell ’im.</q></p>
-<p><q>This here’s a kinder personal story,</q> began Andy, settling back in his
-chair. <q class='cq'>Twenty-four years ago this very winter, I was in the woods on
-Pyle’s Brook, over in the Tobique country, choppin’ for Howard Frazer. I
-was restless in them days; and I’ll bet there ain’t a block of woods ten
-mile square in all the Province I ain’t had a foot into, lumberin’ or
-huntin’ or trappin’ fur. Well, I knowed that country pretty nigh as well
-as I know the Oxbow—so I thought. I diskivered later as how I’d thought
-wrong. Pete Sabatis here was choppin’ for Frazer’s gang, too. That was a
-kinder onusual thing, even in them days—a full-blooded Injun working
-hard an’ honest with a crew of lumbermen. But Pete allus was one who
-could do a white man’s job as well as an Injun’s—an’ both a mite
-better’n any other Injun or white man could do it. I’d say the same even
-if he wasn’t right here a-listenin’ to me.</q></p>
-<p><q class='cq'>Well, I didn’t have no better friend in that outfit nor this here Pete
-Sabatis, and it was the same with him—what ye might call visey versus, I
-reckon. But, mind ye, I didn’t know the first darned thing about Pete’s
-private life. He was a jolly feller, though never much of a talker an’
-nothin’ at all of a laugher. But all of a suddent, along about January,
-he begun to study hard on somethin’ deep inside himself. He’d stop still
-as if he was frozen all of a suddent in the middle of choppin’ into the
-butt of a big tree, with his axe sunk to the eye in the yellow wood, an’
-stare kinder across-eyed into himself, with a look on his face like he
-didn’t care much for what he seen. Of course I knowed he wasn’t sick,
-but I asked him if he was; an’ when he said as how he wasn’t, then I
-cal’lated his trouble was somethin’ I’d best not ask him any more
-questions about.</q></p>
-<p><q class='cq'>So it went on for three days, maybe; an’ then one Saturday night, after
-supper, he asks me if I’ll make a trip with him next day.</q></p>
-<p><q class='cq'><q>A trip?</q> sez I. <q>What sort o’ trip?</q></q></p>
-<p><q class='cq'><q>Snowshoes,</q> sez Pete.</q></p>
-<p><q class='cq'><q>Sure, but how far?</q> I sez.</q></p>
-<p><q class='cq'><q>Quite a spell,</q> he answers back. <q>A long ways an’ rough goin’, an’
-trouble at the end of it.</q></q></p>
-<p><q>Well, there’s plenty men who’d set back hard in their britchen when
-they’d hear a note like that—but not me, twenty-four year ago, nor
-to-day. We started eastward into the tall timber before sun-up that
-Sunday mornin’, with grub enough for two days maybe, and blankets, and
-our axes. Pete carried a muzzle-loader gun you could shoot bullets out
-of pretty straight up to seventy yards. It was a clear, cold day,
-without so much as a fan of wind abroad. It was Sunday, as I’ve told ye;
-an’ it felt like Sunday—kinder waitin’ an’ uncommon. Pete went slam
-through everything on a straight line all his own as fast as he could
-flop his racquets along, but it didn’t bother me none to keep up to him.
-He didn’t say a word. We halted and et about noon—but even then he
-wouldn’t talk.</q></p>
-<p>Andy Mace paused to relight his pipe.</p>
-<p><q>Talk,</q> said Pete Sabatis. <q>Too much talk. You lemme tell how that
-happen, so we don’t set up all night. Pretty soon we come to one little
-clearin’ in the woods, with one log shanty on him. We go to door an’
-open him an’ step inside. There we find the folk I look for a’right.
-Andy Mace look at them like he don’t know nothin’ at all—an’ so he
-don’t. I push him back on the door till it shut an’ give him the gun.
-Then I take one step acrost at that half-breed man, an’ the woman grab
-somethin’ from the wall back of him and BANG—an’ Pete Sabatis don’t know
-nothin’ else for quite a spell.</q></p>
-<p><q>I cal’late I’m tellin’ this story!</q> interrupted Andy. <q>Young Dan ain’t
-got a notion what yer talkin’ about. He’s smart, but he’s only human.
-Why, he don’t even know yet who them folks was an’ what you had come to
-see them about.</q></p>
-<p><q>An’ you didn’t, neither,</q> retorted Pete. <q>So after long while I open
-one eye an’ feel mighty sick. They got me in the bunk then, with head
-all tie up an’ brandy inside me, an’ Andy Mace an’ them two lookin’ down
-like they think I don’t never open one eye any more, maybe. Then that
-woman, who is my daughter, say, <q>I shoot out your eye. What for you come
-here, anyhow?</q> Then I say, <q>You shoot my eye clear out, hey?</q> Andy say
-then, <q>You got only one eye now, Pete, an’ that’s gospel.</q> Then that
-woman, my papoose one time, say, <q>You come to kill Pierre, so I shoot
-quick.</q> I feel mighty sick, you bet, for that pain in my head an’ the
-think how I got only one eye left, but I pretty near laugh.</q></p>
-<p><q>That’s right!</q> exclaimed Andy Mace. <q>He come about as nigh to laughin’
-real hearty then as ever I see him, durn his old leather face. Ye see,
-pardner, that squaw, Pete’s daughter, had made a mistake. Her husband,
-that there halfbreed, Pierre, had stole fur on Pete years before, till
-Pete had chased him out o’ the country. But they’d come sneakin’ back
-that winter, an’ Pete had heard about it an’ studied on it. He didn’t
-like that feller, Pierre; but he figgered out as how he’d go look the
-two of ’em over an’ kinder give them his blessin’ an’ some money if he
-seen that Pierre was doin’ right by his wife, who was Pete’s own
-daughter. An’ his daughter up an’ shot an eye out o’ him before he could
-say <q>howdy</q>. An’ what d’ye reckon Pete Sabatis done then, Young Dan? He
-sez, <q>Pretty good breed, that Pierre, if she like him so darn much
-still—an’ he give them some money an’ said how he was glad to see them
-back in the Tobique country even if he had only one eye to see them
-with.</q> <i>And next day he snowshoed back to Howard Frazer’s camp.</i> That’s
-how he lost his eye, twenty-four years ago this winter; an’ now there’s
-five of us who know about it instead of only four. An’ he quit choppin’
-for only two days after gittin’ back to camp. That’s the sort o’ man
-Pete Sabatis is!</q></p>
-<p><q>Talk, talk, talk! That’s the kind of feller Andy Mace is,</q> said the
-Maliseet, winking his only eye at Young Dan very deliberately.</p>
-<p>Young Dan was greatly impressed by the story of Pete’s just temper and
-amazing physical stamina. He said so. Then, at Andy’s request, he read a
-story of the wizard of Harley Street. Andy interrupted the narrative
-frequently, but the Maliseet listened in keen silence.</p>
-<p><q>It couldn’t be done, nohow,</q> said Andy, at the conclusion of the tale.
-<q>The devil himself couldn’t of worked it out like that.</q></p>
-<p><q>Maybe,</q> said Pete. <q>I dunno.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan left the camp bright and early next morning with his uncle’s
-rifle, axe and blankets, a pack of fine furs and grub enough to last him
-to Bean’s Mill. He pushed along steadily all day and slept in a hole in
-the snow that night. He crossed the river well above his father’s farm
-and gave it and the village at the Bend a wide offing. He reached the
-outskirts of the settlement of Bean’s Mill about noon and dined well
-beside his own fire in a thicket of young spruces before appearing to
-the settlers. Then he went straight to Luke Watt’s store.</p>
-<p>Mr. Watt did a big business in a small store. That’s the kind of
-business man he was, but in character he was a very different sort of
-person. He was small in character and large in body and manner. As a
-storekeeper his activities were larger than his premises, but as a man,
-his chest and legs and arms and skull—yes, and his <q>lower chest</q>—were
-much too large for him. He had a stiff right wrist, calculating and
-watchful eyes of no particular color, large hands queerly shaped and a
-large manner of good-fellowship and an unattractive mustache.</p>
-<p>Young Dan found Luke Watt behind his counter, in a corner close to one
-of the dirty windows, barricaded into his position by boxes and barrels
-and crates and bags. Young Dan worked his way inward to the counter. He
-saw, as he advanced, that the other did not know him.</p>
-<p><q>Good morning, Mr. Watt,</q> he said. <q>I’m Dan Evans from up past the
-Bend—Young Dan Evans. I got a few skins here I want to sell.</q></p>
-<p><q>Of course ye’re Dan Evans!</q> exclaimed Luke Watt. <q>Didn’t I know it the
-minute I see you! Lay it there! How’s tricks up river?</q></p>
-<p><q>Pretty good, I guess,</q> replied the youth. <q>It’s been a great winter for
-trapping so far, anyhow.</q></p>
-<p>He undid his pack on the head of a barrel at his elbow and placed a
-couple of pelts on the counter. A swift glance at Watt’s face told him
-that the storekeeper was finding it difficult to hide his enthusiasm.</p>
-<p><q>Um—fisher,</q> said Mr. Watt. <q>Mighty common skins, ain’t they?</q></p>
-<p><q>They are as good fisher as were ever trapped on the Oxbow,</q> said Young
-Dan.</p>
-<p><q>Sure they’re good of their kind—but they’re fisher; and fisher are
-all-fired common this year. And skins ain’t much in my line, anyhow. I
-buy a few—but I’m that good natured an’ easy I always lose money on the
-deal. What d’ye figger these two skins is worth? Three times their real
-value, I’ll bet a dollar!</q></p>
-<p><q>Maybe so,</q> replied Young Dan slowly and in a puzzled voice. <q>Yes, just
-about that, I guess. I don’t know as much about selling ’em as I do
-about catching ’em.</q></p>
-<p>A flicker of a smile, cold and swift, showed beyond the drooping ends of
-Luke Watt’s mustache, and for an instant a light of amusement and
-satisfaction glimmered in his eyes.</p>
-<p><q>I know you pay a whole lot for black fox,</q> continued Young Dan.</p>
-<p><q>Black fox!</q> exclaimed the other. <q>You got half a dozen black foxes
-right here with you—I don’t think. Say, Dan, what you been drinkin’?</q></p>
-<p><q>I don’t drink, Mr. Watt—but I trap in a good country for black fox—and
-I know that you gave Jim Conley a mighty good price for his.</q></p>
-<p>The storekeeper’s eyes became very hard and keen with eagerness and
-caution. He squared his elbows on the counter and leaned across toward
-the youth. So, for several seconds, he stared in silence; and the other
-returned the stare with an innocent and unwavering gaze.</p>
-<p><q>What d’ye know about Jim Conley?</q> he asked, in a low voice.</p>
-<p><q>Never saw him before this winter, but we’re trapping the same line of
-country now,</q> returned Young Dan. <q>We’re working ’way up past the
-Prongs.</q></p>
-<p><q>D’ye mean you an’ Jim Conley are pardners?</q></p>
-<p><q>We use the same traps. Guess you might call it a partnership.</q></p>
-<p><q>It wasn’t a first-class skin, that wasn’t, as you know yerself, Dan. It
-was more patch than black. But if you have another like it I’ll pay the
-same price, even if I lose money on it—seein’ it’s you.</q></p>
-<p><q>All in cash, Mr. Watt?</q></p>
-<p><q>Not at the same price. I always figger on making part payment in trade.
-But what’s the matter with that? Wasn’t Conley satisfied last time?</q></p>
-<p><q>I reckon he was—but gin ain’t good for him. He got lost getting home.</q></p>
-<p><q>Not so loud,</q> whispered Luke Watt. <q>Call it trade. Didn’t Conley warn
-you to mind yer tongue? You talk like a fool; and if you ain’t more
-careful you’ll land yer pardner in jail. But that’s all right, seein’
-it’s yerself. I’ll buy yer skins—all you have there—an’ give you top
-price. But you got to take part payment in trade. Any kind o’ trade.
-Tea, tobacco, flour—anything you want or yer pardner wants. My prices
-are right.</q></p>
-<p><q>That’s fair, Mr. Watt. Will you pay me forty dollars for these two
-fishers? They are the best fishers I’ve seen this winter, color and
-size.</q></p>
-<p>The storekeeper stood upright and laughed heartily. He straightened his
-back to it and squared his shoulders to it until Young Dan thought the
-buttons would fly off the straining front of the big waistcoat.</p>
-<p><q>Forty dollars!</q> exclaimed the big man at last, like one who sees the
-point of a good joke and immediately repeats it to show that he has seen
-it. <q>Forty dollars! That’s pretty good, Dan! Darned good!</q></p>
-<p><q>Pretty fair,</q> returned Young Dan, quietly. <q>They’re worth more.</q></p>
-<p><q>Are you serious, young fellow? D’ye mean forty real dollars for them
-two skins? You look kinder as if you meant it. You must be crazy!</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan sighed and removed the pelts from the counter to the rest of
-the pack. Slowly he tied up the pack, watching the storekeeper all the
-while with the tail of his right eye. He shouldered the pack and took up
-the axe and stockinged rifle.</p>
-<p><q>Not so fast, Dan!</q> cried Mr. Watt. <q>That ain’t any way to do business.
-Say, are you crazy? Let’s see them skins again, and maybe I’ll go as
-high as thirty-five. And gimme a look at the rest o’ the lot.</q></p>
-<p><q>I been reading in the papers what furs are worth this year,</q> replied
-the youth. <q>You can’t fool me. I ain’t Jim Conley. So long.</q></p>
-<p>Anger and something of apprehension flamed in Luke Watt’s unpleasant
-eyes and big face. With a muttered oath he started for the door in the
-counter—but before he reached it, Young Dan had closed the door of the
-store at his heels. And by the time the big man had reached that door,
-after squeezing his way through the clutter of barrels and crates, Young
-Dan was half-way down the village street.</p>
-<p>Young Dan kept on going along the well-beaten river road, with his
-snowshoes on his back instead of his feet, for half an hour. He paused
-now and again to glance over his shoulder, for he believed that Luke
-Watt would soon be on his tracks with a horse and pung. And in that he
-was right. Looking back from the top of one rise he saw a fast-trotting
-horse come over another rise half a mile behind. Then he turned to the
-right, into a logging road, and ran at top speed for a couple of hundred
-yards. The logging road was crooked, and rough underfoot. After the
-sprint, Young Dan strapped his snowshoes on and hopped into the woods.
-He glanced up at the sun, then went forward on a straight course at a
-fine pace. He felt very well satisfied with his morning’s work. He had
-confirmed his suspicions of Mr. Luke Watt, at least.</p>
-<p><q>I have the goods on both of them,</q> he said. <q>I worked it out just
-right. Now I guess they’ll both have to behave themselves or clear right
-out of this country. I’ve got enough on Conley to scare him into being
-good and looking after his wife and kids, that’s certain.</q></p>
-<p>He halted for long enough to eat two sandwiches of cold bread and colder
-bacon, standing. Then, steering by the sun, he continued to break
-straight through the woods toward the little town of Harlow.</p>
-<p>Luke Watt, in his little red pung behind his leggy trotter, drove
-straight on down the well-beaten river road, intent on reaching the
-upper edge of Harlow ahead of Young Dan. If the trapper held to the road
-and was overtaken on the way, all the better for the storekeeper, of
-course—but the great thing was a meeting this side of Harlow. It was not
-the fear of losing trade that inspired Mr. Watt to this determination
-and this unusual speed. He would regret a loss of trade, sure enough;
-but what he actually feared was the Law. He suspected Young Dan Evans.
-He suspected him of being less simple and ignorant than he seemed to be
-on the surface. He suspected himself of having been dangerously
-indiscreet in so quickly accepting that long-legged youth as nothing but
-a source of profit.</p>
-<p><q>He worked me for a rube, I do believe,</q> he reflected. <q>I must get him
-before he gets me; an’ then, if I can’t scare him off I’ll have to buy
-him off. I reckon he’ll scare easy enough, if he’s mixed up with Jim
-Conley.</q></p>
-<p>But would that young fellow scare easily? There had been a look in his
-eyes that said <q>no</q> to the scare idea.</p>
-<p>There was no shorter course between the Bend and Harlow than the river
-road. There was no bee-line through the woods that would cut so much as
-a yard off it. Mr. Watt knew this. He drove straight into the town and
-stabled his horse. Then he walked back beyond the up-river end of the
-town, accompanied by a middle-aged, middle-sized, seedy looking man with
-whom he seemed to be very well acquainted. So narrow is that small town
-that two men could easily keep an eye on all the ways of entrance to it
-at either end. Mr. Watt and his friend took up positions of advantage
-several hundred yards apart and waited.</p>
-<p>The sun was low when Young Dan came out of the woods and headed
-slantwise across a wide field beside the highway.</p>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:50%; max-width:700px;'>
-<img src='images/img-100.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chIX'><span style='font-size:1.1em'>CHAPTER IX</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.8em'>THE FIGHT IN THE SNOW</span></h2>
-<p>Young Dan Evans slanted across the white field, heading for the highroad
-which led smoothly into the little town of Harlow. His journey was
-within a half-mile of its completion. He had worked hard ever since
-leaving Bean’s Mill, through thick timber and untracked snow; and now he
-was tired and hungry but in fine spirits. He had thought much of Andy
-Mace and Pete Sabatis during the journey—of their admiration for one
-another’s qualities of physical and spiritual fiber—and believed that
-they would soon take him as seriously as they now considered each other.
-Of course Andy was his firm friend and already thought highly of his
-<q>smartness</q> along certain lines—but he feared that he had not yet made a
-very deep impression on the one-eyed Indian. He suspected that Pete
-Sabatis considered him a trifle too big for his cap and boots. He had
-seen something of the kind in the old man’s one eye that very morning.</p>
-<p><q>I guess he thinks I’m just a cub playing at something and trying to
-fool folks into thinking I’m a smart man,</q> he reflected. <q>But when I
-have that big Luke Watt jumping to my say-so, and that thieving drunkard
-Jim Conley come to heel like a trained partridge-dog, and Mrs. Conley
-and the kids fed and looked after properly, I guess he will have to
-admit that I know what I’m doing.</q></p>
-<p>Thus engaged with his thoughts, he drew near to an extensive grove of
-swamp-birches and alders which grew along the snow-drifted fence like a
-screen between the field and the highroad. He carried his blankets and
-pack of furs on his back, his axe on his right shoulder and his cased
-rifle hung by its sling on his left shoulder.</p>
-<p>He was close to the edge of the tangle of birches and alders, and about
-midway of its length, when a bulky figure in a coonskin coat arose from
-the snow and stepped out in front of him.</p>
-<p>Young Dan Evans did so many things all at once then that it is difficult
-to disentangle and describe his actions. Mind and body worked quick as
-thought—quicker, perhaps, for he was scarcely conscious of thinking. As
-he recognized Luke Watt in the very instant of seeing him he let
-everything he carried slip and fall from him into the snow in one
-shrugging motion—pack and rifle and axe—and jumped forward straight and
-hard. Even as he jumped, he saw Luke Watt draw something from a
-side-pocket of the fur coat—but he did not flinch from the mark. He
-struck Watt with his whole body all at once. His knees dug into the big
-man’s middle and his left arm went around the fur-clad thick neck; and
-as they fell he heard the revolver explode twice and felt the jolt of
-the gloved hand that held it against his ribs; and he drew up his left
-knee and stamped a wide snowshoe on Watt’s right arm, and struck the big
-face with his right fist. Thus they sank into the drift, with Luke Watt
-underneath and flat on his back. Young Dan trod the hand that held the
-revolver deep into the snow; and he struck the vanishing face again and
-again, though the snow muffled the blows of his mittened fist; and, all
-the while, his right knee crushed and pounded.</p>
-<p>Luke Watt struggled—but what was the use! He was breathless, helpless,
-bound and half smothered by the snow. All this violence had occurred so
-swiftly that he could not fully realize exactly what had happened. He
-had confronted the young trapper with his gun ready and the game in his
-hand; and now, a few seconds later, his mouth was choked with snow, his
-eyes were blinded, his arms and weapon were powerless and he was being
-beaten to death!</p>
-<p>Young Dan shook the mitten from his left hand and thrust his bare hand
-deep into the snow. In a moment he stood up and stepped backward a pace
-or two, with Luke Watt’s revolver in his grasp. He looked about him and
-saw a stooped figure on the road walking hastily townward. He turned
-again to his enemy, who was sitting up by this time and struggling
-painfully for breath. He flung the revolver far away and recovered his
-axe, pack and rifle.</p>
-<p><q>How’re you feeling now?</q> he asked.</p>
-<p>Mr. Watt gulped a mouthful of air but made no attempt to answer. He did
-not even open his eyes. He paid no attention to the other’s departure.</p>
-<p>Young Dan found the hotel without difficulty and entered the office
-fully equipped.</p>
-<p><q>Will you kindly tell me the way to the nearest sheriff?</q> he asked of
-the man at the desk.</p>
-<p><q>The nearest sheriff?</q> repeated the hotel-keeper. <q>Do I get you, young
-feller? Ye’re askin’ the way to the nearest sheriff?</q></p>
-<p>There were four other men in that dreary little office of varnished
-brown woodwork, mangey mooseheads and crockery cuspidors. These all
-stared curiously at the young trapper and shifted their positions in
-their chairs. The hotel-keeper leaned far over his little counter.</p>
-<p><q>D’ye want to give yerself up?</q> he added, with a rude attempt at wit.</p>
-<p><q>I have asked you a simple and civil question,</q> said Young Dan in his
-quietest voice. <q>If you don’t understand simple questions here and don’t
-answer civil ones, then I’ll ask somewhere else. What about it?</q></p>
-<p>The hotel-keeper and his chaired patrons exchanged glances.</p>
-<p><q>Sure, sure,</q> said the former, hurriedly. <q>We ain’t got a sheriff in
-this town, but we got a fust-class depity-sheriff by the name of Archie
-Wallace. Maybe ye’ve heared of him; an’ maybe he kin do yer business for
-yer as well as the full-blowed high sheriff of the county. What was it
-you said you wanted to see him about?</q></p>
-<p><q>I didn’t say,</q> replied Young Dan, with a disarming smile. <q>Thank you
-very much for the information; and now if you’ll tell me where I can
-find Mr. Wallace I’ll step along and stop troubling you.</q></p>
-<p>The hotel-keeper reached for his coat, which hung on a hook behind him.</p>
-<p><q>No trouble at all,</q> he said. <q>Glad to oblige. I’ll step along an’ show
-you his very door. I always aim to help strangers all I know how.</q></p>
-<p><q>Ye hadn’t ought to leave yer seegar-stand in the rush hour, Dave,</q> said
-one of the patrons, getting quickly out of his chair. <q>I’ll take the
-young man to Archie Wallace. It’s fair on my way home.</q></p>
-<p>The hotel-keeper paid no attention to this offer but donned coat and cap
-and issued from behind the counter and dusty cigar-stand.</p>
-<p><q>Follow me, stranger,</q> he invited, leading the way out. <q>Me and the
-depity-sheriff are old friends. I’ll make you known to him.</q></p>
-<p>So Young Dan followed the hotel-keeper, and three of the four patrons
-followed close upon the heels of Young Dan. The deputy-sheriff’s house
-was not more than fifty yards from the hotel; and the young trapper
-smiled politely and said nothing all the way to it. The hotel-keeper
-rang the bell and took up a position on the top step in front of Young
-Dan.</p>
-<p>The door was opened by a tall, lean man who looked like a woodsman and
-wore a Cardigan jacket and grey homespun trousers tucked into
-high-legged larrigans of oil-tanned leather.</p>
-<p><q>Here’s a young feller lookin’ for you on important business, Archie,</q>
-said the hotel-keeper. <q>It is so all-fired important that I brought him
-right along to you myself, so there wouldn’t be no possible mistake.</q></p>
-<p>The deputy-sheriff looked at Young Dan Evans with calm inquiry.</p>
-<p><q>It is private business,</q> explained Young Dan, smiling; <q>and these
-gentlemen don’t know any more about it or me than I do about them. I
-never so much as set eyes on any one of them in my life until five
-minutes ago. What I have to say is for your private hearing, if you are
-really an officer of the law.</q></p>
-<p><q>Step in,</q> said the tall man to Young Dan; and to the others he said
-drily, <q>Thanks, boys, for escortin’ the young stranger to the right
-place.</q> Then he closed the door in the hotel-keeper’s face. He led the
-way into a small room opening off the narrow hall—an untidy, stale
-cigar-scented room poorly illumined by an oil lamp with a green paper
-shade.</p>
-<p><q>Dump your outfit in the corner and sit down,</q> he invited.</p>
-<p>Young Dan obeyed and removed his cap and mitts and outer coat. The
-deputy-sheriff sat down in his own arm-chair beside the untidy table and
-removed the shade from the lamp so that the light reached his visitor’s
-face. For several seconds he gazed keenly but pleasantly at Young Dan.</p>
-<p><q>I’ve seen you before, somewheres or other,</q> he said. <q>Seems to me I
-have known you pretty well, sometime or other. Who are you an’ where
-from?</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan answered the questions briefly but clearly.</p>
-<p><q>You remind me of someone I know well,</q> said Mr. Wallace. <q>But it isn’t
-yerself, for I never saw nor heard of you before. A full-grown man—and a
-smart one. You speak like him—whoever he is.</q></p>
-<p><q>Bill Tangler, maybe? You’d know him, I guess. He’s my uncle.</q></p>
-<p><q>Bill Tangler it is! Your uncle, hey? Well, son, you’ve got a smart
-uncle. More than that, he’s able; an’ better still, he’s white. If Bill
-Tangler’s your uncle we don’t need any more introduction—so fire away.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan told briefly of his partnership with old Andy Mace, and
-produced from an inner pocket the letter from his uncle containing the
-suggestion of the venture and the partnership and the offer of camp and
-outfit. Archie Wallace chuckled over the letter. Then the trapper told
-of his encounters with Jim Conley, of the rebaited trap, and of the
-night Conley went off his course in the woods with a cargo of gin inside
-and out. He produced and exhibited the piece of paper upon which Mr.
-Luke Watt had figured out Jim Conley’s bill. The deputy-sheriff studied
-that exhibit very intently and slapped his hand on his thigh.</p>
-<p><q>You’re a winner, Dan Evans!</q> he exclaimed. <q>Have a cigar.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan shook his head to the cigar and told his adventures of the
-day, up to the very minute of telling. He raised his short coat of
-wool-lined blanketing from the floor and held it up to the other’s view.</p>
-<p><q>And here I am; and here’s where Luke Watt burnt two holes in my jacket
-with his revolver,</q> he concluded.</p>
-<p>Archie Wallace examined the holes in the coat without a word. Then he
-lit a fresh cigar from the butt of an old one, returned the green shade
-to the lamp and sat well back in his chair. He gazed at the lamp-shade
-in meditative silence. His manner impressed Young Dan. Suddenly he
-turned his glance upon his visitor and asked abruptly, <q>Can you cook?</q></p>
-<p>The nature of the question was so unexpected that Young Dan was far too
-astonished to reply. He blushed and stared, wondering if he was being
-made fun of.</p>
-<p><q>Can you cook?</q> repeated the deputy-sheriff.</p>
-<p><q>Yes.</q></p>
-<p><q>Then you’ll oblige me by goin’ to the kitchen and gettin’ supper for
-the two of us,</q> said the official. <q>Here are matches, and you’ll find a
-lamp on the table. The kettle’s b’ilin’, the coffee-pot an’ fryin’ pan
-are on the back of the stove, and there’s ham and eggs all ready set out
-on the dresser. I’m a bum cook myself. There’s an old hound somewheres
-in the house who is the only person besides myself who can stomach my
-cookery. He won’t bite you if you treat him friendly. While you’re
-gettin’ supper I’ll sit right here an’ study over what you told me. It
-needs some study.</q></p>
-<p>So Young Dan started for the kitchen. In the narrow hall he met the old
-hound, which seemed delighted with him and followed eagerly into the
-kitchen. It was an extraordinary kitchen. All the dishes were jumbled up
-on the table, and not one of them was clean. But the fire of dry
-hardwood was burning clear in the stove and both pot and kettle were
-full and boiling. He went briskly to work; and in half an hour all the
-dishes were washed, the table was laid and supper was ready.</p>
-<p>The deputy-sheriff swallowed his first cup of coffee in silence. Then he
-said, <q>Jim Conley’s a trap-thief all right, all right—but you can’t
-prove it on him. He’s a liar I reckon, and I know darned well you ain’t
-a liar—but his word about that trap and whatever he took from it is as
-good as yours to the Law. So I can’t round him up—but I can scare all
-the blood and gin in his nose back to his rotten heart.</q></p>
-<p><q>I guess that’ll be all he will need,</q> replied Young Dan.</p>
-<p>Mr. Wallace nodded and devoured ham and eggs for five minutes or so with
-undivided attention.</p>
-<p><q>As for Luke Watt—well, that feller is nigh as strong as he is
-slippery,</q> he said, pouring more coffee. <q>He’s so danged crooked that he
-had ought to’ve been thrown away with all the corkscrews when the
-country went dry. Or he’d ought to of moved over into Quebec. He is
-strong, too—but I reckon we got the goods on him all right, all right.
-Do you think you could find that revolver of his you threw away?—or do
-you reckon he’s maybe picked it up himself?</q></p>
-<p><q>I guess I could find it; and I don’t think he has picked it up because
-his eyes were shut and full of snow when I threw it away,</q> replied Young
-Dan. <q>I was mad, you know, what with his shooting at me and everything;
-and it was only the deep snow and my mitts that saved him from getting a
-sight worse than he got.</q></p>
-<p><q>Do you want to arrest him for assault with intent to kill, an’ for
-sellin’ gin; or do you want to run him out of the country on a pair of
-cold feet?</q> asked the deputy-sheriff. <q>Take your choice, Dan.</q></p>
-<p><q>Neither,</q> said the youth. <q>Neither, if we can scare him enough to
-handle him the way I want to. If we can scare him into keeping the law
-and doing something for Jim Conley’s wife and kids, I’ll be satisfied.</q></p>
-<p><q>But we got him cold,</q> said the other. <q>You’ve done a smart piece of
-work, Dan Evans. You’ve caught Luke just how I’ve been tryin’ to catch
-him this six months back. But what’s your idee? What’s this about
-wantin’ that fat lubber to do something for Conley’s wife an’ kids?</q></p>
-<p><q>They need help. Jim Conley’s no good. The way I figger it is, Luke Watt
-cheated Conley on the price of that skin. Whatever the skin was, patch
-or black, we know Conley didn’t get even as much as a third of the right
-price. And if we can’t prove that the skin belonged to Andy Mace and me,
-then it was Conley’s rightful property, in the law. So if we can shoot a
-real scare into Luke Watt—a regular death-cold fright—then we can make
-him hand over the rest of the price of that skin, in groceries and boots
-and clothing, to Jim Conley’s family. I’ll pick out the goods—enough to
-last them till well on in the spring; and Watt’ll have to pay to have
-them packed in to Conley’s camp. That’s my idea.</q></p>
-<p>The deputy-sheriff drank more coffee, scratched his chin and relit the
-half-smoked cigar.</p>
-<p><q>You’re a philanthropist, Dan Evans,</q> he said. <q>You’re like your uncle
-Bill Tangler in that.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan let that pass with a noncommittal smile, for the word was one
-which he had somehow overlooked in his explorations into literature. But
-he felt that it was nothing to be ashamed of if the same could be said
-of his uncle Bill Tangler.</p>
-<p><q>And maybe you’re right,</q> continued Mr. Wallace. <q>You know the situation
-and I don’t, so it’s for you to say. As for the scare—if we find that
-revolver we can scare Watt into totin’ a year’s supply of grub all the
-way in to the Right Prong of Oxbow on his own fat back. And I reckon
-he’ll keep the law after we’ve had a chat with him, for he ain’t a fool.
-He’d sooner keep it along with his freedom than behind stone walls and
-iron bars, you can betcher hat on that. But there are other sides to the
-question to be considered. There’s no sense in jumpin’ before we look
-all round for the dryest place to land. So far you’ve considered nothin’
-but Jim Conley’s family’s need of grub and clothes. Well, that’s all
-right in its way, and as far as it goes—but it will sure encourage Jim
-Conley to sit at home all day and eat his head off. If he can’t drink
-he’ll eat. A feller like him has just got to be doin’ something with his
-mouth all the time; and I reckon he ain’t got brains enough to do much
-talkin’. If feedin’ his wife and children will make a good citizen out
-of him, then you’re dead right. But what about Luke Watt? We can scare
-him into keeping the law as far as bootleggin’ gin is concerned, but we
-can’t stop him cheatin’ in his trade every chance he gets. We couldn’t
-make a good citizen of him in a hundred years. And that ain’t all. Not
-by a long shot! Suppose I nab him in my official capacity, with his
-number right in my pocket? What’ll folks say about Deputy-Sheriff Archie
-Wallace then, d’ye think? They’ll say that Deputy-Sheriff Archie Wallace
-is an all-fired smart, able, slick and deserving officer! Yes, Dan
-Evans, it will sure mean feathers a foot high in my hat. And what will
-be said about the young trapper from ’way back in the woods who did the
-brain-work and took the risk? They’ll say you’re the best detective
-outside the covers of a book they ever heard tell of. You’ll be a big
-man with your name in the newspapers—and I’ll be the next high sheriff
-of this county. That’s <i>my</i> idea.</q></p>
-<p><q>And it is a good idea,</q> replied Young Dan, reflectively. <q>It sounds
-mighty good to me, of course. I’d like fine to see my name in the papers
-as a detective, but I wasn’t figgering on anything like that. I want to
-see that woman and her children decently fed. I don’t like her much,
-mind you—but she’s sure a courageous mother, and I pity her, and so
-would you if you knew Jim Conley. If we could scare him into earning a
-living for his family, then I’d certainly like your idea better’n mine.</q></p>
-<p><q>But you ain’t reckonin’ on makin’ Luke Watt support Conley’s wife and
-kids all the rest of their lives, surely?</q> returned Mr. Wallace. <q>That
-would be goin’ a mite too far with it. He’d sooner go to jail than do
-that, I wouldn’t wonder. No, that won’t do! You got to make Conley get
-to work. Philanthropy’s a fine thing, but justice is a fine thing, too.</q></p>
-<p><q>You’re right, Mr. Wallace—and you are the deputy-sheriff. I guess
-whatever you say goes. All I want to do is scare Jim Conley off of our
-trap-lines, and help his family, and smash that hound, Luke Watt.</q></p>
-<p><q>Then we’d best sleep on it, an’ have a look for that revolver first
-thing in the morning,</q> said the other. <q>Maybe we’ll hit on a way of
-reconciling your hunger for philanthropy with my thirst for fame and
-promotion.</q></p>
-<p><q>They sound as if they’d ought to pull all right in double-harness,</q>
-remarked the youth, with that smile which reminded the deputy-sheriff of
-Bill Tangler.</p>
-<p>The deputy-sheriff wakened his guest at the first peep of day; and after
-breakfast they set out in a red pung behind a long-gaited
-three-year-old. Young Dan left his skins locked securely away in one of
-Mr. Wallace’s closets, with the understanding that Wallace would ship
-them to an honest fur-dealer immediately upon his return from the
-present expedition. This arrangement would be sure to prove advantageous
-to Young Dan and his partner, for Archie Wallace, as deputy-sheriff of
-the county, would obtain a higher price for the furs than a private
-trapper could possibly make any buyer consider reasonable. They stopped
-near the scene of the trapper’s swift and violent encounter with the
-storekeeper from Bean’s Mill, slipped on their snowshoes and entered the
-slanting field. Mr. Wallace regarded the deep marks of the struggle with
-chuckles of satisfaction. Then Young Dan led him about thirty yards away
-to a very small cut in the snow and dug up Luke Watt’s revolver. He
-handed the weapon to Wallace, who wiped it off, tied it up carefully in
-his handkerchief and stowed it away in his pocket.</p>
-<div class='figcenter' style='width:50%; max-width:500px;'>
-<img src='images/img-114.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%;height:auto;' />
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
-<h2 id='chX'><span style='font-size:1.1em'>CHAPTER X</span><br /> <span style='font-size:0.8em'>FEAR OF THE LAW</span></h2>
-<p>The road between Harlow and Bean’s Mill was all that hoof and heart
-could wish, and the long-gaited three-year-old was sound in wind and
-limb and as fresh as the frosty morning. It was still early in the day
-when the deputy-sheriff drew rein in front of Luke Watt’s store. He
-jumped out and hitched the strawberry mare to a well-chewed post and
-threw a blanket and a goat-skin robe over her. Then he cleared the frost
-from his eye-lashes, pulled his fur mittens off and threw them into the
-pung and rubbed his bare hands briskly together as if to limber up the
-fingers. Then he sank his hands deep into the roomy side-pockets of his
-fur coat.</p>
-<p><q>You keep your collar turned up an’ your cap pulled down and sit right
-there till you get the high sign,</q> he said to Young Dan.</p>
-<p>Young Dan nodded his muffled head. He sat stuffily in the pung, very
-bulky and shapeless in an old coonskin coat of the deputy-sheriff’s,
-looking as much like <q>The World’s Fattest Lady</q> as anything else in the
-world—much more like that than like a lanky young trapper of fur.</p>
-<p>As Archie Wallace pushed open the door of the store he closed his eyes
-tight, the quicker to readjust them to the gloom within from the
-brightness without. As he closed the door behind him with his left
-elbow—for still his right hand was in his pocket—he opened his eyes and
-looked at everything in one wide-eyed glance. He saw, in that first
-comprehensive look, everything in the store—the counter, the fancy
-groceries on the dirty shelves, the barrels and crates, the baskets of
-eggs, the chewing-gum and depressing cigars in the little show-case, the
-boots and suspenders and amazing neckties hanging aloft, and Mrs. Watt
-and three customers—everything which he had expected to see except Luke
-Watt. He made his way to the counter and Mrs. Watt and wished her a
-rather grim good-morning. His professional manner was always uppermost
-when he was actually engaged in the final stages of a piece of
-professional work. He felt that he owed this alike to the Law and to the
-probable offenders against the Law.</p>
-<p><q>I want to speak to your husband, Luke Watt,</q> he continued.</p>
-<p>Mrs. Watt, who was as like Mr. Watt in appearance and character as a
-woman could be, changed color swiftly and at the same time met the man’s
-grim gaze with a hard and brazen glint in her eyes.</p>
-<p><q>You sure ain’t forgot my husband’s name, Archie Wallace,</q> she said.
-<q>What are you puttin’ on yer depity-sheriff airs for this mornin’? You
-sound like you was huntin’ for trouble.</q></p>
-<p><q>You’ve said it,</q> returned Mr. Wallace, drily. <q>Where is Luke?</q></p>
-<p><q>At home in bed, sick with a cold; an’ that’s where he has been since
-yesterday afternoon,</q> she answered. <q>You can go over to the house an’
-make a call on him in bed, if yer business is that pressin’</q>; and then,
-with a swift change from effrontery to curiosity in eyes and voice, she
-leaned across the counter and whispered, <q>What’s the trouble?</q></p>
-<p><q>Exactly what you suspect, Mrs. Watt—an’ maybe quite a lot more,</q> he
-replied, whispering in his turn from the force of example rather than by
-intention. <q>Now I’ll just step over to the house an’ have a talk with
-him.</q></p>
-<p><q>Wait,</q> she whispered, closing her fingers on the sleeve of his coat.
-<q>Tell me, have you got his number? Have you caught him? Tell me!</q></p>
-<p>Wallace withdrew his sleeve from her grasp and turned and left the store
-without another word. His face was drawn for a second with an expression
-of sickening distaste, for he had seen, quick and sure as lightning,
-exactly what the woman had in her mind. He knew that she salted away the
-money which her husband corkscrewed out of the rural population; and he
-had just now seen her as a rat that contemplates the advisability of
-leaving a sinking ship. But she was a cautious sort of rat and wanted to
-make dead sure that the ship was going down before she swarmed down the
-anchor-chain and swam ashore. This nautical figure of thought came pat
-to Mr. Wallace, for he had sailed four deep-sea voyages out of St. John
-in his eighteenth and nineteenth years.</p>
-<p><q>Mrs. Watt says he’s sick abed with a cold,</q> he informed Young Dan. <q>It
-may be so, for what would be the sense of her tellin’ that lie? That’s
-the house. If you’ll stable the mare across there at Murphy’s, I’ll go
-to Watt’s—and you follow me as soon as you’ve stood the mare in the
-stall. Open the front door an’ walk right in and up the stairs.</q></p>
-<p>The deputy-sheriff found Luke Watt in bed. The store-keeper was very red
-of face and watery of eye, and there were dark bruises on his brow.</p>
-<p><q>Your wife said I’d find you here, sick abed,</q> said Wallace.</p>
-<p><q>Well, she told ye the truth,</q> replied Watt. <q>What d’ye want, Archie?</q></p>
-<p><q>You, Luke Watt. This is an official visit I’m makin’ you.</q></p>
-<p><q>Me? Official? Who’s the joke on? Tell me when to laugh, will you?</q></p>
-<p><q>Yes, you; and when the time to laugh comes I’ll do it. You’re done.</q></p>
-<p><q>And you’re crazy! I’m done, am I? Who d’ye reckon did me?</q></p>
-<p>Wallace heard the front door open and close and then a light, slow step
-on the stairs. He opened the bed-room door and looked out.</p>
-<p><q>Luke Watt wants to know who did him,</q> he said. <q>Come along in and show
-him, an’ then maybe he’ll believe me.</q></p>
-<p>He returned to the side of the bed; and, a moment later, Young Dan
-entered the room in his bulky muffling of furs and shut the door behind
-him. Luke Watt’s face twitched. The trapper slipped out of his borrowed
-coat and removed his cap and mittens and looked at the man in the bed.
-Watt made a bluff at returning that look—but it was a weak bluff. His
-face twitched again, and he closed his eyes and sneezed. Young Dan
-noticed the bruised forehead and was glad of it.</p>
-<p><q>I’d of marked you worse than that if it hadn’t been for the snow and
-the mitten on my hand,</q> he said. <q>But I guess you got enough!</q></p>
-<p><q>He must of got some snow down his neck an’ caught cold from it,</q> said
-the deputy-sheriff. <q>But if you’d killed ’im, Dan Evans, you wouldn’t of
-done more’n I would have done in your place. I wouldn’t of blamed you.</q></p>
-<p><q>What are you two talkin’ about, anyhow?</q> demanded Watt, in a voice
-husky with cold and emotion. <q>And who’s this here young jay?</q></p>
-<p><q>Cut it out!</q> retorted Wallace. <q>I know the whole story, right back to
-the fox you bought off of Jim Conley, and I’ve seen the piece of paper
-you used to figger out the price of it on—the price, mostly in gin. And
-I’ve got the gun in my pocket you used on Dan Evans here when you tried
-to stop him from gettin’ into Harlow. You ain’t as cute as I thought you
-were, but you’re a long sight more dangerous. I never reckoned on you
-tryin’ murder.</q></p>
-<p><q>It’s a lie!</q> cried the other. <q>Git out, or I’ll have the law on you!</q></p>
-<p><q>Not so fast,</q> continued Wallace, calmly. <q>I had a talk with your
-friend, Tom Marl, about one o’clock this mornin’, after I’d heard Dan
-Evans’s story. Tom was scared. He thought the two shots you fired had
-hit the mark. He’s quite a talker, Tom Marl is—when fear loosens his
-tongue.</q></p>
-<p>All the color went from Luke Watt’s face and again he closed his eyes.</p>
-<p><q>Attempted robbery under arms, and assault with intent to kill—it would
-make an exciting case,</q> continued Wallace, slowly and clearly. <q>It would
-give the smart lawyers a fine chance to show their smartness, some
-tryin’ to hang you and others tryin’ to save your neck—but the smartest
-lawyers in the province couldn’t save you from five years in pen. The
-liquor case won’t be near so exciting. We’ve got you so cold there the
-lawyers wouldn’t find anything to argue about.</q></p>
-<p>Watt continued to lie with his eyes tight shut, breathing heavily.</p>
-<p><q>I guess I’d have to make a charge against him for the assault and all,
-and for firing two shots at my ribs, wouldn’t I?</q> said Young Dan, in an
-unsteady voice. He felt unsteady. The sight of the big man’s fear and
-despair shook him strangely.</p>
-<p>The storekeeper opened his eyes.</p>
-<p><q>Ain’t you made the charge agin me?</q> he cried. <q>Then don’t do it! Gimme
-a chance! I was scart crazy. All I meant to do was to stop you an’ talk
-you round. The gun kinder went off by accident. I swear it!</q></p>
-<p>The deputy-sheriff sighed and lit a cigar.</p>
-<p><q>How much did you get for that skin that you bought from Jim Conley?</q>
-asked Young Dan.</p>
-<p><q>That skin?—why, I ain’t sold it yet,</q> answered Watt, thinking hard and
-speaking slowly and uncertainly.</p>
-<p><q>In that case, I’ll take a look at it and value it,</q> said Wallace.</p>
-<p><q>You needn’t trouble yerself,</q> said the other, sullenly. <q>I got five
-hundred dollars for it.</q></p>
-<p><q>Then you still owe the original owner of the skin four hundred an’ some
-odd dollars,</q> said the trapper.</p>
-<p><q>Business is business,</q> protested the man in bed. <q>I bought the skin an’
-I sold it; an’ now I wisht it had been burnt to a cinder before I ever
-seen it!</q></p>
-<p><q>Give me four hundred dollars for Jim Conley’s wife and kids and I won’t
-make that charge against you,</q> said Young Dan.</p>
-<p>The deputy-sheriff, who had been gazing reflectively out of the window,
-turned at that with an air of decision and regarded the trapper with
-level eyes.</p>
-<p><q>I’m goin’ to be downright and honest with both of you,</q> he said. <q>It’s
-nothing to me if you get four hundred dollars out of Watt for Conley’s
-wife and kids, or if you don’t. It’s no concern of mine. I don’t care
-what dicker you make with him, or if he keeps his end of the bargain or
-goes back on it—but I tell you both that whatever happens, he is pinched
-for selling gin. He is pinched good and hard for selling gin, and he’ll
-go to jail for it, without the option of a fine, as sure as my name is
-Wallace; and I’ll put a constable into this house to guard him until
-he’s fit to go to jail and await his trial.</q></p>
-<p><q>But I won’t make the other charge, if you’ll give me four hundred for
-Jim Conley’s wife and babies,</q> said the trapper to Watt.</p>
-<p><q>I’ll do that,</q> replied Watt. <q>Go over to the store an’ fetch my wife,
-will you? She takes care of the money.</q></p>
-<p>Young Dan went to the store and found a young woman with a red head in
-charge. She informed him that Mrs. Watt had gone to the mill on business
-and wouldn’t be back for half an hour, perhaps. He returned to Luke
-Watt’s bedroom with this information.</p>
-<p><q>She ain’t got no business over to the mill,</q> said Watt. <q>Maybe she’s in
-the house somewheres. Take a look round the house for her, will you, an’
-tell her I want to see her quick.</q></p>
-<p>So Young Dan left the bed-room again and searched the house high and
-low. The only living thing he found in it was a cat in the kitchen; but
-he saw melted snow here and there on the kitchen floor. He looked
-closely at the damp marks and knew them for the tracks of feet shod in
-arctics. He saw that the tracks began at the outer door of the kitchen,
-crossed to the big dresser and returned to the door. He opened the door,
-which was not locked, and looked into the cold shed. He saw a few small
-films of pressed snow on the dusty floor of the shed, between the
-shed-door and the kitchen-door. He went back to the big dresser and
-gazed curiously and eagerly for a few seconds at its dish-laden shelves
-and the closed doors of its cupboards, then returned to the room
-upstairs and said that the house was empty.</p>
-<p><q>But there’s been a woman in the kitchen,</q> he added. <q>In and out again,
-with snow on her feet. She wore arctic overboots, whoever she is.</q></p>
-<p><q>That’s her!</q> exclaimed Luke Watt weakly.</p>
-<p>He got out of bed and put on trousers and coat over his nightshirt and
-thrust his feet into slippers. He shivered and sat down on the edge of
-the bed. His eyes of no particular color were miserable with dread.</p>
-<p><q>Take a look in the stable,</q> he whispered. <q>See if my trottin’ mare’s
-there.</q></p>
-<p>The trapper went out to the stable, by way of the kitchen and the shed.
-The stall was empty. The harness had gone from its pegs. There were
-fresh tracks of hoofs and runners in the snow in front of the stable
-door.</p>
-<p><q>She must of tied the bells,</q> he said. <q>She seems to know what she’s
-about, whatever it is. And I wonder what it is?</q></p>
-<p>He went back to Watt and the deputy-sheriff with the news that the
-trotting mare was gone from the stable, harness and pung and all.</p>
-<p>Luke Watt turned a tragic, despairing and murderous gaze on Mr. Wallace.
-<q>You fool!</q> he cried, hysterically. <q>Why couldn’t you keep yer silly
-mouth shut! You told her how ye’d come to pinch me, an’ how I hadn’t a
-chance to git clear—an’ so she’s up an’ lit out with all the money!
-That’s what she’s done! Lit out with every dollar!</q></p>
-<p>With that explosion the storekeeper sank back across the bed and covered
-his face with his hands. The deputy-sheriff and the trapper exchanged
-embarrassed glances.</p>
-<p><q>He’s lying,</q> whispered Wallace. <q>He’s tryin’ to fool you, Dan. There
-ain’t a woman in the world would do a trick like that on her husband;
-and Mrs. Watt couldn’t even if she wanted to.</q></p>
-<p>He leaned over Luke Watt and shook him roughly by a shoulder.</p>
-<p><q>Where’d you bank your money?</q> he asked.</p>
-<p><q>I didn’t bank it nowhere,</q> mumbled Watt, still with his face in his
-hands. <q>She didn’t bank it, neither. She salted it away.</q></p>
-<p><q>Where’d she salt it away?</q></p>
-<p><q>I dunno.</q></p>
-<p><q>You’re lying, Luke Watt—or you’re the biggest an’ softest boob I ever
-heard tell of.</q></p>
-<p><q>I’ll bet she kept it somewhere in the dresser in the kitchen,</q> said
-Young Dan. <q>That’s where the tracks led to—to the dresser and out
-again.</q></p>
-<p>The storekeeper jumped to his feet and ran heavily from the room, crying
-<q>Let’s go look.</q> The others followed him close.</p>
-<p>Young Dan took charge of the investigation of the dresser. All the
-dishes were removed from the shelves and every inch of woodwork was
-searched for a hidden drawer or sliding panel—but all in vain. Luke Watt
-sat down beside the stove and shivered and wept. Then Young Dan and Mr.
-Wallace emptied the four pot-closets in the bottom of the dresser of
-dozens of pots, pans, sauce-pans and frying-pans, and Young Dan crawled
-into each in turn and rapped here and there and everywhere with
-enquiring knuckles. In the fourth closet he found his reward. Without
-withdrawing his head he passed back and out a section of the bottom of
-the closet. Mr. Wallace took the piece of dry pine board in his hand and
-showed it to Luke Watt. Luke stared at it and ceased his weeping. Then a
-section of board from the floor of the kitchen appeared from beneath the
-trapper’s elbow. He withdrew his head and shoulders from the closet a
-few seconds later and squatted back on his heels.</p>
-<p><q>Empty,</q> he said.</p>
-<p>Yes, the hiding-place beneath the floor was empty. The deputy-sheriff
-found it empty. Even Luke Watt’s hungry fingers failed to find anything
-in it.</p>
-<p><q>An’ if there was a dollar in it there was twenty thousand,</q> whispered
-Watt, in a stunned voice.</p>
-<p><q>There don’t live another woman in the world would play a trick like
-that on her man,</q> said Mr. Wallace. <q>No matter how bad he was, she
-wouldn’t play him down like that. It beats anything I ever heard of.</q></p>
-<p><q>Reckon yer right,</q> replied the storekeeper, listlessly. <q>Eliza ain’t no
-ordinary woman. You hadn’t ought to told her yer business with me.</q></p>
-<p>He sounded like a man talking in his sleep.</p>
-<p><q>I guess you’re in trouble enough, Luke Watt,</q> said Young Dan. <q>Well, as
-far as I’m concerned, you’re no worse off than if you hadn’t tried to
-stop me with a gun. That’s forgotten.</q></p>
-<p>The dazed storekeeper went back to bed; and Archie Wallace supplied a
-cook and a muscular constable to feed him and hold him until he was in
-fit health to be removed to the county jail.</p>
-<p>On their way through to Dan’l Evans’s farm behind the long-gaited
-strawberry mare, the deputy-sheriff and Young Dan bought as much food as
-two good men could pack a day’s journey from Amos Bissing at the Bend.
-Mr. Bissing was deeply impressed by Young Dan’s company and appearance.
-He asked a great many questions and received a good many answers—but not
-a single answer to his questions as to the deputy-sheriff’s reasons for
-touring the country in Young Dan’s company. He could see easily enough
-by the manners of the two that their relations were entirely friendly.</p>
-<p>When the strawberry mare passed the kitchen windows of the Evans farm,
-and Young Dan was recognized by every member of the family and Mr.
-Wallace was recognized by the father, amazement and apprehension flamed
-in every heart.</p>
-<p><q>He’s a policeman, I tell ye!</q> exclaimed Dan’l for the third time in
-quick succession, flattered by the panicky effect of his words. <q>He’s
-the sheriff from Harlow. Young Dan’s been too smart for his own good at
-last, I cal’late. Them fool books an’ his Tangler brains has tripped him
-by the heels at last. Wonder what he done?</q></p>
-<p>Then the kitchen door opened and Young Dan entered with the tall man
-close behind him. He threw aside his cap and embraced his mother; and at
-the first clear glimpse of his face she knew that her Daniel senior had
-been mistaken again.</p>
-<p>They remained at the farm for supper, and the night and breakfast. Dan’l
-Evans was greatly relieved, of course, to know that his son was not an
-offender against any law—but he was not happy. Everything was too right
-for his complete enjoyment. There was too much talk on the
-deputy-sheriff’s part to suit him, of the virtues of Bill Tangler and
-the great thing Young Dan had done; and Young Dan, was too well pleased
-with himself and the deputy-sheriff; and Mrs. Evans made altogether too
-much of both the visitors and had more to say about the intellectual
-qualities of her own family than could be expected to please a husband
-of Dan’l’s disposition. When he knocked and belittled and sneered, he
-was either ignored entirely or bluntly contradicted. When he advanced
-the theory that Young Dan had been guilty of an error in judgment in
-jumping so quick at Luke Watt, and cited the two bullet-holes in the
-youth’s coat as proof of the mistake, the deputy-sheriff thought that he
-was joking and laughed heartily.</p>
-<p><q>You’re a dry humorist, Mr. Evans,</q> he exclaimed. <q>The driest I ever
-met. That’s good—that about the holes in Dan’s coat. You sure do give a
-new and uncommon slant to a thing.</q></p>
-<p>This puzzled Dan’l, giving him food for silent thought to last him for
-the remainder of the evening.</p>
-<p>Young Dan and Mr. Wallace set out for the Right Prong country after an
-early breakfast, on their snow-shoes, with forty-pound packs on their
-shoulders, leaving the strawberry mare in Dan’l Evans’s charge. It was a
-windless clear day, and the snow was well settled. Young Dan led the way
-at his best pace—but he did not have to stop once to let Archie Wallace
-catch up to him. The fact was, he had to put on an extra spurt every now
-and then to keep the tails of his snowshoes from being stepped on.
-That’s the kind of man Archie Wallace was.</p>
-<p>They found both old men at the camp in fine spirits and Andy Mace’s
-rheumatism greatly improved. Andy cooked a masterpiece of a supper; and
-after supper Archie Wallace told the story of Young Dan’s adventures
-with Luke Watt in his best style. At the conclusion of the narrative,
-Pete Sabatis turned the glance of his single eye from the face of Young
-Dan to that of Andy Mace and slowly nodded his head twice.</p>
-<p><q>Guess you size ’im up right, Andy,</q> he said.</p>
-<p>Young Dan blushed with pleasure, yet pretended not to have seen or heard
-this passage of intelligence. To be accepted as an able man by Pete
-Sabatis and to measure up to the heroic standards of earlier
-generations, these were triumphs which might well expand the heart and
-redden the cheek of even an older man than Young Dan.</p>
-<p>After breakfast the deputy-sheriff and Young Dan went north to Jim
-Conley’s cabin, heavy-laden with their contributions toward the support
-of that worthless fellow’s wife and children. Just before coming into
-view of the cabin, Mr. Wallace halted and the trapper took to the brush
-beside the trail. Wallace stood motionless for five minutes, then
-advanced. Within a second of sighting the little hut of logs he glimpsed
-the swift flash of a face at the little window. He went forward without
-haste and knocked on the door. It was opened to him by the woman.</p>
-<p><q>Good mornin’, m’am,</q> he said, standing his rifle against the edge of
-the door and lowering his pack to the threshold. <q>Here’s some grub for
-you, with the compliments of Dan Evans.</q></p>
-<p>The woman stared at him, motionless and silent.</p>
-<p><q>Is Jim round anywheres handy?</q> he asked. <q>I’d like to speak to him.</q></p>
-<p><q>It was him sent ye here—that young fool, Dan Evans!</q> she exclaimed.
-<q>Why don’t he mind his own business? Can’t ye let Jim be? He’s workin’
-fine now that the gin’s all gone. Can’t ye leave him be?</q></p>
-<p><q>What’s he workin’ at, m’am?</q></p>
-<p><q>Trappin’, that’s what.</q></p>
-<p><q>But whose traps?</q></p>
-<p>Her face paled. Quick as a flash she reached out an arm, snatched his
-cased rifle from where it stood and stepped back into the room. Mr.
-Wallace smiled, raised the pack of provisions from the threshold,
-carried it into the cabin and closed the door behind him. He crossed the
-room in four strides and opened another door; and there stood Conley,
-facing it, with both hands held high in air and a rifle in one hand.
-Behind him stood Young Dan.</p>
-<p><q>Come along in,</q> said the deputy-sheriff.</p>
-<p>Conley obeyed; and young Dan came close at his heels and shut the door.
-Wallace took the rifle from Conley and his own from the woman. Then he
-turned to Young Dan and said, <q>You’ve got something to say to these
-folks, I believe. Fire away.</q></p>
-<p><q>It’s this,</q> said Young Dan, looking coldly from the man to the woman.
-<q>I’m just about sick of supplying you with grub. A wolf would feel more
-gratitude than either of you. So this is the last time; and if ever I
-call again with the deputy-sheriff, there’ll be trouble for you. We’ve
-arrested Luke Watt for selling gin, and he is going to jail for it. Oh,
-yes, I know all about that fox skin! Stick to yer own trap-lines from
-now on, Jim Conley, and trade yer furs for food instead of hard liquor,
-and I’ll leave you alone. But make one more break at me or my traps, and
-I’ll land you where you can talk it over with Luke Watt. Here’s more
-grub—the last I bother to tote in to you—and that’s all I’ve got to say.
-Come along, Mr. Wallace. Let’s get out into the fresh air quick.</q></p>
-<p>They turned away and left the man and woman and bewildered children
-standing silent and motionless.</p>
-<p><q>I didn’t suspect it was in you to be so sharp with them,</q> remarked
-Archie Wallace. <q>What riled you?</q></p>
-<p><q>Conley tried to slip a knife into me after he’d put up his hands,</q>
-replied Young Dan.</p>
-<p><q>Well, I reckon they’ll be good from now on, so far as you’re
-concerned,</q> said Wallace. <q>You scared ’em. You pretty nigh scared me.</q></p>
-<p>They were half-way back to Bill Tangler’s camp when the deputy-sheriff
-halted and lit a cigar.</p>
-<p><q>You’re a wizard, Dan Evans,</q> he said. <q>A trapper needs to be smart, but
-not as far-sighted an’ clear-thinkin’ as you. The Government will be
-glad to pay you for anything you do—so will you lend me a hand now an’
-then, when I’m up against something too big for me to swing alone?</q></p>
-<p><q>Sure,</q> said Young Dan.</p>
-<p><q>That’s a bargain!</q> exclaimed Mr. Wallace; and they shook hands there in
-the white trail.</p>
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;'>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE OXBOW WIZARD***</p>
-<p>******* This file should be named 61911-h.htm or 61911-h.zip *******</p>
-<p>This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:<br />
-<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/6/1/9/1/61911">http://www.gutenberg.org/6/1/9/1/61911</a></p>
-<p>
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.</p>
-
-<p>Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-</p>
-
-<h2 class="pgx" title="">START: FULL LICENSE<br />
-<br />
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE<br />
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK</h2>
-
-<p>To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.</p>
-
-<h3 class="pgx" title="">Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works</h3>
-
-<p>1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.</p>
-
-<p>1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.</p>
-
-<p>1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.</p>
-
-<p>1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.</p>
-
-<p>1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:</p>
-
-<p>1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:</p>
-
-<blockquote><p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United
- States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost
- no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use
- it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with
- this eBook or online
- at <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
- are not located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws
- of the country where you are located before using this
- ebook.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."</li>
-
-<li>You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.</li>
-
-<li>You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.</li>
-
-<li>You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause. </p>
-
-<h3 class="pgx" title="">Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm</h3>
-
-<p>Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.</p>
-
-<p>Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org.</p>
-
-<h3 class="pgx" title="">Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation</h3>
-
-<p>The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.</p>
-
-<p>The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact</p>
-
-<p>For additional contact information:</p>
-
-<p> Dr. Gregory B. Newby<br />
- Chief Executive and Director<br />
- gbnewby@pglaf.org</p>
-
-<h3 class="pgx" title="">Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation</h3>
-
-<p>Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.</p>
-
-<p>The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/donate">www.gutenberg.org/donate</a>.</p>
-
-<p>While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.</p>
-
-<p>International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.</p>
-
-<p>Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate</p>
-
-<h3 class="pgx" title="">Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.</h3>
-
-<p>Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.</p>
-
-<p>Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.</p>
-
-<p>Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org</p>
-
-<p>This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.</p>
-
-</body>
-</html>
-