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+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.
+
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69702 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69702)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of A backwoods princess, by Hulbert
-Footner
-
-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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: A backwoods princess
-
-Author: Hulbert Footner
-
-Release Date: January 4, 2023 [eBook #69702]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Al Haines, Jen Haines & the online Distributed Proofreaders
- Canada team at https://www.pgdpcanada.net
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BACKWOODS PRINCESS ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Cover Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- By HULBERT FOOTNER
- __________________________
-
- A Backwoods Princess
- Madame Storey
- Antennae
- The Shanty Sled
- The Under Dogs
- The Wild Bird
- Officer!
- Ramshackle House
- The Deaves Affair
- The Owl Taxi
- The Substitute Millionaire
- Thieves’ Wit
- New Rivers of the North
- __________________________
-
- NEW YORK:
- GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY
-
-
-
-
- A BACKWOODS
- PRINCESS
- By
- HULBERT FOOTNER
-[Illustration]
- NEW YORK
- GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, _1926_,
- BY HULBERT FOOTNER
-
- A BACKWOODS PRINCESS
-
- —Q—
-
- PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I Catastrophe................ 9
- II The Burial of Blackburn.... 22
- III The Slaves Without a Master 30
- IV At Fort Good Hope.......... 40
- V Yellow-Head................ 51
- VI The Dinner Party........... 64
- VII The Cloven Hoof............ 79
- VIII Heavenly Music............. 94
- IX An Upset................... 102
- X Contraband................. 118
- XI A Meeting.................. 133
- XII Fur........................ 140
- XIII The Fur Goes Out........... 156
- XIV The Discovery.............. 167
- XV Shadowing.................. 179
- XVI With Conacher.............. 190
- XVII The Meeting................ 201
- XVIII Confusion.................. 207
- XIX Preparing for Danger....... 216
- XX Besieged................... 228
- XXI A Leap for Freedom......... 239
- XXII The Search................. 255
- XXIII Hunger..................... 273
- XXIV Downstream................. 287
- XXV Conclusion................. 305
-
-
-
-
- A BACKWOODS PRINCESS
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
- CATASTROPHE
-
-
-Spring was in full tide at Blackburn’s Post, but Laurentia Blackburn and
-the four Marys were confined to the Women’s House by rain. There sat the
-girlish Princess surrounded by her handmaidens in the midst of a rude
-magnificence which best sets off a beautiful woman. Her feet were hidden
-in a superb polar bearskin which had come down from the Arctic in trade;
-and the chair in which she sat was completely covered by the frosted
-pelt of a grizzly, his huge head hanging down over the back. She was a
-black-haired Princess with something untamed about her like the
-creatures whose pelts decorated her chamber. Around her neck hung an
-astonishing necklace of great pearls strung alternately with water-worn
-nuggets of gold. Her black dress was worked at the neck and wrists with
-an Indian design in brightly dyed porcupine quills.
-
-The four Marys were Indian girls, small and comely, with glistening
-copper faces, and raven hair drawn smoothly back from their brows. They
-were clad alike in black cotton dresses, with doeskin moccasins upon
-their feet; and a stranger would have been hard put to it to tell them
-apart. However, he would presently have perceived that one of them stood
-in quite a different relation to her mistress from the others. This was
-Mary-Lou who was of the Beaver tribe, whereas the others were only
-Slavis. She was the Princess’ foster sister. She could speak English.
-All four girls looked at their mistress with fear and respect; but only
-Mary-Lou’s face was capable of softening with love. She was reading
-aloud from “The Lady of the Lake.”
-
-The others were Mary-Belle; Mary-Rose and Mary-Ann. The first-named
-crouched in front of the small fire which had been lighted to mitigate
-the dampness out-of-doors. It was her task to see that it neither went
-out, nor became hot enough to scorch the Princess’ face. The other two
-sat on a bearskin engaged in embroidering velvet-soft moccasins with
-gayly colored silks. None of them could understand a word of what
-Mary-Lou was reading from the book; and the gentle, droning voice was
-fatally conducive to sleep. The Princess watched them lazily through the
-lowered fringe of her black lashes; and, when a head was seen to nod,
-she exploded like a fire cracker.
-
-“Sit up straight! Your head is going down between your shoulders! Before
-you are twenty-five you will be the shape of a sack of hay! Your husband
-if you ever get one at all will look for another wife!”
-
-It especially terrified the girls to be scolded in the English they
-could not understand. This particular rebuke was addressed to Mary-Belle
-but all three of the Slavis cringed, and their dark eyes turned
-helplessly this way and that like a frightened deer’s. Mary-Lou looked
-apprehensive, too, expecting her turn to come next.
-
-“Well, go on with the book,” said Loseis crossly. The name Laurentia,
-being unmanageable on the tongue of the Indians, they had given her this
-one, which means “little wild duck.”
-
-The tremulous voice resumed.
-
-“Oh, shut the book!” Loseis cried immediately afterwards. “It is a
-foolish book! It tires my ears!”
-
-“Shall I get another book?” faltered Mary-Lou.
-
-“What’s the use? We have read them all. They are no better than this
-book. All foolish, goody-goody books!”
-
-All four red girls sat scared and silent.
-
-Loseis jumped up as if she had strong springs in her legs. “Can’t you
-say something, any of you? Are you all struck dumb? You can chatter fast
-enough among yourselves when I am not there!” She amplified her remarks
-in the Slavi tongue.
-
-They were struck dumb indeed, then. They looked at each other
-helplessly, each one mutely begging her neighbor to speak.
-
-“Oh, leave me! leave me! you foolish pudding faces!” cried Loseis,
-waving her hands. “Or I shall have to beat you!”
-
-They faded into the kitchen with alacrity. Only Mary-Lou looked back.
-
-“Mary-Lou, you stay here,” commanded Loseis. “I’ve got to have somebody
-to talk to!”
-
-Mary-Lou leaned shyly against the door frame; pleased at being called
-back, yet terrified, too. Loseis paced up and down the room like a slim
-black panther, her eyes shooting greenish sparks.
-
-It was a broad, low room with but two tiny windows, glass being such a
-difficult article to bring in seven hundred miles by pack train. There
-was a capacious fireplace, cunningly built out of rounded stones from
-the creek bed. The log walls had been plastered with clay, hardened now
-almost to the consistency of brick; and overhead was spread a canvas
-ceiling cloth to keep in the warmth. Walls and ceiling had been washed
-with a warm terra cotta color, which made a rich background for the
-beautiful furs. Over the carved bedstead in the corner was flung a robe
-made of hundreds of raccoons’ tails, the black stripes worked into an
-elaborate geometrical design. There were other robes made of otters’
-skins, of lynx paws, of silver foxes. On the walls hung many beautiful
-examples of Indian handicraft.
-
-Glancing at the drooping head of the red girl, Loseis cried: “Mary-Lou,
-you’ve got as much spirit as a lump of pemmican! When you sit by the
-fire I wonder that you do not melt and run down in grease!”
-
-Mary-Lou’s head went lower still, and her eyes filled.
-
-Seeing this, Loseis became angrier still. “There you go! Of course
-you’re _good_! That’s what makes me mad! Because I’m not good at all!
-I’ve got the temper of a fiend! Well, do you suppose I enjoy losing it?
-. . . I know I ought to say I’m sorry now, but it sticks in my throat!”
-
-“I not want that,” murmured Mary-Lou. “I am lovin’ you anyway.”
-
-“Well . . . I love you, too,” grumbled Loseis, shamefaced as a boy. “But
-I wish you weren’t so humble. It’s bad for me. This is Blackburn’s Post
-on Blackburn’s River; all this is Blackburn’s country, and I’m
-Blackburn’s daughter. There is nobody to stand up to me. I am too young
-to be the mistress. I don’t know anything. . . . That white man laughed
-at me as one laughs at a child!”
-
-Loseis had stopped her pacing. Her head hung down. “I ought to have a
-white woman to tell me things,” she said wistfully. “In all my life I
-have seen but one woman of my own kind. That was the governess my father
-brought in for me. I used to mock her. But now I wish I had her back.
-She had nice manners. . . . He laughed at me. . . .”
-
-She strayed to the second little crooked window, which was at the end of
-the room furthest from the fireplace. It overlooked a natural meadow
-below, where the tepees of the Slavis were built upon both sides of a
-creek which emptied into the main stream just beyond. In front of the
-Post the main river described a great convex bend, so that Loseis could
-look both up-stream and down. This bend was formed by a bold promontory
-of a hill which forced the river to go around its base. The point of
-this hill had been sliced off by the water, leaving a precipitous yellow
-cut-bank facing the Post. On the summit, startlingly conspicuous against
-a group of dark pine trees, was a fence of white palings enclosing a
-tiny plot with a cross rising out of it. By day and by night too, that
-grave dominated the Post.
-
-“Ah! if only my mother had lived!” sighed Loseis.
-
-“Let me read the book again,” suggested Mary-Lou, to divert her mind.
-
-Loseis shook her head impatiently. She came away from the window. “I am
-not in the humor for it. I guess it is too fine for me. . . .” She
-resumed her uneven pacing. “Mary-Lou,” she suddenly cried in a voice
-full of pain, “when a man and a woman love I am sure they do not think
-such elegant thoughts as are in that book. Ah! the heart burns a hole in
-your breast! It is impossible to think at all!”
-
-The red girl’s eyes followed her, full of compassion.
-
-Observing that look, Loseis said sharply: “You must not think I am in
-love with that white man, Conacher. Oh, no! I was just imagining. I am
-far from loving him. I hate him!”
-
-“You are not hating Conacher,” murmured Mary-Lou sadly. “Why say that to
-me?”
-
-Loseis stamped her foot. “I tell you I hate him!” she cried. “That is
-enough for you! . . . What right had he to treat me like a child? I am
-Blackburn’s daughter. My father is the master of this country. And who
-is this white man? A poor man in a canoe with only two servants! Nobody
-ever heard of him before. My father was angry at his coming, and I was
-angry. We do not want white men coming here to spoil the fur trade!”
-
-Mary-Lou’s silence suggested that she was far from being convinced.
-
-“A poor man with no outfit at all!” Loseis repeated louder. “Yet he held
-his head as if he was as good as my father! He must be a fool. He talked
-to me as if I was anybody at all, and his eyes laughed when I became
-angry . . . !” In the midst of her tirade Loseis suddenly broke down.
-“Oh, I wish I could forget him!” she cried, with the angry tears
-springing to her eyes.
-
-This sign of weakness gave Mary-Lou the courage to glide to her
-mistress, and wreathe her arms about her. “I think Conacher was a good
-man,” she whispered. “His eyes were true.”
-
-These words were very sweet to Loseis; but she would not openly confess
-it. However, she gave Mary-Lou a little squeeze, before withdrawing
-herself from her arms. “No,” she said; “I shall stand by my father. My
-father is the finest man living. Conacher is gone. I shall never see him
-again. I shall quickly forget him.
-
-“It was only because he took me by surprise,” she went on with an
-eagerness in which there was something pathetically childlike. “When he
-came paddling down our river with the two Beaver Indians I was like one
-struck on the head. It was like a white man falling from the skies. No
-white man ever came down our river before; and he so young and strong
-and full of laughter! He wore no hat; and the sunlight was snared in his
-yellow hair. I never saw hair like that. . . .”
-
-“He like you, too, ver’ moch,” ventured Mary-Lou. “I was there when he
-landed. I saw it burn up like fire in his blue eyes.”
-
-“Yes, I saw that, too,” murmured Loseis, averting her face. “But why did
-he change right away?”
-
-“Because you treat him like poor, dirty Slavi,” said Mary-Lou. “No white
-man take that.”
-
-“That is because I was so confused,” whispered poor Loseis. She suddenly
-covered her face with her hands. “Oh, what will he be thinking of me!”
-she groaned.
-
-Mary-Lou’s eyes were all sympathy; but she could think of nothing to
-say.
-
-Loseis drifted back to the window, where she stood with her back to
-Mary-Lou. After awhile, without turning around, she said in an offhand,
-experimental sort of voice: “I have a good mind to see him again.”
-
-Mary-Lou merely gasped.
-
-“Oh, not meaning anything in particular,” Loseis said quickly. “There
-never could be anything between us. But just to show him that I am not a
-redskin, and then leave him.”
-
-“How could you see him?” faltered Mary-Lou.
-
-“He is camped with his outfit alongside the Limestone Rapids, one
-hundred miles down,” Loseis went on in that offhand voice. “He has to
-break the rocks with a hammer, and study them where they split. It is
-what they call a geologist. . . .” Her assumed indifference suddenly
-collapsed. “Let us go to see him, Mary-Lou,” she blurted out
-breathlessly. “We could make it in a long day’s paddling with the
-current; three days to come back if we worked hard. We wouldn’t let him
-know we had come to see him. We would say we were hunting. . . .”
-
-“Oh! . . . Oh! . . .” gasped Mary-Lou. “Girls do not hunt.”
-
-“He doesn’t know what _I_ do!” cried Loseis. “I _must_ see him! It kills
-me to have him thinking that I am a common, ignorant sort of girl! Let
-us start at daybreak to-morrow!”
-
-“Oh, no! no!” whispered Mary-Lou, paralyzed by the very thought.
-“Blackburn . . . Blackburn . . . !”
-
-“He couldn’t say anything until we’d been and come,” said Loseis coolly.
-“Anyhow, I’m not afraid of my father. My spirit is as strong as his. He
-can’t shout _me_ down!”
-
-“No! No!” reiterated the red girl. “If you go after him like that, he
-think little of you.”
-
-In her heart Loseis recognized the truth of this, and she fell into a
-sullen silence. After awhile she said: “Then I will make him come back
-here. I will send a message. . . . Oh, not a letter, you foolish girl!”
-she added in response to Mary-Lou’s startled look.
-
-“What kind of message?”
-
-“I will make a little raft and send it floating down on the current,”
-said Loseis dreamily. “I will set up a little stick on the raft, with a
-ribbon tied to it, a piece of my hair. I think that will bring him back
-. . .”
-
-“Maybe it float past his camp in the nighttime,” said Mary-Lou, in her
-soft, sad voice. “How you know?”
-
-“Then I will send down two,” said Loseis. “One in the day and one in the
-night. He will see one of them.”
-
-Mary-Lou was astonished by the cleverness of this idea.
-
-“And then when he comes back,” said Loseis quite coolly. “I will say
-that I did not send it. I will say that it is a custom of the red girls
-to make offerings to the Spirit of the River. I think that will make him
-feel pretty small. But I shall not laugh at him. Oh, no! I shall be very
-polite; polite and proud as Blackburn’s daughter ought to be. And I
-shall send him away again.”
-
-Mary-Lou looked somewhat dubious as to the feasibility of this program;
-but held her tongue.
-
-“I shall send him away again,” repeated Loseis with great firmness, “and
-after that I shall think of no man but my father. Before Conacher came
-my father was enough for me; and after he has gone my father will be
-enough. I am lucky to have such a father; so handsome and brave and
-strong-willed. . . .” Loseis suddenly became dreamy again. “But Conacher
-was not afraid of my father. That young man was not afraid of my father.
-I have never seen that before. . . .”
-
-Mary-Lou permitted herself to smile tenderly.
-
-Seeing it, Loseis colored up hotly, and became very firm again. “Never
-mind that! There is nobody like my father! He is the finest man in the
-world! I shall be a better daughter to him after this. I will do
-everything he wants. Ah! my father is like a king . . . !”
-
-Mary-Lou was suddenly drawn to the end window by some disquieting sounds
-from the Slavi village below. She cried out in surprise: “Jimmy
-Moosenose is running between the tepees.”
-
-“What do I care?” said Loseis, annoyed by this interruption.
-
-“He is running fast,” said Mary-Lou, her voice scaling up. “He speaks to
-the people; they throw up their hands; they run after him; they fall
-down. There is something the matter!”
-
-Loseis, alarmed, ran to join her at the window. Together they watched
-the old Indian come laboring up the little hill to the grassy bench on
-which the buildings of the Post stood. Jimmy Moosenose was a Beaver
-Indian, and Blackburn’s right-hand man by reason of being the only man
-beside the trader himself, who could speak the English and the Slavi
-tongues. There were no white men at Blackburn’s Post.
-
-When Jimmy passed beyond range of their vision the girls transferred
-themselves to the other window. The Indian struck across the grass
-straight for their door. A tatterdemalion crowd of natives and dogs
-streamed after him. Fear clutched at Loseis’ brave heart; and she became
-as pale as paper. An instant later Jimmy Moosenose burst in. The others
-dared not follow him through the door.
-
-“What is the matter?” demanded Loseis haughtily.
-
-At first the old man could only pant and groan, while his body rocked in
-despair. Loseis seized him as if she would shake out the news by main
-strength.
-
-“Speak! Speak!” she cried.
-
-“Blackburn . . . !” he gasped. “Blackburn . . . !”
-
-“My father! Hurt! Take me to him!” said Loseis crisply. She made as if
-to force her way out through the crowd.
-
-“They . . . are bringing him,” faltered the old man.
-
-Loseis fell back against the door frame. “Bringing him?” she echoed
-faintly.
-
-The old man’s chin was on his breast. “Blackburn dead!” he said.
-
-Loseis’ arms dropped to her sides; her widened eyes were like tragic
-black stars. “Dead?” she repeated in quite an ordinary voice. “That is
-impossible!”
-
-Speech came to the old man. “It was the black stallion,” he cried. “I
-tell Blackburn, many tam I tell him that horse kill him some day. He
-jus’ laugh. He say: ‘I lak master that horse.’ Wah! what good master
-when both are dead! . . . It was the high cut-bank at Swallow Bend.
-Blackburn, he spur that horse to edge of bank to mak’ him rear and
-wheel. Blackburn he is laugh lak a boy. The horse is crazy mad. He put
-his head down. He no stop. He jomp over. He jomp clear in the air. Wah!
-when I see that, my legs are lak water! When I look over the bank there
-is nothing but water. Both are gone. We get canoe. Down river I see
-Blackburn’s leg stickin’ out. We pull him out. His neck is broke. . . .”
-
-The crowd gathered outside the house, broke with a common impulse into a
-weird, wordless chant of death, the women’s voices rising piercing
-shrill. There was no sound of human grief in it; and the open-mouthed
-copper-colored faces expressed nothing either; the bright, flat, black
-eyes were as soulless as glass. They pointed their chins up like howling
-dogs.
-
-Loseis clapped her hands to her head. “Stop that ungodly noise!” she
-cried.
-
-Even old Jimmy looked scandalized. “They sing for Blackburn,” he
-protested.
-
-“Stop it! Stop it!” she cried. Forcing her way out, Loseis ran to meet
-the cortège that was crawling up the rise towards Blackburn’s house.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
- THE BURIAL OF BLACKBURN
-
-
-Hector Blackburn’s own room revealed a beautiful austerity fitting to
-the chamber of death. It was plastered and ceiled like the room of
-Loseis, but the color was a cool stone gray. The few articles of
-furniture that it contained had all been constructed in the old style,
-carved and polished by the owner himself, who had a taste that way. The
-lustrous pelts were more sparingly used here.
-
-The narrow bedstead with its four slender columns had been dragged into
-the center of the room. Upon it lay the body of Hector Blackburn clad in
-decent black clothes; his big hands crossed on his breast. Beside the
-bed knelt Loseis, her rapt gaze fixed on her father’s face. Six feet two
-in height, and forty-eight inches around the chest, he made a splendid
-figure of death. There was not a white thread to be seen in his
-spreading black beard, nor in the plentiful wavy hair of his crown. To
-be sure, the high red color was strangely gone out of his transparent
-cheeks; and the passionate features were composed into a look of haughty
-peace. For sheer manhood, truly a father to be proud of.
-
-Loseis thought of the feats of strength and daring that had made his
-name famous throughout the Northwest Territories; how he had strangled a
-full grown black bear with his naked hands; how he had leaped from his
-canoe at the very brink of the American Falls and had brought safely
-ashore an Indian who was clinging to a rock. He had been even more
-remarkable for his strength of will. The last of the great free traders,
-he had defied the power of the mighty Company, and had prospered
-exceedingly. He held his vast territory against all comers, by the power
-of his personality alone. Thinking of these things Loseis’ mind was
-confused. There lay his still body before her eyes, but what had become
-of the wild energy which had lately animated it? Surely, surely that
-could not be blown out like a candle flame.
-
-Dragging herself to her feet, she went into the adjoining kitchen. She
-had had no opportunity to change her dress, but in an impulse of grief
-had torn off the gay embroidery; and now she was all in black like the
-corpse. In the kitchen Mary-Lou sat huddled on the floor, with her arms
-wrapped around her head. Jimmy Moosenose stood beside the open door,
-looking out, a withered, bent little figure, but still capable of
-activity. As Loseis entered he said in an expressionless voice:
-
-“They have gone.”
-
-“Who?” asked Loseis sharply.
-
-“The people; all the people.”
-
-She ran to the door. It was true; every tepee was gone from the meadow
-below. Except for certain litter abandoned in their haste there was no
-sign that a village had ever stood there. The Slavis had taken flight
-and vanished like a cloud of insects.
-
-“Where have they gone?” demanded Loseis in astonishment. Though she had
-been born amongst them she did not understand this inscrutable, timid,
-savage race. It was impossible for any white man to know what went on
-inside their cramped skulls, Blackburn used to say. He had ruled them
-without making any attempt at understanding.
-
-“Gone up river,” muttered Jimmy.
-
-“For why?”
-
-“They moch scare’.”
-
-“But they are familiar with death. Death comes to all alike.”
-
-Jimmy Moosenose cast an uneasy look towards the room where the dead man
-lay. He was near enough akin to the Slavis to share in their fears.
-“They think ver’ powerful strong spirit live in Blackburn’s body,” he
-muttered. “Now that spirit free they not know what it do to them.”
-
-“Oh, what nonsense!” cried Loseis helplessly.
-
-“What we do now?” asked Jimmy fearfully.
-
-Loseis looked him over. “Are you man enough to ride all night?” she
-asked brusquely. “The trail is good.”
-
-“What trail?” asked Jimmy with a terrified face.
-
-“To Fort Good Hope to fetch the parson,” said Loseis in surprise.
-
-“It is ondred-feefty mile,” faltered Jimmy.
-
-“What of it? Two days to go and two to come. You can drive three spare
-horses before you. I don’t care if you kill them all.”
-
-“I not man enough for that,” said Jimmy shaking his head.
-
-“Well six days to go and come then. I’d go myself, but I know you two
-wouldn’t stay here alone.”
-
-Jimmy’s and Mary-Lou’s frightened faces testified eloquently to that.
-Jimmy shook his head. “No good! No good!” he said. “It is summer time
-now. He no keep six days.”
-
-Loseis groaned aloud. In her desperate helplessness she looked like a
-little girl. “How can I bury him without a parson!” she cried.
-
-“You have the parson’s little book,” said Jimmy. “You can say the
-prayers from that. It is just as good.”
-
-Loseis turned her back on them, that they might not see her childish,
-twisted face. “Very well,” she said in a strangled voice; “I will be the
-parson.”
-
-“What I do now?” asked Jimmy Moosenose.
-
-“First you must make a coffin.”
-
-“There is no planks.”
-
-“Oh, tear down the counter in the store!” cried Loseis with a burst of
-irritation. “Must I think of everything?”
-
-“You tell me how big?” asked Jimmy, with another glance of sullen terror
-towards the inner room.
-
-“Yes, I will measure,” said Loseis. “And the coffin must be covered all
-over with good black cloth from the store. Mary-Lou will put it on with
-tacks. And lined with white cloth. While you are making it I will go
-across the river, and dig the grave. We will bury him to-morrow.”
-
-“That is well,” said Jimmy with a look of relief. “Then the people come
-back.”
-
-“Ah, the people!” cried Loseis with a flash of angry scorn. “They are
-well-named Slaves!”
-
-At the end of May in the latitude of Blackburn’s Post it does not become
-dark until nearly ten; and it was fully that hour before Loseis, having
-completed her task, returned dog-weary, across the river. During the
-balance of the night she sat wide-eyed and dry-eyed beside her dead, her
-hands in her lap, planning in her childlike and passionate way how best
-to conduct everything next day with dignity and honor.
-
-At sun-up Jimmy Moosenose was despatched to the river shore to construct
-a raft, the light bark canoes that they possessed not being sufficient
-to ferry the coffin across. No flowers were available so early in the
-season, and Mary-Lou was set to work to twist a handsome wreath of the
-crisp green leaves of the high-bush cranberry. Neither Jimmy nor
-Mary-Lou could be induced to enter Blackburn’s room, so Loseis herself
-dragged the completed coffin in beside the bed; and she unaided, managed
-somehow to lift the body into it. In life Hector Blackburn had weighed
-more than two hundred pounds. It was Loseis, too, who nailed the lid on
-the coffin with an aim no better than any other woman’s. Those crookedly
-driven nails distressed her sorely.
-
-When Jimmy came up from the river, they slipped short lengths of pole
-under the coffin, and rolled it to the door. Outside the house, since
-there was nothing in the nature of wheels at Blackburn’s Post, they
-hitched an old horse directly to the coffin, and dragged it at a slow
-pace over the grass down hill to the river. Jimmy led the horse, while
-Loseis and Mary-Lou walked behind, steadying the coffin with ropes
-affixed to each side. During this part of the journey Loseis was all
-child. Every time the coffin [word missing in original] over an
-unevenness her heart was in her mouth. “Oh! Oh! Oh!” she cried
-involuntarily; and her agonized eyes seemed to add: “My darling! did
-that hurt you?”
-
-At the river edge they worked the coffin onto the raft with rollers and
-short lengths of plank; and Loseis draped the Post flag upon it, and
-placed the green wreath. Jimmy and Mary-Lou propelled the raft across
-with long poles, while the slender, black-clad figure of Loseis stood
-looking down at the coffin like a symbolical figure of Bereavement. In
-her grief-drowned eyes there was a look of piteous pride, too; for the
-black coffin with its flag and green wreath looked beautiful.
-
-The smooth brown river moved down in silky eddies; the freshly budded
-greens of poplar and willow made the shores lovely, backed by the grave,
-unchanging tones of the evergreens. Behind them the low, solid buildings
-of the Post crouched on the bench above the river with a sort of human
-dignity; before them rose the steep grassy promontory with the waiting
-grave on top. Over their heads smiled the Northern summer sky of an
-enchanting tenderness of blue that is not revealed to lower latitudes.
-
-Landing upon the further shore they caught another horse—there was no
-lack of horses at Blackburn’s Post. In order to drag the coffin up the
-rough, steep hill it was necessary to construct a travois of poles to
-lift the front end clear of the ground. The horse was fastened between
-the poles as between shafts. At the top of the hill Loseis had removed
-the palings; and the new grave yawned beside the old one. She had dug
-the shallow hole with sloping ends, that the horse might walk right
-through, leaving his burden in its place.
-
-The animal was then liberated; and Loseis stood on one side, prayer-book
-in hand, with Jimmy Moosenose and Mary-Lou facing her on the other. It
-was a meagerly attended burial for the great lord of that country.
-Loseis read the noble prayers in a grave voice charged with emotion. The
-sound of it caused the tears to run silently down the smooth cheeks of
-Mary-Lou; but Jimmy merely looked uncomfortable. The feelings of white
-people were strange to him. He had given his master a doglike devotion
-while he lived; but he was dead now, and that was an end to it.
-
-“Man that is born of woman hath but a short time to live and is full of
-misery,” read the brave young voice. “He cometh up and is cut down like
-a flower; he fleeth as it were a shadow, and never continueth in one
-stay. In the midst of life we are in death; of whom may we seek for
-succour but of Thee, O Lord, who for our sins art justly displeased?”
-
-When she came to the end of the service, Loseis dropped the book and
-involuntarily broke into an extempore prayer, standing with straight
-back and lifted face like an Indian, her arms at her sides. Her words
-were hardly couched in the same humble strain as those of the book; but
-the passionate sincerity of the speaker redeemed them from irreverence.
-
-“O God, this is my father. He was a strong man, God, and you must make
-allowances for him. You gave him a proud heart and a terrible anger when
-he was crossed, and it would not be fair to judge him like common men.
-He could have done anything he wanted here, because he was the master,
-but he was always square. Every season he paid the Indians half as much
-again for their fur as the Company would pay, and that is why the
-Company traders spoke evil of him. He was hard and stern to the Indians,
-but that was the only thing they could understand. How else could you
-deal with a tribe of slaves? Be merciful to my father, O God! for he
-would never ask mercy for himself; and let him see my mother again, for
-that was all he wanted. Amen.”
-
-Jimmy Moosenose picked up the spade with a businesslike air, and threw a
-clod on the coffin. At the dreadful sound that it gave forth, a sharp
-cry broke from Loseis. She wrapped her arms about her head and fled away
-down the hill.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
- THE SLAVES WITHOUT A MASTER
-
-
-When the three mourners landed again on their own side of the river,
-Jimmy and Mary-Lou looked at Loseis at a loss. What to do next?
-
-Rousing herself, Loseis said wearily: “Jimmy, you must fix up the
-counter in the store. Fix it with split poles until we can make some
-plank. Mary-Lou, fetch a hatchet and come with me.”
-
-On the river shore some hundred yards downstream, hidden by a clump of
-willows in case Jimmy Moosenose should be inclined to spy on what they
-were doing, Mary-Lou under Loseis’ instructions built a tiny raft out of
-dead branches. To the raft Loseis fixed a little pole to the top of
-which she tied a streamer of black. She launched the raft on the
-current, and with big, childish eyes watched it float around the bend.
-
-“I am not sending for Conacher to come to me,” she said haughtily to
-Mary-Lou. “But when a white man dies it is customary to let men
-know. . . . To-night I will push off another one. One or the other he
-will see.”
-
-Within an hour the Slavis returned as mysteriously as they had departed.
-They must have had an outlook posted to report upon the burial of
-Blackburn. To Loseis their actions seemed perfectly senseless; for Jimmy
-had said it was the spirit of Blackburn that they dreaded, yet as soon
-as his body was hidden underground their fears departed. They set up the
-tepees in their former places, and went about their usual occupations as
-if nothing had happened. Loseis’ breast burned with anger; and she
-wanted to go down and give them a piece of her mind. However, Jimmy
-dissuaded her.
-
-“No good! No good!” he said. “It is over now. They not understand white
-man’s ways.”
-
-There was a sharp ring of anxiety in his voice that caused Loseis to
-stare in haughty surprise. She thoroughly despised the Slavis. However,
-she said nothing. She and Mary-Lou went off to their house to sleep.
-
-Down on the flat it was the women who were erecting the tepee poles, and
-drawing the covers over them. They no longer used skins for this
-purpose, Blackburn having persuaded them of the superior advantages of
-the canvas that he sold. In the same way the whole tribe had learned to
-wear white men’s clothes out of the store. While the women worked, the
-men sat in groups smoking and talking in that queer clicking tongue that
-few white men have ever mastered. Their talk was light and punctuated
-with laughter; but it was clear from their uneasy glances towards the
-white man’s buildings that they were not speaking their hearts. As a
-matter of fact the Indians are quite as adept in insincere small talk as
-their white brethren.
-
-From time immemorial the Slavis have been known as a small, weak people;
-and this particular branch, cut off from their fellows on the distant
-shores of Blackburn’s River had further degenerated as a result of too
-close inter-marriage. They were a weedy lot, and like all weak peoples,
-shifty-eyed. As is always the case, the men showed up worse; hollow
-chests and spindle shanks were the rule; the whole tribe could not
-produce one stalwart, handsome youth. But they were not
-poverty-stricken. They all wore good clothes, and lived in new,
-weather-proof tepees. They hunted the best fur country in all the North,
-and for twenty years Blackburn had jealously guarded it for them.
-
-From where they sat Jimmy Moosenose could be seen splitting poles in
-front of the store, and carrying them in. Without appearing to, the men
-were all watching him. The groups of talkers fell silent. They could not
-meet each other’s eyes. A curious look of dread flickered in their
-faces; that which had directed the whole course of their lives for so
-many years had been suddenly removed, and they were all at a stand.
-
-By twos and threes they began to drift up the grassy rise, their vacant
-eyes drifting this way and that. There was something peculiarly ominous
-about their purposelessness, their lack of direction. They squatted down
-on their hunkers, making a rough semi-circle about Jimmy. They no longer
-spoke among themselves, nor did any volunteer to help Jimmy; they simply
-squatted and stared at him with their unwinking animal-like eyes. Jimmy
-affected to take no notice of them; but his forehead became moist with a
-sudden fear. He was reminded that he was of alien blood to these people,
-and that they were thirty to his one. And there were five times that
-number more in their summer camp at Blackburn’s Lake.
-
-At length the silence, the unwinking stares became more than Jimmy could
-bear. “Where is Etzooah?” he asked, affecting indifference.
-
-Etzooah was one whom Jimmy suspected of being a trouble maker. He was a
-bigger man than the others; and was said to have Cree blood. More than
-once in the past his sharpness had displeased Blackburn, who, however,
-tolerated him because he was the best hunter in the tribe.
-
-“Etzooah gone to the lake to see a girl,” said one.
-
-From the way the others grinned it was clear this was a lie. Jimmy was
-much troubled that they grinned openly in his face. Had Blackburn been
-in the store behind him they would never have done that. Jimmy glanced
-desirously in the direction of the Women’s House, and his watchers
-marked that glance.
-
-One said, affecting the stupid look of a crafty schoolboy: “Are you the
-trader now?”
-
-“No,” said Jimmy, “Loseis is the mistress here.”
-
-The ugly little men bared their blackened teeth; and a squall of
-laughter rocked them on their heels. There was no true merriment in the
-sound. It ended as suddenly as it began. It struck an icy fear into
-Jimmy’s breast. He was all alone; all alone.
-
-“Go back to your lodges!” he said, drawing himself up, and imitating the
-voice of Blackburn.
-
-They neither moved nor spoke; but squatted there staring at him.
-
-He dared not repeat the order. Shouldering his poles, he started into
-the store. Of one accord the Slavis rose, and came pushing through the
-door after him. Flinging down his poles, Jimmy spread out his arms to
-bar their way.
-
-“Get out!” he cried. “There is no trading to-day.”
-
-Keeping their eyes fixed on his, they continued to push in. They walked
-right into Jimmy, forcing him back. What was he to do? His instinct told
-him that the moment he showed fight it would be all up with him. He
-picked up one of his poles and started to nail it into place, grumbling
-to himself, and making believe to ignore them.
-
-They stood about the store watching him with affected sleepiness through
-half-closed eyes. One of them, keeping his eyes fixed on Jimmy, thrust a
-hand into an opened box and pulled it out full of dried apricots. All
-the instincts of thirty years of trading were outraged by this act, and
-Jimmy forgot his fears.
-
-“Put it back!” he cried, brandishing the hammer. “Get out, you thieves!
-You half-men, you dirty slaves!”
-
-None moved, nor changed a muscle of his face. The man with the apricots
-held them in his hand, waiting to see what Jimmy would _do_. What he
-said was nothing to them. He might as well have been storming at the
-wind. Finally, half beside himself with rage, Jimmy ran to the back of
-the store where the guns were kept.
-
-Instantly the little men sprang into noiseless activity. One picked up a
-short length of pole, and darting after Jimmy on soft pads like a lynx,
-hit him over the head with it, before he could turn. In a flash they
-were all about him, their dark faces fixed in hideous grins, each trying
-to strike. They used tinned goods for weapons; one secured the hammer;
-one snatched up a heavy steel trap which he held poised aloft waiting
-for Jimmy’s head to appear. The whole mass swayed from this side to
-that, toppling over the goods on either side. Jimmy went down, and they
-had to bend over to hit him. They were as voiceless as squirming
-insects. There was no sound but the sickening blows that fell.
-
-When they finally drew back a shapeless huddle was revealed, lying in
-blood. Panic overtook the feather-headed Slavis, and they ran out of the
-store to look anxiously in the direction of the Women’s House. Nothing
-stirred there. They returned inside the store. They did not consult
-together, but appeared to act as instinctively as animals. There was a
-window at the back of the store. They pried it out frame and all, and
-hastily shoved the broken body through the hole, careless of where it
-fell. The instant it was out of sight they forgot about it, nor did they
-trouble to put the window back.
-
-Alone in the store, the Slavis betrayed a curious timidity. It seemed as
-if the ghost of Hector Blackburn restrained them still. They overran the
-place like ants, peering into everything, stroking the objects that they
-desired, but forbearing as yet to pick them up. At intervals panic
-seized them, and they swept in a cloud to the door to look over towards
-the Women’s House. Some of the Slavi women and children had been
-attracted from the tepees. These never ventured through the doors, but
-hung about outside, expressing no concern one way or the other; merely
-waiting to see how it all turned out.
-
-At length one man ventured to eat of the dried apricots; another split
-the top of a can of peaches with a hatchet; and instantly looting became
-general. Boxes were smashed, and bags ripped open, pouring their
-precious contents on the floor. Food in the North is not to be lightly
-wasted. Articles of clothing were the chief prizes; the only way to
-secure them was to put them on, one on top of another. Sometimes two
-pulled at the same garment, snarling at each other. But they never
-fought singly. They were dangerous only in the mass.
-
-In the middle of this scene suddenly appeared Loseis, her black eyes
-blazing. A terrified Mary-Lou cringed at her heels. Every Indian in the
-store, dropping what he was about, instantly became as immobile and
-watchful as a surprised animal. Loseis glared about her speechless. She
-was as much aghast as she was angry, for such a scene was beyond
-anything she had ever conceived of. But she was not afraid. She turned
-to the door.
-
-“Jimmy! Jimmy!” she called peremptorily.
-
-She waited in vain for an answer.
-
-“Where is Jimmy?” she demanded haughtily.
-
-None answered her.
-
-She dispatched Mary-Lou in search of him.
-
-The situation was beyond words. Loseis’ eyes darted silent lightnings at
-one man after another. The scattered Slavis slyly edged together. No
-single pair of eyes could meet hers, but she could not cow more than one
-man at a time; and the bright, inhuman eyes of the others remained fixed
-on her face.
-
-Finally with a magnificent gesture Loseis pointed to the door. “Get
-out!” she said.
-
-No man moved.
-
-That was a terrible moment for the high-spirited girl. A look of
-astonishment appeared in her eyes. Suddenly her face crimsoned with
-rage; she flew at the nearest man, and started pommeling him with her
-little fists. The man ducked under her blows, and sought to evade her.
-He pulled another man in front of him; whereupon Loseis transferred her
-blows to this one. All the others looked on with faces like masks. And
-so it went. The mysterious prestige of the white blood sanctified her,
-and they dared not strike back; they resisted her with that senseless
-animal obstinacy that drives masters mad with rage. They were satisfied
-to let her pommel them, knowing that she must tire of it in the end. And
-what then? It was like fighting a cloud of flies. They would not be
-driven out of the store. When one was driven out, as soon as Loseis went
-for another, he returned.
-
-She drew off at last. In that moment she knew the unspeakable agony of
-an imperious will that finds itself balked. She nearly died of her rage.
-But she faced it out. She admitted to herself that she was balked. The
-last two days had matured her. Fortunately for her, under all the
-passion and wilfulness of her nature there was a solid substratum of
-commonsense. Commonsense warned her that it would be fatal to make the
-least move in the direction of the guns at the back of the store. She
-could not force the senseless savages to obey her; well, commonsense
-suggested that she use guile. Loseis had an inspiration.
-
-Just inside the door of the store, behind a rough screen of wood,
-Blackburn had a little desk with a cover that lifted up. Loseis went to
-it, and took out a sizable book stoutly bound in gray linen and red
-leather. Every Slavi knew that book. It was Blackburn’s ledger. Loseis
-appeared around the screen carrying the ledger; and up-ending a box
-beside the door, sat herself upon it with the book spread on her knees.
-
-“You wish to trade?” she said to the men at large. “It is good. Take
-what you want. I will put it down in the book.”
-
-The eyes of the Slavis bolted; and they moved uneasily. The spell of
-their strangeness was broken. To their simple minds there was magic in
-those scratches by which white men’s thoughts might be conveyed to any
-distance that they chose; or stored up in a book to be brought out years
-afterwards unchanged. In particular, Blackburn’s ledger had always been
-held in superstitious awe as the source of his “strong medicine.”
-
-Loseis looked at the man nearest her, and thumbed the pages of the book.
-“Mahtsonza,” she said; “a Stetson hat; two skins. A Mackinaw coat; five
-skins. Wah! you have two coats? Ten skins!”
-
-Mahtsonza began to slide out of his stolen clothing.
-
-Loseis turned to the next. “Ahchoogah; a bag of rice; one skin. The bag
-is spoiled, and you must pay for all. You can carry it away.”
-
-There was a sudden rush for the door; but Loseis, springing up, barred
-the way. “I have all your names,” she cried. “Whatever is taken or
-spoiled will be written down, and all must pay a share!”
-
-Then she stood aside and let them slink by, a ridiculously crestfallen
-crowd of little bravoes.
-
-For the moment Loseis had won—but at no small cost. The instant they
-were out, the reaction set in. All the strength seemed to run out of her
-limbs; she sank down on the box covering her face with her hands. The
-fact of her appalling solitariness was made clear to her. She dared not
-look into the future.
-
-Presently Mary-Lou came back. “No can find Jimmy,” she said. “Nobody see
-him.”
-
-Proceeding to the rear of the store to survey the damage, the two girls
-came upon the wet, dark stain spreading over the floor. The instant she
-saw it, Loseis knew what had happened and went very still; but Mary-Lou
-cried out: “Look, the window is out!” and must needs stick her head
-through the hole to look.
-
-A piercing shriek broke from the red girl; she fell back half witless
-with terror into Loseis’s arms.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
- AT FORT GOOD HOPE
-
-
-At Fort Good Hope on the big river, the free trader Andrew Gault and his
-financial backer David Ogilvie, stood by the flagpole concluding their
-business, while the steam-launch _Courier_ waited in the stream below to
-carry Ogilvie down river.
-
-Outside of the towns, Fort Good Hope was the most enterprising and
-progressive Post in that country. The original log buildings were now
-used as bunk-houses for the half-breed employees; while on one side rose
-the magnificent dwelling of the trader, built of clapboards in the
-“outside” style and having fancy porches with turned pillars; and on the
-other side the equally modern store with plate glass windows imported at
-God knows what expense and trouble; and a huge sign. This sign was the
-occasion of considerable humor throughout the country, since there was
-nobody who required to be told whose store it was.
-
-This was by no means all of the improvements at Fort Good Hope. Gault
-had built and now operated a steamboat on the river, which connected
-with a line of wagons across the ninety-mile portage to Caribou Lake,
-and so kept him in touch with the world. By means of the steamboat he
-had imported an electric light plant, a sawmill and a steam process mill
-for grinding and bolting flour. The land along the river was rich, and
-Gault had established farmers there. They were only frozen out about one
-year in three; and that was their loss, not Gault’s. His flour, raised
-and milled on the spot, he was able to sell to the Indians at an
-enormous profit.
-
-In spite of all this, when Gault made up his accounts with Ogilvie, the
-financier pursed up his mouth in a grudging fashion, and Gault who was a
-bitter, proud man, ground his teeth with rage.
-
-“Your improvements are fine, fine,” said Ogilvie dryly; “the Post looks
-almost like a village on the railway. But my dear man, all this only
-returns a beggarly ten or fifteen per cent on the investment. I need not
-point out to you that our company is accustomed to receive two profits
-on every transaction. In other words we do not want the cash that you
-remit to us; we want fur. And I’m sorry to see that your consignments of
-fur have been growing less every year.”
-
-The trader was silent out of anger; and Ogilvie went on: “The history of
-all the old posts is the same. With the advance of civilization the fur
-is always retreating. With your steamboats and your sawmills you are
-hastening the process, my dear Gault. At the other old posts as the fur
-recedes they reach after it with sub-posts and trading stations. Why
-don’t you do something of the sort? You are in a better strategic
-position than any of them, because off to the northwest here you have a
-vast land that is still written down unexplored on the maps. Why don’t
-you get that fur?”
-
-“As you know,” muttered Gault, “on the northwest I am blanketed by
-Hector Blackburn.”
-
-Ogilvie shrugged. “Why remain blanketed?” he asked.
-
-“What do you propose?” asked Gault bitterly.
-
-“Oh, the specific measures must be left to you,” said Ogilvie hastily.
-“You are the man on the ground. But of course our company will back you
-up in anything you undertake. The old rough stuff has gone out of
-fashion, but the principle is the same. To put it bluntly, Gault: buy
-him out or drive him out.”
-
-“The entire resources of our company would not buy him out,” said Gault.
-“The man is drunk with pride at having the name of the last free
-trader.”
-
-“Well then?” said Ogilvie meaningly.
-
-“As to driving him out, I mean to do that; but I must await my
-opportunity. He’s in an almost impregnable position.”
-
-“Why did you let him get in such a position?” murmured Ogilvie. “You
-were on the ground first.”
-
-“He had all the luck,” said Gault bitterly.
-
-“Why is his position so impregnable?”
-
-“Well, for one thing he has a tribe of Indians completely under his
-thumb. Those are the Slavis, the most ignorant and primitive race of
-them all. Once they covered this whole country, but have gradually been
-pushed back by the Crees and other tribes. They have some other name,
-but I don’t know what it is. All the other Indians call them Slavis.
-Well, Blackburn has got this people penned up in his own country, where
-no whites can communicate with them. He deliberately trades on their
-ignorance and superstition. He has persuaded them that I am a devil and
-that black magic is worked at this Post, and no power under Heaven can
-persuade them to come within fifty miles of me.”
-
-Ogilvie laughed. “Not bad,” he said. “Why don’t you outbid him for fur?
-That might work a miracle.”
-
-“I have tried it,” said Gault grimly. “He is willing to go higher than
-the company is willing to let me go.”
-
-“But surely a year or two of that, with his ruinously expensive
-transport would break him,” said Ogilvie.
-
-“Blackburn is as rich as Crœsus,” said Gault bitterly; “and he’d risk
-every cent of it to beat me. What is more, he is entirely independent of
-transport. When they run out of food over there, he sends his cheaper
-furs to me for flour, and I have to take them, because I need the fur.
-Blackburn trades horses for fur. He has in the triangle between his
-river, the foothills and the Mud River, a vast natural range for horses.
-God knows how many thousands of head he has. The fame of them has spread
-all over the country. He can afford to sell them cheap since they cost
-him nothing. The Sikannis Indians bring their fur all the way from
-British Columbia to trade for horses. The Indians from Wabiscaw and
-eastward cross the river here right under my nose, carrying their fur to
-Blackburn for horses.”
-
-“You say you are awaiting your opportunity,” said Ogilvie; “how will you
-know when that comes?”
-
-“I have a spy at Blackburn’s Post,” said Gault. “It wasn’t easy to find
-him, because nobody can speak their damned language but Blackburn. This
-man, Etzooah, is the son of a Cree father and a Slavi mother, and is
-able to mix with the Slavis as one of themselves.”
-
-“What good do you expect that to do you?”
-
-“Etzooah talks to the Slavis in my interest. However, that is not what I
-am counting on.” Gault smiled disagreeably. “Blackburn is a headstrong,
-passionate man, and a hard drinker. He treats the Slavis like dogs. He
-believes there is nobody to call him to account. Some day he will go too
-far. Then I’ll have the law on him. He runs his whole show
-single-handed. Won’t tolerate a white man near him. Consequently if he
-were removed, even for a while, the whole thing would fall into
-confusion. That will be my chance.”
-
-“I have heard there was a daughter,” said Ogilvie idly.
-
-“Yes, a black-haired she-devil in her father’s own image!” said Gault.
-
-“Well, good-by until next Spring,” said Ogilvie. “I wish you every
-success. If Blackburn were out of the way this would be the greatest
-Post in the country.” He looked around him with assumed regret. “You
-have made so many improvements it would be a pity if we had to close you
-out. But of course we must have the fur. . . . Good-by. . . . Good-by.
-. . .”
-
-Gault watched him go with rage and bitterness making his heart black.
-Damn all financiers and officials who fattened on the labors of better
-men than themselves! Gault had not told him the full history of his
-relations with Hector Blackburn; but no doubt Ogilvie knew anyhow, for
-it was common gossip throughout the fur country; how Gault and Blackburn
-had come to grips a dozen times during the past twenty years, and Gault
-had been invariably and humiliatingly worsted. He too, was a ruthless
-and determined man, and when he thought over these things it was almost
-more than he could bear.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Andrew Gault was a bachelor, living alone in his monstrosity of a yellow
-clapboarded house. A handsome, lean, grizzled man in his early fifties,
-with a cold and polished manner that one would hardly expect to find in
-a fur-trader. It was a point of pride with Gault never to allow himself
-to go slack. For all he was seven hundred miles from town, his house was
-well-furnished, his servants well-trained. These last were of the Cree
-tribe, a handsomer and more intelligent race than the miserable Slavis,
-but not so manageable.
-
-Some days after the visit of Ogilvie, Gault, having finished his
-breakfast, remained sitting at the table, gloomily staring at the cloth,
-and abstractedly crumbling pellets of bread. His mind was forever
-traveling the same weary round without finding a way out. Thoughts of
-Hector Blackburn poisoned his very being. How to get back at him; how to
-ruin him. Ah! his enemy seemed to be intrenched at every point!
-Blackburn could laugh at him. Stronger measures must be taken now, for
-certain ruin stared Gault in the face. Somehow, Blackburn’s own weapons
-must be turned against him. Could not the ignorant Slavis be incited to
-rebellion? They must have their own medicine men or conjurers, and these
-fellows could generally be bought. He, Gault, must get hold of Etzooah
-before the next fur season set in.
-
-Toma, Gault’s old house-servant entered the room. He was excited. “Wah!
-Man come from Blackburn’s Post,” he announced.
-
-To Gault this had the effect of a miracle. He sprang to his feet. “What
-man?” he cried.
-
-“Name Etzooah,” said Toma.
-
-“Bring him to me! Bring him to me!” shouted Gault. “Let none else come
-in until I call.”
-
-Toma shuffled out of the room, and Gault had time to compose himself. It
-was very bad policy of course, for a white man to betray his emotion
-before a native. The trader reseated himself.
-
-Etzooah came sidling around the door, awe-struck at finding himself
-admitted to the great house, and exhibiting a witless grin. He was a
-small man with a bullet head set between muscular shoulders. His thick
-coarse hair was cut straight across his forehead in the Slavi style, and
-straight around at his neck behind. He wore good store clothes with a
-gay worsted sash about his middle. For business reasons the spy affected
-an air of good-natured, giggling imbecility, which would deceive nobody
-who knew the Indians. His little eyes were as quick and sharp as a
-weasel’s.
-
-“What news?” asked Gault curtly.
-
-“Blackburn is dead,” said Etzooah, laughing heartily and silently.
-
-Gault caught his breath. For an instant he lost all self-control. The
-upper part of his body sprawled across the table; his eyes seemed to
-start from his head. “Dead?” he gasped; “dead? . . . You are sure?”
-
-“I see him die,” said Etzooah, with silent pantomime of delight. “Him
-black horse jomp over high cut-bank. Him neck broke. Him drown
-afterwards. When him pull out of river him head loose lak a berry on the
-bush.” Etzooah illustrated.
-
-A shock of joy does not kill. Gault stood up straight and arrogant; a
-warm color came into his pale cheeks, and his eyes shone like a boy’s
-again. “By God! this news is good to my ears!” he cried. “You shall
-never go hungry, Etzooah. . . . When did it happen?”
-
-“Two days,” said Etzooah. “At noon spell. Right away I tak’ two horses;
-ride all night. Only stop for one little sleep yesterday.”
-
-“Did anybody know you came?”
-
-“No. I sneak away.”
-
-“Hm!” said Gault stroking his chin. “Then they’ll know that you were my
-man all the time. . . . Oh, what does it matter now! Everything is in my
-hands. . . . Had Blackburn sent his fur out yet?”
-
-“No. Roundin’ up pack horses when him kill.”
-
-“Then that is _my_ fur now! . . . What will the Slavis do without their
-master?”
-
-Etzooah shrugged expressively. “No can tell. Slavis lak crazy children.
-Not know what they do. Maybe they run wild now; kill the girl and steal
-the store goods. No can tell.”
-
-Gault’s face darkened. “By God!” he cried. “If the Slavis get out of
-hand, it would bring in the police. I don’t want the police nosing into
-this. I will ride back to-day. Toma! Toma! . . . You, Etzooah, eat in my
-kitchen, and take a sleep. . . . Toma, you——————!”
-
-The old man came shuffling in.
-
-“Fetch Moale from the store. Bestir yourself! Afterwards get out my
-riding-suit, my saddlebags, my traveling blankets, and all things
-necessary for a journey!”
-
-Joe Moale was the “bookkeeper” at Fort Good Hope, otherwise Gault’s
-second in command. Technically a white man, a flavor of the red race
-clung about him; he was probably a quarter breed. He was reputed to be a
-relative of Gault’s. An educated man, as able and intelligent as any
-white man in the company’s employ, he was as inscrutable as an Indian.
-He was a well-built man of middle height, not uncomely in his wooden
-fashion. It was impossible to guess his exact age, but he was much
-younger than the trader. He served Gault with absolute and unquestioning
-faithfulness, but there was no affection in the glance that he bent on
-his master. With true redskin patience he was waiting for Gault to die.
-
-“Blackburn is dead!” cried Gault, striding up and down in his dark
-exultation.
-
-“The news has already spread about the Post,” said Moale, unmoved.
-
-“Can we both get away together?” asked Gault.
-
-“Why not? The fur is all in. At this season Claggett can keep the
-store.”
-
-“Then I want you to come with me. We must start within an hour. Round up
-the four smartest lads you can put your hands on, and a dozen of our
-best horses. We must make a good appearance, you understand. Six of us
-will be more than enough to handle the beggarly Slavis. . . . Blackburn
-is dead!” he cried for the mere pleasure of repeating the words. “And
-his business is ours!”
-
-“What will you do about the girl?” asked Moale stolidly.
-
-“Oh, a miss of eighteen,” said Gault contemptuously. “She will give me
-no trouble . . . I’ll be her guardian, her trustee,” he added with a
-satanic smile.
-
-“She’ll be rich,” said Moale.
-
-“Not when I’m through with her.”
-
-“I’m not referring to the Post, nor the horses,” said Moale. “Blackburn
-sends out near a hundred thousand dollars worth of fur per annum. He
-don’t import but a fraction of that in goods. The balance must be salted
-down somewhere.”
-
-Gault stopped and stared. A new light of cupidity broke in his face.
-“Why, sure!” he said, a little bemused with the glittering picture that
-rose before his mind’s eye. “My mind must be wandering! Shouldn’t wonder
-if it amounted to a million! . . .” He went on muttering to himself: “It
-would be the best way anyhow. Nobody could question what I did then. And
-I shouldn’t be doing it for the company neither but for myself!” His
-voice suddenly rang out. “By God! I’ll marry the girl!”
-
-Going to the sideboard, he examined his face anxiously in the mirror.
-“Joe,” he said, “if you didn’t know my age, how old would you call me?”
-
-Whatever Moale’s thoughts might have been, he concealed them. “About
-thirty-eight,” he said.
-
-“Hardly that,” said Gault confidently. “If it wasn’t for the gray in my
-hair I could pass for thirty-five easy. I wish to God I could lay my
-hands on some hair dye.”
-
-“I can make a good black dye out of nutgalls,” said Moale.
-
-“Well, go to it!” cried Gault. “Get a move on you now. We must sleep at
-Blackburn’s Post to-morrow night . . . Oh, my God! suppose we were to
-find that the Slavis had got out of hand and murdered the girl!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
- YELLOW-HEAD
-
-
-Loseis sat on a bench at the door of the store. The Princess was very
-pale, and her lips were pressed tight together. In her brave, proud eyes
-was to be seen the piteous, questioning look of a child: Why must I
-suffer so much? Just inside the door of the store Mary-Lou was squatting
-on the floor with her head buried in her arms. Loseis had to be brave
-for both.
-
-The buildings at Blackburn’s Post formed three sides of a grassy square,
-the fourth side being open to the river. The store faced the river,
-flanked by a warehouse on each side. On Loseis’ right was the Women’s
-House, and opposite it Blackburn’s House and his stable. All the
-buildings were constructed of logs, and roofed with sods, now sprouting
-greenly. Nothing could have been rougher, nevertheless the buildings
-seemed to belong in that place; and there was a pleasing harmony in
-their arrangement. Out in the middle of the grassy square rose a tall
-flagpole.
-
-Loseis and Mary-Lou had taken up their abode in the store. At this
-season of the year the stock of goods was much depleted, and Loseis was
-in no great concern about losing what was left; but knowing the Indian
-nature, she was well aware that if the Slavis were not prevented from
-helping themselves, they would soon get out of hand altogether.
-
-In the store there was plenty of food to their hand; as for water,
-Loseis obtained it after dark by creeping down to the small stream where
-it wound around the flank of the little plateau. All night a little lamp
-burned in the window of the store. Night-attacks were not at all in the
-Slavis’ line; but Loseis wished them to be reminded whenever they looked
-that way, that somebody was on guard. All day the door of the store was
-allowed to stand open; while the two girls permitted themselves to be
-seen passing unconcernedly in and out, and performing their household
-tasks out in front. Their only defense lay in this appearance of
-unconcern.
-
-Three days and three nights of cruel anxiety had passed, and the fourth
-night was approaching. Loseis had not reflected much on her situation;
-it simply wouldn’t bear thinking about. She had just gone ahead and done
-what came to her hand at the moment. During the first night the body of
-Jimmy Moosenose had disappeared. The Slavis either buried it hastily in
-some out of the way spot, or threw it in the river. Like the children
-they were, they believed that if only the body were hidden the crime
-could never be brought home to them.
-
-None of the Slavis had ever approached the store. Apparently they were
-pursuing their ordinary avocations as if nothing had happened; the dogs
-and the children fought; the women fished, cooked the meals, and made
-moccasins; the men loafed and smoked. As she looked down at them the
-sight of their inhuman indifference caused Loseis’ heart to burn.
-Senseless animals! she ejaculated to herself a dozen times a day.
-
-Mary-Lou came out of the store. The Indian girl was unable either to
-apply her hands to any work or to sit still. Her copper face had become
-grayish, and her eyes were distracted with terror. She looked down over
-the tepees, biting her lip.
-
-“More have come,” she said hoarsely.
-
-“You imagine that,” said Loseis. “I have seen nobody come.”
-
-“They not let you see them come,” said Mary-Lou. “Sleep in their
-friends’ tepees. But I see more canoes in the creek.”
-
-“Well, what of it?” said Loseis with a grand parade of indifference.
-“They’re harmless.”
-
-“Like coyotes,” said Mary-Lou. “They are sitting down to wait for us to
-die!”
-
-Loseis sprang up nervously. Her face was working. “You are like a raven
-croaking all day!” she cried. “That does no good!”
-
-Mary-Lou caught hold of Loseis imploringly. “Let us go from here!” she
-begged. “All night I listen! . . . My brain is turned to ice. I don’t
-know what I am doing! . . . As soon as it is dark let us take horses and
-go. They not know until to-morrow that we are gone. Never catch us then.
-It is only ondred-feefty mile to Fort Good Hope. . . .”
-
-Loseis detached the clinging hands. “It’s no good going on this way,”
-she said harshly. “I will not run from Slavis.”
-
-Mary-Lou fell on her knees, clutching Loseis’ skirt, babbling
-incoherently in her terror. Loseis raised her face to the sky, clenching
-her teeth in despair. How much of this have I got to stand? she was
-thinking.
-
-Then she saw the Slavis begin to run to the river bank. “Look! Look!”
-she cried. “Something is coming up the river!”
-
-Mary-Lou scrambled to her feet. Whatever it was in the river, it was
-approaching close under the bank. They could see nothing. The Slavis
-were yelling and pointing.
-
-“It is Conacher!” screamed Mary-Lou.
-
-“NO! No! No!” cried Loseis in a voice as taut as an over-stretched
-violin string. “It is just a Slavi coming up river. Anything is enough
-to get them going.”
-
-“It is Conacher!” screamed Mary-Lou. “If it was a Slavi they would run
-down to the water. They stop on the bank. They are a little afraid. See!
-they look at us. It is somebody for us. It is Conacher!”
-
-Loseis felt that if she allowed herself to believe it and was then
-disappointed, it would kill her. “No! No!” she said faintly. “It is too
-soon!”
-
-And then the yellow head rose above the bank.
-
-Loseis collapsed suddenly on the bench and burst into tears. Her whole
-body was shaken. Mary-Lou fell on her knees with a scream of joy.
-“Conacher! . . . Conacher!”
-
-Loseis struggled hard to regain her self-control. “Stop that noise!” she
-said angrily. “Go into the store. He mustn’t think that we want him so
-badly!”
-
-Laughing and crying simultaneously, Mary-Lou went staggering into the
-store.
-
-Loseis remained on the bench watching, with her hands in her lap. The
-tears were called in; and she furtively wiped away their traces.
-Conacher had his two Beaver Indians with him. These lingered to
-fraternize with the Slavis, while the white man came striding across the
-natural meadow to the foot of the rise. He was bare-headed as usual. A
-newcomer in the country, the fame of his curly, yellow pate had already
-spread far and wide. Alongside the Slavis he loomed like a young giant.
-Loseis had seen him take a Slavi man by the collar in each hand, and
-lift them clear of the ground. To the waiting girl he was like a god
-come in answer to her prayer.
-
-She was very quiet when he reached her, her smile tremulous. The change
-in her from the arrogant little Princess who had used him so
-despitefully on his first visit was so striking, that at first Conacher
-could only stand and stare. They never thought to greet each other.
-Finally Conacher exhibited the little black streamer, limp from being
-clutched in his warm hand.
-
-“What does this mean?” he asked simply.
-
-“My father is dead,” said Loseis. “Four days ago.”
-
-“Oh, Heaven!” cried Conacher. “And you all alone here! What did you do?”
-
-“I buried him,” said Loseis, spreading out her hands.
-
-“_Yourself!_”
-
-“There was no other to do it.”
-
-“Oh, my God!”
-
-Mary-Lou had crept out of the store again. “They kill Jimmy Moosenose,”
-she said, nodding in the direction of the Slavis. “And break into the
-store.”
-
-“I put them out again,” said Loseis, quickly and proudly.
-
-“Oh, God! what awful things have been happening here!” cried Conacher
-aghast.
-
-His sympathy caused Loseis to tremble dangerously again. “Oh, it will be
-all right now,” she said swiftly. “One white man is enough to put fear
-into the heart of these dogs.”
-
-Conacher looked at that brave and piteous figure, and was caught up in a
-very hurricane of the emotions. He was mad to enfold her in his arms; to
-comfort the child, to love the woman, but a feeling of chivalry
-restrained him. It appeared unseemly to intrude his love in the moment
-of her grief; he turned away abruptly, searching distractedly in his
-mind for some expedient to tide him over the dangerous moment.
-
-“I must go fetch my fellows before they are contaminated by the Slavis,”
-he said in a strangled voice, and strode away down the slope again.
-
-“Ah, he does not love me,” murmured Loseis with extreme sadness.
-
-“You are wrong,” said Mary-Lou. “It was speaking in his eyes.”
-
-“No! No! No!” said Loseis violently. Nevertheless she was secretly
-comforted.
-
-She went bustling into the store. “Come! we will close up the store now,
-and go to our own house. Conacher will be hungry. We must cook a big
-meal. There is still some canned apples and canned butter in the store.
-Ahchoogah brought in a moose to-day. I will take a haunch of it for
-Conacher. I will take the biggest fish for Conacher, too. Be quick! Be
-quick! I will go down and get the other Marys to help you. . . .”
-
-Later, Loseis and Conacher were sitting at the door of the Women’s
-House, while the appetizing odors came stealing out. A heavy constraint
-was upon them; they could not meet each other’s eyes. The man, looking
-down, marveled at the delicacy of Loseis’ shapely hands, lying loosely
-in her lap. What a rare, fine creature to find in these rude
-surroundings! Her beauty and her proud manner intimidated him. Who was
-he to aspire so high? The girl wondered sadly why the man did not speak.
-He had only to speak!
-
-When he did speak it was not in the tone that she longed to hear. “What
-are you going to do?” he asked, matter-of-fact.
-
-To Loseis the solution was simplicity itself. Conacher was to stay
-there, and everything go on as before. But it was not seemly for her to
-propose this. She shrugged. “I don’t know,” she said.
-
-“But you must have thought something about what you would do,” he said
-surprised. “You can’t stay here.”
-
-Loseis’ heart sunk. She said nothing.
-
-“Fort Good Hope cannot be but a hundred miles or so across the height of
-land,” he went on.
-
-“A hundred and fifty,” said Loseis.
-
-“I have heard there’s a white woman at Fort Good Hope,” said Conacher.
-“She’s the parson’s sister.”
-
-“What do I want with the parson’s sister?” demanded Loseis with a spice
-of resentment.
-
-Conacher looked at her helplessly.
-
-I would go to Fort Good Hope to the parson with Conacher if he asked me,
-thought Loseis, and a deep blush overspread her neck and face. She
-turned away her head to hide it.
-
-“You can’t stay here,” he said.
-
-“I am not going to give up my father’s Post, and allow the Slavis to
-strip the store,” said Loseis with spirit. “Besides, the whole season’s
-catch of fur is stored in the warehouse, waiting to be shipped outside.
-It is worth many thousands of dollars.”
-
-“How is it sent out?” asked Conacher.
-
-“Every Spring when the grass is grown sufficiently to graze the horses,
-it is sent overland by pack-horse to a warehouse that my father has on
-the prairie near the crossing of the big river. That is three hundred
-miles. Jimmy Moosenose was always sent with the horses and men. Seventy
-horses and fifteen men beside the cook. In that warehouse they find the
-grub for next year and the store goods which are put there by John
-Gruber, my father’s outside man. They bring the grub back, and leave the
-fur in the warehouse, and John Gruber gets it afterwards. My father
-never allowed the Slavis to meet the Crees in John Gruber’s outfit. It
-is time for them to start now. John Gruber will be waiting many days at
-the Crossing.”
-
-“But you’ve no one to send now,” said Conacher.
-
-“Then I must go myself,” said Loseis.
-
-“My God! not alone with a gang of redskins!” cried Conacher.
-
-“They would not dare harm me,” said Loseis proudly.
-
-“Maybe not,” cried Conacher violently. “But just the same I couldn’t
-stand for that!”
-
-Loseis’ sad heart looked up a little. He did care a little what became
-of her.
-
-And then he spoiled it by adding: “No white man could!”
-
-“We must find somebody to go with you,” he presently went on; “and then
-you can continue on outside with your father’s agent.”
-
-“There is all the grub and store goods waiting to come in,” objected
-Loseis.
-
-“That will have to be sold,” said Conacher. “The Company will buy it.”
-
-“There are all my father’s horses across the river,” said Loseis; “many
-thousands of head. During the summer hay must be cut for them around the
-shores of our lake; or next winter they will starve.”
-
-“But my dear girl,” said Conacher, “you cannot go on doing business here
-now that he is gone!”
-
-“Why not?” demanded Loseis.
-
-“Why . . . why . . .” stammered Conacher. “A woman trader! Why such a
-thing was never heard of!”
-
-“Well, it will be heard of now,” said Loseis.
-
-Conacher ascribed this to mere bravado. What a spirited little thing she
-was! Like a plucky boy; but with all the sweetness of a woman. “We must
-send to Fort Good Hope for help,” he said.
-
-“Do not speak to me again of Fort Good Hope!” said Loseis. “Gault, the
-trader there, was my father’s enemy.”
-
-Conacher knew nothing of the feuds of the country. “Yes, yes,” he said
-soothingly; “but a tragedy like this wipes out old scores. Gault would
-not take advantage of your situation.”
-
-“You are an outsider,” she said. “You do not know Gault.”
-
-“No man would!” insisted Conacher.
-
-“I will not hand over my father’s Post to Gault!” cried Loseis. “That
-would bring my father out of his grave!”
-
-“Not hand it over to him,” protested Conacher. “But just let him advise
-you. He is the only one that can tell you what is best to do; who can
-arrange things. There is no other white man within hundreds of miles.”
-
-Then it had to come out. “I already know what to do,” said Loseis, very
-low. “If you would help me, we could do it all together.”
-
-Conacher groaned, and clutched his head. “Oh, God! you don’t
-understand!” he cried. “And what must you be thinking of me! What a
-chance to be offered to a man, and I can’t take it!” He tried
-desperately to explain to her. “You see, I am not free like the men of
-this country. I am a government employee, tied hand and foot to my work.
-My whole Summer’s work has been laid out for me. And my little piece is
-only a part of a great survey of this whole country. I am appointed to
-join with another party at Great Slave Lake on a certain date, and we in
-turn must proceed up the Liard River to another rendezvous on the Yukon.
-If I fail, the whole fails. Don’t you understand?”
-
-She did not wholly understand. “I heard you tell it,” she said a little
-sullenly.
-
-Conacher jumped up, and paced the grass in an agony of indecision. He
-was teetering on the brink. If Loseis had raised her eyes to his face,
-he would have fallen at her feet, and allowed the government to go to
-the devil. But she kept her eyes sullenly down. And then before either
-spoke again, with a smart thudding of hoofs and creaking of saddle
-leathers, a well-turned out company of six men and several spare horses
-came down the trail behind the Post, and trotted out into the little
-plaza.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Gault had caught sight of Conacher’s yellow head as soon as he came over
-the brow of the hill. He reined up sharply, his face going pinched and
-ugly. “A white man here!” he said furiously to Moale. “Who the devil can
-he be?”
-
-Moale drew up at his side. “That will be Conacher,” he said in his
-unconcerned way. “I have heard talk of his yellow head.”
-
-“A _young_ man!” said Gault; and cursed him thickly and fervently.
-
-“He’s on a government survey down to Great Slave Lake and beyond,” said
-Moale indifferently. “He won’t be able to interfere with us.”
-
-But Gault rode down the hill with a black heart. The young man had got
-in his innings first; and now fifty-three must stand comparison with
-twenty-three, and the dyed black head be measured against the famous
-golden one.
-
-By the time he rode around the buildings of the Post his face was
-perfectly composed and solicitous, of course. He sat his horse with
-conscious grace. Flinging himself off, he tossed the reins to one of the
-Crees, and came quickly to Loseis.
-
-“Miss Blackburn,” he said, “the moment I heard of your terrible loss I
-jumped on my horse to come to you. I cannot express to you how shocked
-and grieved I am. Your father and I were not good friends, but that is
-all past now. Believe me, I am most completely at your service.”
-
-The watching Conacher considered that this was very handsomely said. How
-much better than he could do it! he thought with a sigh. He had no
-reason to share in Loseis’ suspicions of Gault. A load was lifted from
-the young man’s heart. Gault’s fine outfit inspired confidence. Loseis
-would be all right now, and he could go on about his work. But before he
-left he would ask her to wait for him. The idea that this old man might
-prove to be a rival, never entered Conacher’s honest heart.
-
-Loseis received Gault with a manner no less finished and proud than his
-own. “You are welcome,” she said gravely. “My father’s house”—she
-indicated the building opposite—“is at your disposal. If you wish to
-put up your horses the stable is behind it. Or you can turn them out
-anywhere. Dinner here in half an hour.”
-
-Gault bowing, expressed his thanks. He then turned inquiringly towards
-Conacher.
-
-That young man said: “I am Paul Conacher of the geological survey.”
-
-Gault thrust out his hand with the appearance of the greatest
-cordiality. “I am delighted to meet you,” he said. “It is a great
-satisfaction to find that Miss Blackburn is not alone here.” He gave
-Conacher a meaning glance that suggested as between man and man it would
-be well for them to discuss the situation together.
-
-This was quite in line with Conacher’s ideas, and the two walked off
-together towards the house opposite. Loseis watched them go under stormy
-brows. She saw Gault place his hand affectionately on the young man’s
-shoulder, and her lip curled.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
- THE DINNER PARTY
-
-
-Gault and Conacher returned to the Women’s House for dinner. Gault had
-changed to a well-cut black suit with linen of the finest quality, and a
-little discreet but handsome jewelry. Poor Conacher, having no change,
-showed up at a disadvantage beside him. When they beheld Loseis both men
-caught their breath in astonishment. She was wearing one of the
-“outside” dresses which her father had been accustomed to import that he
-might have the pleasure of seeing her in them. This one was of black
-velvet cunningly and simply draped, and showing no touch of color.
-Around her neck hung a string of pearls that made Gault open his eyes;
-not the one with the gold nuggets; but a long plain string of
-beautifully matched stones. The innocent Conacher had no notion but that
-it was a string of pearl beads such as his sisters wore.
-
-The table was laid for four in Loseis’ own room. She seated Moale facing
-her; Conacher at her right; Gault at her left. The trader who was
-sensitive to these little things, bit his lip at this arrangement, but
-was obliged to put up with it. Conacher never noticed that he had been
-given the seat of honor. There was fine china and silver on the table;
-and the food was wonderful, including delicacies which Gault himself
-could not command at Fort Good Hope, such as currant jelly; the joint of
-moose meat cunningly larded with bacon, and served with cranberry sauce;
-an apple pie. The three comely Marys in black dresses and snowy aprons
-moved noiselessly about the table, while Mary-Lou oversaw all in the
-kitchen.
-
-To Conacher, after weeks on the trail, it was like a taste of Heaven;
-and Gault was obliged to confess to himself that the establishment while
-rude, nevertheless had a better style than his own. Loseis with her hair
-done up on top of her head looked like a Princess indeed, and the trader
-gloated at the thought of seeing her enthroned at _his_ table. He
-pictured a glorious future for Fort Good Hope. The thought of Conacher
-gave him little concern now. He had put down the young man to his own
-satisfaction as a fool.
-
-The trader dominated the table. The lamplight was favorable to him, and
-he knew it. None would have thought of terming him an old man. His
-manner was perfection. Open-browed, courteous, half-apologetic, he kept
-them entertained with stories of the country; and both of the young
-people were to a certain extent fascinated by his charm. During the meal
-business was not to be touched upon.
-
-“Ah! what a privilege it is to have a lady at the table!” said Gault
-wrinkling up his eyes, and showing his big white teeth.
-
-(Rather like the wolf in the fairy-tale; thought Loseis; but I suppose
-some would call him a fine-looking man.)
-
-“Hear! Hear!” said Conacher. The young man felt like a hobbledehoy
-alongside the elegant Gault; but he harbored no malice. Poor Conacher’s
-heart was oppressed by the sight of Loseis in her bravery. Could this be
-the rude little spitfire that he had dared to laugh at upon their first
-meeting?
-
-“That is what we miss in the North,” Gault went on; “the civilizing
-touch of lovely woman! It is terrible the way men go to seed in this
-country. It is a fact that when a man’s manners go, his morals are bound
-to go too. Ah! my dear Miss Blackburn, if we had more like you to grace
-our lonely posts we’d all be better men!”
-
-(Why haven’t I the face to say such things? thought Conacher.)
-
-Loseis smiled a little wanly. She was secretly confused by the trader’s
-glibness. She had never known a man like this.
-
-Later they sat down in front of the small fire that had been lighted to
-drive away the evening chill; Loseis in her hammock-chair, the men on
-either hand sitting stiffly in the straight-up-and-down chairs that
-Blackburn had carved. What remained on the table was silently whisked
-into the kitchen.
-
-“You may smoke if you wish,” said Loseis.
-
-Gault produced, wonder of wonders! a full cigar case, and offered it to
-the younger man. The fragrance of the genuine Havana spread around.
-
-“Well!” said Conacher; “I never expected to get anything like this north
-of Fifty-eight.”
-
-“Oh, with my improved transport,” said Gault carelessly, “I can have in
-pretty much anything I want.”
-
-It now became necessary to speak of business. Gault inquired if the
-season’s fur had been sent out.
-
-“No,” said Loseis.
-
-The trader might almost be said to have purred upon hearing that.
-Indeed, fearing himself that he might be betraying too much complacency
-about the mouth, he rubbed his upper lip, and gave a little cough. “I
-will charge myself with that,” he said comfortably. “Make your mind
-quite easy.”
-
-Loseis looked unhappy, but said nothing.
-
-“Of course,” Gault went on with the air of one who must be fair at
-whatever cost to himself, “being your father’s competitor, his rival as
-you might say, it is not proper that I should be your sole advisor.”
-
-Loseis looked at him in surprise. Dared he to speak of that? Her
-confusion increased. This man was too much for her.
-
-“I am mighty glad that Conacher is here,” said Gault.
-
-“But I must return down the river to-night,” said Conacher. “I am
-already many days behind my schedule.”
-
-Loseis’ eyes were close-hid now. “To-night?” she echoed softly. “But you
-paddled all last night to get here.”
-
-Conacher affected to laugh, while his hungry eyes sought her averted
-face. Loseis could have read there that he didn’t want to go; but she
-wouldn’t look. “Oh, going downstream’s a cinch,” said Conacher. “Two of
-us can sleep at a time in the dug-out, while the third man keeps her in
-the middle of the current.”
-
-Loseis was silent.
-
-“To-night!” said Gault. “Ah, that’s too bad! . . . However, I can take
-my measures before you go . . . Does your father employ a man of
-business, a lawyer, outside?” he asked Loseis.
-
-“None that I know of,” she said, “except John Gruber.”
-
-“Ah, Gruber,” said Gault in his purring voice (Moale at the other end of
-the row, listened to all this with a face like a sardonic mask), “an
-excellent fellow, too. But too ignorant a man to serve you in this
-crisis. . . . I am sure your father must have had wide interests outside
-of the fur business,” he said insinuatingly.
-
-“If he had, I know nothing about it,” said Loseis. “He got business
-letters every year when the outfit came in, but he did not show them to
-me. I know nothing of business.”
-
-“Of course not,” said Gault soothingly. “Have you looked for those
-letters since his death?” he asked, betraying more eagerness than was
-perhaps in the best of taste.
-
-“No,” said Loseis, shortly.
-
-Gault was pulled up short. “Hm!” he said, stroking his chin. “Hm! . . .”
-Finally he got a fresh start. “Well, if Blackburn employed an attorney
-outside, Gruber will know his name. Gruber carried all his letters out,
-and brought the answers back. I will write to Gruber. And if Blackburn
-has no lawyer already, I will send for the best one obtainable, and will
-arrange special means of transport for him. We’ll have him here in five
-or six weeks at the outside. Lastly I will send for a sergeant and
-detail of the police, so that the murder of Jimmy Moosenose can be
-investigated. Until they come, in order that the Slavis may not take
-fright, we will allow them to suppose that the murder has been
-forgotten.”
-
-Conacher nodded in agreement with this; Loseis felt that she was being
-crowded to one side.
-
-“I’ll start my letters off to Fort Good Hope at sun-up,” Gault went on.
-“Unfortunately my steamboat has gone up to the head of navigation, and
-won’t be back for a month; but by the time the messenger reaches the
-post, my launch will have returned from carrying Mr. Ogilvie down to the
-Chutes. The launch can make the Crossing in a week. Gruber will be
-waiting there.”
-
-It all sounded so businesslike and proper, Loseis could take no
-exception to it. The smooth voice, arranging everything, afflicted her
-with a sort of despair.
-
-After some desultory talk, Gault arose, saying: “With your permission I
-will go and write my letters now, so that Conacher may see them before
-he goes.”
-
-Loseis bowed in acquiescence. She thought: I can talk to Conacher while
-he is away. But Gault looked sharply from one to another, and added in
-his polite way: “I’d be glad of your help in composing them, Conacher.”
-Loseis’ heart sunk. The two went out together arm in arm. Moale followed
-his master as a matter of course.
-
-Loseis was left staring into the fire. Mary-Lou came to the door and
-looked at her full of loving solicitude; but Loseis made believe not to
-know that she was there. The simple Mary-Lou could be of no help to her
-in this situation. Loseis, whose nature it was to act instantaneously
-without thinking, was all at sea on this flood of words. Everything was
-mixed up in her mind. Maybe Gault is a true man, she thought; maybe he
-means what he says. Conacher is satisfied. And if he is lying what can I
-do anyhow? I know nothing.
-
-In due course they returned (without Moale) and the letters were laid
-before Loseis. It appeared that Gault packed a little typewriter in his
-outfit, and Loseis, though she looked at the letters indifferently,
-secretly marveled at the neat clear printing. How could one contend
-against a man like this! She scarcely read the letters. The lengthy
-sentences merely dizzied her.
-
-It goes without saying that they were admirably expressed letters. There
-is no need of reproducing them here, since Gault had not the slightest
-intention of letting them reach their destinations. They were to be
-conveniently lost en route.
-
-“I am satisfied if Conacher is,” said Loseis.
-
-“Mr. Gault has thought of everything,” said Conacher.
-
-Soon Conacher said, affecting to make light of his heavy heart: “Well,
-I’ve sent my men down to launch the dug-out. I must be getting aboard.”
-
-Gault said quickly in his hearty way: “I’ll go down and see you off.”
-
-Conacher looked wistfully at Loseis, and hesitated.
-
-Loseis rebelled at last. She did not feel able to dispute Gault in
-matters of business, but if he dared to interfere with her own private
-concerns, let him look out! She stood up very quickly, and her chin went
-up. “First I want to take Conacher to the store, and give him some grub
-to take,” she said coolly. “You wait here, Mr. Gault.” Her eyes sought
-his unafraid, and the trader’s eyes trailed away.
-
-“Why of course!” he said in his hearty way. But his affable smile had a
-sickly look now. As they went through the door he shot a baleful glance
-after them. That was a black half hour for him, obliged to sit there,
-grinding his big teeth and picturing the two young creatures together in
-the dark. Just when everything had seemed to be going his way, too!
-
-Outside, the black sky was crowded with stars big and little, all
-focused on that pair of mortal lovers. The earth was so still one seemed
-to hear the whisper of starlight. Loseis drew a great breath of relief.
-Why that load was suddenly lifted from her breast she could not have
-told. She involuntarily slipped her hand under Conacher’s arm, and he
-pressed it hard against his ribs. They walked, pressing close together,
-the blond head brooding low over the black one. There was no confession
-of love. They were still afraid of that word. And anyhow this was
-confession enough. With happiness their hearts became as breathlessly
-still as the night.
-
-“Let’s not go to the store,” whispered Conacher. “I don’t need any
-grub.”
-
-“I just said that,” whispered Loseis. “I wanted to be with you.”
-
-“Oh, you dear! . . . you dear! . . . you dear!” he murmured tremulously.
-
-Loseis pressed his arm. “Let’s go down on the flat,” she whispered. “He
-might come to the door to watch us.”
-
-They went down the grassy slope. For a long time they did not speak.
-They walked at a snail’s pace, arms linked, hands clasped, and heads
-leaning together. At last a little whimpering sound was heard from
-Loseis. That brave heart owned its weakness at last.
-
-“Oh, Paul!” she faltered. “Oh Paul, _must_ you go?”
-
-“I must! I must!” he cried in pain. “But I will arrange things just as
-quick as I can, and come back.”
-
-“It will be so long!” she said sadly.
-
-“But at least you are safe now.”
-
-“Oh, safe . . . maybe!”
-
-“If you are afraid, come with me. I will take care of you.”
-
-“No,” she said quickly. “That would not be acting right towards my
-father. . . . I am not afraid of any danger. But . . . but I cannot see
-what is before me! I do not like that man!”
-
-“He seems to be on the square,” said Conacher anxiously. “He has
-provided for everything better than I could.”
-
-“It is so terrible for me to have to be with somebody I do not like,”
-said Loseis.
-
-“You have your own house,” said Conacher. “And your girls. You need only
-talk to him about business matters.”
-
-“He is so ugly!” said Loseis.
-
-“You silly girl!” said Conacher fondly. “Gault’s considered a very
-fine-looking man!”
-
-“Not to me! . . . You are beautiful, my Paul. In the dark I can see your
-beauty!”
-
-“Oh, Loseis! you must not say such things!” he said, genuinely
-distressed. “It is not fitting from you to me!”
-
-“Why?” she asked wilfully.
-
-“Because . . . because . . . by comparison with you I . . . Oh, Loseis,
-I ought to be kneeling at your feet!”
-
-“What good would you be to my feet?” she asked, nestling against him. “I
-like it better this way.”
-
-Conacher laughed suddenly and delightedly in his throat.
-
-“Well . . . ?” said Loseis, leaving her interrogation in the air.
-
-“What is it?” he asked anxiously.
-
-“Oh, you make me _say_ it!” she cried vexatiously. “Do you think I am
-beautiful?”
-
-The question rendered him nearly speechless. He pressed her hand hard
-against his cheek. “Oh, Loseis!” he stammered. “I . . . I . . . you
-. . . I can’t tell you. I’m just a blundering fool when it comes to
-expressing my feelings. Why, you have made a new world for me. When I
-think of your face it drives me out of my senses. I can’t think of the
-words for it!”
-
-She pillowed her cheek happily in the hollow inside his shoulder. “Then
-you must find words!” she said. “You must never stop telling me. My ears
-are greedy to hear it. Of all the world, I only care to be beautiful for
-you!”
-
-In sight of the darkly flowing river they came to a stop. They could
-hear the murmuring voices of the two Beaver Indians at the water’s edge.
-They drew apart. For a long while they stood there not touching each
-other in dumb unhappiness and constraint. They were both new at this
-lovemaking business.
-
-“Well,” said Conacher at last, like a schoolboy trying to carry it off
-flippantly, “I must make a break . . .”
-
-“Oh!” she cried, hurt to the quick. “Is that all you care?”
-
-He dropped his absurd pretense. “It is like death to leave you now,” he
-murmured, brokenly.
-
-“Well, good-by,” she said suddenly in an unnaturally high-pitched voice.
-And turned as if to run forthwith.
-
-He caught hold of her. “No! No!” he cried. “Not like this!”
-
-She struggled in his arms. “Let me go! Let me go!” she whispered in a
-desperate voice. “I can’t stand these good-bys. I like a thing ended
-quickly. . . . Let me go!”
-
-Holding her within one arm he tried to turn up her face to his. “Loseis
-. . . dearest . . . before I go,” he whispered imploringly. “_Please_,
-Loseis. . . . To remember all those lonely nights . . .”
-
-She resisted with all her strength. “No! No! No! No! Not yet! If you
-kiss me I shall never be able to let you go! . . . Ah, let me go while I
-want to go!”
-
-That naïve cry touched his heart. He released her. The instant she was
-released she lost all her desire to run. She stood there in front of
-him, very still.
-
-“You had better go,” he said shakily.
-
-“Put your hands behind your back!” she whispered breathlessly. “Stoop
-down a little.”
-
-He obeyed.
-
-Like lightning her arms went around his neck, and her lips were pressed
-hard against his. Then like a shadow she was gone. Through the dark her
-caressing whisper came back to him.
-
-“Come back soon, dear!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-When Loseis got back to the Women’s House, Gault was sitting there by
-the fire, smoking a fresh cigar. He sprang up with a pleasant, fatherly
-sort of smile. His eyes dwelt lightly on Loseis’s face, but she had an
-impression just the same, that they were boring into her. Well, let them
-bore! At the business of hiding her heart she was fully his match. She
-showed him a smooth, untroubled face.
-
-“Has he gone?” asked Gault.
-
-“I expect so,” said Loseis. “I did not go down the hill with him.”
-
-Gault rubbed his lip. He didn’t know whether or not to believe her.
-
-He felt his way carefully. “Conacher seems like a fine young fellow,” he
-remarked. “Have you known him long?”
-
-Loseis remained standing by the fire. “Oh, he stopped here for three
-days,” she said coolly. “But I scarcely saw him then.”
-
-“How did he learn so soon of your father’s death?”
-
-“I never thought to ask him,” said Loseis with a clear brow. “By
-moccasin telegraph, I suppose. The Slavis are continually traveling up
-and down the river.”
-
-“It is too bad that he is in the government employ,” said Gault.
-
-Loseis had no intention of discussing the man she loved with another
-man. She remained silent. She had a good capacity for holding her
-tongue. It was her only defense against Gault’s smooth talk; and it was
-a better defense than she realized.
-
-Gault was obliged to go on and answer the question without its having
-been asked. “They never come to anything,” he said. “They are no more
-than clerks all their lives.”
-
-“So I have heard,” said Loseis indifferently.
-
-Gault was deceived by her coolness. He argued that she was too young to
-be able to hide her feelings so consummately. She did not care for the
-young geologist. Their meetings had been too few and brief for any
-serious damage to be worked. He began to feel better.
-
-“How did you learn of my father’s death?” asked Loseis unexpectedly.
-
-Gault determined to tell the truth, since it must become known anyway.
-“The Indian Etzooah brought me the news. Did you not send him?”
-
-“No,” said Loseis.
-
-“Well!” said Gault with an air of astonishment. “I suppose he must have
-started off blindly on his own account.”
-
-“I didn’t know he could speak English,” said Loseis.
-
-“He can’t. Only Cree.”
-
-“Nobody here knew that he could speak Cree, either,” said Loseis.
-
-Gault allowed the subject to drop. “While you were away I have been
-sitting here thinking over your affairs,” he said, enveloping Loseis
-with his smile.
-
-Oh, Heaven! she thought; is he going to start talking again? How can I
-endure it without Conacher here to keep me in countenance! In
-desperation she feigned to hide a yawn behind her hand.
-
-Gault had no recourse but to take the hint. “You are worn out!” he said
-solicitously. “And no wonder. I will retire now. And to-morrow we can
-talk.”
-
-Loseis’ heart sunk. To-morrow!—and all the succeeding to-morrows!
-Should she never be able to escape his talk! “You are very kind,” she
-murmured politely.
-
-“Good-night,” said Gault, offering her his hand.
-
-Loseis either had to give him hers, or come to an open quarrel. With an
-inward shiver of repulsion, she laid her hand within his, keeping her
-eyes close hid. “Good-night,” she murmured.
-
-Good God! how beautiful she is! thought Gault; with her mixture of
-haughty pride and shyness (for so he took it). I’d take her if she
-didn’t have a cent! A genuine desire was mingled with the calculation in
-his eyes; he bared his teeth in what he intended to be an ardent smile.
-In his youth Gault had been famous for his big white teeth, and he did
-not realize that their luster was somewhat diminished. For a moment he
-clung to the cool, limp hand.
-
-“My dear, dear girl!” he murmured. “If you only knew how my heart goes
-out to you in this hour of affliction. My only desire is to serve you!”
-
-Loseis gritted her teeth in a torment of repulsion. Grinning at her in
-that disgusting way, while his hard eyes sought to pry into her heart?
-She could _feel_ his grin, though she kept her eyes down. Her hand
-trembled with the desire to snatch itself away, and smack his leering
-old face. But above all she was determined that Blackburn’s daughter
-should not be revealed to this fine gentleman as a savage uncultured
-girl, and she commanded her repulsion.
-
-“Good-night . . . good-night,” repeated Gault with a touch of archness,
-that looked to the future. He hastened out with a debonair swing.
-Loseis’ fiery eyes bored holes in his back.
-
-Crossing the grass, Gault exulted within himself. “A half-formed child,”
-he thought; “an experienced man can make whatever he chooses of her! And
-by God, what natural elegance! what pride! what beauty! I am in luck!”
-
-While within the room he had just left, Loseis scowled at her offending
-hand, and rubbed it violently on her skirt.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
- THE CLOVEN HOOF
-
-
-Next morning before Loseis had breakfasted, Gault was back at the
-Women’s House, knocking deprecatingly at the door.
-
-“I’m sorry to disturb you so early,” he said, “but I forgot something
-last night; and I’m holding my messenger now until I can get it from
-you.”
-
-“What is that?” asked Loseis.
-
-“May I come in?” he said smiling.
-
-Loseis led the way into her room.
-
-Gault had several sheets of paper in his hand. “If, as I suspect,” he
-began in the smooth voice which so exasperated Loseis without her
-knowing why, “Blackburn has sums of money lying in the bank outside,
-that belongs to you, of course; but you could not draw against it unless
-the bank was already in possession of your signature. Therefore, in
-order to save time, I propose to send out several specimens of your
-signature now. I will put them in the hands of your lawyer, who will in
-turn pass them on to the bank.”
-
-This sounded all right to Loseis, who proceeded to write her name on
-each of the four blank sheets that Gault passed her. Loseis had had
-small occasion to practice the art of handwriting, and it was but slowly
-that she formed the great round letters of her official name.
-
- _Laurentia Blackburn_
-
-“Laurentia!” murmured Gault in a fond voice. “What an odd name.”
-
-“I believe I was named after a chain of mountains,” said Loseis dryly.
-
-“But how dignified and melodious!” he said. “Laurentia . . . Laurentia
-. . . !”
-
-She shot an irritated glance at him through her lashes. Had the man
-nothing better to do than to stand there mouthing her name in that
-ridiculous fashion! Loseis privately detested her name. Jane would have
-been more to her fancy.
-
-Gault gathered up the sheets, and made as if to go. At the door he
-paused: “I say,” he said, like one speaking to a child, “isn’t there
-something at Fort Good Hope that you would like my messenger to bring
-back to you? I have a regular ‘outside’ store at Good Hope, you know.”
-
-“Oh, no, thank you,” said Loseis quickly. “Nothing at all!”
-
-“Just the same,” said Gault with that arch smile of his, “I will see if
-we cannot find something that will please you!”
-
-As he went through the door Loseis involuntarily flung up her arms
-crying: “Oh, give me air! Give me air!”
-
-Mary-Lou came running in to see what was the matter.
-
-Loseis kicked a fur rug violently to one side, and banged open the
-little window. “Oh, that man is like a bearskin tied over one’s head;
-like a feather bed upon one!” she cried. Standing back from the window
-she angrily apostrophized the receding figure of Gault. “Yes, you! you!
-If I have to see you every day I shall suffocate!” Turning around and
-beholding the amazed figure of Mary-Lou, Loseis suddenly embraced her,
-and dropping her head on her shoulder, burst into tears.
-
-“But what is the matter?” gasped Mary-Lou.
-
-“I don’t know!” wailed Loseis. “I must be crazy! He speaks fair and
-honest; he is always polite and kind . . . but . . . but I _can’t stand_
-the man!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Before the morning was out Gault was seen returning. Loseis, who had
-persuaded herself that she was a fool, schooled herself to receive him
-politely. He was accompanied this time by one of his Crees, who was
-carrying a neat leather-covered box by its handle. Gault never performed
-such menial tasks for himself. There was enough of the child in Loseis
-to be rendered intensely curious by the sight of that box.
-
-The trader dismissed his servant at the door, and brought the box in
-himself. Upon being laid on the table and opened, a most fascinating and
-complicated little machine was revealed, all shining with nickel-plate
-and black lacquer. Loseis had not the remotest idea of what it was for.
-
-“This is the typewriter; the writing-machine,” explained the trader. “I
-have another one at the Post which I have sent for. In the meantime I
-want to present this to you. I thought it might amuse you to practice on
-it; and it will certainly save you time. Now that you are a business
-woman, you will have many letters to write.”
-
-Loseis’ heart was touched by this seeming act of kindness. She felt
-remorseful. “That is very good of you,” she said, blushing. “It is true,
-I am a miserable writer. But I shall never be able to learn this.”
-
-“On the contrary,” said Gault. “It is very simple. Sit down at the table
-and I will show you now.”
-
-Loseis obeyed; and Gault drew up another chair close beside her. He
-explained to her how to put the paper in; how to shift the carriage back
-and forth; how to start a new line. For the rest all you had to do was
-to strike the proper letters. In ten minutes Loseis had mastered the
-idea of the thing. She was fascinated with this new toy (she had
-possessed so few toys in her life) but was made horribly uncomfortable
-by the enforced proximity of Gault’s head to her own. He was chewing
-some sort of medicated candy that gave his breath a strong, pungent
-odor. Loseis hated strong smells of every kind.
-
-“Now let me try it all by myself,” she said.
-
-“Go ahead! Go ahead!” he said, but did not withdraw himself at all. When
-he saw her at a loss, he would grab hold of her finger and guide it to
-the right key. Loseis shivered internally.
-
-Finally her discomfort became more than she could bear. “I cannot do a
-thing if you hang over me like that,” she said.
-
-Gault leaned back in his chair with a great laugh. “So independent!” he
-said teasingly.
-
-However, he held himself away from her, and Loseis proceeded with her
-slow punching of the keys. How strange and fascinating to see the words
-stand up upon the paper! She had never possessed so marvelous a toy as
-this. As soon as Gault was out of the way she would start a letter to
-Conacher. How astonished he would be!
-
-In a minute or two Gault’s head was as close as ever to hers. Loseis
-tried to ignore the fact, but it was impossible to do so. She was aware,
-through a subtle feminine sense, that he was not paying any attention to
-the typewriter now. He was too still. She felt as if something precious
-were being drawn from her that she had no intention of yielding to any
-man save one.
-
-“I’ll go on with this this afternoon,” she said nervously. “I have to do
-something else now.” At the same time she attempted to slide sideways
-out of her chair.
-
-Gault caught her hand. “Ah, don’t stop,” he said a little thickly. “You
-look like such a cunning little student, bending over your work. Where
-did you get that wonderful black hair of yours . . . ?”
-
-Loseis was up like a wild thing then, and backing off to the far end of
-the room. “How dare you! How dare you!” she said breathlessly. “Take
-yourself out of here, and your machine too! Or I’ll fling it after you!
-Did you bring it here only as an excuse to insult me!”
-
-Gault rose also. “Well!” he cried, laughing heartily. But there was an
-ugly look in his eyes.
-
-His laughter immediately brought about a reaction in Loseis. She
-realized that she was making far too much of a trifle. This was not the
-way for a well-born girl to act. She told herself that it was only
-because she had come to love another man that she found this one
-detestable. She lowered her head, and a hot blush flowed over her
-cheeks.
-
-“I am sorry,” she muttered unwillingly. “I am out of sorts this morning.
-I did not mean what I said.” In the very act of saying this Loseis’
-heart accused her of cowardice. She felt hopelessly confused. Oh, how
-difficult it was to be well-bred and ladylike.
-
-“Why, that’s all right!” cried Gault heartily. “It is perfectly natural
-at such a time. I’m sorry I displeased you. I assure you I feel nothing
-for you, but the deepest respect and sympathy! . . . I’ll leave you now.
-Do amuse yourself with the typewriter.”
-
-As he walked away from the house he murmured to himself: “A skittish
-filly! I must proceed more slowly. Gad! it’s difficult though!” Thus he
-deceived himself, as middle-aged gentlemen bent on gallantry are so apt
-to do. He felt delightfully ardent. At the same time though, a nasty
-little anxiety continued to plague the back of his mind.
-
-Meanwhile Loseis paced up and down her room, wondering for the hundredth
-time within the past twenty-four hours, what was the matter with her,
-that she felt so hopelessly divided. This was a new feeling for her.
-However the shining little typewriter _was_ fascinating. She presently
-sat down to compose a letter to Conacher; and forgot her troubles.
-Another little raft carried her letter downstream.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Every afternoon Loseis opened the store. It was a point of pride with
-her to comport herself in all respects towards the Slavis as if nothing
-had happened. She often visited their village, interesting herself in
-all their concerns, as she considered fitting in a prudent mistress
-towards her childish and feather-brained servants. They were shy with
-her, and none came to trade at the store. Loseis, shrugging, was content
-to bide her time. Hunger would tell in the end. For twenty years now,
-the Slavis had been accustomed to the white man’s flour, tea and sugar,
-and the present generation could not do without them.
-
-Loseis and Mary-Lou sat on the bench outside the store. Mary-Lou had
-been reading aloud, but her mistress had silenced her, because she
-wished to think. Loseis was unpracticed in the exercise of thinking
-things over, and she found it both difficult and painful. This was the
-question on which she split: was Gault a scoundrel? All his acts and
-words seemed to be above reproach; but Loseis’ heart stubbornly misgave
-her. Could she trust her heart? She reflected that her father had never
-betrayed any hesitation in calling Gault a scoundrel; but Loseis had had
-plenty of examples of her father’s wrong-headedness. She adored him, but
-had no great opinion of his judgment. It was by his strength and energy
-that Blackburn had forged ahead, not by wisdom. And so the weary round
-continued. To one of Loseis’ downright nature it was torture to remain
-in a state of indecision.
-
-At the door of Blackburn’s House fifty yards distant from where they
-sat, the Indian Etzooah was to be seen ostentatiously cleaning a pair of
-Gault’s boots. It suggested itself to Loseis as rather curious that
-Gault should choose the ignorant Slavi for a body-servant, when he had
-the more civilized Crees. She recollected that on various occasions
-during the past few days she had seen Etzooah hanging about looking
-self-conscious. The thought popped into her head that perhaps Gault had
-set him as a spy on her movements. Well, supposing that to be so, here
-was a chance to turn the tables on the trader. Through Etzooah she might
-be able to learn if Gault had lied to her.
-
-She called to Etzooah in her ordinary manner of offhand assurance. When
-he came to her cringing and grinning in his imbecile fashion (you could
-read nothing in that grin of the Slavis) she said coolly:
-
-“I need a man. There are some goods in the store to be moved.”
-
-Leading him inside, she had him shift some bags of flour from one place
-to another. This done, she presented him with a plug of tobacco, and let
-him know that he had done all she required. They returned outside, and
-Loseis bade Mary-Lou go on with the reading.
-
-Etzooah, as Loseis expected, did not leave them, but, making his face
-perfectly vacant, squatted down in the grass at the other side of the
-door, and proceeded to shave a pipeful of tobacco from the plug, careful
-not to spill a crumb. Loseis allowed Mary-Lou to read for awhile, then
-she started slightly as if a thought had just occurred to her, and
-motioned to the girl to stop.
-
-“Etzooah,” she said (speaking in the Slavi tongue of course) “it comes
-to me that I have not thanked you for fetching Gault from Fort Good
-Hope. That was well done.”
-
-Etzooah grinned. “Gault is a good man,” he said.
-
-“You speak truth,” said Loseis gravely. “How did it come that you set
-off without telling me?”
-
-“Wah!” said Etzooah, “you were attending upon the body of Blackburn. It
-was not right for me to go to you at such a time. I just caught some
-horses and went.”
-
-“It was well thought of,” said Loseis. “How did you make yourself
-understood to the white men?”
-
-“I speak the Cree,” said Etzooah.
-
-“Wah!” said Loseis politely. “That was not known to me.”
-
-“My father was a Cree,” said Etzooah. “It is well known.”
-
-“I had forgotten,” said Loseis.
-
-Without changing a muscle of her face, or raising her voice at all,
-Loseis shifted to English. “Etzooah,” she said, “the Slavis are saying
-to each other that you were false to your own people. They are angry
-because you brought Gault here. . . . Do not move suddenly or you are a
-dead man. Mahtsonza is hiding behind the corner of the store with a gun
-in his hands waiting to shoot you!”
-
-Etzooah’s copper face changed to a livid ash-color. Suddenly with a
-single movement he bounded to his feet, and inside the door of the
-store. Loseis stood up with a scornful laugh.
-
-“Go back to your master,” she said, pointing. “I only wished to find out
-if you could speak English. You are a spy!”
-
-Etzooah slunk away. Still only half convinced that he had been tricked,
-he kept glancing fearfully over his shoulder.
-
-Loseis was filled with a fierce exultation. Now she _knew_! No more
-indecision. To be sure, when she reflected, her solitary and desperate
-situation might well appall the stoutest heart; but at the moment she
-was only aware of the relief of getting rid of that suffocating sense of
-futility. Now she would know what to do! Her father was right about
-Gault; and her own heart had not played her false.
-
-She closed the store, and took Mary-Lou back to their house.
-
-Loseis’ nature knew no half measures. Having recognized Gault as her
-enemy, she was prepared to fight. She did not blink the danger of her
-position. She no longer had any illusions about the fate of those
-letters which the trader had so impressively despatched outside. She
-realized that Gault himself stood between her and any possible succor,
-and that he intended to keep her cut off from her kind until he should
-have obtained what he wanted. Well, she quickly resolved upon a course
-of action. Her only hope lay in bringing her wits into play. Gault must
-not be allowed to suspect that she saw through his schemes. Etzooah, she
-knew, would never dare confess to his master that he had betrayed
-himself. There was a fatuous side to Gault’s character; and she must
-play on that. Perhaps through his own folly she might defeat him in the
-end.
-
-Suddenly Loseis clapped her hands to her head with a cry of dismay. She
-had suddenly recollected that all her father’s papers were in his desk
-in the room where Gault was sleeping, and the desk was not even locked!
-While he was alive of course, nobody would have dared venture into
-Blackburn’s room uninvited, much less touch his papers. Loseis beat her
-fists against her head, and groaned in bitterness. What an ignorant
-childish fool she had been to neglect a thing so important!
-
-She ran to the window to look across at the men’s house. She could not
-tell whether Gault was within or not. On the spur of the moment she sent
-Mary-Lou across to invite Gault and Moale to supper with her. Mary-Lou
-returned to say that the two men had ridden up to the lake (ten miles
-distant) to have a look at the Slavi village there. Loseis then ventured
-across herself.
-
-Etzooah was in the kitchen of the house. He received her with his
-customary witless grin, and edged in front of the door to the inner room
-as if to keep her out. Loseis caught her breath in astonishment, and her
-eyes fairly blazed on the man.
-
-“Stand aside, dog of a redskin!” she cried. “This is my father’s house,
-and Gault is only a guest here at my pleasure!”
-
-To the terrified Indian it seemed as if the little figure had grown a
-foot. He slunk aside, and Loseis went into her father’s room, closing
-the door after her.
-
-Upon her first glance at the desk it was apparent to her that Gault had
-stolen a march on her; though she did not immediately understand the
-significance of what he had done. The desk was a handsome piece after
-the Colonial style made by Blackburn himself. It had four drawers below,
-and a flap which lifted down to form the writing table. The drawers and
-the flap alike were fastened shut by strips of papers, caught down by
-clots of sealing wax. Going closer Loseis saw that the wax had been
-impressed with Gault’s ring.
-
-Loseis smiled bitterly. Her first impulse was to tear open these flimsy
-seals; but she held her hand. No; the damage was already done; if
-anything had been abstracted, how was she to know? Better to keep Gault
-in ignorance of the fact that she had been there. She did not believe
-that Etzooah would tell him, unless it occurred to Gault to question
-him. A Slavi never volunteers any information to a white man. The upshot
-was that Loseis turned around, and went home.
-
-The invitation to supper was repeated later. When Gault came over it was
-a changed Loseis who greeted him. Her uncertainty was gone. Danger
-stimulated her; all her faculties were sharpened. She had put on one of
-her prettiest dresses; her dark eyes sparkled with topaz lights; and she
-gave Gault smile for smile. The trader was charmed. She is coming
-’round, he thought; I knew she would.
-
-Moale saw deeper. His inscrutable eyes followed Loseis with a new
-respect. Moale served his master very faithfully, but he was like the
-Slavis in one respect; he never volunteered any information.
-
-Supper was quite a jolly occasion. Loseis listened attentively to
-Gault’s stories; and was prompt with her applause. The trader visibly
-expanded; and Moale’s expression as he watched him became even more
-sardonic than usual. During the course of the meal, Loseis said with an
-innocent air:
-
-“Mr. Gault, all my father’s papers are in that desk in your room. Will
-you go over everything with me to-morrow, and explain it.”
-
-He wagged a protesting hand in her direction. “No, no, no,” he said;
-“nothing must be touched until the lawyer comes.”
-
-“That cannot be for weeks yet,” said Loseis, “and in the meantime I am
-curious to . . .”
-
-“I have sealed the desk,” said Gault.
-
-“Sealed my father’s desk?” said Loseis, opening her eyes wide.
-
-“My dear girl, consider my position,” he said. “I am an interested party
-in these matters—or at least I will be so considered; and I have to
-lean over backwards in the effort to avoid anything which would look
-like taking an unfair advantage. Imagine my feelings upon retiring that
-first night, when I found myself alone in the room with all the private
-papers of my late rival in business! I was shocked; shocked. If the desk
-had been locked, and the key in your possession it would have been all
-right; but upon trying it—for my own protection, I found that it was
-open. Fortunately Moale was in the kitchen. I instantly called him in,
-and sealed up the desk in his presence.”
-
-“Why didn’t you let me know?” asked Loseis.
-
-“It was late. You had retired.”
-
-“Why didn’t you speak of it next day?”
-
-“I never thought of it. It is customary when a man dies to seal up his
-papers until his attorney can take charge. I did it as a matter of
-course.”
-
-“Perhaps his papers are not there after all,” said Loseis.
-
-“Perhaps not,” said Gault, with a seeming open look. “I only moved the
-cover with my thumb for about a quarter of an inch to find out if it was
-locked. I know no more than the man in the moon what the desk contains.”
-
-Loseis lowered her eyes. What a fool he must think me! she
-thought—well, it is just as well that he should think me a fool.
-
-“Did Blackburn possess a safe?” asked Gault.
-
-“No,” said Loseis. “Nobody ever stole anything from my father.”
-
-“I wish I could say the same,” said Gault ruefully. He went on to tell
-the story of the Scotch half-breed who had brought a black fox skin to
-his post to trade, and had then replaced it with a clumsy imitation,
-almost under the trader’s nose. It appeared that he had worked the trick
-in turn at every post on the big river; but was apprehended at Fort
-McMaster on his way out. Loseis, smiling at the story, permitted Gault
-to suppose that it had caused her to forget the sealed desk.
-
-After the meal, Gault sent Moale away on a manifestly trumped-up errand.
-Loseis was not sorry to see him go. She was a little afraid of his
-unchanging, watchful gaze. He never spoke unless he were addressed. As
-for Gault, it was curious that now she knew he was her enemy, she no
-longer dreaded to be left alone with him.
-
-She drew up the hammock-chair to the fire. “You must take this chair
-to-night,” she said. “And light one of your delicious cigars. . . .
-There,” she said presently, “that is just like the happy nights when my
-father came to sit with me.”
-
-Gault’s smile became a little bleak. He didn’t want to be regarded as a
-father. He stole a look at Loseis to see if this could be an intentional
-dig; but her face expressed only an innocent pleasure in seeing him
-comfortable.
-
-She perched herself on one of the straight-backed chairs beside him,
-with her heels cocked up on the rungs. “Have you ever been married, Mr.
-Gault?” she asked.
-
-“No,” said the trader, a little uncertain as to what was coming next.
-
-“Why not?” asked Loseis.
-
-“Well,” said he, looking noble, “I could not bear to expose the kind of
-woman that I wished to marry to my rude life in the wilderness.”
-
-“How lonely you must have been!” murmured Loseis.
-
-Gault felt reassured. This was the sort of talk a man had the right to
-expect from a white woman. He settled himself for a comfortable heart to
-heart talk by the fire. “Ah, yes,” he said with a far-away look; “I have
-had my bitter times! People call me a hard man; they do not know! They
-do not know!”
-
-The corners of Loseis’ mouth twitched demurely. “Tell me all about
-yourself,” she murmured.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
- HEAVENLY MUSIC
-
-
-At noon of the fourth day after his setting-out, Gault’s messenger
-returned from Fort Good Hope driving several laden pack-horses before
-him. The horses were unpacked at the door of Blackburn’s House, and the
-goods carried in. From their windows opposite, Loseis and the four Marys
-full of curiosity, watched and speculated on the contents of the various
-packages. The natural consequence of Blackburn’s having forbidden all
-traffic across the height of land was that Fort Good Hope loomed in the
-imagination of his people as a sort of fabulous place. Anything might
-come from there.
-
-By and by Gault was seen coming across the grass accompanied by a breed
-with a canvas duffle bag over his shoulder.
-
-“More presents for you!” cried Mary-Lou clasping her hands.
-
-Loseis permitted all the girls to be present while the bag was unpacked.
-Gault disregarded them. Thrusting his arm into the bag, he produced the
-various articles with a tender and proprietary smile upon Loseis. The
-Princess at such a moment was like any other young thing; breathless
-with anticipation, all her difficulties and dangers forgotten. First
-came several packages of novels, and an exclamation of pleasure escaped
-her. Novels had been forbidden her; and she had had no more than
-tantalizing tastes of their contents in the installments appearing in
-the magazines which drifted to Blackburn’s Post from time to time. Next
-came boxes of chocolates and other candies specially packed in tin. Next
-bottles of perfumes of various sorts, and boxes of strongly-scented
-soaps. As soon as Gault was out of the way, Loseis distributed these
-amongst her hand-maids. Next a box of elegant writing paper; pink, with
-gold edges.
-
-“For you to write to me upon when I am gone,” said Gault with his fond
-smile.
-
-(May that be soon! thought Loseis.) Aloud she said: “How pretty!”
-
-The most astonishing present came, as was most fitting, from the bottom
-of the bag. From a little card-board box Gault took a shining nickel
-cube, having a sort of cup at one end, covered with glass. When you
-pressed a spring in the cube, light most miraculously appeared behind
-the glass. Loseis took it gingerly in her hands, gazing at it with wide
-and wondering eyes. The four red girls drew back, a little afraid.
-
-“Of course you can’t get the full effect of it until dark,” said Gault.
-
-“This is the electric light of which I have read,” said Loseis in a
-hushed voice. “How strange and beautiful!”
-
-“There’s a box of extra batteries when it gives out,” said the trader.
-
-Batteries meant nothing to Loseis. The gleaming torch had laid a spell
-upon her imagination. She switched it on and off. How strange, how
-strange this little light that she summoned and dismissed with a touch
-of her finger, like a fairy servant!
-
-“If you went through the Slavi village some night with that in your hand
-it would create a sensation,” said Gault laughing.
-
-His laughter jarred on Loseis. “No use frightening them for nothing,”
-she said. “I might need it some time.”
-
-In the beginning it would have irked Loseis very much to receive these
-presents from Gault, but now she felt no qualms. He is counting on
-getting it back many times over, she thought.
-
-During the course of the afternoon, Loseis and her girls were astonished
-to see Gault’s men climbing to the roof of Blackburn’s House. Alongside
-the chimney they affixed a tall pole. When it was up, wires were strung
-from it to the top of the flagpole in the middle of the little plaza.
-Loseis’ curiosity could no longer contain itself. She went across to ask
-what they were doing.
-
-“Wait until to-night,” said Gault, smiling. “You are dining with me
-to-night. Afterwards there is to be a surprise.”
-
-That dinner was full of new things for Loseis. A crowning touch was
-supplied by a potted geranium in the center of the table, bearing three
-scarlet blossoms. Never before had that flower bloomed at Blackburn’s
-Post. A cry of admiration broke from Loseis.
-
-“The parson’s sister sent it to you with her compliments,” said the
-trader. “She has them blooming all winter in her parlor.”
-
-Loseis’ heart suddenly went out to this unknown sister of her own color.
-“What is she like?” she asked shyly.
-
-“Oh, just what you’d expect a parson’s sister to be,” he said
-indifferently.
-
-The food was strange to Loseis; but for the most part highly agreeable.
-First there was a queer, spicy soup. Mulligatawney, Gault called it, and
-Loseis laughed at the ridiculous-sounding word. It must have come out of
-a can, she reflected. This was followed by a great roast of beef which
-is extraordinarily esteemed as an article of food up North, simply
-because it is so hard to come by. (“A steer was slaughtered at Fort Good
-Hope expressly for you,” said Gault to Loseis with a bow.) With the
-roast beef were served potatoes and stewed tomatoes, both novel dishes
-at Blackburn’s Post. For dessert came on a plum pudding, likewise out of
-a can; and this Loseis considered the best thing she had ever tasted.
-There were, besides, small dishes containing olives which the guest did
-not like; and salted almonds which she did.
-
-Pride forbade Loseis to betray any further curiosity concerning the
-“surprise” but with every mouthful she took, she was thrillingly
-conscious of an oblong box that rested on a small table at the side of
-the room, covered by a cloth. That must be the surprise of course. It
-had a most exciting shape.
-
-After the table had been cleared, Gault sought to tease her, by lighting
-up his cigar in leisurely fashion, while he talked of indifferent
-matters. But he didn’t get any change out of Loseis, who sat quietly
-with her hands in her lap, looking at the fire.
-
-Finally he said: “Wouldn’t you like to know what is under that cloth?”
-
-“Whenever you are ready,” said Loseis politely.
-
-Gault laughed, and jerked the cloth away. Loseis beheld a beautiful box
-of a polished red wood, having in the front of it several curious black
-knobs with indicators and dials above them. The whole apparatus was
-suggestive of magic. Gault began to turn the knobs, and Loseis, holding
-her breath, prepared herself for anything to happen; red and green
-flames perhaps, with a Jinn springing up in the middle.
-
-When it came, it let her down suddenly from that awful suspense. It was
-not startling at all, but sweet. Music mysteriously filled the room,
-coming, not from that box, but from an unknown source. It melted the
-heart with its sweetness. It resembled the music of a violin with which
-Loseis was familiar, but infinitely fuller and richer, with strange,
-deep undertones that caused delicious shivers to run up the girl’s
-spine.
-
-“Oh, what is it? What is it?” she murmured.
-
-“Music from Heaven,” said Gault grinning.
-
-For a moment she believed him. Closing her eyes, she gave herself up to
-the entrancing sounds. It was too beautiful, too beautiful to be of this
-earth. Yet it was not strange; it seemed like something she had always
-been waiting for; it satisfied a longing. It caused her to think of her
-father and of her lover. The thoughts of death and of love became
-intermingled in her mind, intolerably sweet and bitter. The tears
-swelled under her eyelids.
-
-Then Gault destroyed the spell that he himself had evoked. “It’s coming
-through fine, to-night,” he remarked to Moale. “No interference.”
-
-Loseis dropped down to earth. A recollection came to her. “It is the
-radio,” she said quietly. “I have read of that, too.”
-
-It was a music of many voices, now loud, now soft; one voice then
-another spoke above them all; then all were raised together. Shrill,
-merry voices running up and down like laughter; voices as plaintive as
-the laughter of loons at dusk; deep, sonorous voices that suggested
-courage and endurance. Loseis tried in vain to pick out the tune. It had
-a meaning; but one could not grasp it. It was like listening to the
-whole world.
-
-“What makes such music?” she whispered.
-
-“Orchestra,” he said.
-
-Loseis had met with this word in books; but she did not know the
-meaning. She would not ask.
-
-“A whole crowd of instruments together,” said Gault. “Little fiddles,
-medium size fiddles, and big fiddles; wooden horns and brass horns of
-every size and shape; and a row of drums.”
-
-“Where is it coming from?” she asked.
-
-“From the station in Calgary.”
-
-Loseis was lifted up on the wings of wonder again. From Calgary! A
-thousand miles away! She visualized the long ten miles ride to the Lake;
-and tried to imagine a hundred times ten miles. It was too much; the
-mind could not take it in. She thought of the night outside, and
-suddenly it became clear to her why the silence of Northern nights was
-so profoundly disturbing. It was not a silence at all; the night was
-full of these voices from all over the world, winging through the sky,
-and the heart was sensible to them, though the ears were deaf.
-
-“How do you do it? How do you do it?” murmured Loseis.
-
-“Oh, it would take old Marconi to explain that,” said the trader
-laughing.
-
-Ah! will Paul and I ever listen to such music together? thought Loseis.
-
-The music came to an end. After a pause a man began to speak. This
-affected Loseis even more strangely than the music. A man speaking to
-them in a quiet, friendly voice, as if he was there beside them! And he
-was not there. A spirit was amongst them without its body. Awe gripped
-Loseis. She shivered, and looked over her shoulder. Gault watching her,
-chuckled, and she shrank sharply into herself again.
-
-The man was giving a humorous account of how he went with his wife to
-buy a hat. He spoke of the crowds of people in the streets, and the
-gayly decorated shop windows. Loseis was too much filled with wonder of
-the voice to pay heed to the story. He said: “I met her at the Palliser
-Hotel this afternoon.” Yet he was a thousand miles away! He said: “I
-took her into the restaurant, and when she said she wasn’t hungry, I
-prepared myself for the worst.” Gault and Moale laughed, and Loseis
-looked at them in surprise. A thousand miles! A thousand miles.
-
-It was a jolly, friendly voice that reassured the child’s heart of
-Loseis. And it was clear that he was speaking to others whom he knew to
-be as honest and kind as himself. Loseis had a sudden vision of the
-populous, kindly world lying outside, and her breast yearned over it.
-The friendly voice seemed to bring her so close, to admit her to that
-world. But a realization of her loneliness swept over her. There was
-that thousand miles of prairie, muskeg and forest lying between. Alone!
-Alone! worse than alone, for she was hedged about with false and lying
-men who wished her ill. Ah! If she could only communicate with the
-honest people, they would not let her come to harm. Drawn quite out of
-herself, Loseis rose to her feet, stretching out her arms.
-
-“Oh, if I could only speak to him!” she murmured.
-
-Gault laughed heartily. “That would require a whole transmitting
-station,” he said. “Quite a different matter from getting it.”
-
-Loseis dropped back in her chair. She glanced at the trader with
-involuntary dislike. What a coarse animal under his fine manners! she
-thought.
-
-When the concert came to an end, Gault said: “To-morrow night, we’ll get
-the Slavis into the kitchen, and spring it on them,” he said laughing.
-“Lordy! what a scatteration there will be!”
-
-Loseis got up to go. “You will do what you like, of course,” she said
-coldly. “But do not expect me to come.”
-
-“But why?” asked the surprised Gault.
-
-“It’s a beautiful, wonderful thing,” said Loseis, looking wistfully at
-the red box. “I should not care to see it made a mock of.”
-
-“Oh, well, in that case,” said Gault quickly, “no Slavis! I brought this
-over solely to give you pleasure, Princess!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
- AN UPSET
-
-
-Gault and Moale were breakfasting in the men’s house.
-
-“How about the fur here?” asked Moale.
-
-“All in good time,” said his master.
-
-“Have you got the key to the warehouse?”
-
-“Yes. But of course I have to make out that it’s sealed up in the desk.”
-
-“I don’t see what you expect to gain by that bit of flummery,” said
-Moale.
-
-“No?” said Gault sarcastically. “I am keeping the girl out of her
-father’s papers, am I not? . . . I know what I am doing. Suppose some
-one should come in here? Everything would be found in order; Blackburn’s
-will, his accounts, his letters. I have taken nothing, because there was
-nothing I wanted; it was sufficient for me to read it all.”
-
-“What was in his will?” said Moale curiously.
-
-“Oh, he left everything to the girl, of course. That doesn’t signify
-anything, because if there was no will, the courts would award it to her
-anyway.”
-
-“Well, I’d like fine to have a look at that fur,” said Moale with
-glittering eyes. Fur was his passion. If he had other passions, he kept
-them hid.
-
-“You are to keep away from the warehouse for the present,” said Gault
-peremptorily.
-
-“I have read the inventory,” said Moale. “There are ten black fox skins
-of the first quality. I have never seen so many at one time. Those alone
-will bring from a thousand to fifteen hundred each. Besides the silver
-and the cross foxes; the mink, otter and fisher. The whole lot is worth
-well above a hundred thousand at present prices.”
-
-“Quite that,” said Gault. “But I’m playing for a bigger stake, and I
-don’t intend to jeopardize it by making any premature move.”
-
-“How much is the girl worth?” asked Moale slyly.
-
-“I don’t know,” said the other coolly.
-
-Moale lowered his eyes; he knew very well that Gault was lying; but did
-not care to let him see that he knew. Presently he said: “The news of
-Blackburn’s death will be all over by now. That fool Etzooah let it out
-at our post before I could stop his mouth. And Conacher carried the news
-north with him.”
-
-“I had no thought of keeping it secret,” said Gault.
-
-“How about Gruber, then? If you keep him waiting too long at the
-Crossing, he’s likely to come down here to see what’s up.”
-
-“I’ve written to Gruber telling him that if he will wait a few weeks,
-I’ll send him the fur as soon as I can arrange matters.”
-
-“Maybe that letter won’t satisfy him.”
-
-“Well, if he comes he shall have the fur. It will be a good way of
-getting him away from here again.”
-
-“I should hate to see that fur get out of our hands,” said Moale.
-“That’s real; that’s the goods! Whereas the other thing . . .” He
-shrugged.
-
-“You’re a fool,” said Gault contemptuously. “The girl is all but ready
-to drop into my arms. All I need is a little time.”
-
-Moale looked down at his plate again.
-
-In spite of the confidence that Gault had expressed, this conversation
-brought forward the little worrying anxiety that lingered in the back of
-his mind. Here were the days passing one after another, and could it be
-honestly said that he was making progress with Loseis? Sometimes he was
-sure he was—sometimes not so sure. She was such a baffling creature; at
-one moment as open and easily moved as a child and the next moment
-revealing a maturity of mind and an originality that startled him. At
-other times she was as provoking and secretive as an Indian. To be sure
-of late she had been generally friendly, even sympathetic; but try as he
-would, he could not get their relations on the man and woman plane, the
-plane of courtship. Loseis eluded him like a sprite.
-
-In his heart Gault cursed the time that must be wasted in wooing a
-civilized miss. They managed such things better in a simpler state of
-society, when the girl would have been hit over the head, and dragged
-off without more ado. Women have never really become civilized, he
-thought; they need to be beaten still. Well, having an eye to the
-outside world, he could not actually do this, but should he not apply
-the principle? Perhaps he had been too gentle, too considerate a wooer.
-That only set her up in her own opinion. It was ridiculous to suppose
-that a mere slip of a girl who didn’t know her own mind could resist a
-mature and strong-willed man like himself. The time had come for him to
-overbear her by the mere force of his personality. She would thank him
-for it in the end. A Loseis, humbled and loving; Ah! what a seductive
-picture!
-
-Gault had his horse brought, and mounting, rode across to the Women’s
-House, well aware that he appeared to the best advantage on a horse. He
-knocked at the door without dismounting, and when Loseis appeared, she
-was obliged to look up at him, proudly holding his seat, and making
-believe to soothe his horse, while secretly fretting him with his off
-heel. But no light of admiration appeared in Loseis’ clear eyes. She
-took horsemanship as a matter of course.
-
-“Will you ride up to the lake with me?” asked Gault. “I have grub for
-two. I think you ought to show yourselves to the Slavis just to remind
-them that you are the mistress here.”
-
-Loseis cocked an eye at the sky. It was like an inverted bowl of palest
-turquoise. “Surely!” she cried. “I’m longing for a ride. Give me five
-minutes to change my skirt.”
-
-Mary-Rose was sent running to fetch Loseis’ horse.
-
-Loseis and her horse appeared simultaneously. This was the first time
-that Gault had beheld the girl’s riding costume. It comprised Strathcona
-boots; breeches; a blue flannel shirt; and a flat-brimmed man’s hat set
-crookedly on one side of her head. The shirt was open at the neck, and
-under the collar she had knotted a gay red and yellow kerchief. She
-turned up her face to the sky, all open, drinking in the light with joy;
-and Gault, observing her hair, softer and blacker than anything else in
-Nature, the tender brilliance of her eyes, and her flower-petal lips,
-felt a pain like a needle go through his breast, and lost his sense of
-mastery.
-
-He thought: The devil is in it, that she is able to hurt me so! She must
-never be allowed to suspect her power.
-
-Loseis vaulted on her horse. They trotted down the rise, and passing
-between the tepees, splashed through the small stream. Clawing their way
-up the further bank, their horses broke into a gallop in the clean
-grass. Summer had pronounced her benediction on the North, and the world
-was like a freshly painted picture. Loseis, who was ahead, sang out:
-
-“Oh, what a day for a ride!” To herself she added: “If that was Conacher
-pounding along behind, I should be the happiest girl alive!”
-
-Their way led more or less close to the river. There were but two horse
-trails leaving Blackburn’s Post; that to Fort Good Hope, and this one
-which, after circling the easterly shore of Blackburn’s Lake, struck
-south to the distant rendezvous near the Crossing. Rich bottom lands
-alternated with occasional gravelly ridges to be crossed. Conversation
-was impossible; for horses trained to the trail will not travel abreast;
-however Gault, knowing that they would be out all day, was content to
-bide his time.
-
-Descending into a lush meadow, already fetlock deep in grass, Loseis
-clapped heels to her horse, and set off, yelling like an Indian. Her
-sorrel mare laid her ears back and went like the wind. She would have
-yelled too if she could. The sight brought that needle-pain back to
-Gault’s breast, by reminding him that his day for yelling and running
-was forever past.
-
-In another meadow they came upon a herd of horses quietly feeding, and
-Loseis paused to look them over. These were the broken horses kept on
-this side, while the wild horses ranged across the river. Blackburn on
-the day he was killed, had been engaged in rounding up these horses to
-take out the fur.
-
-When they rode up on top of the ridge which formed the cut-bank known as
-Swallow Bend, all Loseis’ gayety was quenched. She slipped out of her
-saddle, and without speaking, handed her rein to Gault to hold. Creeping
-to the edge of the bank, she looked over. In the gravelly stuff below
-she could easily follow the marks where the horses had first struck, and
-then rolled down into the water. A wild regret filled her heart, and her
-tears ran fast.
-
-They were still falling when she returned to Gault, and silently
-received her rein. Her grief was as natural and spontaneous as her
-gayety had been an hour before. The ageing man bit his lip and cursed
-her in his heart for being so beautiful.
-
-Just below the lake they forded the main stream through a brawling
-shallow rapid, the Slavi village being on the other side. Scores of
-tepees rose here, as well as several log shacks built in imitation of
-the white man for winter use. Their coming was beheld from afar, and a
-tremendous commotion arose in the village; the news was shrieked from
-tepee to tepee. Upon their entrance a dead silence fell; and the Slavis,
-like school children all adopted a look of vacant stupidity as a cover
-for their embarrassment. Loseis did not dismount; but rode up and down,
-speaking to this one and that.
-
-Tatateecha, the head man of all the Slavis came to her stirrup. He was a
-round little man, distinguished amongst all the tribe by his fleshiness.
-The responsibilities of headship had given him more steadiness of
-character too, but not much more. Loseis did not hold him accountable
-for the excesses at the Post. Tatateecha made a flowery speech of
-welcome to Loseis; and another to Gault.
-
-“You are wasting your breath,” remarked Loseis. “He does not understand
-your tongue.”
-
-“Is he the trader now?” asked Tatateecha slyly.
-
-“No!” said Loseis with a flash of her eyes. “He is my guest. . . . Do
-you wish to trade with him?” she added.
-
-“No! No!” said Tatateecha earnestly. “He has the name of a hard trader.
-They tell me that the people at Fort Good Hope are always poor.”
-
-“Very well, then,” said Loseis. “Serve me, and I will deal with you
-justly and fairly as my father did. You never knew want when he was
-alive.”
-
-Tatateecha’s eyes twinkled. To be talking in this manner under the very
-nose of the proud Gault appealed to the Slavi sense of humor.
-
-“This man wishes me ill,” Loseis went on. “He would take my post from
-me. I look to you and your people to be my friends, and help me to keep
-what is my own.”
-
-Tatateecha in his redskin style swore fealty. Unfortunately he was not
-to be trusted far.
-
-“I have another thing to say,” Loseis went on. “The man who fetched this
-man into our country—I do not name him because this man would hear me;
-you know the man I mean. That false person is this person’s spy, so
-beware how you open your hearts to him. I have finished.”
-
-Loseis and Gault rode on. They left Tatateecha looking rather scared,
-but Loseis told herself that at least her speaking to him would do no
-harm.
-
-“What were you talking about?” asked Gault.
-
-“Oh, he was apologizing for the way his people behaved in the store, and
-I was telling him it had better not happen again,” said Loseis
-carelessly.
-
-Beyond the village the land rose to a low bluff which commanded a
-prospect of the lake. Here they turned out their horses, and sat down in
-the grass to eat. After the pleasant, diversified country they had
-ridden through, an astonishing panorama met their eyes. The whole earth
-suddenly flattened out. They were upon the only bit of high ground that
-approached the lake. In front of them a sea of water and a sea of grass
-stretched to the horizon; and it was impossible to say where the one
-ended and the other began. On either hand in the far distance ran the
-bordering hills. The only thing there was in sight to break that
-tremendous flatness was a flock of wild swans a mile or more away,
-fluttering their wings in the sun.
-
-When they had satisfied their hunger, Gault bethought himself that it
-was time to take a firm tone with Loseis. He said bluntly:
-
-“Do you know, you’re a damn pretty girl.”
-
-He prepared himself for an explosion; but Loseis surprised him again.
-
-“Of course I know it,” she said coolly; looking at him with a slanting
-smile.
-
-“How do you know it? You’ve never seen any white girls.”
-
-“Oh, one knows such things anyhow,” she said shrugging.
-
-“Has any man ever told you?” demanded Gault.
-
-“No,” said Loseis, clear-eyed as the sky; but thinking of Conacher
-nevertheless.
-
-“Well, I’m telling you,” said Gault.
-
-“Thanks,” said Loseis with a quick smile.
-
-The smile annoyed the trader. It seemed to express something other than
-gratitude. “Do you know what they sometimes call me?” he asked.
-
-Loseis shook her head.
-
-“Kid-Glove Gault. An allusion to my manner, of course. Everybody knows
-that it conceals an iron hand. I have been through a hard school, and I
-have come out hard. I choose to be courteous because I despise those who
-surround me. I have taught myself to stand alone.”
-
-Loseis became very uncomfortable. Why does he tell me all this? she
-thought.
-
-“Look at me!” he said peremptorily.
-
-She shook her head, pressing her lips together. If I did, I should burst
-out laughing in his face, she thought.
-
-Gault was not ill-pleased by her refusal. It seemed to testify to his
-power. “There is another side to my nature,” he went on, “which I have
-never revealed to a living soul. All the softer feelings which other men
-scatter in a hundred directions I have saved up for one!”
-
-Mercy! ejaculated Loseis to herself.
-
-“But it is not to be given lightly,” said Gault. “I am a proud, jealous,
-and violent man. I may be led by one whom I trust, but never driven. I
-shall never let down my guard until I am assured that the one I have
-chosen is worthy . . .”
-
-This sort of talk put Loseis on pins and needles—she could not have
-told why. Her body twitched, and her face was all drawn up in a knot of
-comical distaste. She kept her head averted from Gault. Oh, if he would
-_only_ stop! she was saying to herself.
-
-“. . . of my confidence,” he went on; “such is my character. I am not
-trying to excuse it. I have long been indifferent to both praise and
-blame. The woman who places her hand in mine must . . .”
-
-Loseis could stand no more. Springing to her feet, she ran back towards
-the place where the horses were grazing.
-
-“Excuse me a moment,” she called over her shoulder. “I must water my
-horse.”
-
-Gault with a black face had sprung up to follow her. But he checked
-himself. That would be _too_ ludicrous for one of his years and dignity.
-Besides, she could probably run faster than he. He ground his teeth with
-rage. “A coquette!” he muttered. “By God! I’ll tame her!”
-
-All the way home he glowered at her back, but Loseis could not see that.
-
-After supper she went across to hear the radio concert in some
-trepidation; but Gault received her with his usual smooth and
-well-controlled face; and she felt relieved. He treated her with the
-most exquisite courtesy. This high manner may have concealed terrible
-fires within; but Loseis was not worrying about that. She gave herself
-up to the music.
-
-After it was over, Gault walked home with her. That rare day had been
-succeeded by a still rarer night. Low in the southerly sky hung a great
-round moon. Measured by the standards of southerly latitudes, the moon
-behaves very eccentrically up there. After describing a short arc across
-the southern sky, she would go down in an hour or so not far from where
-she had risen. In the meantime she held the world in a breathless spell
-of beauty. In that magical light the rude buildings of the Post created
-a picture of old romance. There was a silvery bloom upon the grass; and
-the velvety black shadows suggested unutterable meanings that caught at
-the heart. The shadow of Gault’s house reached almost to Loseis’ door.
-
-They paused there; and Loseis looked around her with a tight breast. (Is
-he somewhere under this moon thinking of me?) “This is the night of the
-whole year!” she said.
-
-“Well, we are free, white, and twenty-one,” said Gault. “Why go to bed?
-. . . The best place to see moonlight is on the river. Come out in a
-canoe with me for an hour.”
-
-Loseis’ intuition warned her not to go—but one does not always listen
-to one’s intuitions. She was tempted. He can’t do any more than talk,
-she thought; I guess I can stand it. I shall be looking at the
-moonlight, and thinking of the other one. “Very well,” she said.
-
-“Go in and get a coat,” he said. “I’ll come back for you in two
-minutes.”
-
-He hastened back to his own kitchen. One of his Crees was sent down to
-the creek mouth to find a canoe. Of the others, one played a banjo and
-all could sing the old-fashioned songs that are still current in the far
-North. These were stationed on a bench outside the kitchen door with
-orders to sing, _not loud_. After all there was something magnificent
-about Gault. In his dark way he had imagination. But he was fifty-three
-years old!
-
-When they got down to the water’s edge the Cree was holding the canoe
-for them to step into. By Gault’s orders he had chosen not one of the
-usual bark canoes of the Slavis which are little more than paper boats,
-but a dug-out of which there were several lying in the creek. These
-heavier and roomier craft are however, no more stable than the others.
-Loseis perceived that a nest of blankets and pillows had been arranged
-for her in the bottom.
-
-“Oh, I like to paddle,” she said.
-
-“Give me the pleasure of looking at you in the moonlight,” murmured
-Gault.
-
-Again Loseis felt strong compunctions; but it seemed too ridiculous to
-back out then; especially with the Indian looking on. She got in; and
-Gault, taking his place in the stern, paddled out into the main stream.
-
-Heading the canoe down river, he allowed it to drift. That brought
-Loseis reclining under his eyes in the full shine of the moon; while he,
-sitting up on the thwart, was blackly silhouetted against the light.
-Presumably it was very lovely on the river—Loseis observed how the face
-of the water seemed to be powdered with moon-dust; and at any other time
-her heart would have been melted by the distant strumming of the banjo,
-and the muted voices; but now it was all spoiled for her by that
-silhouette. How could she think of Conacher while the other man’s eyes
-were boring into her. She was sorry she had come. She became sorrier
-when Gault began to speak.
-
-“You are beautiful!” he said in a masterful voice. “I want you!”
-
-At first Loseis was only conscious of astonishment.
-
-“Want me?” she echoed blankly.
-
-“To-morrow I shall send over to my Post for the parson,” he went on,
-coolly. “He may bring his sister with him to attend upon you. We shall
-be married in your house. It will be more fitting.”
-
-Loseis was literally struck dumb. She sat up straight, trying to peer
-into the shadowy face that was almost invisible to her, her mouth
-hanging open like a child’s.
-
-Gault laughed fondly. “Do not look so frightened,” he murmured. “I will
-take good care of you . . . little sweetheart.”
-
-A little strained note of laughter was surprised out of the girl. The
-last word sounded so funny, shaped by those stiff old lips.
-
-Gault ascribed it to nerves. It did not put him off at all. “As soon as
-we are married,” he went on. “Let us take advantage of the Summer season
-to make a trip outside. A handsome spirited girl like you will enjoy
-seeing the cities. You shall have everything that your heart desires.
-And we will be able to attend to the business of your father’s estate. I
-don’t mean places like Edmonton or Calgary. What would you say to New
-York . . . London?”
-
-As he talked on a chill of terror struck to Loseis’ breast. He seemed so
-very sure of himself! The fond, elderly voice made her feel like a
-little girl again. “Do I _have to_ marry him?” she asked herself,
-trembling.
-
-The river was very high. The muddy borders which would show themselves
-later, were now completely covered. The overhanging willows trailed
-their branches in deep water. Without noticing it, they had drifted
-close to the easterly shore.
-
-Gault’s ardor increased. He dropped forward in the bottom of the
-dug-out, and crept closer to Loseis. Putting a hand down on either side
-of her for support and balance, he strained towards her. Loseis got a
-hateful whiff of the scented breath again.
-
-“Seal it with a kiss, sweetheart,” he murmured.
-
-Loseis’ blood rebelled, and all uncertainty left her. She was no longer
-the child, but an aroused woman. She wriggled her body further forward
-in the dug-out, out of his reach.
-
-“Easy! Easy!” he cried sharply; “or you’ll have us over!”
-
-“Marry you!” cried Loseis with a burst of clear laughter that flayed him
-raw. “You ugly old man! The husband I have chosen is not like you!”
-
-Gault drew in his breath with a moan of rage; and, careless of the
-danger, began to creep towards her. At that instant a willow branch
-brushed against the girl’s hair. Springing up, Loseis embraced a whole
-mass of the leaves within her arms, and swung herself out. Under the
-violent propulsion of her body, the narrow craft rolled over in a
-twinkling, and Gault was precipitated into the water.
-
-Loseis sank into the icy water up to her neck, and hung there, dangling
-from her branches. For a moment there was silence; then Gault’s head
-emerged from the river, and the night was shattered by a roar for help.
-Loseis saw him seize the canoe, and knew that he was in no danger of
-drowning. He was no more than twenty feet from her, but drifting away on
-the current.
-
-Loseis worked her way along her slender branches, to thicker branches,
-and finally gained a footing on firm ground. Gault, drifting downstream
-continued to roar for help. Making her way across the flat below the
-Post, Loseis met Moale, and the Crees running in response to their
-master’s cries. The Slavi village was in an uproar.
-
-“Gault is in the river,” said Loseis coolly. “He’s in no danger. Get
-canoes and go after him.”
-
-Reaching her own house Loseis found the terror-stricken girls huddled in
-a group. At the sight of her drenched clothing, Mary-Lou clasped her
-hands tragically.
-
-“What has happened?” she gasped.
-
-Loseis did not answer her immediately, but only leaned back against the
-door with widening eyes. For suddenly she had realized what _had_
-happened, and was appalled by the certain consequences. She alone there
-with that pack of terrified girls!
-
-“Bar the door,” she said. “Shutter the windows. We’ll have to stand a
-siege now! . . . No, wait!” she cried as they moved to obey her. “We
-must have weapons. The men won’t be back for half an hour. I’ll fetch
-guns from the store!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
- CONTRABAND
-
-
-All night long Loseis and her girls listened in trepidation, but none
-approached their house. In the morning, Loseis, disdaining to remain
-under cover any longer, sallied out of the house to find Gault, and have
-it out with him. Anything was better than uncertainty.
-
-The trader was at breakfast in the kitchen of the men’s house. Seeing
-Loseis at the door, he rose quickly, showing a smooth, composed face,
-but with eyes as hard as agate. “Good morning,” he said with extreme
-politeness; “I trust that you received no hurt from your ducking last
-night. I was coming over directly to inquire. How inexcusably careless
-of me! I shall never forgive myself!”
-
-Loseis waved all this aside. “I should like a few words with you,” she
-said as politely as he.
-
-“Please come in,” said Gault. He indicated the inner room.
-
-“I would be glad if you would step outside,” said Loseis.
-
-“Certainly!”
-
-They walked away from the door, followed by the sharp, secret glances of
-the Crees. Gault rubbed his upper lip. Under the mask he wore, an
-uneasiness made itself felt. Certainly he had not expected Loseis to
-look him up, nor could he guess what was coming.
-
-She wasted no words in coming to the point. “When you heard of my
-father’s death you hastened over here to help me, you said. If your
-intentions were good, I thank you.”
-
-“Do you doubt it?” asked Gault sharply.
-
-She spread out her hands. “What difference does that make now? Whether
-you wished to help me or not it would be impossible under the present
-circumstances.” She paused for a moment. It required a strong nerve to
-say this to Andrew Gault. “I must therefore ask you to leave the Post as
-soon as possible.”
-
-There was a silence. Gault stared at her incredulously. In spite of his
-iron self-control a blackish flush spread under his skin. Infernal
-passions were raging under his mask. But he fought them down. He said
-nothing. He fell back a step, that Loseis could not see his face without
-turning squarely around.
-
-“Well?” she said sharply. “Have you nothing to say?”
-
-“What is there to say?” he murmured.
-
-“You could refuse to go,” said Loseis proudly. “If you refused to go, of
-course I could not make you.”
-
-“I could not refuse,” said Gault with a sort of hollow reverberation of
-his usual full and courteous tones. “You put me in an extraordinarily
-difficult position. I do not think you should be left alone here; but of
-course I cannot stay.”
-
-“I shall manage very well,” said Loseis.
-
-“I am sorry you think so badly of me,” said Gault.
-
-“Oh, I shall not think badly of you, if you will only leave me alone,”
-said Loseis quickly. “I shall always be grateful to you!”
-
-Silence again. Gault literally ground his teeth. After awhile he was
-able to say: “You are mixing up two things together.”
-
-“You are mistaken,” said Loseis. “The two things are quite separate in
-my mind. I have had all night to think them over.”
-
-“Do you wish me to leave Mr. Moale here to assist you?” he asked.
-
-“No, thank you,” said Loseis firmly. “Furthermore, I should be greatly
-obliged if you would carry Etzooah back with you.”
-
-For the fraction of a second the flames broke through Gault’s mask.
-“Suppose you needed a messenger!” he cried.
-
-“I should not choose Etzooah to be my messenger,” said Loseis quietly.
-
-He quickly controlled himself. “Very well,” he said; “we will be off as
-soon as we can get our traps together. Say to-morrow morning.”
-
-“Oh, suit your convenience, of course,” said Loseis politely.
-
-Gault’s expression changed. His hard eyes turned askance on the girl.
-“Upon consideration,” he said, more smoothly than before, “I am sure we
-will be able to get away late this afternoon. We can make our first camp
-up on the prairie, where we will at least be out of your sight.”
-
-Loseis bowed; and they parted out in the middle of the little square.
-
-When Gault re-entered the kitchen of the men’s house, he did not speak.
-The expression on his face was frightful to see. One by one the Crees,
-making believe to have noticed nothing amiss, slipped outside. Even
-Moale did not care to face that look. He sauntered out after the others.
-Gault sat down as if to finish his meal; but he touched no food. He
-merely sat there with his hands on the edge of the table and his head
-lowered, thinking; thinking.
-
-Finally he rose; and going into Blackburn’s room, coolly produced a key,
-with which he opened a wall cupboard. From it he took an earthenware
-jug, one of several on the shelves; and locking up the cupboard, carried
-the jug back to the kitchen table. Removing the cork, he smelled of the
-contents, but did not taste. It was a known thing in the country that
-Gault was not a drinking man. He called out to have Etzooah sent to him.
-
-When the grinning Indian stood before him, Gault said curtly: “This
-afternoon, just before supper time, I shall be starting away from here.
-You are to come with me.”
-
-Etzooah nodded.
-
-“Etzooah,” the trader continued, fixing his burning glance on the man,
-“do the Slavis know the taste of whisky?”
-
-“Wah!” said the Indian, showing his blackened teeth; “Tatateecha know
-it. And some of the old men. Twenty-five years ago there was a party of
-Klondikers went down this river. They had whisky. They hand it round.
-Blackburn had whisky too, but he did not give the people any.”
-
-“Can you teach the younger men to drink it?” asked Gault with an ugly
-smile.
-
-“Wah!” said Etzooah, with his silent laugh. “No need teach! All know
-what whisky is. The story of the white man’s stomach-warming medicine is
-often told over the fire.”
-
-“Good!” said Gault. “When we leave here to-day, you may take them that
-jug of Blackburn’s whisky. Let it be carried out of the house with the
-other things when we are packing up. Just before we start, you may go
-down behind the house, that the white women may not see you, and give it
-to Mahtsonza for all. Do not tell them that I sent it. Say that you
-found it in Blackburn’s room, and I never missed it, because I am not a
-whisky-drinker.” Gault leaned across the table, and lowered his voice.
-“And tell them as if not meaning anything by it, that there are four
-more jugs in the little cupboard on the wall of Blackburn’s room.”
-
-“All right,” said Etzooah, grinning still. “What if there is trouble
-after?”
-
-“I’ll take care of that,” said Gault coolly. He had recovered his
-self-control.
-
-“All right. All right,” said Etzooah.
-
- * * * * *
-
-During the course of the day, Loseis cast many an anxious glance across
-the way. Certain obvious preparations for departure were immediately set
-under way; the pole on the roof was taken down, and the wire rolled up
-on spools; the pack-horses which had been turned out in the meadow
-across the creek, were rounded up, and driven into the corral attached
-to Blackburn’s stable. So much done, Gault could have left within an
-hour had he chosen, but a long time passed before any further move was
-made.
-
-Finally, towards the end of the afternoon, the Crees began to carry
-their bedding rolls out of the kitchen. The horses were led out and
-saddled, their packs adjusted, and the hitches thrown. By five o’clock
-all was ready for the start. After another wait, Gault came marching
-over to the Women’s House. Loseis met him at the door.
-
-Exhibiting his finest manner, he smiled politely. “I know this must be
-disagreeable to you,” he said, “but I thought it better to keep up
-appearances before my servants and yours. I have come to say good-by.”
-
-“I was expecting you,” said Loseis. “I wish to return the various gifts
-which you . . .”
-
-“Oh, no!” said Gault sharply. “Do not put that slight upon me before
-these redskins. Surely you have done enough. . . .”
-
-“Oh,” said Loseis, “if you feel that way about it, it does not matter,
-of course.”
-
-He immediately recovered himself. “Let us appear to take a friendly
-good-by of each other.”
-
-“Surely,” said Loseis. “Perhaps you will take a letter out for me? I
-understand that the mail is carried from Fort Good Hope every month.”
-
-“Charmed!” said Gault.
-
-She gave him the letter which had been written during the afternoon. It
-was addressed to Gruber at the Crossing. She realized that if the first
-letters had not been sent out, this one would hardly be allowed to go;
-still, it was a chance that must not be neglected.
-
-Gault, standing hat in hand, said with his polite smile: “I shall give
-myself the pleasure of sending over from time to time, until assistance
-reaches you from the outside. Though you repudiate it, I still feel
-responsible for you.”
-
-Loseis smiled back—a little quizzically. Is it worth it? her smile
-said.
-
-“Good-by,” said Gault, putting out his hand.
-
-“Good-by,” said Loseis, letting hers lie within it.
-
-He strode back to his waiting party, and swung himself into the saddle.
-The Crees cried to the pack-horses, and all set off briskly out of the
-inclosure, disappearing behind the store. Presently they were to be seen
-on the trail above, trotting up the incline; smart, well-found,
-arrogant, modeled upon the style of the old Company. Loseis breathed
-more freely. To be sure, they were not gone yet, for Gault had said they
-would camp for the night on the edge of the prairie. She was not in the
-least deceived by his politeness. There would be another night of
-anxiety to face, but not so keen as the previous night; for the violence
-of his rage must have abated somewhat. Loseis realized that she had not
-so much to fear from violence now, as from the man’s cold craft.
-
-She went into her house. The supper was waiting. The thoughtless red
-girls, thinking only that Gault was gone, were all smiles. Loseis had
-Mary-Lou to sit down with her at table, in the effort to keep at bay
-that ghastly feeling of solitude that crept over her like the coming of
-night. Alone! Alone! Alone! And so long before she could hope for
-succor! She gave the girls a highly comic account of Gault’s proposal
-the night before, laughing loudly herself. Anything to keep the bogies
-at bay!
-
-It was about an hour afterwards when they first began to realize that
-something was amiss in the Slavi village. There was an ungodly sound of
-singing going on. The Slavis frequently made the twilight hours hideous
-with their wordless chanting. Loseis was accustomed to it. To-night it
-was different; it had an insane ring; they were burlesquing their own
-performance, and screaming with laughter. It was significant too, that
-the voices of the women were not to be heard. Loseis scarcely knew what
-drunkenness meant, or she would have understood sooner.
-
-She went to the little window at the end of the room which overlooked
-the river flat. Though it was eight o’clock the sun had not yet dropped
-out of sight. All the Slavi men were gathered in a rough circle around a
-fire on the creek bank. There was no order in the company; some lay
-about; some danced with extravagant gestures. The ordinary dance of the
-Slavis was a decorous shuffle. The women were nowhere to be seen. Every
-moment the scene became more confused, and the yelling louder.
-
-Leaving the window, Loseis said: “I am going down to see what is the
-matter.”
-
-Mary-Lou flung herself upon her mistress: “No! No! No!” she cried in
-despair.
-
-Loseis was very pale. She firmly detached the clinging hands. “There is
-nothing else to be done,” she said simply. “If I do not notice this, my
-influence over them is gone!”
-
-Loseis went sedately down the grassy rise, neither hurrying, nor hanging
-back. Her back was straight; her face composed. Her look of proud scorn
-lent a strange poignancy to her childishness. Her heart might have been
-fluttering like a frightened child’s, but nobody could have guessed it.
-Mary-Lou, seeing her face, wept aloud, without knowing what it was that
-had moved her so.
-
-As Loseis came near, the Slavis around the fire fell quiet and still.
-Only one of them jumped up, and ran away, carrying something. Loseis
-recognized the figure of Mahtsonza. He ran across the stepping-stones of
-the creek, and climbed up the further bank. The rest of them were
-orderly enough now: but their drunken, swimming eyes and hanging mouths
-told a tale.
-
-Loseis stepped into the middle of the circle. “What means this howling
-that beats against my ears?” she demanded. “Are your brains full of ice?
-(The Slavi phrase for insanity.) Is this a pack of coyotes or men?”
-
-None answered her. They merely looked stupid.
-
-Mahtsonza, a furlong off by this time, and feeling himself safe, turned
-around exhibiting the earthenware jug. He insolently turned it up to his
-lips.
-
-Loseis recognized the style of the jug. Her heart sank at the young
-man’s act of open defiance; but no muscle of her face changed. “Now I
-understand,” she said coldly. “Blackburn’s whisky has been stolen.”
-
-“No steal,” muttered the man called Ahchoogah. “It was a gift.”
-
-“Who gave it?” demanded Loseis.
-
-There was no answer.
-
-Loseis stepped to the nearest tepee, and stuck her head through the
-opening. Within, a crowd of dejected women and children, crouched around
-a tiny fire on the ground.
-
-“Where did they get it?” demanded Loseis.
-
-A voice answered: “Etzooah brought it.”
-
-All was clear to Loseis. She sickened with disgust that a man big and
-powerful as Gault could stoop to so cowardly a trick.
-
-Returning to the men she said in a voice of scorn: “Call Mahtsonza back.
-Drink what is left. Drink until you lie like rotten logs! When you
-return to yourselves you shall be punished!”
-
-By this she meant that a fine would be entered against each man’s name
-on the books. Letting her eyes sweep around the circle as if to fix each
-face in her memory, she stepped out of the circle, and returned to her
-house without looking back.
-
-The moment the door closed after her, the yelling broke out again, now
-with a clear note of defiance and derision. They wished her to
-understand that though they could not face out her strong glance, behind
-her back they spat at her. Looking out of the end window she could see
-them capering about, indulging like children in an outrageous pantomime
-of derision directed towards her house. Loseis quickly turned away. It
-was a bitter, bitter dose for her pride to swallow. “They should be
-whipped! They should be whipped!” she said, with the tears of anger
-springing to her eyes.
-
-However, she felt a little better when she reflected that there was only
-one gallon of whisky between about forty men. It was only because they
-were totally unused to the stuff that it had affected them as quickly
-and so violently. The effect could not last long.
-
-As on a former occasion at the suggestion of danger, Loseis found that
-the three Slavi girls had quietly vanished. “Let them go!” she said
-shrugging. “They would only be in our way.”
-
-Loseis determined that she and Mary-Lou should sleep in the store. As
-long as she could keep them out of the store, she held the whip hand.
-When the two of them appeared outside the house, carrying their beds
-across the square, jeers and yells greeted them from below. Mary-Lou’s
-coppery cheeks turned grayish with fear; but Loseis’ chin went higher.
-
-“Cowardly dogs!” she said. “If I went down there, their voices would dry
-up in their throats.”
-
-As soon as it began to grow dark, she set the lighted lamp in the window
-of the store, to remind the Slavis that she was on guard.
-
-Shortly afterwards the whole gang swept up into the little square within
-the buildings. They all carried branches and sticks; one or two had
-lighted brands from the fire below. Yelling and capering like demons,
-they piled their fuel in the center of the space, and set fire to it. In
-a few seconds the flames were leaping high, illuminating every corner of
-the square, and throwing the fantastic leaping shadows of the savages
-against the house fronts. Through the little window of the store, Loseis
-watched them with a stony face. To bring their orgy within the very
-confines of the Post! A hideous chill struck into her breast. If they
-dared so far, what might they not dare!
-
-Soon, like the savages they were, they lost interest in their bonfire.
-The noise quieted down somewhat. Loseis ventured to hope that the effect
-of the spirit might be beginning to wear off. The jug was not visible.
-Presently she noticed that their attention was concentrated on her
-father’s house. Some of them were nosing around it like animals; others
-stood senselessly trying to peer through the dark panes; near the door a
-man was haranguing his fellows, waving his hand towards the house,
-Loseis could not hear his words.
-
-The crowd around the door increased. Finally one ventured to put his
-hand on the latch. The door was not locked. It swung inward, and all the
-Slavis fell backward in affright. The same man who had opened the door,
-crept back on all fours, and sticking his head inside, uttered a
-senseless yell. The others shrieked with laughter. Still, they dared not
-venture in. They gathered together in a close body outside the door, and
-the sound of their jabbering reached Loseis faintly. Suddenly those at
-the back began to push, and the first ones were thrust inside. Instantly
-they all swept in. With a sickness of the heart, Loseis saw one run back
-to the fire, and snatch up a pine branch with a burning end.
-
-The girl groaned. It affected her like an act of sacrilege. Blackburn
-was indeed dead when these miserable savages feared not to overrun his
-house. She expected to see his private papers scattered out of the door;
-she waited for the house to burst into flames.
-
-However, destruction was not their present aim. They reappeared almost
-immediately, yelling in triumph. He who came first held another jug
-aloft; and others followed; Loseis counted: two . . . three . . . four!
-Her chin went down on her breast. Well . . . this is the end, she
-thought.
-
-Mary-Lou had seen, too. “Quick! we must go!” she gasped. “They will kill
-now! Quick! through the little window at the back!”
-
-Loseis slowly shook her head. “No! You can go. I stay. As long as I am
-here they will not dare to enter the store.”
-
-“Look! Look!” cried Mary-Lou. “What they care now? They will kill you!”
-
-“Maybe,” said Loseis somberly; “but I will not run from Slavis. You go.”
-
-Mary-Lou dropped to her knees, and hid her face in Loseis’ skirt. “No!
-No!” she whispered. “I never leave you.”
-
-Pandemonium had broken loose outside. Some had rifled Blackburn’s wood
-pile; and armful after armful of fresh fuel was thrown on the fire. The
-Slavis took leave of what little humanity they had. The jugs were
-snatched from hand to hand; tipped up to thirsty mouths; and snatched
-away again. But even in their drunkenness they did not fight amongst
-themselves. The fighting instinct was absent in this degenerate people.
-It was an ugly thing to see the miserable little creatures, born under
-the shadow of fear, and obliged to cringe to all men, now released of
-their fears by whisky. They expressed their freedom by throwing their
-heads back and howling like dogs; and by dancing around the fire with
-legs and arms all abroad like jumping-jacks. The great, round moon,
-rising a little higher to-night, looked down on this scene with her
-accustomed serenity.
-
-Finally they began to turn their attention to the store. At first they
-did not dare to approach; but one or another would hide behind his
-fellows and squall derisively in the direction of Loseis. The others
-would laugh in the childish way of savages. These were merely animal
-cries, without words. Later Loseis began to hear the word Burn! cried
-from one to another. She shivered internally. Meanwhile the jugs were
-still circulating, rousing them to a pitch of frenzy.
-
-At last a man snatched up a stick with a burning end. Instantly a dozen
-others followed his example. Loseis knocked out a pane of glass with her
-elbow; and put the barrel of her gun through the hole.
-
-But the Slavis never reached the store. Something caused them to freeze
-where they stood. The whole mad, shifting scene suddenly became fixed
-like a picture. Then they dropped their torches and fled; vanishing in
-the silent manner peculiar to themselves. You could scarcely see how it
-happened; you looked again, and they were not there. A moment or two
-after the sound had reached their ears it came to Loseis within the
-house. It was the distant pounding of many hoofs on the trail.
-
-When Gault and his men rode into the little square, Loseis was standing
-at the open door of the store. She still had the gun over her arm. Gault
-flung himself off his horse.
-
-“Good God! what has happened?” he cried. “I heard the racket clear to my
-camp, and jumped on my horse. Are you hurt?”
-
-Loseis slowly shook her head.
-
-“Is any damage done?”
-
-Loseis indicated the empty jugs lying scattered about. “None; except
-that my father’s whisky has been drunk up,” she said dryly.
-
-“My God!” cried Gault. “The brutes! I hated to leave you this afternoon,
-but I didn’t expect to see my fears materialize this way. Now you see,
-don’t you, that I was right. You cannot be left here alone.”
-
-Loseis did not speak. She looked at him steadily, her lips curving in a
-slow smile of scorn. She was thinking: Let him babble! It only makes him
-out a fool. I shall not tell him all I know. To keep silence gives me a
-power over him.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
- A MEETING
-
-
-Alongside a vast inland sea whose further shores were lost under the
-horizon, a tall young white man was cooking his supper in the open. The
-meal was going to be better than usual, for, having been camped in the
-same spot for a week, he had been able to secure game. On a spit before
-an ingeniously constructed fireplace of stones, a wild goose was
-roasting. The young man turned the spit, and basted his fowl. He kept
-the wooden spit from catching fire by the simple expedient of basting
-that also. At a little distance two Indians looked on with covert scorn
-at their master’s elaborate arrangements. What a lot of trouble to take
-to eat! They had been content to impale their goose for awhile on a
-stick inclined over the fire; whence they snatched it scorched on one
-side and raw on the other.
-
-The young man, while taking an innocent pleasure in his own ingenuity,
-was thinking how unsatisfactory it was to cook your own dinner. When it
-first began to sizzle you became weak with hunger; but the continued
-spectacle took the fine edge off your appetite long before the meat was
-done.
-
-A dug-out nosed its slender length around a near point, and a shrill
-hail electrified them all.
-
-“Conacher, thank God!” cried the young man.
-
-The two Indians ran down to the water’s edge; but their master would not
-leave his goose which was browning beautifully.
-
-From the dug-out landed an exactly similar outfit; that is to say a tall
-young white man and two Indians. The two white men clasped hands, and
-their eyes beamed on each other. However, they were shy of betraying
-emotion before the reds, and their greeting was distinctly casual.
-
-“Hello, old bean! Where the hell you been? The boss has gone down the
-lake, leaving me to fetch you. Do you know that you’ve held up the whole
-blooming survey?”
-
-“It’s a long story,” said Conacher. “Oh boy! is that a roast goose I
-see? Let me get my teeth into it, and then I’ll tell you.”
-
-When they had thoroughly discussed the goose, they lighted their pipes;
-and Alec Jordan invited Conacher to fire away. Jordan was about three
-years older than Conacher; and they were tried friends. The Indians
-around their own fire, were out of earshot.
-
-“What delayed you?” said Jordan. “It was downstream work all the way.”
-
-“Gad! it’s good to have a white man to talk to!” said Conacher. “I’m
-damn thankful it’s you, old scout. I couldn’t have told the others.”
-
-“But why this emotion?” asked Jordan humorously.
-
-“Well, it concerns a woman,” said Conacher, looking away.
-
-His friend’s face hardened. “An Indian?” he asked.
-
-“No, damn you!” cried Conacher indignantly. “What do you think I am?”
-
-Jordan opened his eyes. “But between here and the Rocky Mountains,” he
-said, “around Blackburn’s Lake, and down Blackburn’s River, what else is
-there?”
-
-“There is Blackburn’s daughter?” murmured Conacher.
-
-“Oho!” cried Jordan. “I forgot about her. . . . Indeed, I thought she
-was still a little girl.”
-
-“Don’t josh it!” muttered Conacher. “This is the real thing.”
-
-“I’m sorry, old man,” said Jordan, touching his shoulder.
-
-“Blackburn is dead,” said Conacher.
-
-“I knew it,” said Jordan. “The boss knew it, too. But it never occurred
-to us to connect your delay with his death. We figured you would have
-been past his Post before the date of his death.”
-
-“I was,” said Conacher. “But I went back.”
-
-He went on to tell the whole story; how he had first come to Blackburn’s
-Post, of the trader’s ungracious reception and the daughter’s scornful
-one; how he had gone on down the river; how the little raft had come
-floating by his camp with the pathetic black streamer; and how, yielding
-to an impulse that he had scarcely understood, he had hastened
-up-stream. He ended his story with the coming of Andrew Gault to
-Blackburn’s Post.
-
-“I could leave her then with an easier mind,” he said. “Gault knew
-everything to do.”
-
-“Sure,” said Jordan; but in so uncertain a tone, that Conacher asked him
-sharply:
-
-“What’s the matter?”
-
-Jordan looked at him queerly; and the lover’s anxious heart was filled
-with alarm.
-
-“What are you keeping back?” he demanded.
-
-“I don’t know as I ought to tell you,” said Jordan slowly.
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“It’s just gossip. We’ve got our work to do.”
-
-“Do you put me or our work first?” demanded Conacher.
-
-“Well, since you put it that way, you!” said Jordan.
-
-“Then tell me.”
-
-“But what can you do, now?”
-
-“Never mind. You tell me, and I’ll make up my mind what I can do. I’m a
-grown man.”
-
-“Well,” said Jordan, “when you told me that Gault had come to the aid of
-Blackburn’s daughter I couldn’t help but think it was like the wolf
-coming to save the lamb.”
-
-“Yes, I know,” said Conacher impatiently, “something of that sort
-occurred to me, but hang it all! no white man could be blackguard enough
-to take advantage of a young girl in that situation!”
-
-Jordan smiled affectionately at his friend. “You’re young, my son,” he
-murmured. “I don’t know as I would put it by Gault. . . . I suppose
-you’ve never heard the full story of Blackburn and Gault?”
-
-“No, how should I?” said Conacher. “Coming from the mountains.”
-
-“True, this is your first season. I’ve been in the country three
-summers, and I’ve picked up all the gossip. It’s one of the stock
-stories of the country how Blackburn and Gault have been fighting each
-other for twenty years, and Blackburn has beaten out Gault at every
-turn. Gault had to obtain financial assistance outside. But here’s a new
-piece of information that came to me pretty straight. Nothing can be
-hidden in this country. It seems that Ogilvie, Gault’s backer, told
-Gault on his last visit to Fort Good Hope that the Company would fire
-him if he didn’t succeed in putting Blackburn out of business.”
-
-Conacher’s face darkened with anxiety. “I wish I had known that!” he
-muttered. “How did you hear of Blackburn’s death?”
-
-“Yesterday, before the boss pulled out, we got mail from Good Hope by
-the half-breed Modest Capeau. When he left the fort the news of
-Blackburn’s death had come; and Gault had gone over there. . . .” Jordan
-hesitated, with an embarrassed glance at his friend.
-
-“Well, out with it!” said Conacher sharply.
-
-Jordan shrugged. “According to the gossip at Fort Good Hope, Gault said
-that he was going to marry the girl.”
-
-Conacher jumped up. “Oh, my God!” he cried agitatedly. “That old man!
-What the devil will I do!”
-
-Jordan followed him. “How about the girl?” he asked.
-
-“She loves me, Alec,” said Conacher simply.
-
-Jordan gripped his shoulder. “Old fellow . . . you deserve to be happy!”
-he said warmly.
-
-“Happy!” cried Conacher bitterly. “I never should have left her!”
-
-“But you had to leave her.”
-
-“Oh hell, what does the government matter in a case like this. . . .
-Wait a minute. I must try to think this out. How far can you trust this
-gossip?”
-
-“Well I’m bound to say this is more than common gossip,” admitted
-Jordan. “It was Joe Moale, the man closest to Gault, who told the
-fellows he had heard Gault swear that he would marry the girl. . . . But
-she won’t have him, of course. No doubt everything will be all right.”
-
-“Oh, God! don’t try to smooth things down!” cried Conacher. “She is
-completely in his power. The only Indian who could speak English was
-murdered . . . Of course she’ll reject him! And then what? Then what?
-Oh, my God! think of the girl being left in the power of the man she had
-turned down! . . . I never should have left her. But how could I stay
-with all you waiting for me? . . . Well, it’s different now. I’ve done
-the bit of work that was entrusted to me. I can put all the data in your
-hands. After this they can get along without me if they have to. . . .”
-
-“My God! Paul, what are you talking about?”
-
-“I’m going back,” said Conacher quietly.
-
-“You _can’t_ go back! Think of the row that would be kicked up!”
-
-“I’ll have to face it.”
-
-“You’ll lose your job. Where will you get another?”
-
-“It’s true, nobody wants a geologist but the government. But I’m young;
-I’ll make out somehow.”
-
-“Oh, my God! this is terrible!” cried Jordan. “We’re so shorthanded
-already!”
-
-“Do you blame me?” demanded Conacher.
-
-Jordan’s expression changed. “No, I don’t blame you, really,” he said.
-“Go on back, and God bless you! . . . But it’s me that’s got to face the
-boss. You know what he is. At the first mention of a girl he will think
-the worst. He’s depending on your Indians, too.”
-
-“Take them,” said Conacher. “Your dug-out is big enough to carry all
-five. I couldn’t pay them anyhow. All I want of the government is enough
-grub to see me through.”
-
-“It’s foolhardy to travel alone!” cried Jordan.
-
-“That’s all right,” said Conacher. “I’m not going to break a leg this
-trip. I can’t afford to. The only thing that bothers me is, it’s all
-up-stream work. I can’t make but twenty miles a day.”
-
-“I wish it was me,” said Jordan enviously.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
- FUR
-
-
-Quite early in the morning, Loseis, issuing out of her house, was
-greatly astonished to see the door of the little fur warehouse standing
-open, and the bales of fur being carried out by Gault’s Crees. This
-warehouse flanked the store on the left hand side as you faced the
-river; on the other side there was a similar building for the storage of
-flour. Loseis’ breast grew hot at the sight; and without more ado, she
-marched across. Gault was not in sight; Moale was directing the Crees.
-
-“What does this mean?” demanded Loseis.
-
-Moale turned his flat, inscrutable black eyes to the girl’s face. The
-dash of Indian blood lent a touch of mystery to Moale’s olive face. It
-was a comely face; but so expressionless it was impossible to tell the
-man’s age. “I beg your pardon?” he said in his pleasant voice.
-
-“You heard me!” said Loseis in a passion. “By what authority have you
-broken into my warehouse, and helped yourself to my fur?”
-
-It was quite true that Moale had opened one of the bales for no reason
-except the pleasure of seeing and stroking the marvelous pelts of the
-black foxes. He was a connoisseur. He said smoothly: “Mr. Gault’s
-orders, Miss. I thought you knew.”
-
-“I did not know,” said Loseis, “and I will trouble you to have the fur
-carried back again, and the door locked.”
-
-Moale scratched his head. “I’d be glad if you’d talk it over with Mr.
-Gault,” he said.
-
-Loseis imperiously beckoned to the nearest Cree. “Man!” she said, “tell
-Gault that I would be glad to have a few words with him.”
-
-While they waited for Gault, Moale busied himself with tying up the
-opened bale. He did not speak; but he looked at Loseis curiously and
-wistfully, when she was not aware of it.
-
-Gault was presently to be seen approaching from the men’s house. He did
-not hurry himself. “Good morning,” he said, raising his hat. His manner
-had changed. He was still polite, but it was an insolent politeness. His
-eyes were as hard as glass.
-
-Loseis welcomed the change. It permitted her to come out into the open.
-“Why did you give orders to get out my fur?” she asked.
-
-“It must be sent outside without further delay,” said Gault coolly.
-
-“Am I not to be consulted?” asked Loseis, running up her eye-brows.
-
-“It did not seem worth while to do so,” said Gault. “You have set
-yourself in opposition to me at every point. Just the same I have a
-responsibility towards you that I am obliged to fulfill.”
-
-“I am the mistress here,” said Loseis in a rage.
-
-“You are not of age,” said Gault coolly.
-
-“Well, you are not my guardian!”
-
-“No. But whoever may take your affairs in charge, will look to me as the
-only man on the spot, for an accounting. If the fur is not sent out at
-once you would lose the market for an entire season.”
-
-Loseis turned away biting her lip. Whenever he began to talk in this
-vein with glib use of legal and business terms, she was helpless. Her
-instinct told her that he was merely cloaking his evil intentions in
-smooth words, but she had not experience enough to be able to strike
-through to the truth.
-
-“Besides,” Gault went on, “if we do not get the fur to the Crossing,
-Gruber will get tired of waiting for it.”
-
-Loseis caught at this. “So,” she said, “you are sending it to Gruber,
-then?”
-
-“I expect to,” said Gault cautiously, “but I must reserve myself full
-freedom of action. He has got to satisfy me that he can dispose of it to
-the best advantage of your interests.”
-
-“When does it go?” asked Loseis.
-
-“To-morrow morning.”
-
-“By the usual route?”
-
-“No. I am sending it to Fort Good Hope; and thence by my launch to the
-Crossing.”
-
-Loseis felt that here was a point she could stick on. “I would rather
-have it go by pack train as usual, direct to the Crossing over the
-prairie,” she said.
-
-“That would take two weeks longer.”
-
-“Just the same, I request you to send it in that manner.”
-
-“I must decline.”
-
-The red flags flew in Loseis’ cheeks. “You have said that it was my
-fur,” she said. “Very well, I order you to send it out as I desire.”
-
-Gault, cool and hard; frankly enjoying the spectacle of her anger, said:
-“And I decline to do so.”
-
-Loseis observing that she was furnishing him with enjoyment, contrived
-by a miracle to control herself. “Thank you very much,” she said coolly.
-“I was just trying to find out where I stood. Shall you accompany the
-consignment?”
-
-“No,” said Gault darkly, “I remain here to look after you.”
-
-Loseis bowed, and marched back to her own house. Gault looked after her,
-rubbing his lip. His thin mouth was twisted with anger and bitterness.
-By God! there was a spirit in the girl! Never had she seemed so
-desirable to him as at that moment. Moale too, looked after her with a
-deep wistfulness in his mysterious eyes. The tang of red blood cut him
-off from any hopes in that direction.
-
-Loseis put her feet down like a little princess; but her eyes were
-stinging with tears. She conducted an orderly retreat, while her heart
-was bursting with mortification. It was intolerable to be so proud and
-so helpless. Helpless! Helpless! Her sex, her loneliness, her ignorance
-delivered her three times over into the power of this man. She was
-certain now that he intended to rob her, and she could do nothing!
-
-During the whole day the preparations went on. The pack-saddles were got
-out; and the fur was divided into lots of a suitable size for a horse
-load. Gault sent Moale to the Women’s House with a polite message
-requesting Loseis to come to the store to issue the necessary grub. She
-proudly handed over the key, telling them to take what they required,
-and leave a memorandum of it.
-
-In the afternoon the horses were rounded up. As many were put into the
-corral as it would hold, and the rest picketed in the square. Upwards of
-seventy horses were required for the entire outfit. To make any sort of
-progress between twelve and fifteen men would be needed to pack and
-unpack the horses twice a day. Moale and two of the Crees were going,
-while the other two remained to wait upon Gault. Loseis observed that
-Ahchoogah, Mittahgah and others of the Slavis who had accompanied the
-fur train on other years, were working willingly enough with the horses.
-This started a train of thought in her mind.
-
-Gault is too strong for me, she told herself; why shouldn’t I trick him
-if I can?
-
-With the passing of danger, the three Slavi girls had come sidling back
-into the kitchen of the Women’s House, and Loseis indifferently took
-them in, partly because she was accustomed to having them wait on her;
-and partly because they furnished a useful link with the Slavi village
-below. She now called Mary-Belle to her.
-
-“Can it be true,” she asked, “that Ahchoogah, Mittahgah, and other men
-are going to Fort Good Hope? That place is dangerous for Slavi men.”
-
-“Wah! they would not go to that place!” said Mary-Belle with a look of
-terror. “There is bad medicine in that place! Gault has said if they
-will drive the horses as far as the red spring, the water of which makes
-men and horses sick and well again, he will give each man a Stetson hat
-and a mouth-organ. Blackburn never had mouth-organs in his store. The
-red spring is half way between the two rivers. Gault says for the Slavis
-to leave the horses there and come home. Musqua (one of the Crees) is
-riding fast to bring the Crees from Fort Good Hope. Moale and Watusk
-(the other Cree) will watch the horses and the fur at the red spring
-until they come. So there is no harm.”
-
-Loseis let the subject drop.
-
-After supper, choosing a moment when she believed that Gault and Moale
-were still at the table, she went over to the store. Fastening the door
-behind her, she climbed through the back window, and making her way down
-to the creek shore, followed it down to the Slavi village. Of course if
-Gault happened to look out of the end window of his house, he could see
-her amongst the Slavis; but then it would be too late to interfere with
-her purpose.
-
-The air was still full of a pleasant warmth, and the Slavis having just
-eaten, were squatting in groups outside the tepees, laughing and
-chatting in their ceremonious way. It is only in the presence of a white
-man that the Indian is taciturn. By this time the men had thrown off the
-alcoholic poison which had made them sick for days, and a general
-feeling of well-being was in the air. Fathers fondled their little sons,
-and abused their womenfolk; and the latter accepted it with equanimity.
-
-At the approach of Loseis a dread silence fell upon them, and they drew
-a walled look over their dark faces. It was the first time she had
-visited them since that terrible night, and they expected the worst. But
-Loseis was bent on playing a part to-night. Her face was as smooth as
-their own, and much blander. Allowing them to suppose that she had
-forgotten what had happened, she addressed this one and that by name
-with grave politeness; promised a mother medicine for her sick child,
-and handed out peppermint lozenges to the little boys who were the idols
-of the tribe. Nobody would have thought of giving the little girls
-candy.
-
-Loseis sat down on an overturned dug-out, with the manner of one who is
-prepared to hold agreeable discourse. The Slavis began to gather round,
-but always with that absurd pretense of not letting their left hands
-know what their right hands were doing. Loseis was very wonderful to
-them, too wonderful to inspire affection; awe was nearer the word.
-
-At first she talked of the stage of water in the river; the promise of a
-full crop of berries; the scarcity of rabbit; all subjects of first-rate
-importance to the Slavis. Ahchoogah, the oldest man present, in order to
-prove how bold he was, undertook to answer her politely to her face.
-When Loseis perceived that she had gathered the audience she wanted, she
-went on casually:
-
-“The wind is from the setting sun. There will be no rain. It is well.
-The men who are going to-morrow will see Fort Good Hope in five sleeps.”
-
-A tremor of uneasiness passed through her listeners. “No, no!” said
-Ahchoogah. “We are not going to Fort Good Hope. At the red spring we
-will turn back.”
-
-“That is Gault’s talk,” said Loseis courteously. “All know that Gault’s
-talk hides a snare. When you get to the red spring you will not want to
-turn back. Gault’s medicine will draw you on. It is very strong
-medicine. It’s name is electricity. I know it, because Gault brought me
-a little piece of it when he came here. The girls at my house have told
-you that. It opens its eye in the dark.”
-
-Loseis paused to allow this to sink in. She fancied that she perceived
-fear behind the blank masks of the Slavis; but could not be sure. None
-spoke.
-
-“I have heard of many strange things at Fort Good Hope,” she went on
-with an air of indifference that the Slavis could not outdo. “Men say
-that Gault is Old Man’s partner. Old Man say to Gault; I lend you my
-strong medicine, but when you die you must be a dog to my sledge. Gault
-thinks he will cheat Old Man, by going away to the white man’s country
-to die. Maybe so. I do not know such things. I hear them told.”
-
-She paused again. The men looked down their noses. A woman crept to
-Loseis’ feet, and twitched her skirt.
-
-“Loseis, tell my son not to go,” she said tremulously.
-
-“If he wants to go, what is that to me?” said Loseis with an air of
-surprise. “He will see strange things. When Gault claps his hands—Wah!
-there is light. Gault catches the voices of the air on his wires and
-brings them into his room. He did that in my father’s house and I made
-him stop, because I did not want the Powerful Ones to fix their eyes on
-me! Etzooah has told you these things. At Fort Good Hope Gault keeps
-great beasts fastened to the earth. They have fire in their bellies and
-they do his bidding. When they open their mouths you can see the fire,
-and steam hisses through their nostrils as from many kettles in one.
-When they are hungry they scream so that a man falls flat on the ground
-to hear it. These fiery beasts eat men too, and Gault is always worried
-because he has no men to spare. So he is glad when strangers come to
-Fort Good Hope.”
-
-Loseis rose, feeling that she could hardly better this conclusion. She
-held out her hand in turn to Ahchoogah, to Mittahgah, to Mahtsonza and
-the others there that she knew were going next day. “Good-by. . . .
-Good-by. You are good hunters. You bring me plenty of fur. I am sorry
-that you go.”
-
-She returned home. It was impossible to tell how the Slavis would react
-next day; but she had done her best.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Early next morning Loseis was at her window. Nothing was changed. The
-horses were still picketed in the square; and the Crees were lounging
-about the doorway of the men’s house. The lordly Crees had no notion of
-bestirring themselves while there were Slavis to do the hard work. By
-and by Gault appeared in the doorway, and with vigorous pantomime of
-anger evidently demanded to know why nothing had been started. He was
-told; whereupon Etzooah was dispatched down to the Slavi village in a
-hurry.
-
-From the other window Loseis watched Etzooah haranguing the Slavis, and
-expostulating with them. It was all in vain. He was finally obliged to
-return cringing to Gault, shrugging, spreading out his hands in
-significant by-play. Gault’s face turned black, and he aimed a furious
-kick at Etzooah, that the wily redskin dodged. Gault went inside; while
-Etzooah slipped around the house. Gault reappeared carrying an ugly
-quirt. Summoning his Crees with a jerk of the head, he set off down the
-rise. The tall redskins followed with cruel grins of anticipation.
-
-Back at the end window, Loseis saw the miserable little Slavis driven
-like sheep by the five tall men. But sheep were never used so brutally.
-The sneaking Etzooah, reappearing from the creek-bed, pointed out the
-wanted ones, who were driven up the rise with incontinent kicks and
-cuffs, and the furious lashing of the whip. Squeezing their bodies
-together to offer as small a mark as possible, the diminutive savages
-darted this way and that, to find that they could only escape punishment
-by running straight ahead. The Crees yelled with laughter. The Slavis,
-cowering, made haste to start packing the horses, and Loseis made up her
-mind that she had lost.
-
-Oscillating between the two windows, she presently saw that the Slavis
-below were striking their tepees, and piling everything pell-mell into
-the canoes, and she took heart again. She knew the Slavis better than
-Gault did. Either Gault did not notice what the people were about, or he
-disdained them. There was no interference with them. They presently set
-off in a cloud up-river, paddling as if the devil were behind them. So
-precipitate was their departure that a small boy who had gone down
-amongst the willows to set muskrat snares, returned to find his village
-wiped off the flat. After prowling around to see if by chance any scraps
-of food had been overlooked, the child set off composedly up-river by
-the horse-track.
-
-Soon afterwards Loseis perceived that Gault was having trouble with his
-gang. In the process of saddling the pack-horses, some of the Slavis had
-disappeared. The four Crees were sent off in different directions to
-round them up. This was a fatal move, because Gault and Moale could not
-possibly watch all the others, and Etzooah would always play double. The
-Slavis, on their part, have an uncanny faculty of choosing the moment
-when no eye is upon them to fade away silently: to slip behind a
-building, to roll down the creek bank, to lose themselves in the bush of
-the hillside. In spite of Gault’s whip, and his terrible voice, his crew
-literally melted away before his eyes. After making long detours, they
-would rejoin their people somewhere above. Even weakness is not without
-its resources.
-
-When the Crees returned empty-handed, the Slavis were reduced to five.
-These were all but surrounded; nevertheless, it was presently discovered
-that there were but four, without anybody being able to say what had
-become of the fifth. In any case it would have been impossible for such
-a small number of men to pack and unpack seventy horses twice a day.
-Gault gave up. The remaining Slavis were dismissed with kicks, and the
-trader, doubtless in a hellish rage, strode back to his house. Near the
-door, the grinning Etzooah spoke to him. For an instant Gault showed a
-murderous face in Loseis’ direction; then went inside. Loseis
-experienced a feeling of the sweetest triumph.
-
-However, within an hour, two of the Crees with their bedding and grub
-set off on the easterly trail, and her heart sunk again. In four or five
-days they would be back with a swarm of Crees from Fort Good Hope. What
-good would four days do her? She had only succeeded in prolonging the
-agony.
-
-Seeing the last of their people disappear, the Slavi girls exhibited the
-frantic, unreasoning fear of half-broken horses deserted by the herd.
-Loseis scornfully let them go. They slipped around behind the Women’s
-House, and were not seen again.
-
-The pack-horses had been turned out again; and the fur carried back into
-the little warehouse. The lock of the warehouse had been forced out of
-respect to Gault’s pretense that the key was sealed up in Blackburn’s
-desk, and no other lock was put on. The door was held shut by a propped
-pole.
-
-Meanwhile Gault had not returned the key to the store; and after waiting
-a few hours, Loseis sent Mary-Lou across the square with a polite
-request for it. The girl returned without it, and bearing a message
-equally polite, to the effect that henceforward Gault would relieve Miss
-Blackburn of the trouble of attending upon the store. Until her duly
-constituted representative arrived, he would administer it together with
-the rest of her property.
-
-Loseis was never the one to take this lying down. She instantly marched
-over to the store. The door was fastened with a padlock through staples.
-Loseis bethought herself that there were crow-bars somewhere about the
-post. However she found an easier way. Gault had overlooked the fact
-that the little back window was out. Loseis climbed through, and
-obtaining a file and a new lock from the store, returned to the front of
-the building and set to work. It was a long job in her inexperienced
-hands; but she was supported by the agreeable thought that Gault was
-watching her. By the end of the afternoon she found herself inside.
-Putting in the rear window, she fastened the new lock, and returned to
-her house to supper dangling the keys from thumb and forefinger.
-
-After supper Moale came over. Loseis received him at the outer door.
-Whatever his private feelings may have been did not appear. He said in
-an impassive voice:
-
-“Mr. Gault instructs me to say that you and your girl must prepare to go
-out to Fort Good Hope when the fur goes in four or five days’ time. He
-can no longer take the responsibility of keeping you here while the
-Slavis are in open rebellion.”
-
-Loseis laughed scornfully. “He can always find respectable-sounding
-words, can’t he?” she said. “You’re a white man, aren’t you? I should
-think you would feel ashamed to be the carrier of such lying words.”
-
-Moale’s face changed not a muscle. Some secret feeling made him proof
-against her scorn. He was not altogether white. He had not looked
-directly in her face.
-
-Loseis’ temper got the better of her. “You tell Gault, I shan’t go!” she
-cried.
-
-In his even voice Moale said: “I am instructed to say that Mr. Gault is
-prepared for that.”
-
-Loseis shut the door.
-
-During the hours that followed she walked up and down her room, half
-beside herself with balked rage. What possible answer was there to this
-latest threat of Gault’s. He had hinted at using force. He intended to
-lay hands on her. To Loseis’ flaming blood there were only two possible
-answers: to kill herself or to kill Gault. The first alternative she
-immediately rejected; that was the counsel of weakness. Nothing would
-please Gault better than for her to kill herself. She would kill Gault
-then, before he should lay hands on her. But ah! _dared_ she take the
-life of a white man? She had had so vivid an experience of death taking
-a man in his strength.
-
-Besides there were three other men. She could not hope to shoot them all
-before she was seized. She would be carried out anyhow. She visualized
-the horrors of a trial of which she knew so little; she imagined the
-cloud of lies that would beat her down. She had no one to speak for her
-but Mary-Lou; and Mary-Lou would never be allowed to speak. And if she
-were, the simple red girl would be struck dumb with terror. Disgraced!
-Disgraced! thought Loseis. Parted from Conacher without hope in this
-life. She buried her face in her hands. I must not kill him! she thought
-in terror. I must not let myself kill him. . . . But how can I help it
-if he lays hands on me!
-
-If Gault had come over without warning to seize her, Loseis would have
-snatched up a gun, and shot him without thinking about it. But with
-devilish cunning he had sent to tell her of his intention. He was giving
-her four days in which to go mad with trying to find a way out when
-there was none.
-
-Mary-Lou was terrified by the expression on her mistress’ face. She held
-out her arms imploringly. “Please . . . please to go to bed,” she
-whispered. “You will sleep. To-morrow you feel better.”
-
-“Sleep!” cried Loseis. “I shall never sleep again!”
-
-“Please . . . please,” persisted Mary-Lou. “Please stop walking.”
-
-“Go to bed, you,” said Loseis angrily. “Let me be by myself. Close the
-door after you.”
-
-Mary-Lou went sadly out.
-
-Loseis pressed her knuckles against her temples. I must be quiet! she
-told herself. I must think what I am doing! . . . Quiet! The only thing
-that would quiet me would be to go across and call him to the door and
-shoot him! Ah, then I could sleep! . . . I must not think such things! I
-must not! I must always be telling myself it would not end things to
-kill him; it would only begin worse things! . . . But what is the use? I
-know I shall suddenly kill him! If he lays hands on me! . . . If I were
-a man he would not dare! She flung her arms above her head. “O God! why
-didn’t you make me a man! It is too hard to be a girl!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-It had been dark for some time. To-night the silence was even more
-complete, for no child whimpered in the tepees, and no Slavi dog barked.
-Loseis was pulled up all standing by hearing a gentle tapping on the
-glass of the window alongside the kitchen door. These nights the inside
-shutters were always closed. She instinctively flew to her gun which was
-standing in the corner; but put it down again, smiling scornfully at
-herself. It was not in this manner that an attack would be made.
-
-Returning to the window, she said firmly: “Who is there?”
-
-A whisper came winging back: “Conacher.”
-
-Loseis’ heart failed her; her legs wavered under her; she struggled to
-get her breath. Then in a flash life and joy came crowding back until
-she felt as if she would burst. She clapped a hand over her mouth to
-hold in the rising scream of joy. Gault must not know! “Oh, Paul! . . .
-Oh, Paul!” she murmured, fumbling blindly for the latch of the door.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
- THE FUR GOES OUT
-
-
-Loseis and Paul Conacher sat on the great white bear rug before the
-fire. Said Loseis, concluding her tale:
-
-“He gave me to understand through Moale, that he would stop at nothing.”
-
-“The scoundrel!” muttered Conacher. “He was trying to terrorize you. In
-reality he cannot touch your rights here, unless you sign them away.”
-
-“Sign?” said Loseis sharply. “I have signed my name four times on blank
-sheets of paper for Gault. I had clean forgotten that.” She described
-the circumstances.
-
-“Obviously a trick,” said Conacher. “If you had known anything about
-banking methods, you would have seen through it.”
-
-“I am so ignorant!” said Loseis humbly.
-
-“How could you be expected to know!” said Conacher. He mused. “I wonder
-how in thunder he expects to use those signatures. . . . Were they at
-the top, in the middle or at the bottom of the sheets?”
-
-“Towards the bottom,” said Loseis. “He pointed his finger, and I wrote.”
-
-“Of course!” said Conacher. “Then he could fill in anything he wanted
-above your signature.”
-
-Loseis leaned towards him. “What does it matter?” she said dreamily. “We
-are together!”
-
-“You darling!”
-
-Loseis was too happy to remain sitting still. Springing up, she threw
-back the little shutter. Outside it was broad day. “The day of my
-happiness!” she murmured. Sticking her head through the kitchen door,
-she called out: “Mary-Lou! Quick with my breakfast. I must set off!”
-
-“So soon?” said Conacher. “It’s not four.”
-
-“Gault mustn’t see me start. If he tried to interfere, you would be
-drawn into it, and everything spoiled.”
-
-“He’ll see you come back.”
-
-“That doesn’t matter. I shall have settled everything with Tatateecha
-then.”
-
-“Can we depend upon the Slavis?” asked Conacher anxiously.
-
-“If it was to fight, never! But to play a secret trick at night, oh,
-yes! that’s just in their line.”
-
-“And I?” asked Conacher.
-
-“You must stay close to the house all day. This shall be your room now
-. . . Ah! the happy room! Do not go near the windows. . . . Where did
-you leave your dug-out last night?”
-
-“Hidden under the willows about a furlong downstream. I thought I had
-better communicate with you before showing myself.”
-
-“You did right! . . . If the Slavis were here your dug-out would be
-discovered within an hour, but Gault will never find it. . . . You must
-sleep all you can to-day.”
-
-“You must sleep too.”
-
-“Ah! happiness has made me over! I need no sleep! . . . However, I will
-be sensible. I will be back from the lake in three or four hours, and
-will sleep all day in the kitchen. Neither of us will get any sleep
-to-night.”
-
-“I don’t altogether like your plan,” said Conacher frowning. “I should
-be the one to stay here.”
-
-“You are wrong in that,” said Loseis earnestly. “There is nothing of any
-value here. All Gault cares about is the fur. The post of danger is with
-the fur, and you have that.”
-
-“Why shouldn’t you and I take it out together?”
-
-“No! If I left the Post, it would give Gault an excuse to say that I had
-given up my rights here.”
-
-“But how can I leave you alone again?”
-
-“Ah, nothing can harm me now!” cried Loseis. “I am guarded by happiness!
-I will do everything quite willingly that Gault forces me to do, and
-just be patient until you and Gruber come back. There is a sergeant of
-police at the Crossing. Bring him back too. Oh, Gault will be quite
-different when he knows that help is on the way. He has to think of the
-law, then.”
-
-Conacher was silenced: but he did not look altogether convinced. They
-sat down to their breakfast.
-
-“It is like being married!” said Loseis with a sigh of content.
-“Mary-Lou, have you cooked enough for a man’s breakfast?”
-
-Loseis’ own horse and her saddle were in the stable behind the men’s
-house; therefore unavailable. Having improvised a halter out of a piece
-of rope, she therefore set off on foot; and catching one of the broken
-horses in the meadow beyond the creek, she rode it in the Indian
-fashion, bareback.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At half-past eight she was back again. Turning the horse loose, she hid
-the halter in a bush, and returned across the stepping-stones. Gault was
-pacing up and down in front of his house. From this position he could
-not see her until she started to mount the rise. It was impossible for
-him to tell from what direction she had come. At sight of her,
-notwithstanding his self-command, his face sharpened with curiosity; and
-he changed his course in order to intercept her. Loseis was seized with
-a slight sense of panic. He must not read anything in my face! she told
-herself.
-
-“Good morning,” said Gault, politely.
-
-“Good morning,” returned Loseis. Alas! for all her care, she could feel
-the dimples pressing into her cheeks, and she knew that her eyes were
-shining. She kept her lids lowered, but that in itself was a giveaway,
-for she had been accustomed heretofore to look Gault straight in the
-eye.
-
-By the brief silence which succeeded, she knew that his suspicions were
-aroused. “You are up early,” he remarked in a carefully controlled
-voice.
-
-“I just went down to see if the Slavis had left a canoe that I could
-use,” she said carelessly.
-
-“I did not see you go,” said Gault.
-
-“It must have been an hour ago,” said Loseis. “I went for a walk, the
-morning was so pleasant.” (I should not be explaining things like this,
-she thought. I ought to be proud and angry with him.)
-
-“If you want a canoe my men will make one for you,” said Gault.
-
-“Oh, no, thank you,” said Loseis quickly. “It was just a fancy. One must
-have something to do.”
-
-She had not stopped walking, and they came to her door. Loseis bowed.
-
-“May I come in for a moment?” asked Gault.
-
-“Sorry,” she said quickly. “We are not ready for visitors so early. But
-if you wish to speak to me here I am.”
-
-“Oh, it will keep until later,” said Gault. He touched his hat, and
-watched her through the door.
-
-Conacher was waiting for her in the inner room. Loseis flung herself in
-his arms.
-
-“Ah, you are really here!” she murmured. “It was not a dream! . . . If
-Gault could see me now!” she added with a laugh, like a chime of little
-bells.
-
-Conacher pressed the hair back from her forehead. He had been watching
-through the window, and his face was dark. “It makes me see red to have
-that man speak to you,” he muttered. “What was he after?”
-
-“Wanted to know where I’d been?” said Loseis. “Of course I didn’t tell
-him. But I’m afraid I gave away a good deal in my face. I have him badly
-worried. I hope it won’t cause him to sit up to-night, or set a watch on
-us.”
-
-“All is arranged then?”
-
-“Yes. Tatateecha will land a hundred men in the second river meadow at
-ten o’clock. They will wait there until it becomes dark. We’ll only have
-about four hours of darkness, and the moon will be shining. It cannot be
-helped; we must put our trust in silence. Slavis are the quietest
-animals there are.”
-
-A few hours later, Loseis, sleeping in the kitchen, was awakened by
-Mary-Lou who said that Gault was coming across.
-
-“He must be allowed to come in,” said Loseis. “Say that I am sleeping.
-It will give me a moment to prepare.”
-
-She hastened into the other room. Awakening Conacher, she said:
-
-“Gault is coming. I must let him in here in order to put his suspicions
-to sleep. Get under the bed.”
-
-Conacher, still bemused with sleep, obeyed her; and Loseis, with a rapid
-survey of the room, gathered up whatever was his, and thrust it after
-him. The robe of raccoons’ tails hung down over the edge of the bed
-concealing all. She went to the door.
-
-“Come in,” she said, affecting to conceal a yawn.
-
-“I am sorry to have disturbed you,” said Gault smoothly. His eyes swept
-around the room, taking everything in. It was not that he expected to
-find anyone there; he was merely trying to discover what secret source
-of support Loseis had found. He gave her a hard look as much as to say:
-What are you sleeping in the morning for?
-
-Loseis, having had time to prepare, was fully mistress of herself. “Last
-night I was too angry to sleep,” she said coolly.
-
-“Hum!” said Gault, rubbing his lip. “That is what I came to talk to you
-about.”
-
-Loseis held herself in polite readiness to hear what he had to say.
-
-“We mustn’t quarrel,” said Gault. He buttered his harsh voice; but his
-eyes were still boring into the girl.
-
-“I don’t wish to quarrel,” said Loseis mildly. “But when you tell me you
-are going to banish me from my own home . . .”
-
-“You refuse to co-operate with me,” said Gault, spreading out his hands.
-
-“You don’t give me a chance,” said Loseis. Inwardly she was quaking
-dangerously with laughter. If he knew what was under the bed!
-
-“You are so young!” said Gault deprecatingly.
-
-“However young I am,” said Loseis, “what is mine, is mine!”
-
-“Well, I may have been a little too hasty,” said Gault with the air of
-one who was making an immense concession. “Let us try to make a fresh
-start.”
-
-Loseis reflected that if she allowed a reconciliation to take place she
-would never be able to get rid of him. “Perhaps I have been hasty, too,”
-she said, “but I can’t forgive you yet. Give me another twenty-four
-hours . . . Come to breakfast to-morrow, and I promise to meet you half
-way.”
-
-“Done!” cried Gault, showing all the big teeth. I am wearing her down!
-he thought. Women do not mean all they say! “Expect me at eight,” he
-said, making for the door.
-
-Conacher crawled out from under the bed with a very red face. “It’s good
-he went!” he growled. “I couldn’t have stood it much longer. . . . What
-did you want to ask him to breakfast for?”
-
-Loseis was charmed to see Conacher betraying jealousy. “While I have him
-here no discovery is likely to be made,” she said. “Every hour’s start
-that you can gain will help.”
-
-“Well, I hope he comes after me, that’s all,” said Conacher grimly.
-
-At ten o’clock that night Loseis and Mary-Lou came out of their house
-arm in arm, and stood in front of the door linked together, gazing up at
-the serene moon. Behind them crouched Conacher. Across the way Gault’s
-house was in the blackest shadow, and they could not tell but that the
-door might be standing open, and some one watching them from within.
-Making out to be lost in contemplation of the moon, the two girls,
-always taking care to present a double front to a possible watcher,
-edged to the corner of the house. Conacher then darted around behind. He
-was to make his way around the outside of the square and meet them
-beside the creek in half an hour.
-
-Loseis went back to close the door of her house, and the girls continued
-their stroll. From the middle of the square they could make out that the
-door of Gault’s house was closed. They descended to the bank of the main
-stream, and came back again. Having by this maneuver satisfied
-themselves that they were not being followed, they returned down the
-rise, picked up Conacher at the creek, and crossed the meadow beyond.
-Upon the gravelly ridge which bounded it on the other side, they came
-upon Tatateecha and his silent men, squatting on the earth with their
-backs to the moon like a patch of little bushes.
-
-Conacher was presented to Tatateecha as the friend of Loseis who must be
-obeyed in all things. Conacher himself could only issue his orders by
-means of signs. Being a white man, and therefore not to be trusted where
-absolute silence was required, he was sent down into the second meadow
-to wait. The little Slavis deployed in the first meadow, and slowly
-closing up, urged the horses slowly back over the ridge. In the second
-meadow they could be packed without danger of arousing the sleepers at
-the post. For this operation the light of the moon would be invaluable.
-
-Led by Loseis, the whole tribe then crept back in single file through
-the grass towards the Post. They crossed the creek, not by the
-stepping-stones, but higher up, immediately below the steep bank at the
-back of the men’s house and the little warehouse. Leaving her men at the
-bottom of the bank, Loseis went up to make a reconnaissance. She crept
-up to the wall of the men’s house, and rounding the front corner, edged,
-a foot at a time to the door. Laying her ear to the crack, she was
-rewarded by hearing heavy snores within. No watch was being kept. What
-had Gault to fear from two girls?
-
-Returning to her men, Loseis gave the signal, and the business of the
-night began. Loseis herself removed the pole that propped the warehouse
-door, and let it back softly against the wall. One of the Slavis was
-posted close to the men’s house with instructions to croak like a
-bull-bat if there was any sound of movement from within. Inside the
-warehouse Loseis would have been thankful to use her electric torch, but
-was afraid of precipitating a panic amongst the Slavis. However the fur
-had all been divided into half loads for a horse, each half load being a
-load for a man. Silently the endless procession wound in and out. A long
-line of little men waited in the moonlight at the door. Nobody stumbled,
-or dropped his load. There were a hundred bundles of fur. Afterwards the
-pack-saddles, saddle-cloths, hitching-gear had to go. Loseis breathed a
-little prayer of thankfulness when at last she propped the pole against
-the closed door, exactly as it had been before.
-
-There was still the grub to be got from the store; but as this was
-passed out through the rear window, and carried away behind the
-warehouse, the danger was not so great.
-
-The easterly sky was full of cool light when the hitch was thrown over
-the last pack, and pulled home. The head of the train had already
-started. Tatateecha rode first to make the trail. Conacher lingered to
-say good-by to Loseis. His heart failed him.
-
-“Ah, come too,” he urged her. “Here are plenty of spare horses. Let me
-take care of you!”
-
-“No, no, dearest!” she said. “Before we had gone twenty miles Gault
-would be up to us, and the Slavis would stampede. We’d have to wait for
-Gault’s Crees after all. But if you can only get the Slavis fifty or
-sixty miles from home into a strange country, you couldn’t drive them
-away from the grub-boxes. I am hoping that two days may pass before
-Gault discovers the loss of the fur.”
-
-“He will see that the horses are gone,” objected Conacher.
-
-“They are accustomed to wander from one meadow to another along the
-river.”
-
-The last Indian had passed out of sight. Conacher took the girl in his
-arms. “You are asking the hardest thing in the world of me,” he groaned.
-“And that is to leave you!”
-
-“Ah! don’t make it harder for me,” faltered Loseis. “It is the only
-way!”
-
-“Damn the fur!” said Conacher. “It makes me out a mere fortune-hunter. I
-wish you had nothing!”
-
-“I’m not worrying about what you are,” said Loseis. “My heart tells me.
-For myself, I care nothing about the fur. It was my father’s. I would
-feel that I had been false to him, if I let Gault fool me out of it. I
-could never respect myself. I am Blackburn’s daughter. I cannot allow
-the name of Blackburn to become a joke in the country.”
-
-“I’m only a tail to the Blackburn kite,” grumbled Conacher.
-
-Loseis laughed a little, and pressed him close. “I shall make it up to
-you,” she whispered. “You shall be my lord and master. Isn’t that
-enough?”
-
-“That makes me feel worse,” he said. “I’m not worthy. . . .”
-
-Loseis put a loving hand over his mouth. “Enough of that talk,” she
-said. “You love me, don’t you?”
-
-“Until death,” he murmured.
-
-“Me too, until death,” she whispered passionately. “That makes us equal.
-This talk of fortunes and worthiness is less than nothing. . . . Now you
-must go.”
-
-“They ride so slowly,” pleaded Conacher.
-
-“Get on your horse, dearest; I must not be seen returning to-day.”
-
-Conacher obeyed with a heavy heart. He leaned out of the saddle for a
-final embrace. They clung together.
-
-“Good-by,” whispered Loseis. “Good-by, my dearest love. Come back soon!”
-
-Swiftly withdrawing herself from him, she gave his horse a smart slap;
-and it carried him away.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
- THE DISCOVERY
-
-
-Dawn was rosy in the East when Loseis got home; but the moon had set,
-and the little square within the buildings was full of shadows. There
-was no stir of life about the men’s house; the door was still closed.
-Loseis slipped thankfully within her own door. Mary-Lou, being of no
-help in packing the horses, had been sent home some hours before.
-
-In her first feeling of relief, Loseis threw herself on her bed, and was
-instantly asleep. But at six her subconscious anxiety awoke her again;
-and the instant she awakened, she was at the window. The door of the
-men’s house now stood open; and the two tall Crees were respectively
-splashing in a basin and brandishing a towel outside the door. They had
-learned this trick from the white man. Etzooah squatted on the ground
-near by, grinning derisively. The Slavis did not believe in washing. If
-they ever yielded to this weakness, it was in secrecy.
-
-One of the Crees went off to the stable; and presently returned leading
-Gault’s own horse, a rangy, half-bred chestnut from the “outside.” Gault
-appeared from the house fully accoutered, and Loseis’ heart seemed to
-drop into a hole in her breast. Suppose he rode along the river trail;
-any man not absolutely blind must perceive the marks of the passage of
-the fur train. However, to her relief, he trotted diagonally across the
-square, and started up the trail behind the store.
-
-Freshening himself up to come courting again, thought Loseis with
-curving lips.
-
-Her next anxiety was that Moale, actuated by his passion for fine furs,
-might visit the warehouse to look them over. But Moale did not appear
-outside the cabin. Loseis saw smoke rising from the chimney, and
-supposed that he must be acting as cook for the time being. So she left
-the window to prepare herself for the day.
-
-In due course Gault returned from his ride. He went within to refurbish
-himself; and promptly on the stroke of eight was to be seen striding
-across the square, very stiff and handsome and black.
-
-Quite a picture, thought Loseis in a detached way; but not for my album.
-She spoke through the door to Mary-Lou. “Let him wait in the kitchen for
-a moment. We must not appear to be too eager.”
-
-When she opened the door, Gault was standing there, hand on hip, looking
-every inch the chief, and fully aware of it. He presented a smooth face
-to her, with a hard and wary eye. He did not know exactly what to
-expect. Loseis, making her own face expressionless, greeted him
-politely.
-
-“Come in,” she said.
-
-The table was ready spread in the inner room, and they sat down to it,
-outvying each other in cool politeness. Gault was thinking: She asked me
-here this morning. It’s up to her to show her hand. And Loseis was
-thinking: I have everything to gain by keeping him guessing. Let him
-make the first move. So it was:
-
-“This fried rabbit is delicious, Miss Blackburn.”
-
-“I’m glad you like it. I was sorry there was no other fresh meat. The
-Slavis say that a man may starve on rabbit.”
-
-“The Slavis may say so: but it satisfies me. I can never get it cooked
-so well as this. It needs a woman.”
-
-“But I have read that the most famous cooks are always men.”
-
-“Oh, I was speaking of our country. I have had many a good man cook on
-the trail; but they seem to lose their cunning in a house.”
-
-“My usual cook is the Slavi girl that I call Mary-Ann,” said Loseis.
-“But she has run off with the others.”
-
-Gault shrugged in a commiserating fashion. This was getting on dangerous
-ground.
-
-The trader was at a serious disadvantage in this fencing, because he
-wanted the girl, wanted her intolerably, whereas she was indifferent to
-him. Gault did not know the cause for it; but his senses were aware that
-Loseis was revealing a new beauty these past two days. Her dark eyes
-were fuller and more beaming; her very skin seemed to radiate a
-mysterious quality of light. All this made the man a little sick at
-heart; but he could not altogether give up hope, either. She asked me to
-breakfast, he told himself; what does that mean but that she is
-beginning to come round. Very often a woman is most scornful just at the
-moment when she is preparing to give in. I should hang off a little now.
-
-Meanwhile Loseis was thinking: Five hours! They will be making their
-first spell. Fifteen miles. I told Tatateecha to cut it down to three
-hours on the first day. Then five hours on the trail, and camp for the
-night thirty miles from here. Gault’s Crees cannot arrive before
-to-morrow night at the earliest. My people will then have sixty miles
-start.
-
-Loseis’ beauty teased Gault to such an extent that he was forced to make
-overtures to bring a little warmth into that composed face. “Shall I
-send to the lake village to fetch Mary-Ann back?” he asked.
-
-“Oh, no!” said Loseis. “I prefer to ignore her. I shall be in a better
-position to deal with her when she comes crawling back of her own
-accord.”
-
-“I was merely thinking of your comfort,” said Gault.
-
-“You are very kind.”
-
-Gault could no longer keep it in. “Well, am I forgiven!” he asked in a
-jolly sort of way.
-
-Loseis gave him no answering smile. “I am no longer angry with you,” she
-said coolly. “I am just neutral. I am waiting to see what happens.”
-
-Gault was a good deal dashed. She is just playing with me! he thought
-angrily. But Oh God! that pure, pale skin, that proud averted glance!
-With an immense effort he controlled himself. “There is no need for you
-to leave this place,” he said with a reasonable air.
-
-Instead of showing the gratitude that he expected, she said in a
-slightly surprised voice: “Of course there isn’t!”
-
-“But if we are to remain here together,” he said, nettled, “you must
-make it possible for me to work with you.”
-
-“It seems to me that you are putting the cart before the horse,” said
-Loseis softly.
-
-Gault ground his teeth together. This child to be taking such a tone to
-him! “My dear girl!” he said loftily, “I must be the one to decide what
-is best for us until some better qualified person appears.”
-
-Loseis thought: I must not make him too angry. I must lead him along.
-She said in a more amicable tone: “We are just talking in a circle.”
-
-Gault contrived to laugh again. “Of course we are!” he cried. “Well,
-what do you propose? You promised to meet me half way.”
-
-“I will do anything that you suggest,” said Loseis with an alluring
-mildness, “provided you explain the reasons for it.”
-
-The blood rushed to Gault’s pale face. He had to restrain himself from
-reaching for her hand. “That is all I could ask!” he cried.
-
-“Yes,” Loseis slyly went on, “I will even go out to Fort Good Hope when
-you send the fur, if it is necessary.”
-
-A doubt occurred to the trader—this was such a violent face-about: but
-she looked so adorable when she said it, that he waved the doubt away.
-“Splendid!” he cried. “I now say to you that there is not the slightest
-necessity for your going to Fort Good Hope!”
-
-Loseis smiled at him at last, a slow, oblique, curious smile, having
-infinitely more meaning than the trader suspected. It carried him clean
-off his feet. His hand shot out.
-
-“Shake!” he cried.
-
-Loseis could not control the impulse of her blood that forced her to
-rise suddenly (she had finished her breakfast) and to say with cool
-distaste: “Oh, please not. I hate to paw.”
-
-And Gault’s blood was aware of the true significance of that recoil, but
-his vanity would not acknowledge it. He sat glowering at her half-hurt,
-half-angry, a pathetic sight at fifty-three. “Oh, sorry,” he said in a
-flat voice. “It is instinctive amongst men.”
-
-“I know,” said Loseis, trying to smooth things over. “But I am not a
-man. . . . Do smoke one of your delicious cigars. I have missed them
-during the last few days.”
-
-Gault allowed himself to be deceived. “My pet weakness!” he said,
-smiling at Loseis rather killingly.
-
-They were tempted outside. Loseis’ gaze involuntarily swept the heavens.
-No cloud in sight; not the filmiest of vapors to dim the inverted bowl
-of blue. There would be no rain for days. It was well.
-
-“What are you expecting?” asked Gault smiling.
-
-“Oh, nothing!” she said with a shrug. “My father always looked at the
-sky when he came out of doors. I suppose I caught the habit from
-him. . . . Shall we walk down to the river? Things have been so mixed up
-lately, all my habits are broken up. I need exercise.”
-
-“Delighted!” said Gault. “. . . There is not going to be any more
-quarreling, is there?” he added with his fond smile.
-
-“I hope not,” said Loseis demurely.
-
-They paused at the edge of the river bank. The view was filled in by the
-bold high point opposite, with the old grave and the new grave side by
-side on top within the extended palings. The sight of the grassy mound
-and the earthy mound aroused a poignant emotion in Loseis.
-
-Do _they_ know what I am going through? she wondered. Ah! I hope not! I
-should not want their peace to be disturbed!
-
-Gault, watching the girl’s face, said with a heavy gravity: “I have not
-yet had the opportunity to visit Blackburn’s grave. I trust I may be
-permitted to pay that tribute. He was a great man!”
-
-Loseis turned back from the river. She did not care to share her emotion
-with _him_. The hypocritical words sickened her slightly. “Of course!”
-she said coolly. “Why not?”
-
-A hard nature! said Gault to himself.
-
-However as they sauntered back through the grass, which was now
-bestarred with pale crocuses, Loseis exerted herself to charm him, and
-God knows that was not difficult. Matters went swimmingly again. Gault
-expanded. He could see himself bending elegantly and solicitously to the
-slim and lovely girl. It was a sensation one had never experienced in
-that rude country.
-
-As they mounted the rise to the little plateau, Gault was saying: “I am
-expecting my men back to-morrow afternoon with some fresh supplies from
-Good Hope. I trust you will give me the pleasure of dining with me. The
-fare will not be as good as that you provide, but perhaps it will have
-an element of novelty. . . .”
-
-And at that moment they perceived Moale running towards them like a
-madman.
-
-Loseis’ heart sank. All her trouble to fool him was for nothing, then!
-Immediately afterwards she went hard all over. Now for it! Well, let it
-come!
-
-“The fur is gone!” yelled Moale.
-
-“_What!_” cried Gault, with an affronted air, that was almost comic.
-
-“The warehouse is empty!” cried Moale waving his arms. “Gone! Gone! All
-gone!” Nothing else could so have aroused that wooden man.
-
-Gault and Loseis now stood at the top of the rise. The trader turned to
-the girl with a towering look. “By God!” he said, softly at first, then
-louder: “By God! . . . You have hidden the fur!”
-
-Loseis, holding herself very straight, looked away with a maddening air
-of unconcern, and held her tongue.
-
-“She has sent it out!” cried Moale. “The saddles are gone; the horses
-are gone! I have sent Watusk along the trail to pick up their tracks.”
-
-“Where is the fur?” demanded Gault of Loseis.
-
-She reflected that the truth was bound to come out immediately. “I have
-sent it out,” she said coolly. “It was mine.”
-
-The two men stared at her open-mouthed, bereft of speech. Finally Gault
-got his breath back, and his anger.
-
-“You foolish girl!” he cried. “You have lost it then! The Slavis are
-useless without a leader.”
-
-Loseis thought it just as well to let them know that they had more than
-the Slavis to deal with. “They have a leader,” she said with an offhand
-air. “My friend Mr. Conacher is in charge of the pack-train.” How sweet
-it was to flick that name so carelessly in Gault’s rage-distorted face.
-
-Another silence. Gault’s face looked perfectly witless in its
-astonishment. Then it crimsoned, and the storm broke. In his passion the
-man’s coarse nature brazenly revealed itself.
-
-“You lying hussy!” he cried. “All the time you’ve been showing me your
-demure face, you’ve been secretly receiving your lover! Lies! Lies!
-Lies! Nothing but lies behind that smooth face! All morning you have
-been lying to me to pave the way for his escape! . . .”
-
-The girl faced him, surprised at first, then royal in her anger. “How
-dare you!” she cried. “You accuse me of lying, you! _you!_ Why should I
-not lie to you? You, whose whole presence here has been a lie since you
-told me Etzooah could not speak English! You! with your mouth full of
-hypocritical talk, pretending to be my friend while you plotted to rob
-me! You unspeakable blackguard! It was lucky for me that I found a true
-friend!”
-
-Gault’s face turned blackish; and his lips drew back over his teeth. He
-raised his clenched fists over his head as if to strike Loseis down. But
-the scared Moale touched his arm, and the blow never descended. A
-terrible shudder went through Gault’s frame. He turned and strode
-stiffly away. At the door of his house he curtly dismissed Moale, and
-went in alone.
-
-Inside her own door, Loseis’ knees weakened under her, and she was glad
-to sink into a chair. She covered her face in the effort to shut out
-that truly frightful picture of rage. After all she was only a girl. Ah!
-how thankful she would have been to have Conacher at her side then!
-
-Her weakness was but momentary. She hastened to the window, standing far
-enough back to keep her face from showing at the pane. It was essential
-for her to know what Gault was going to do. Suppose he and his men rode
-after Conacher, she would have to follow, and let the Post look after
-itself. Impossible to remain inactive! Her horse was as good as the
-best. Should she not ride at once to warn Conacher? Her horse was in the
-stable with Gault’s horses. But there were other horses she might catch.
-No! No! First she must see what Gault was going to do.
-
-The Cree, Watusk, returned, and the four men were hanging around outside
-the door, at a loss what to do. Suddenly Moale went in as if summoned by
-a call. He immediately reappeared, spoke to the others, and they all
-went into the corral and stable. In due course they came out leading all
-of Gault’s remaining horses, eight in number, ready saddled; some to be
-ridden, others to carry packs. They began to carry out their belongings
-from the house.
-
-Now I must start! thought Loseis in a fever. But a more prudent voice
-restrained her. You mustn’t let Gault see what you’re going to do!
-
-When the little train was ready, Gault came out of the house. To Loseis’
-astonishment he kept on across the square. He was coming to speak to
-her. She began to tremble all over. Just the same, she was glad that she
-had stayed. She went to the door, and waited for him in an unconcerned
-pose. He should never guess that her heart was pounding.
-
-Gault had only partly succeeded in regaining his composure. He was
-lividly pale; his lips moved with a curious stiffness; and there was an
-ominous triangular furrow etched in his forehead. Without looking
-directly at Loseis, he said in a controlled voice:
-
-“I have done my best to look after your affairs. You have rejected my
-efforts at every turn. Well, if you have found somebody else to advise
-you, there is nothing further for me to do here. I am returning to Fort
-Good Hope.”
-
-With that, he faced about, and went to his horse. Loseis had not said
-anything at all. The others were waiting in the saddle; and as soon as
-Gault mounted they set off, Gault staring stiffly ahead of him, the
-others looking askance at the girl lounging in the doorway. Around the
-store, and up the side hill at the back.
-
-The instant they were out of sight Loseis sprang into action. Without
-waiting for so much as coat or hat, she ran across to the stable, and
-flung saddle on her horse. It was perfectly evident to her that Gault
-was still lying. If he had, as he pretended, given up in disgust, he
-would have ridden away without a word. The fact that he felt it
-necessary to advertise his giving up was to her proof positive that he
-was not giving up at all.
-
-Mary-Lou, seeing her mistress prepare to ride away, realized that she
-would be left the last living soul at Blackburn’s Post. Panic seized
-her. Running across the square, she met Loseis leading her horse out of
-the stable.
-
-“Take me! Take me!” she gasped.
-
-Loseis was obliged to curb her headlong desire to be off. “Well . . .
-well . . .” she said impatiently. “The buckskin is in the stable. I will
-saddle him for you. Run back to the house. Fetch some grub. Shove my
-riding clothes in a saddlebag. I’ll change on the trail.”
-
-As she tightened girths, Loseis reflected: Etzooah is familiar with the
-triangle of country between the two trails, from having trapped it in
-the winter. There is no cross trail, but it would be possible to lead
-their horses through the bush, and across the coulee. Take a little
-time, though. I shall be on the southerly trail ahead of them. . . . But
-suppose they steal back here first to spy on me . . . ?
-
-A hard little smile wreathed Loseis’ lips. Hastily tying the horses to
-the corral fence, she flew across the grass again. Meeting Mary-Lou
-coming out of the house, she ordered her to put down the things, and
-help her. In the house, Loseis tore the mattress off her bed, and
-dragging it into the kitchen ripped it open. It was stuffed with moss.
-Wetting the moss from the barrel of water which stood within the door,
-she arranged it in the fireplace in such a way that it would smolder a
-little at a time.
-
-“That will last out the day,” she said smiling. “Come on; let’s go!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
- SHADOWING
-
-
-Loseis and Mary-Lou rode hard through the river-meadows and over the
-gravelly ridges. There was no danger that anyone who followed would be
-able to pick out the prints of their horses’ hoofs in the confusion of
-tracks left by the fur train. When they gained the shelter of the wooded
-country, some six miles from the Post, Loseis pulled up to a walk. It is
-impossible to think at a gallop. She wished to canvass all the
-possibilities of the situation again.
-
-She thought: The further they went along the trail before striking
-across, the harder it would be to get over. Therefore if they intended
-to come this way they would turn off as soon as possible. They would now
-be behind me. . . . But I do not _know_ that Gault intends to ride after
-the fur, though that is the likeliest thing for him to do. How foolish I
-would look if I dashed ahead to warn Conacher, and then Gault never
-came. Gault might be planning to steal back to the Post, and seize it.
-Or he might have some devilish trick in mind that would never occur to
-me. . . . I will not ride on until I make sure that he is on this trail.
-
-It is impossible to hide with horses alongside a traveled trail. The
-horses are certain to betray you by whinnying at the approach of other
-horses. Therefore, Loseis was obliged to ride on four miles further to
-the Slavi village at the foot of the lake. Here she sent Mary-Lou across
-the river with instructions to turn the horses out, and to lose herself
-amongst the Slavis.
-
-Loseis walked back along the wooded trail, looking for a suitable place
-of concealment. The river ran close alongside. On the river there was a
-fringe of berry bushes at the base of the trees; but the water sparkled
-through the interstices of the stems. No room to hide there. The other
-side was more open; a thick brown carpet of pine needles that smothered
-all undergrowth. Loseis began to run in feverish impatience. Suppose she
-was surprised before she could hide herself.
-
-At last in a place where the sun broke through, she came upon a thick
-clump of the high-bush cranberry on the inshore side of the trail. She
-walked up and down the trail surveying it from every angle. It would
-serve! She crept in, careful to leave no tell-tale marks of her passage.
-She constructed herself a little cave amongst the leaves, that would
-permit of a certain freedom of movement without betraying her by a
-rustle. Here she crouched within two yards of the trail.
-
-It was very difficult to compose her impatient blood to wait. The
-swollen river moved down, whispering and sucking under the bank.
-Overhead a smooth, smoky-colored whisky-jack fluttered like a shadow
-from branch to branch, cocking a suspicious eye down at her. Would he
-betray her? thought Loseis anxiously. However he made up his mind after
-awhile that she was a fixture, and faded away. In the distance Loseis
-could hear the children and the dogs of the Slavi village. A dozen times
-within a quarter hour Loseis looked at her watch; and each time put it
-to her ear to make sure it had not stopped.
-
-A whole hour passed, and another one on top of that. Loseis was
-beginning to ask herself if she were not on a fool’s errand. What ought
-she to do? What ought she to do? Then she heard a sound that caused all
-uncertainty to vanish: hoof-beats on the hard-packed trail. It was then
-two o’clock. As the sound drew closer her brow knitted; only one horse;
-that was not what she had expected; why should they send one man in
-pursuit of Conacher?
-
-A minute later Etzooah rode by in the trail. He was not hurrying himself
-at all; his horse was single-footing it gently; and the Indian rode with
-his near leg thrown over the saddle horn, his body all relaxed and
-shaking in the untidy native style. Etzooah, unaware of being observed,
-looked thoroughly well pleased with himself. He hummed a chant under his
-breath, and from force of habit his beady black eyes watched on every
-side of him. Sharp as they were they perceived nothing amiss in the
-clump of high-bush cranberry.
-
-When he had passed, Loseis after making sure that there were no more
-coming, issued out of her hiding place, and started back for her horse,
-considering. Her first impulse was to ride after Etzooah, but she
-dismissed it with a shake of the head. No! No personal danger threatened
-Conacher from Etzooah’s coming. This was just part of some tricky game
-that Gault was playing. Etzooah might safely be left to Conacher to
-handle. She must find out what Gault was about. There lay the real
-danger.
-
-Obtaining her horse, and bidding Mary-Lou to remain where she was,
-Loseis rode back towards the post. Having ridden about two miles, an
-intuition warned her to dismount and lead her horse, that she might not
-give undue warning of her passage. Shortly afterwards the mare suddenly
-threw up her head and whickered. A moment later Loseis heard more
-hoof-beats; several horses this time, pounding in a measured way that
-suggested they were being ridden by men.
-
-Turning her horse, Loseis mounted and rode back a hundred yards or so to
-a small stream that fell into the river. Dismounting in the water, she
-cut her mare sharply across the withers, sending her galloping on in the
-direction of the Indian village. Wading up the little stream, she
-presently climbed the bank, and making a detour among the pines, pressed
-herself close in to the stem of a young tree, with branches growing down
-to the ground. It was not a perfect hiding-place; she was further from
-the trail.
-
-The riders approached. They were walking their horses now. Gault, Moale
-and one of the Crees; the other, Watusk, was missing. They had left
-their pack-horses behind them. So they are not going far! thought
-Loseis. Gault’s face, when he was alone with his men, wore an expression
-that he had never permitted Loseis to see; a look of naked brutality
-that made the girl shiver. It is the natural expression of that face,
-she thought.
-
-Even before she could see their faces, Loseis heard Gault and Moale
-talking back and forth. The first words she heard distinctly were spoken
-by Gault. He said:
-
-“It must have been somewhere along here. I heard a horse run off along
-the trail. I had not heard it before that. Sounded like some one might
-have been waiting here.”
-
-“A loose horse startled away by our coming,” suggested Moale. “There are
-plenty of them along the river.”
-
-“They don’t often run alone,” Gault pointed out.
-
-“A Slavi, then. I suspect they prowl up and down this trail.”
-
-“We don’t want them prowling around us,” growled the trader.
-
-“Let Musqua cry like the Weh-ti-go,” said Moale.
-
-The Cree, grinning, threw back his head and uttered the long-drawn,
-wailing screech that is supposed to be the cry of that dreadful spirit.
-
-“They will say that it is Blackburn,” said Moale chuckling.
-
-There was a silence.
-
-“We mustn’t go too far,” said Gault. “Or we’ll be on top of the Slavi
-village.”
-
-“What are you looking for?” asked Moale.
-
-“A dead tree alongside the trail that we can pull over.”
-
-For some reason these words struck a cold fear into Loseis’ breast. The
-riders passed out of earshot.
-
-The trail wound in and out among the trunks as woodland trails do, and
-you could never see more than twenty-five yards or so ahead or behind.
-As soon as the men had gone, Loseis issued from her hiding-place, and
-started to follow on foot. She could still hear the murmur of their
-voices but not what they said. The leisureliness of their progress
-puzzled her. They were not going much further. What could they be up to?
-And the remaining Cree; what had become of him?
-
-She heard them pass through the little stream that crossed the trail. A
-short distance beyond they stopped, apparently for the purpose of
-holding a consultation. Loseis approached as close as she dared, but
-could not make out their words. After awhile they left the trail. From
-the sounds that reached her, Loseis understood that they were leading
-their horses away amongst the trees. She went forward as far as the
-stream, and ascended the bed of it, thus keeping roughly parallel with
-the course they were taking.
-
-For a couple of hundred yards back from the river, the forest was
-perfectly flat, and for the most part clear of undergrowth. The ground
-then rose steeply, and on the hillside young trees and bushes crowded
-up. The little stream came down through a ravine full of bowlders.
-Loseis, concentrating on the faculty of hearing, gathered that men and
-horses had made their way back to the foot of the rise, where they had
-gone into camp for a spell.
-
-She climbed up the side of the ravine to a point well above their heads,
-and then edged cautiously around the hill until she was directly over
-the voices. Thereupon she began to let herself down softly, softly, an
-inch at a time, choosing every foothold with circumspection, snaking her
-body through the bushes with care not to create the slightest rustling.
-Loseis as a child had not played with the Slavi children for nothing.
-
-She discovered at last that they had established themselves at the base
-of a gigantic bowlder embedded in the side of the hill. The smoke of
-their little fire was rising over the top. Loseis, descending from
-above, worked her body by slow degrees out on top of the bowlder, where
-she lay perfectly hidden, about fifteen feet above their heads. It would
-have been too risky to attempt to peep over the edge of the stone, but
-whether she could see them was immaterial to her, so she could hear.
-
-Her cautious progress around the hillside had consumed a good bit of
-time, and when she arrived above the camp it was still. For a long time
-she could hear nothing but the uneasy nosing of the horses, that had no
-forage in that spot. They must have been tied, for they did not move
-about. Loseis knew the men were still below her, for she detected a
-faint aroma of tobacco, apart from the fumes of burning pine. At last,
-startlingly, Gault’s quiet voice resolved itself out of the stillness.
-He might have been speaking to herself.
-
-“No, don’t put any more on. If any of the Slavis happen to be traveling
-up on the bench, the smoke would attract them. Just keep it going until
-we’re ready to eat.”
-
-Moale asked: “When will you eat?”
-
-Gault replied: “We can only eat once. Put it off until evening.”
-
-Then silence again. Loseis feared that that which she so desired to hear
-must already have been talked out between them.
-
-By and by she heard a horse single-footing it rapidly in the trail.
-
-“Here comes Watusk,” said Moale.
-
-From the sounds which succeeded Loseis made out that Musqua had been
-stationed alongside the trail to intercept Watusk. They could presently
-be heard approaching with the horse, through the trees below. As soon as
-they were within speaking distance Gault said sharply:
-
-“Well?”
-
-A voice, presumably Watusk’s, replied: “Blackburn’s daughter, and the
-Beaver girl are at the post.”
-
-The listening Loseis smiled to herself.
-
-“Did you see them?” asked Gault.
-
-“N’moya. They were in the house. How could I look in the house without
-showing myself? There was smoke coming out of the chimney. For an hour I
-watched it from the branches of a pine tree where the trail goes over
-the hill.”
-
-“Maybe Blackburn’s daughter had left the Indian behind.”
-
-“N’moya.”
-
-“Watusk is right,” put in Moale’s voice. “After everybody else was gone,
-no Indian would stay there alone; not with that new-made grave in
-sight!”
-
-“It is well,” grumbled Gault.
-
-There was more talk about eating. Gault indifferently told the breeds
-they could take theirs if they wanted, but they would get no more until
-morning.
-
-More time passed. As is always the case with men waiting an event, they
-found but little to say to each other. Sometimes the Crees discussed
-their own concerns in low tones. Sometimes they all fell silent for so
-long that Loseis supposed they had fallen asleep. Then suddenly Gault
-and Moale took up the thread of a conversation as if it had been dropped
-but a moment before.
-
-“Couldn’t we hang a noose in the trail?” asked Moale.
-
-“No way of keeping a noose spread,” returned Gault. “It’s better to
-stretch the tracking line across the trail from tree to tree at such a
-height that it will catch him under the chin. I hope it breaks his damn
-neck. Most likely though, it will only yank him off his horse.”
-
-Loseis’ blood slowly congealed as she listened. There could be no doubt
-who the “him” was that they referred to.
-
-“Then we’ll jump on him,” Gault went on; “and tie him up, and lay him in
-the trail, and pull the tree over. I’ve got it all figured out. The
-branches of that tree will stick out over the edge of the bank,
-consequently the trunk will lie flat on the ground and break his back.”
-
-“It may not kill him outright,” suggested Moale.
-
-Loseis heard a horrible chuckle. Gault said: “Oh, I’ll stick around
-until he dies. I don’t care if he lingers a bit. I hope he’ll have sense
-enough to take in what I’ve got to tell him. If he lingers too long I’ll
-stop his breath. You fellows can ride on. I’ve got the best horse. I’ll
-overtake you. We’ll all have to ride like hell to get to Fort Good Hope
-in time to establish a proper alibi.”
-
-There was a brief silence, then:
-
-“But there won’t be any trouble. Unless he’s found to-morrow, the
-coyotes and the wolverines will have picked him clean. And in any case
-the fallen tree, the broken back will tell their own tale. I’ll recover
-the letter, of course, before I leave him.”
-
-“Hadn’t we better keep a watch alongside the trail?” Moale asked
-uneasily.
-
-“Why?”
-
-“He might come along before dark?”
-
-“Impossible. I told Etzooah after he had located the camp, not to show
-himself until the position of the sun showed eight o’clock. You can
-trust a Slavi to keep cover. If Conacher jumped on his horse that minute
-and ran him the whole way he couldn’t get back here till near midnight.”
-
-At last they had named their intended victim!
-
-“My only fear is that it may be daylight before he gets here,” said
-Gault. “But of course we’ll get him anyhow.”
-
-“He may suspect a trick, and not come at all.”
-
-“Oh, sure!” said Gault unconcernedly. “But we had a damn persuasive
-argument to use. If he don’t come by daylight we’ll go after him.”
-
-“And afterwards,” said Moale, “what you going to do afterwards?”
-
-Again the chuckle! “By and by I’ll ride back to Blackburn’s Post to
-resume my courtship.”
-
-“She’ll be mourning for the other one then.”
-
-“What of it? It wouldn’t be the first time that a woman consoled herself
-with the next best thing. It’s a very good time to tackle a woman. She’s
-tender then.”
-
-Loseis had heard enough. She commenced to work herself backward off the
-rock. She inched her way up hill in the same manner that she had come
-down. She was doubly careful now, for another life beside her own
-depended on her success. When she had got high enough to be out of
-earshot, she turned in the other direction from that she had come, and
-making a wide detour, regained the trail a good furlong beyond Gault’s
-camp, and set off to recover her horse.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
- WITH CONACHER
-
-
-Conacher’s spirits rose somewhat with the sun. It was impossible for a
-healthy man to be altogether miserable under that tender, beaming sky.
-The lovely, changing prospects of the parklike country through which
-Blackburn’s River flowed, made the heart swell. Conacher loved, and was
-loved in return. An apparition of the exquisite Loseis continually swam
-before his eyes. He was anxious; but he kept saying to himself as a
-civilized man will: Oh well, nothing serious can happen nowadays.
-
-In the more open places, it was thrilling to see the long, laden train
-of horses stretching ahead; winding over a ridge; trotting down into the
-bottoms. The imagination was arrested by the thought of the riches
-stored in that endless succession of brown packs. It was like a picture
-to illustrate an old fairy tale. Thoughts of Aladdin and Sindbad flitted
-through the young man’s mind. Riches!—not represented by a trifling row
-of figures in a book, but visibly spread before his eyes. Come to think
-of it, Aladdin married a princess, too. An insipid miss in bloomers
-according to the pictures; nothing like the darkly vivid Loseis!
-
-Among other directions for the journey, Loseis had warned Conacher not
-to allow the Slavis to cross the river to loiter in their village. It
-occurred to the young man that he would not be able to prevent this
-while he brought up the tail of the procession, so he took advantage of
-one of the river meadows to urge his horse to the head of the line. By
-Tatateecha’s crestfallen look at his approach, he judged that he had
-acted rightly. It was his first good look at the rotund, greasy little
-head man of the Slavis. Tatateecha was better favored than the run of
-the Slavis; but that was not saying much. He had a neat, Buster Brown
-hair-cut, and a red fillet bound around his brow.
-
-Tatateecha edged his horse out of the line, and fell back to consult
-with the next man. They were like a pair of children conspiring
-together, with sharp, calculating glances at Conacher. The white man
-affected not to notice them. Presently Tatateecha came back to him all
-smiles. Conacher had had no experiences of the Slavis, but he knew
-something about the Indian nature in general. He’s going to try to put
-something over on me now, he thought.
-
-Tatateecha by means of animated signs conveyed to Conacher that his
-village lay a short way ahead; and that it would be the best place to
-spell. Splendid grass for the horses.
-
-“Not on your life!” said Conacher, with vigorous pantomime of denial. He
-indicated to Tatateecha that there would be no spell until the sun had
-traveled a space equal to two hours.
-
-The Slavi broke into speech; but Conacher had him at a disadvantage
-there, by not understanding a word of it. The white man continued to
-point to the sun. Tatateecha became aggrieved; almost tearful in his
-protestations. Then, bringing his horse close to Conacher’s he signified
-with a winning air, that he himself was perfectly willing to go further;
-but the rest of the men would refuse to go at all, unless they were
-permitted to say good-by to their families. Conacher replied by signs
-that if they refused to go and fetch the grub and ammunition, when the
-snow covered the ground there would be no grub, no meat, and the people
-would starve. This argument was unanswerable, and Tatateecha fell back
-sulking.
-
-Shortly afterwards the village hove in sight across the river. The
-people lined up on the edge of the bank yelling; and Conacher’s men
-yelled back. All knew that the white man could not understand their
-tongue; and Conacher guessed that they were making pretty free with him.
-It was a trying situation; but he preserved his imperturbable air.
-
-The river issued out of the lake by means of a wide, shallow, brawling
-rapid. At the present high stage of water, there was but one possible
-place to ford, and this could not be managed even on horseback without
-danger of a wetting. At the point where the trail forked, Conacher
-backed his horse into the arm which ran down the bank, and held him
-there blocking the way. The Slavis jabbered angrily from one to another;
-the whole train was brought to a stand.
-
-Tatateecha approached Conacher to expostulate. The white man pointed
-with his whip down the main trail. Tatateecha attempting to speak again,
-Conacher suddenly urged his horse forward, and cutting the Indian’s
-horse smartly across the flank, sent him careering down the main trail,
-the only way that was open. The train got in motion again. The other
-Slavis, seeing that Conacher meant what he said, filed past him
-sullenly. The people across the river fell silent. Conacher fell in at
-the tail of the procession again. Ten minutes later his feather-headed
-Slavis were singing and chaffing each other in the best temper
-imaginable.
-
-But Conacher had to keep a sharp look-out for deserters. Time and again,
-one or another of the Slavis edged his horse in among the trees with the
-object of circling around and gaining the trail behind Conacher. The
-white man found that he could best defeat this maneuver by falling back
-a quarter of a mile. In that position he would come face to face with
-the astonished deserter, who thought he had already eluded him. Caught
-in the act, they made no attempt to resist his commanding voice. When
-they spelled at last, Conacher, without appearing to, anxiously counted
-his men. He had lost one. With dinner in prospect there was no danger of
-their making off. As soon as they had eaten he distributed plugs of
-tobacco.
-
-Upon reaching the lake the trail turned sharp to the eastward for some
-miles. In order to provide a firm footing it had to encircle the edge of
-the wooded country, far back from the water. The vast lake meadows at
-this season were like a saturated sponge underfoot. For three sleeps,
-Tatateecha explained, they would be traveling alongside these meadows;
-and then, climbing through a pass in the hills, would come to the
-prairie, where they would find the buffalo grass which made horses fat.
-This bottom grass filled them up, but did not stick to their ribs.
-Tatateecha was very ingenious in the sign language. When they spelled he
-was perfectly good-humored again; attaching himself to Conacher like a
-friendly child.
-
-For two full hours they allowed the horses to feed, before rounding them
-up again. Conacher would dearly have liked to sleep (as all the Slavis
-did) but dared not. However, because of the tobacco he had handed out,
-or because they were getting too far away from home, or for some other
-reason, the Slavis appeared to have reconciled themselves. There were no
-further attempts to desert. It was impossible to tell what was going on
-inside their skulls.
-
-Then for five hours longer they continued on their way. The character of
-the route never changed. For mile after mile the brown ribbon of earth
-threaded in and out amongst the trunks of the pines, climbing the little
-unevenness of ground; crossing small water-courses. On their left hand
-the vast sea of grass was generally in sight through the trees, with a
-suggestion of water on the horizon; sometimes for considerable distances
-the trail followed the actual line between grass and timber.
-
-At about six o’clock they halted for the night. It seemed a pity not to
-take advantage of the four remaining hours of daylight; but when
-Conacher looked at the grass-fed horses, sweaty and drooping, he
-perceived the necessity for camping. The horses were turned out in the
-grass; the Slavis built their fire at the foot of the bank; while
-Conacher spread his bed on top in a grove of pines running out to a
-point, whence he could survey both horses and men.
-
-He spent the early part of the evening fraternizing with his men amidst
-great laughter when, as frequently happened, the language of signs broke
-down. About eight o’clock he retired to his own little fire above, and
-rolled up in a blanket. The sun had not yet sunk out of sight; but it
-was planned to start at four next morning. As he lay there day-dreaming,
-he was greatly astonished to see a Slavi Indian quietly approaching
-between the trees at the back of the point.
-
-He sat up. All the Slavis looked very much alike to him; but he
-instantly recognized that this was not one of those who had accompanied
-him all day. There was a suggestion of secrecy in his approach. A rather
-better physical specimen than the average Slavi, his face bore the
-childish, deceitful grin that was characteristic of them all. His teeth
-were blackened and broken; on the whole, an unpleasant-looking
-individual. He held out an envelope towards Conacher; and the young man
-leaped to his feet full of a vague alarm.
-
-“Who are you?” he asked involuntarily.
-
-The Indian, grinning, shook his head like a dog, and pointed to his ear;
-the usual sign for not understanding.
-
-Conacher pointed to himself, and said “Conacher.” He then pointed to the
-Indian.
-
-“Saltahta,” said the man.
-
-Conacher took the envelope. It bore no superscription. Tearing it open,
-his heart was filled with warmth at the sight of Loseis’ signature in
-big round characters. The letter had been written on the typewriter in
-the stammering style of the beginner. Conacher had had such a letter
-from Loseis down river. This one was brief.
-
-“There is something wrong here. Gault is plotting mischief. I am afraid.
-The man who takes this to you is a good man. Let him go with the outfit,
-and you come back to me.”
-
-As he read, all Conacher’s warmth was chilled. Suspicion leaped into his
-mind full-grown. There was a vagueness about the letter that was not
-like Loseis. Moreover he doubted if she would ever confess to being
-afraid, even if she were afraid. And why should she sign her full name;
-Laurentia Blackburn. On the other letter it had been simply Laurentia.
-He remembered the sheets that Gault had made her sign for him, and
-smiled to himself. Really, the plot was too transparent. He, Conacher,
-was to be drawn off, and the fur diverted to Gault’s uses under guidance
-of this Indian. Loseis had told him of a Slavi who was in Gault’s pay.
-
-Suddenly putting his finger on the man’s breast, Conacher said:
-“Etzooah.”
-
-The Slavi looked at him with perfect, stupid blankness, and shook his
-head. “Saltahta,” he repeated.
-
-“Tatateecha!” called Conacher.
-
-The little head man came climbing up the bank. Whatever his astonishment
-at the sight of the newcomer, nothing showed in his face.
-
-“Who is this man?” demanded Conacher, putting his finger on the Slavi.
-
-“Saltahta,” said the newcomer quickly.
-
-“Saltahta,” repeated Tatateecha like a parrot.
-
-Conacher bit his lip. With a jerk of his head he dismissed Tatateecha.
-The other man made as if to follow.
-
-“You stay where you are!” cried Conacher.
-
-Whether or not the man understood English, the gesture which accompanied
-the words was amply significant, and he stopped in his tracks. He began
-to whine pitifully in his own tongue, pointing to his lips and hugging
-his stomach.
-
-“I don’t give a damn how hungry you are,” said Conacher. “I mean to keep
-you under my eye until I decide what to do.”
-
-The Indian sat down at the foot of a tree, and pathetically exhibited
-his empty pipe to the white man. Conacher tossed him the remainder of a
-plug of tobacco, which he began to shave with an air of philosophic
-indifference.
-
-There was an agonizing struggle going on in Conacher’s breast. Though he
-had every reason in the world to believe that letter a trick, he found
-that he _could not disregard it_. There was still one chance in a
-thousand that it was genuine, and it was a chance he could not take. He
-had been unwilling enough in the first place to leave Loseis; this
-little doubt tipped the scale. With that doubt of her safety in his mind
-he recognized that it would be simply impossible for him to go on day
-after day always putting a greater distance between them. “Oh, to hell
-with the fur!” he said to himself; and in that moment his mind was made
-up.
-
-But he had no notion of swallowing Gault’s bait (if such it was) whole.
-He lit a pipe to stimulate his mental processes, and puffed at it
-leaning against a tree, and gazing down at the innocent-eyed Indian
-speculatively. He thought: I shall take you back with me, my man.
-Tatateecha is a good way from home now, and he’s been over this route
-many times. He ought to be able to deliver the fur to Gruber. But in any
-case I’d sooner trust him than you. Whether you like it or not, you
-shall come back with me.
-
-It seemed important to Conacher not to allow the newcomer to communicate
-with the other Slavis. Removing the handkerchief from about his neck, he
-therefore forced the astonished Indian to put his hands around the tree
-behind him, and firmly bound his wrists together. The captive loudly and
-plaintively protested; it was clear that things were not turning out in
-the way that he expected.
-
-Conacher then went down the bank to consult with Tatateecha. None of the
-Slavis had rolled up for the night. Their faces were perfectly wooden;
-but the white man sensed a certain strain in the atmosphere. Evidently
-Tatateecha had told them of the newcomer’s arrival, and it had excited
-them. As well as he could, Conacher signified to the head man that he
-was going back to Blackburn’s Post; and that he wanted two of the least
-tired horses to be caught.
-
-Pointing up to the top of the bank, Tatateecha asked an eager question.
-
-“He goes with me,” said Conacher, illustrating with signs.
-
-He thought he saw a look of relief appear in the Slavi faces. However
-they volunteered no information. Again he asked Tatateecha the man’s
-name, and received the same answer: “Saltahta.” Strange creatures!
-Apparently they knew of no way of dealing with the strong and terrifying
-white man except to hide as much as possible from them.
-
-Men were sent away to catch the required horses, and Conacher took out
-pencil and note-book to write his letter to Gruber. He wished to do this
-in the sight of Tatateecha, knowing what a superstitious reverence all
-the remoter tribes have for the act of writing. And it was quite true
-that Tatateecha, out of the corners of his eyes, followed every move of
-the pencil with a look of uneasy awe. Conacher wrote:
-
- “Hector Blackburn was killed on June 3rd by falling over a cliff
- with his horse. Matthew Gault has come to Blackburn’s Post where
- he is trying to take advantage of the helpless situation of
- Blackburn’s daughter. She has written to you, but supposes that
- the letter has not been allowed to go through. We are sending
- you the fur in charge of Tatateecha because we have nobody else.
- If you get this letter send us help quickly. Send the police if
- possible; at any rate send white men. I have promised Tatateecha
- a credit of one hundred skins if he places this letter in your
- hands.”
-
- “Paul Conacher, Dominion Geological Survey.”
-
-Conacher inclosed this letter in the torn envelope, since he had no
-other, and offered it to Tatateecha. The Indian received it gingerly and
-wrapped it in a fold of the gay worsted sash he wore. Conacher explained
-whom it was for, and told Tatateecha he should receive goods to the
-value of a hundred skins when it was delivered. To convey the figure,
-the white man patiently broke up tiny twigs to the required number.
-Tatateecha’s eyes widened in delighted cupidity. In that moment he could
-be depended on; the question was, could his feather-head hold to a
-resolution long enough to carry it through?
-
-The two horses were driven up on top of the bank. The Slavis jeered and
-pointed at the predicament of the one who called himself Saltahta. If it
-had been Tatateecha or Conacher himself, they would have done just the
-same. By Conacher’s orders, they offered to feed the captive, but he
-refused it. When his horse, which was found tied to a tree near by, was
-led in, it was discovered that he had plenty of bread and meat tied to
-his saddle.
-
-Saddle and bridle were transferred to one of the fresher horses, and the
-man was bidden to mount. His hands were tied behind him; and his feet
-tied with a loose thong under the horse’s belly. The Slavis yelled in
-derision, and slapped their thighs. Conacher would have given a good
-deal to have understood the epithets they bestowed on the prisoner. A
-leading rein was improvised out of a piece of tracking line. Tying
-blanket and food to his own saddle, Conacher mounted, and rode off
-leading the other horse.
-
-For a long time he could hear the laughter of the Slavis. He wondered if
-they could make any more of the situation than he could, or if their
-laughter was as meaningless as it sounded. In the hands of these
-crack-brained savages, he bitterly reflected, rested not only the fate
-of that fortune in skins, but also the hope of Loseis and him receiving
-help from the outside world.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
- THE MEETING
-
-
-Three hours later the two horses were still jogging in the same manner
-along the forest trail. In the beginning the prisoner had sought to make
-as much trouble as possible by beating his heels against his horse’s
-ribs, rendering the animal almost unmanageable. Conacher had then put
-him in front, telling him to beat away, whereupon the Slavi had become
-very quiet. The tiring horse hung back more and more, and in order to
-make any progress at all, Conacher had been obliged to take the lead,
-and pull the other after.
-
-The moon was now high. Little moonlight penetrated through the trees,
-but the general brightness made traveling easier. A slow trot was the
-best that Conacher could get out of the horses. Even that pace was not
-without danger at night. Had not the trail been freshly cleaned up that
-day for the passage of the fur train, they could not have done it.
-
-Conacher figured that he was within two or three miles of the Slavi
-village. In two hours more he would make Blackburn’s Post. His heart
-leaped at the thought of rousing Loseis up in the middle of the night.
-How astonished she would be! He would hold her in his arms again! He
-urged his horse forward, and gave the leading rein a jerk.
-
-Not but what he had certain doubts, too, of his reception. Loseis might
-blame him for returning; would want to send him away again perhaps.
-Conacher firmly shook his head in the darkness. No! whatever the truth
-of the situation, it was better for them to remain together. Nothing
-should persuade him to leave her again.
-
-As Conacher, dreaming, jogged along between the half-seen pillars of the
-pines rising into obscurity, his wearied horse threw up his head and
-whinnied. The rider instinctively drew up to listen. A sound of fear
-broke from the man behind. Presently, out of the stillness of the forest
-came a faint, answering whinny from ahead. Clapping heels to his horse,
-Conacher rode to meet it.
-
-The Slavi moaned in fear. “Stop!” he said. “It is not good. There is
-nobody here.”
-
-“Ha!” said Conacher. “You have found your English, eh?” He continued to
-urge his horse forward.
-
-They turned into a natural avenue through the trees where the moonlight
-came flooding down. At the end of this glade, seen first as a dim gray
-ghost, and gradually resolving itself into the lineaments of life, they
-perceived a motionless horse and rider blocking the trail. For a second,
-such a sight in that awful solitude caused even Conacher’s heart to
-fail; but he did not pull up. As for the Indian, a strangled squall of
-terror escaped him, and he fell to gibbering incoherently. He was
-perfectly helpless. Tied as he was, he could not throw himself off his
-horse without the certainty of being trampled.
-
-Drawing closer, a wild, joyous suspicion sprang up in Conacher’s breast;
-then certainty. It was Loseis in her boy’s dress, sitting astride the
-sorrel mare. Flinging themselves off their horses, they flew to each
-other’s arms, careless of the on-looker.
-
-“Loseis, my darling!” murmured Conacher. “What are you doing here?”
-
-She was all woman then. “Oh, Paul . . . Oh, Paul . . . !” she faltered.
-“I came to warn you. Gault is waiting in the trail to kill you!”
-
-“To kill me!” he echoed amazed.
-
-A hasty, confused explanation took place. They lowered their voices that
-the Indian might not overhear.
-
-“I did not send you that letter,” said Loseis.
-
-“I know it.”
-
-“Why did you come back then?”
-
-“I _had_ to come. . . . Do you blame me?”
-
-“No! No! It is all right. If you had not come they would have ridden
-after you. I can best take care of you here.”
-
-Conacher laughed half in delight, half sorely. “You take care of me! I
-like that! . . . How did you know they had sent me a letter?”
-
-“I crept up to them in the woods. I listened.” She gave him the gist of
-what she had overheard.
-
-“Good God!” cried Conacher in his simplicity. “Think of anybody wanting
-to kill _me_!” Catching hold of the leading line, he jerked the Indian
-into the full moonlight. “Who is this man?” he said.
-
-“Etzooah,” said Loseis with half a glance.
-
-“I thought so,” said Conacher grimly. “According to the letter he was to
-have gone with the outfit; but I thought I had better bring him with
-me.”
-
-“You did well,” said Loseis.
-
-Tying the horses to trees, they walked away a little in the trail. For
-awhile they were completely filled with the joy of being together again.
-The difficulties ahead had to wait.
-
-“Oh, my darling, when I realized that it was you, my heart nearly burst
-with joy. It was so unexpected, so lovely to find you waiting quietly in
-the moonlight!”
-
-“Oh, Paul, it makes up for everything to have known you! I don’t care
-what happens now.”
-
-“You must have been waiting here alone for hours. How could you dare to
-do it?”
-
-“Why . . . I had to do it. I never thought twice about it.”
-
-“You are the bravest girl in the world!”
-
-“Oh, no! I’m just an ordinary girl who is in love with you.”
-
-“I don’t deserve it!” he murmured.
-
-“Well . . . neither do I!”
-
-When they returned to earth, Conacher said simply: “What shall I do with
-this Indian now? Put a bullet through his head?”
-
-“Oh, no! no!” said Loseis nervously. “There must be no killing.”
-
-“They started it,” said Conacher.
-
-“I wanted to kill Gault myself,” said Loseis quaintly; “but I struggled
-against it.”
-
-Conacher laughed. “Little fire-eater!” he said, hugging her close.
-
-“We must be serious now,” she said pushing him away.
-
-“I’ll have to turn the man loose then,” said Conacher. “And let him find
-his way to his friends on foot.”
-
-“That will be best,” said Loseis. “They are waiting about four miles
-from here. It will give us time to get out of the way.”
-
-“The horses are so tired,” exclaimed Conacher. “And it must be eighteen
-miles to the fur-camp. They will die under us before we get there.”
-
-“But we are not going there,” said Loseis. “If I had meant that, I would
-have ridden right through.”
-
-“Where else can we go?” said Conacher, opening his eyes.
-
-“Gault and his men would be up with us almost as soon as we broke camp
-in the morning. The Slavis would run away. How could we protect
-ourselves there in the open? Neither you nor I would ever be seen alive
-again. How easy for Gault to explain that there had been an accident.
-There would be no witnesses but his men.”
-
-“What do you propose then?” said Conacher gravely.
-
-“I have been thinking about it all these hours. We will go back to
-Blackburn’s Post. There we will be on our own ground. There are strong
-buildings to protect us, and plenty of grub and ammunition. It would be
-more difficult for Gault to make out that there had been an accident
-there.”
-
-“Right!” said Conacher. “You have a head on you! Whatever happens we
-will never be parted again.”
-
-“Never!” she said going to his arms.
-
-“One of us will not be left!”
-
-“I swear it!” she said kissing him.
-
-Conacher felt the strength of ten men coursing through his veins. “Come
-on!” he said briskly. “How do you propose to get by the men waiting in
-the trail?”
-
-“We will take a canoe at the Slavi village. Mary-Lou is waiting there.
-She will stick to us. She is not brave, but her heart is true.”
-
-“Good!” said Conacher. “Now for this red-skinned blackguard. How about
-taking him with us to the Post? Gault would then ride after the fur at
-daybreak and we’d gain a day.”
-
-“What good would that do us?” said Loseis. “He would be back at the Post
-by night. And in the meantime the Slavis would be scattered. Tatateecha
-is our best hope of getting help from the outside.”
-
-“All right,” said Conacher. “But it goes against the grain to turn the
-scoundrel loose.”
-
-Taking out his knife, he proceeded to cut the cringing Indian’s bonds.
-“You filthy wretch!” he cried; “you mangy, verminous coyote! If you got
-your deserts I would be sticking this knife between your ribs! Go back
-to your master and tell him . . .”
-
-“Wait!” cried Loseis. “Not a word! Gault won’t know how much we know.
-Let him guess!”
-
-Conacher swallowed his anger. Etzooah slipped from his horse, and
-crawled on the ground like a whipped cur.
-
-Loseis and Conacher mounted and rode on, driving the third horse in
-front of them. Etzooah, cramped from his long confinement in bonds,
-staggered along slowly behind them.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
- CONFUSION
-
-
-When he came to the Slavi village after his long walk, Etzooah crossed
-the ford, and sticking his head inside the first tepee, awakened the
-sleepers with a yell. He demanded to know if Yellow-Head and Blackburn’s
-daughter had been seen. A grumbling voice replied that they had taken a
-canoe and gone down river. Searching for a horse, Etzooah perceived that
-the whites in their haste had turned out their horses without unsaddling
-them. The sorrel mare eluded him; she disliked the Indian smell; but he
-caught the horse he had already ridden so far. It would serve for the
-short distance he had still to go. Refording the river, he proceeded
-along the trail.
-
-It was not Gault’s habit to confide in his creatures any further than he
-was forced to. Etzooah’s job had been to steer the fur train east across
-the prairie and hit the big river at Fisher Point, where the fur could
-be picked up later by the launch and a scow from Good Hope. Etzooah
-might have guessed that a short shrift was waiting for Conacher at
-Blackburn’s Post, but he had been told nothing of the details of the
-plot, which, indeed, had been concocted after his departure. Etzooah
-expected to find Gault and his men camped within a mile or so of the
-Post, where he had left them earlier that day.
-
-Ere he had gone two miles beyond the Slavi village, the miserable Indian
-rode fairly into the trap set for the white man. He was pounding along
-at a good rate over this well-traveled part of the trail, one knee
-hooked around the horn of his saddle, as was his custom. The thin line,
-stretched as taut as a wire across the trail, caught him under the chin,
-and lifted his body clear of the saddle. His knee held him; the horse
-reared; Etzooah’s head was dragged back between his shoulders. As the
-horse’s forefeet dropped back to the ground, there was a horrible soft
-crack heard. The man’s body came away from the saddle, and dropped
-limply in the trail. The terrified horse ran on.
-
-There was a loud laugh of bravado amongst the trees. Gault stepped out
-into the trail. “Worked like a charm!” he said. “I think his neck is
-broke.”
-
-Moale dropped to one knee beside the huddled body, and struck a match.
-“God! . . . It’s Etzooah!” he gasped.
-
-“Etzooah! . . . Etzooah . . . !” said Gault stupidly.
-
-The match had dropped from Moale’s nerveless fingers. He fumbled with
-another. At last the little flame sprang up. “Look!” he said. “Look!”
-
-“God Almighty!” cried Gault. “What’s he doing back here?”
-
-Moale was feeling under the man’s head. “He’ll never tell you,” he said
-grimly. “His neck is broke.”
-
-Gault said anxiously: “See if he has the letter on him.”
-
-A search revealed that the letter was gone.
-
-“Then he has been to Conacher,” said Gault. “Drag him into the bush, and
-we’ll go get that white man.”
-
-“If his body should be found . . .” suggested Moale. “Hadn’t we better
-drop the tree on him as planned for the other?”
-
-“Hell! I’m not going to waste that trick on a redskin! I may want it
-later. Pitch him in the river. The current will carry him far beyond the
-sight of mankind.”
-
-But as Moale started to obey, Gault changed his mind again. “Wait,” he
-said. “I’ll help you to hoist his body out of way of the coyotes.
-Conacher was the last man who saw Etzooah alive, understand? We will use
-that later.”
-
-The Indian’s body, still warm, was hung over two spruce branches. The
-Crees were summoned to fetch the horses from their hiding-place, and
-Gault and his three men rode south.
-
-It was full day and the Slavis were packing the horses, in the spongy
-meadow, when the four big men rode violently down the little pine-clad
-point. Instantly the Slavis jumped on horses and scattered far and wide
-in the sea of grass.
-
-Gault had his eye on Tatateecha. “Let them go,” he shouted to his men.
-He caught the plump headman by the collar as he was climbing on a horse,
-and flung him in the grass. “Now then!” he said with an oath. “Where’s
-the white man?” It was a simple matter to signify Conacher’s curling
-yellow hair and blue eyes.
-
-Another discomfiture awaited the furious trader. Tatateecha, delighted
-to find that Conacher, and not himself, was the object of Gault’s wrath,
-gave, in signs, a graphic and perfectly truthful account of how Etzooah
-had arrived the night before and had given Conacher a letter; and how
-Conacher after reading the letter had put Etzooah on a horse tied hand
-and foot and had ridden back, leading him. Tatateecha said nothing about
-the letter Conacher had given him, which was burning a hole in his
-stomach at that moment.
-
-Gault swore violently, and Tatateecha edged out of reach of his boot.
-The trader was forced to apply to Moale in his perplexity. “What do you
-make of it?” he said. “Etzooah was not tied up when we found him?”
-
-Moale shrugged. “One thing is clear,” he said, “We’ve passed Conacher
-somewhere.”
-
-“Then catch fresh horses and we’ll ride back!” shouted Gault.
-
-“The fur? . . .” suggested Moale, casting desirous eyes on the scattered
-bales.
-
-“To hell with the fur! I’m going to get that white man first!”
-
-At six o’clock in the morning they were back at the Slavi village.
-Splashing through the ford, the first native they came upon was a bent
-crone, too old to get out of the way. Out of her dim eyes she looked at
-Gault with indifferent scorn. In reply to the usual question about the
-white man with the curling hair the color of the sun, she told in signs
-that he had ridden there in the night when the paleness of the sky was
-in the north (midnight). Etzooah was not with him then. The white man
-turned out his horse, took a canoe, and paddled down river.
-
-“Gone back to the girl,” growled Gault. “But what in hell could have
-warned him that we were laying for him in the trail!”
-
-Moale suddenly perceived the well-known sorrel mare grazing amongst the
-other horses. She was still saddled and bridled. The eyes almost started
-out of his head. “Look!” he cried pointing.
-
-It was one of the nastiest shocks that Gault had received. He stared at
-the animal with hanging jaw. “How did that mare get here?” he demanded
-hoarsely.
-
-The old woman replied by signs that Loseis had come with Conacher in the
-night.
-
-“What!” shouted Gault. “_What!_ . . . Why in hell didn’t you say so
-before?”
-
-The very old woman looked at him calmly. Her glance said: You didn’t ask
-me!
-
-The furious Gault was incapable of dealing with her. Moale, calmer and
-warier, plied her for further information. She described how Loseis had
-been up and down in the trail all day. Loseis must have seen Etzooah
-pass at midday, but she had not come back to the village for her horse
-until near evening.
-
-“Then in God’s name what was she doing all afternoon?” muttered Gault, a
-certain fear striking into his rage.
-
-Nothing further was to be learned here. The four men rode on in the
-direction of Blackburn’s Post. Moale and the two Crees gave their master
-a good dozen yards’ lead in the trail. The passions of hell were working
-in the trader’s black face. Moale was gray and the Indians yellowish
-with fatigue and apprehension. It was a safe guess that all three would
-have been glad then to get out of this ugly business; but they were
-bound to their master a hundred times over; there was no possibility of
-dissociating their fortunes from his. They were not bothered by moral
-scruples; but they feared that Gault’s passions had mastered him to such
-an extent that he was no longer capable of listening to the counsels of
-prudence.
-
-At a point about a mile short from the Post, they turned out of the
-trail, and followed the summit of one of the gravelly ridges, picking
-their way slowly through the scrub. Soon the timber and brush became too
-thick for them to guide their horses through, and they were obliged to
-dismount and lead them. After a mile and a half of the roughest sort of
-going, which included the crossing of a gorge-like coulee, they came out
-on the trail to Fort Good Hope in a little prairie dotted with clumps of
-poplars. Here they had left their outfit the day before, and had turned
-out their remaining horses hobbled.
-
-They cooked and ate a meal in sullen silence. Afterwards Gault
-dispatched Moale into the Post to spy out the situation.
-
-“Tell her,” he said with stiff and bitter lips, “that I couldn’t rest
-for thinking of her alone there, and I sent back to ask if she was all
-right.”
-
-Moale, in his impassive way, set off without expressing any opinion as
-to the usefulness of this errand.
-
-He was back by the time the sun had completed a quarter of its journey
-across the sky. Gault was sitting hunched up in the grass almost
-precisely as he had left him. In twenty-four hours the trader had not
-slept. He sprang up at the sight of Moale.
-
-“Well?” he demanded with cruel eagerness.
-
-“I found the two girls in the Women’s House . . .” Moale began.
-
-“Alone?” snarled Gault.
-
-“Alone. Everything looked as usual. When I delivered your message,
-Loseis listened politely, but her eyes were full of hard laughter. She
-did not believe me.”
-
-“What did she say?”
-
-“She told me to thank you, and to tell you that there was nothing she
-required.”
-
-“What then?”
-
-“Conacher, having seen me come, came hurrying across from the men’s
-house.”
-
-“Without concealment?”
-
-“Why should there be any concealment? They cannot know that Etzooah is
-dead. They think Etzooah has told us all.”
-
-“Damnation!” muttered the trader. “I am all in the dark! . . . Go on!”
-
-“Conacher had a gun over his arm. . . .”
-
-“A gun?” echoed Gault in angry alarm.
-
-“A gun. I did not have any talk with Conacher. He left it to the girl.”
-
-“What else did she say?”
-
-“She asked me where we were camped. I replied that we had made but a
-short stage yesterday, because you were anxious about her. It amused her
-to hear me lie. She didn’t say anything; but only looked at the
-three-bar brand on my horse’s flank.”
-
-Gault broke out in furious cursing. “You fool! Why didn’t you change to
-one of the horses we left here?”
-
-“Those horses are not broke for riding.”
-
-“You could have managed.”
-
-“What difference does it make?” said Moale impassively. “They know all.”
-
-“How _can_ they know?” cried Gault. “Go on!”
-
-“I told her that we had come upon a bunch of her horses, and I had
-borrowed one to ride back, so I could save my own. She knew I was lying,
-of course. Her horses do not range on this side of the coulee. But she
-said nothing. She asked me politely if I would eat before riding back. I
-had just eaten, but I said I would, thinking I might learn something by
-staying.”
-
-“The Beaver girl served me in the kitchen. While I was eating Loseis and
-Conacher were talking together outside the house. They talked low, but
-my ears are very sharp. I caught enough of the words to be able to piece
-together the sense of the whole. Conacher wanted to tell me everything,
-and try to win me to their side. I heard him say: ‘Insane with
-jealousy.’ He meant you. His idea was that there was no reason why I
-should risk my neck for you. But the girl would not agree. She said you
-had only sent me over there to get information, and if they told me
-anything it would be playing right into your hand. So nothing was told
-me. When I had eaten, some more polite speeches were made, and I rode
-away.”
-
-“You think . . . ?” said Gault, knitting his brows.
-
-“I am sure that they know all,” said Moale. “The girl must have been
-skulking in the woods yesterday afternoon. She has doubtless learned the
-Slavi tricks of hiding and moving softly. The way Conacher snatched up
-his gun shows what they expect of us.”
-
-Gault revealed the big teeth in an ugly smile. “Well . . .” he said
-slowly, “we won’t disappoint them. We’re in so deep now, we’ve got to go
-the whole way. . . .”
-
-“You mean . . . ?” asked Moale with his enigmatic eyes fixed intently on
-Gault’s face.
-
-Gault nodded somberly. “The girl _and_ the man,” he said. “Before
-anybody comes in.”
-
-Moale shrugged acquiescently.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
- PREPARING FOR DANGER
-
-
-As soon as Moale rode away Loseis, Conacher and Mary-Lou held a council.
-The sense of common danger drew them very close together; their hearts
-were soft towards each other. The whites treated the Indian girl exactly
-as one of themselves. But poor Mary-Lou was not of much help to them.
-Terror had her in its grip again.
-
-The sunshine drew them outside the door of the Women’s House. Loseis
-cast her eyes about the scene. “Ah! how beautiful the world is!” she
-murmured. “Only men spoil it!”
-
-“Cheer up!” said Conacher stoutly. “They haven’t got us yet!”
-
-“I do not mind danger!” said Loseis quickly. “But such wickedness hurts
-my breast. It spoils life!”
-
-“I know,” said Conacher. “You cannot believe in it.”
-
-“Well, never mind our feelings,” said Loseis with a shake of her black
-mane. “What have we got to expect now?”
-
-“We’ve got the time it will take Moale to ride to his master and
-report,” said Conacher.
-
-“But he’s waiting close by, of course,” said Loseis. “He may even be
-watching us from the top of the hill.”
-
-“The simplest thing would be for Gault to ride down and break in the
-door with an ax,” said Conacher. “If he does, I’ll blow the top of his
-head off,” he added grimly.
-
-Loseis shook her head. “Gault never does the simple thing.”
-
-“He may lose his head.”
-
-“Moale is there to remind him to be cautious. . . . No! Gault will never
-attack us in the open. Not while we stick together. I feel that from the
-inside. He doesn’t care what you would think; but he is too conceited to
-let me _see_ what a beast he can be.”
-
-“When it came to the final point,” said Conacher, “I don’t believe he
-could harm you.”
-
-“He’s _got_ to kill me now,” said Loseis simply. “I know too much.”
-
-Conacher walked around the Women’s House, studying it. When he returned
-he said: “I think we had better make this our fortress. There are no
-windows in the back; it will be the easiest building to defend. And more
-comfortable for you girls. I’ll bring over my bed and bunk in the
-kitchen. You two take the inner room. . . . That is, if you agree.”
-
-“You are the captain,” said Loseis with a warm glance.
-
-“Well, we won’t quarrel over who’s the boss,” said Conacher. “Our first
-job must be to stock up with food, water, ammunition and firewood.”
-
-They scattered to these tasks, glad to have something to occupy their
-hands. Expecting momentarily to be interrupted, they worked hard and
-swiftly, always keeping their ears sharpened for hoof-beats on the
-trail. But there were no alarms. Midday came; they finished their work;
-and Blackburn’s Post still basked undisturbed in the sunshine.
-
-While Mary-Lou cooked the dinner, Conacher took stock of their supplies.
-There was ample food, firewood and ammunition—they had taken care to
-transfer the entire stock of ammunition from the store; but the water
-supply gave him cause for anxiety. The entire stock of vessels capable
-of holding water consisted of three small kegs, half a dozen pails and
-some small pots. The Slavis carried water in birch-bark receptacles.
-
-“Barely a week’s supply,” said Conacher ruefully.
-
-“If the worst comes to the worst we’ll have to cut out washing,” said
-Loseis smiling. “The Slavis get along without washing.”
-
-After dinner they lounged in front of the house again. This was the
-hardest time to put in. The uncertainty of what to expect kept them
-keyed up to a painful pitch. Conacher wished to creep up to the top of
-the hill to reconnoiter; but Loseis would not hear of it.
-
-“Would you take me with you?” she asked.
-
-He shook his head.
-
-“No, of course not!” said Loseis. “You know very well we might walk
-smack into a trap.”
-
-They endlessly discussed their chances.
-
-“If Tatateecha makes thirty miles again to-day,” said Conacher; “that
-will complete one-fifth of the whole distance. . . .”
-
-“Better not count too much on Tatateecha,” warned Loseis. “He is as
-reliable as water.”
-
-“I know,” said Conacher. “But there’s no harm in figuring. . . . Say he
-makes the warehouse in eight more days. If Gruber started back
-instantly—and of course he would on getting my letter; he could make
-the return journey in five days, or even four if he had plenty of
-horses. In twelve days then, we may begin to look for relief. After all
-twelve days is not so much. . . .”
-
-“But Gault will be counting those twelve days, too,” said Loseis in a
-low tone. “He will not let them pass without acting.”
-
-Seeing how the Indian girl’s head was hanging down, and her face
-twitching, Loseis said kindly: “Mary-Lou, why don’t you take a horse,
-and ride to the Slavi village? You can stay with the other Marys. You
-would be quite safe there. And you can’t do us any good by staying
-here.”
-
-Mary-Lou, without looking up, slowly shook her head. “I not like live in
-tepee,” she murmured. “Please, I want stay with you.”
-
-Loseis gave her a hug. “Surely!” she said. “But I hate to see you so
-broken up.”
-
-“I all right,” said Mary-Lou in a strangled voice. She hastened into the
-house.
-
-Conacher and Loseis came together. They walked in the grass with linked
-arms.
-
-“Sweetheart,” murmured Conacher; “you hide it well, but you are
-suffering too!”
-
-“You mustn’t feel sorry for me,” said Loseis, “or I’ll feel sorry for
-myself then. . . . It’s only not knowing what to expect! When I see what
-I have to do, I’ll be all right.”
-
-“If I could only get you away from it all!”
-
-“I have been through it alone,” said Loseis. “Now I have you!”
-
-Later in the afternoon Conacher was sitting by himself at the door,
-still revolving their chances of receiving help from the outside, when
-suddenly he perceived a bark canoe with two figures in it coming down
-the river.
-
-“By God! here’s something to break the suspense!” he cried, leaping up.
-
-Loseis ran to the door. But when she saw the canoe her face showed no
-relief nor gladness. She suspected who was in it.
-
-And when the canoe landed in the creek mouth, presently an
-all-too-familiar little rotund figure rose over the top of the bank.
-
-“Tatateecha,” said Loseis in a listless voice.
-
-Conacher’s face fell like a child’s. He groaned aloud in his anger and
-disappointment. “Oh, the miserable cur!” he cried.
-
-“What would you expect of a Slavi?” said Loseis, shrugging.
-
-They waited for him in a bitter silence. Tatateecha came plodding up the
-grassy rise with the air of a guilty schoolboy. His companion remained
-in the canoe. Reaching the top, Tatateecha, with an absurd pretense of
-not seeing Conacher and Loseis, headed straight across towards the
-store. Loseis summoned him peremptorily. He came like a dog to get his
-whipping, twisting his body, and grinning in sickening fear. Still
-trying to make out that nothing was the matter, he said something to
-Loseis that caused her to laugh a single bitter note.
-
-“What is it?” demanded Conacher.
-
-“He is out of tobacco,” said Loseis.
-
-“Oh, my God!” cried Conacher. “Tobacco! When we were counting on him to
-bring us help!”
-
-Loseis held up a restraining hand. “You will only frighten him stupid,”
-she said. “Let me find out what happened.”
-
-The miserable Tatateecha told his story to Loseis, who translated it for
-Conacher. “He says, early this morning when they were packing up for the
-start, Gault, and his three big men suddenly rode into their camp, and
-the Slavis jumped on horses and spread in every direction. Gault, when
-he found you were gone, turned right back, but Tatateecha couldn’t round
-up the Slavis by himself, he says. One by one they gained the trail and
-galloped home; and there was nothing for it but for him to come home
-too. . . . It may be true. It has the sound of truth.”
-
-“Leaving all the fur and the pack-horses where they were, I suppose,”
-said Conacher.
-
-Loseis shrugged. “I expect that was bound to be lost,” she said.
-
-“And he calls himself their head man . . . !”
-
-Loseis concealed her bitter disappointment under a mask of indifference.
-“He isn’t worth swearing at,” she said. “Give him a plug of tobacco, and
-let him go.”
-
-Tatateecha began to argue for two plugs of tobacco; Conacher with a
-threatening gesture, sent him flying down the hill.
-
-Supper time was approaching when all further uncertainty was put to an
-end by the sound of many hoofs pounding down the trail above the Post.
-Loseis and Conacher prudently retired within the house, and barring the
-door, each took up a position at one of the little windows looking out
-on the square. Mary-Lou declined to come to the window. Conacher was in
-the kitchen; Loseis in her room, and the door open between. Conacher
-opened his window. Between his feet rested the butt of his express
-rifle; and he grasped the barrel in one hand.
-
-Presently a numerous cavalcade rode into the grassy square. It seemed to
-the watchers as if they would never stop coming. Besides Gault and Moale
-they counted sixteen well-mounted Indians; big, able-looking fellows;
-mostly having a claim to a distant white ancestor in all probability.
-There were also several laden horses, and a number of spare ones.
-
-“He’s brought his army against us!” said Conacher with scornful
-laughter.
-
-“They don’t know what they’re going to be used for,” answered Loseis.
-
-“Might be a good thing for me to tell them,” suggested Conacher.
-
-“Useless,” said Loseis. “There’s never been any police stationed at Fort
-Good Hope, and they can conceive of no authority higher than Gault’s.”
-
-Reining in, Gault pointed down to the river flat where the Slavi village
-had lately stood. The Indians rode on down the grassy rise with their
-pack-horses and spares; and began forthwith to make camp. Gault and
-Moale were left sitting their horses side by side. Gault, well aware
-that he was being watched, never looked towards the Women’s House. To
-all appearances he was as ever, the elegant gentleman; perfectly turned
-out; his face smooth and bland. He had allowed the rein to fall on his
-horse’s neck. One hand rested on his hip; and with the other he
-gesticulated gracefully towards the camp below, as he issued his
-instructions to the deferential Moale.
-
-“Quite the beau ideal,” said Loseis dryly at her little window.
-
-“So that’s my would-be murderer!” said Conacher at his. “Gives you a
-funny feeling to set eyes on him when you know.”
-
-Moale dismounted and went to the door of the Men’s House, where he
-knocked.
-
-“Feeling his way,” said Conacher.
-
-“It will be amusing to hear what excuse he gives for coming back here,”
-said Loseis.
-
-Conacher raised his gun. “Loseis,” he said soberly, “the quickest way to
-end this matter would be for me to shoot him off his horse as he sits
-there.”
-
-Loseis ran to his side. “No, Paul, no!” she cried agitatedly.
-
-“It would be the best way,” he insisted. “He means to kill us if he can.
-Suppose he gets one of us and the other is left. I’m a pretty good shot.
-I could get him easily now. It would end it. These other men have
-nothing against us.”
-
-“No! No! No!” she cried. “Not until he attacks us! I couldn’t bear it!”
-
-Conacher allowed the butt of his gun to thump on the floor again. “Very
-well,” he said a little sullenly. “Still, I think it would be the best
-way.”
-
-Receiving no answer at the door of the men’s house, Moale faced about,
-and came towards them. Conacher and Loseis watched him with heads close
-together. Moale’s comely olive face was, as always, perfectly
-expressionless.
-
-“What sort of man is this?” asked Conacher grimly.
-
-“Who can tell?” said Loseis. “He is neither white nor red.”
-
-They opened the door, and stood side by side within the frame to receive
-him, Conacher with his gun across his arm. At sight of the gun Moale’s
-eyes narrowed, but he made no reference to it in speech. Bowing to
-Loseis, he said in his gentle voice:
-
-“Mr. Gault wishes to know if he may speak with you?”
-
-“But why not?” said Loseis coolly. “Speech is free.”
-
-“If he comes unarmed,” added Conacher grimly.
-
-Moale stabbed him with a lightning glance of his strange eyes, but did
-not speak. Bowing to Loseis again, he turned and went back to Gault.
-
-Loseis and Conacher remained standing in the doorway. The girl said
-earnestly:
-
-“Paul dear, when he comes, you must hold your anger in.”
-
-“I’m not going to truckle to him,” said Conacher, angry already.
-
-“Of course not! If we showed fear we would be lost. But if we become
-angry they will use it as an excuse to attack us, and we will be lost,
-too. We must show neither fear nor anger, but only coldness. My heart
-tells me that.”
-
-“Oh, you’re right, of course,” groaned Conacher; “but you’re asking
-almost too much of flesh and blood!”
-
-After a brief colloquy with Moale, Gault dismounted, and came striding
-towards them with measured steps. He had retained the lordly air of the
-old-time trader. His self-control was marvelous; he kept his head up,
-and looked from Loseis to Conacher with brazen coolness. But there was a
-sort of glassy guard over his eyes. You could not see into them.
-
-“He has his nerve with him,” grumbled Conacher in unwilling admiration.
-“Marching up to the gun like this, with empty hands.”
-
-“He may have a pistol,” suggested Loseis.
-
-“He’d have to draw it,” said Conacher coolly. “And my gun is in my
-hands.”
-
-As he drew close, Gault’s eyes flickered once. It must have been like a
-knife in his breast to see Conacher and Loseis pressed together
-companionably in the door of their house like a little family. But this
-was the only sign of feeling he gave.
-
-“Good evening,” he said to Loseis.
-
-“Good evening,” returned Loseis.
-
-Gault went on: “I was somewhat surprised to learn from Moale, when he
-returned to me to-day, that Conacher was with you.”
-
-“Were you?” said Loseis dryly.
-
-“You told me that he had gone with the fur.”
-
-This was too much for Conacher’s honest simplicity. “You know damned
-well what brought me back!” he cried.
-
-Loseis laid a restraining hand on his arm. Gault continued to look at
-Loseis as if Conacher had not spoken. There was a silence which seemed
-to bristle with pointing knives.
-
-“Of course it was clear to me that the Slavis would never be able to
-carry through alone,” Gault resumed. “And as I happened to meet the men
-I had sent for from Fort Good Hope just then, I turned around and
-brought them back with me, to offer them to you to take out your fur.
-They are experienced and intelligent men, and can travel anywhere.”
-
-Loseis took thought before answering. Why does he trouble to give me all
-this palaver when he knows he has only to go and get the fur? It
-occurred to her that candor on her part would be the best means of
-disconcerting him. She said coolly:
-
-“The Slavis have already returned. The fur has been abandoned at the
-spot about thirty miles from here, where you saw it early this
-morning. . . .”
-
-Gault changed color slightly. He could not guess how she had learned
-this so soon.
-
-“Well, there it lies,” Loseis went on. “I do not mean to give you
-permission to go and get it. On the other hand I cannot prevent you from
-doing so.”
-
-Gault appeared to be debating the question with himself. He finally
-said: “It is clearly my duty to save this valuable property. I shall
-therefore send the Crees after it to-morrow.”
-
-“As you will,” said Loseis.
-
-Gault made to go; and then turned back as if struck by a new thought. “I
-shall be returning to my own post,” he said. “My first thought was to
-send Moale out with the fur; but your situation cannot be very
-comfortable here. If you and Conacher would like to accompany the fur
-train, Moale may remain here to guard your property until you return.”
-
-Loseis smiled coldly. So this was what he had been leading up to!
-
-Conacher’s blue eyes widened with indignation. “Well, I’ll be damned!”
-he cried. “If this doesn’t. . . .”
-
-Loseis touched him warningly. “I thank you,” she said to Gault with hard
-sweetness. “Mr. Conacher and I both thank you. We offer you all the
-thanks that is due to your most generous offer. But _under the
-circumstances_, we prefer to remain here.”
-
-Gault’s face was like a wall. He bowed to Loseis, and left them.
-
-“By God . . . !” began Conacher.
-
-“Hush!” said Loseis. “Anger just gives him an opening to get angry too.
-But coldness mixes him all up.”
-
-“What a fool he must be to think . . .”
-
-“He is not a fool,” interrupted Loseis. “He knew exactly what he was
-doing. You see he was not sure if we knew that he meant murder. His
-object was to find that out. Well, he did find out.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
- BESIEGED
-
-
-A little tent of pale green silk, trim and elegant, was pitched for
-Gault in the meadow below, a short distance from the big fire built by
-the Crees. After supper they could see Gault seated in the place of
-honor beside the fire, surrounded by his men. Apparently all was peace
-and good-fellowship in that camp. The attitudes of the men suggested
-story-telling, and hearty laughter.
-
-“This is for our benefit,” said Loseis with a scornful smile.
-
-“I shall watch through the night,” said Conacher.
-
-“There will be no open attack.”
-
-“Just the same, I’ll stay up.”
-
-“I will take turns with you.”
-
-However, Gault presently crept under his little tent; and the Crees one
-by one rolled up in their blankets, and lay completely covered up in the
-redskin manner like a long row of corpses along the edge of the creek
-bank. The sun went down, and the great silence crept like long fingers
-out of the darkening sky. The brief hours of darkness passed, and there
-was no suspicious move nor sound from below. The last of the sunset glow
-stole around the northern horizon towards the east. In due course the
-sun rose again, and the camp below lay exactly as before.
-
-Soon afterwards a great bustle began. They built up the fire,
-breakfasted, caught their horses, and packed up. Moale and the main body
-of the Crees crossed the creek, and galloped away over the trail to the
-south. Gault and two men rode up the rise, crossed the little square
-without a glance towards the Women’s House, and went on up the trail
-behind the store.
-
-“There are four men unaccounted for,” said Loseis suddenly. “Only ten
-went with Moale. I counted them.”
-
-“Let’s go out and take a look about,” said Conacher. “Whatever they are
-plotting, it will take them a certain time to organize it. For a few
-minutes anyhow, we will be safe.”
-
-They left Mary-Lou, gray with terror, alone in the house. Conacher took
-his gun. After their night-long vigil it was a delight to get out into
-the open. Running down the grassy rise together, they joked at danger.
-
-“Funny, here in my own place to be expecting to hear a bullet sing past
-my ears,” said Loseis.
-
-“’S all right if it sings past,” said Conacher, grinning.
-
-As soon as Loseis looked over the creek bank she said: “There was a
-damaged dug-out lying in the mud here. They have repaired it and gone in
-it. They must have gone down river, close under the bank. We should have
-seen them if they had gone up. I don’t know why they should go down
-river.”
-
-“I think I can explain that,” said Conacher. “There are three possible
-ways of escape from this place; south by the trail to the lake and
-beyond; east by the trail to Fort Good Hope; and north down the river.
-All three ways are now watched by our enemies.”
-
-“I never should have thought of going down river,” said Loseis. “There
-is nothing there.”
-
-“I have thought of it,” said Conacher. “It would be many hundreds of
-miles to a post, but it’s a possibility. But with the river watched it
-would be the most dangerous way of all. All they’d have to do would be
-to smash our boat, or set it adrift in the current. It would be all day
-with us then.”
-
-“Just to keep us from escaping wouldn’t do Gault any good,” said Loseis.
-“We have plenty of grub; and help is bound to arrive in the end. That
-cannot be the whole of his plan.”
-
-“Oh, no; not the whole of it,” said Conacher grimly. “Time will tell.”
-
-Loseis shivered. “Let’s get back under cover,” she said.
-
-Before returning to the house they made sure that Conacher’s dug-out was
-still safe where he had left it hidden in the willows with the paddle in
-the bottom.
-
-“Who knows? It may come in handy,” he said.
-
-The hours of that day dragged by with leaden feet. Nothing happened, and
-that was the hardest thing to bear. All needed sleep; and all were too
-highly keyed up to obtain it. Clouds had come up with the sun, and by
-breakfast time a soft persistent rain was falling, driven in sheets by a
-cold wind from the northeast. Sharp squalls swept across the little
-square at intervals, almost blotting out the buildings opposite.
-
-“Well, at any rate we’re better off than the other fellows,” said
-Conacher with a grim chuckle. “We’ve got a roof over our heads.”
-
-After breakfast in spite of Loseis’ protests, he took up his position in
-the open doorway, with his gun across his knees. His view out of the
-window was too much narrowed by the thickness of the log walls, he
-explained.
-
-“But you offer such a fair mark where you are!” complained Loseis.
-
-“Nobody could shoot me here except from behind the house opposite,” said
-Conacher. “In order to do that he’s got to show himself; and my eyes are
-as quick as the next man’s.”
-
-The house opposite bothered Conacher. “If they gained possession of it,
-it would render our position untenable, as they say in the army
-communiqués,” he said.
-
-It transpired that there were staples in the door, and a padlock lying
-somewhere within to fasten it. Conacher announced his intention of going
-across to bar the shutters and lock the door.
-
-And so it was done. Loseis stood at the door with her gun to cover his
-passage to and fro across the little square.
-
-Loseis and Conacher, half exasperated, half affectionate, disputed
-endlessly over who should bear the heavier part of the burden.
-
-“You _must_ sleep!” insisted Loseis. “It is to-night that the real
-danger will come.”
-
-“You sleep first,” said Conacher, “and I’ll promise to match whatever
-you do, later.”
-
-Towards the end of the afternoon the sky cleared, and the grass of the
-little square steamed up in the warmth of the late sun.
-
-“I’d give something to be able to run down to the river and back to
-stretch my legs,” said Conacher longingly.
-
-“Every foot of the flat is commanded from the bench to the north,” said
-Loseis sharply.
-
-“Very little danger of getting hit if I zigzagged,” said Conacher,
-partly to tease her.
-
-Loseis changed her tactics. “Very well, I’ll come too,” she said.
-
-“Not on your life!” said Conacher; and the subject was dropped.
-
-They ate their supper; the sun went down; and the great stillness
-descended. Conacher closed and barred the door then; and went back to
-the kitchen window. The window was open; and the slender black barrel of
-his rifle stuck out across the thick log that formed its sill.
-Accustomed as they were to the evening stillness, in this tense hour it
-struck awe into their breasts as if it was the first time. They had an
-indefinable feeling that whatever It was, It would come in this hushed
-moment. Loseis was at her window; Mary-Lou was crouched on the floor at
-the back of the room with her hands pressed to her mouth.
-
-Presently they heard that sound which is always associated with the
-sunset stillness of the Northwest; the long-drawn, intolerably mournful
-howl of a coyote; a sound calculated to shake stretched nerves. It rose
-startlingly close; in fact from the ravine through which the creek
-flowed behind the men’s house opposite.
-
-“That is no coyote,” said Loseis sharply. “They never come so close to
-the Post.”
-
-Mary-Lou moaned.
-
-The cry was repeated; and was answered from down the river.
-
-“That coyote is afloat in a canoe,” said Conacher with a grim chuckle.
-“The men who went down the river to-day have been instructed to come
-back at evening to watch us.”
-
-Another heartrending howl was raised from the hill back of the store.
-
-“The outposts are establishing communications,” said Conacher, carrying
-it off lightly in order to hearten the girls. “Well, it’s a relief to
-know what and where they are. At this God-awful moment of the day you
-could imagine anything!”
-
-For awhile the quavering cries went back and forth; then silence.
-Darkness drew slowly in. At first the sky across the river was like a
-sea of amber with one or two scraps of cloud floating in it like golden
-ships. As the warmth gradually faded out it took on the hue of blued
-steel. The moon was rising later now; to-night there would be an hour or
-so of darkness before her coming. Conacher had to strain his eyes to
-make out the details of the house across the way.
-
-The slow minutes passed. In the big chimney the night-breeze kept up a
-gentle, uneven murmuring that was like somebody speaking to somebody
-else a little way off. Occasionally the man and the girl whispered from
-room to room in the dark just to reassure themselves of the other’s warm
-and breathing presence.
-
-“Paul?”
-
-“Yes, pardner?”
-
-“There’s no need for both of us to be watching.”
-
-“Well, you take a sleep, old girl.”
-
-“Sleep!”
-
-“My sentiments exactly!”
-
-And later:
-
-“Paul, do not remain at the window. Even though they cannot see you,
-they will guess that you are there. It is like a bull’s eye in the side
-of the house!”
-
-“But I must be looking out!”
-
-“Do as I do. Scrape away the clay, and use a chink between the logs for
-a peep-hole.”
-
-After that Paul lay full length on the floor of the kitchen, with his
-rifle barrel poked out through the chink.
-
-Suddenly his gun roared outside, blowing the night to pieces as it
-seemed. A dreadful, low cry escaped from Mary-Lou.
-
-“What was it?” whispered Loseis sharply.
-
-“Man crawling towards the door of the men’s house.”
-
-“Did you get him?”
-
-“No,” said Conacher ruefully. “He streaked back around the corner. It
-was the merest shadow. I shot too soon.”
-
-There was another long wait, much harder to bear for nerves that still
-recollected the explosion of that shot. Then they became aware by a
-gentle grayness pervading the scene outside, that the moon had risen.
-The orb itself was hidden by the buildings opposite.
-
-“He’s gone into the little warehouse beyond the store,” said Conacher
-suddenly. “The door has been opened. . . . Damn it! I should have locked
-that door.”
-
-“You couldn’t have locked it,” said Loseis. “They broke the staples.”
-
-“I’ve a good mind to go over there and get him,” muttered Conacher.
-
-“Right across the open, I suppose,” said Loseis bitterly.
-
-“I might steal around behind the buildings.”
-
-“There are probably others there.”
-
-“If I sent a shot through the open door it would give him a good scare.”
-
-“Nothing to be gained by scaring him.”
-
-The edge of the moon peeped over the ridge of the men’s house. A few
-minutes later she was shining directly into their faces. This had them
-at a cruel disadvantage, for the other side of the square where one or
-more of their enemies were lurking, was hidden in the deepest shadow.
-Conacher swore helplessly under his breath.
-
-By and by a cloud crept across the moon dimming her silvery glare.
-
-“He’s come out of the warehouse,” said Conacher in surprise. “The door
-is closed now. . . . I don’t understand that. Why should he come out
-unless he had found a better place? What other place is there where he
-could sit in hiding and watch us?”
-
-There was no answer forthcoming. The moon came out again, bathing the
-little square within the crouching buildings in her misty radiance. As
-she rose higher their vision was the less obscured. Nothing stirred
-outside. The earth was so still, one fancied one could feel its great
-swing to the east. Time passed, and that fear against which the bravest
-hearts are not proof, lay upon them heavier and heavier; the fear of the
-unknown.
-
-Conacher at his loophole muttered and swore under his breath. “When I
-knew where he was it was all right. . . . This is hellish . . . !”
-
-Finally, when the eastern sky was beginning to get ready for dawn, he
-jumped up. “I can’t stand this,” he cried. “I’ve got to find out where
-they are, and what they’re up to!”
-
-Loseis found him in the dark. “Oh, hush!” she whispered. “Maybe there’s
-an ear pressed against the back wall! . . . What are you going to do?”
-
-Conacher put his lips to her ear. “Make a dummy, and show it at the
-door,” he said. Even at that moment a chuckle sounded in his voice.
-
-They closed the shutters, stuffed up their peep-holes and lighted a
-lamp. Conacher tied a broom to the back of a chair with the brush
-uppermost. He then tied a piece of firewood athwart the broom handle
-just under the brush. This was for shoulders. They dared not use hammer
-and nails. Upon this frame he hung one of Mary-Lou’s dresses, and
-completed the figure by forcing a small cooking pot over the brush of
-the broom, with a piece of white cloth hanging down in front to
-represent a face. In the moonlight at a hundred paces distance they
-judged that it would serve. Conacher blew out the light again.
-
-“I’ll manipulate the chair,” he said to Loseis. “You go back to your
-peep-hole. You must be watching for the flash in case he shoots.
-Mary-Lou, you must open the door. There’s no danger if you keep behind
-it.”
-
-Conacher waited until Loseis was at her place. “All clear outside?” he
-asked.
-
-“I can see nothing,” she whispered.
-
-“All right then, Mary.”
-
-They could hear her gasping softly for breath, as she drew the door
-slowly open. The night stole into the room. All three hearts were
-beating furiously. Conacher, lying on the floor, grasped the legs of the
-chair, and thrust it forward a little. At first he tipped it to
-represent a face peeping around the doorframe, and quickly withdrew it.
-After repeating this once or twice, he allowed the whole figure to show
-in the doorway, swaying a little like a living body.
-
-“Any movement across the way?” he whispered to Loseis.
-
-“Nothing!”
-
-Finally he allowed the figure to tip forward as if to peer outside the
-door. From across the square two shots crashed out almost
-simultaneously. One bullet shattered the chair back; the other buried
-itself deep in the log wall across the kitchen. It was a relief to hear
-those shots, waiting for them was so dreadful. Conacher jerked the
-remains of the chair out of sight, and Mary-Lou slammed the door. All
-three of them were panting for breath.
-
-“Well?” demanded Conacher excitedly.
-
-“They are inside my father’s house,” said Loseis desperately.
-
-“Impossible!” he cried in dismay.
-
-“Yes! They are doing the same as us. Shooting through chinks between the
-logs.”
-
-“How could they have got in? There are no windows in the back.”
-
-“Who knows? Dug underneath the wall, maybe.”
-
-For the first time Conacher showed discouragement. “Oh, God!” he
-groaned. “By night or day they’ve got us covered!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
- A LEAP FOR FREEDOM
-
-
-On the third morning following, Loseis and Conacher were seated at a
-little table in the kitchen of the Women’s House, with a scarcely
-touched meal between them. In the inner room Mary-Lou was lying on a
-mattress with her face turned towards the wall, asleep—or despairing.
-In the kitchen all was in apple pie order; a fire burning on the
-well-swept hearth with a small pot of water bubbling upon it; the
-shutter of the little window flung back, and the sunshine streaming in;
-outside all green and peaceful to the eye. There was nothing to indicate
-the horror of the situation but the faces of the two at the table. Those
-gaunt and gray young faces, deeply seamed and sunken eyed, told a tale
-of seventy-two hours’ horror. Neither had had more than a snatch or two
-of broken sleep. Three endless nights and days and no hope of relief. It
-was the absence of hope which had aged them.
-
-Conacher rested his cheek in his palm, and gloomily traced imaginary
-lines on the oilcloth cover with his fork. Loseis’ eyes, which looked
-truly enormous now, were fixed on the young man’s face, all tenderness.
-
-“You have brought all this on your head through mixing in my miserable
-affairs,” she murmured.
-
-He looked up quickly. “Oh, don’t say a thing like that!” he protested,
-hurt to the quick. “It seems to divide us. How can we be divided now?
-Your fate is my fate and mine yours!”
-
-Loseis looked down, somewhat comforted. But she yearned for more
-explicit comfort still. “I wonder you do not hate me,” she whispered.
-
-“Loseis!” he said sharply, “if you say such things to me, you will have
-me blubbering like Mary-Lou. That would be a nice thing!” And the tears
-actually stood in his eyes.
-
-The sight of those tears was sweet to Loseis; but she went on
-perversely: “Sometimes I think you do hate me. You do not like to look
-at me any more. Always you turn your eyes away.”
-
-Conacher turned his eyes away then. “The truth is, I can’t bear to look
-at you,” he murmured. “Such a child as you are, and so plucky and proud;
-never a word of complaint out of you. It drives me wild to think I can’t
-save you from this!”
-
-Loseis glided swiftly around the table, and caught his head against her
-breast. “Ah, you blessed Paul!” she crooned, brooding over him. “I was
-just trying to make you say again that you loved me. You mustn’t grieve
-so over me. Think what it would be for me if you weren’t here!”
-
-She dropped to her knees beside his chair. Speech would no longer serve
-to convey their feelings. They snatched a moment of poignant happiness
-out of the surrounding horror.
-
-Finally Conacher, partly withdrawing himself from her arms, sat up
-straight. “This can’t go on!” he said, striking the table.
-
-“What is in your mind?” she asked anxiously.
-
-“We have plenty of food,” he said, “and the water is still holding out;
-but what is the use of it all? To be trapped like this would break
-anybody’s nerve; knowing night and day that the guns were covering you.
-If we stay here they’re certain to get us in the end. Time is passing.
-If we give them no opportunity to pick us off, they’ll drive us out of
-our shelter. They have only to build a fire against the back wall of
-this house . . .”
-
-“Oh, Heaven!” murmured Loseis.
-
-“I don’t want to frighten you unnecessarily,” he said, stroking back her
-hair; “but we’ve got to face the worst. I’ve been looking for it to
-happen every night. That’s why I couldn’t sleep. How simple for Gault to
-shoot us down as we ran out, and throw our bodies back on the fire . . .
-I say we must make a break for it, while we are able to choose our own
-time.”
-
-“But where could we go?” faltered Loseis.
-
-“I’ve been thinking about that. God knows, I have had plenty of time!
-The three obvious ways out are closed to us, but there is a fourth way
-. . .”
-
-“Where?”
-
-“Across the river and over the prairie to the north or northwest.”
-
-“But that is the unknown country!” said Loseis with widening eyes. “No
-white man has ever been across there!”
-
-“True,” said Conacher; “but after all it’s just a country like any
-other. And I’m accustomed to making my own way.”
-
-“Nobody knows what is on the other side!”
-
-“I know,” said Conacher. “It’s part of my job to map this country; and I
-carry the existing map in my mind. Two or three hundred miles away—I
-can only make a rough guess as to the distance; there is an important
-river called the Mud River. We only have reports of it from the Indians.
-But the name tells you what kind of a river it is. It must be a prairie
-river like this one; fairly deep and moderately swift. If there are
-cottonwood trees I could make a rough dug-out; or I could always make
-rafts. The Mud River eventually falls into the Sinclair. It is up the
-Sinclair River that my outfit is making its way at present. According to
-their schedule they will make the mouth of the Mud River on July
-fifteenth. That gives us a month. If we are too late we could follow
-them up the Sinclair. They travel slow on account of the work they have
-to do. It is the best chance I see. No woman has ever made such a
-journey, but men have; and you are as plucky and strong as a boy.”
-
-“I can do it if you can,” said Loseis quickly. “But how could we escape
-from here with an outfit; grub, blankets, ax, gun, ammunition?”
-
-“It would have to be a mighty slim outfit,” said Conacher. “I could feed
-you with my gun if I had to.”
-
-“Across the river there are only a few broken horses,” said Loseis. “We
-could not be sure of finding them at the moment we needed them.”
-
-“We may have to walk,” said Conacher.
-
-“But when Gault missed us, he could swim his horses over. What chance
-would we have then?”
-
-“Not much of a one. . . . But a crazy idea has been coming back to me
-again and again. Maybe the very craziness of it is in its favor. . . .”
-
-“What is it?”
-
-“If we could persuade Gault that we had committed suicide in our
-desperation . . . . ?”
-
-Loseis’ eyes widened like a child’s.
-
-“Can you swim?” asked Conacher.
-
-She sadly shook her head.
-
-“Hm! that’s awkward. . . . But maybe I could manage. . . . There is that
-little air pillow in my outfit. . . .”
-
-They heard Mary-Lou approaching out of the next room, and drew apart.
-
-“What on earth will we do with her?” whispered Loseis.
-
-Conacher shook his head in complete perplexity. “We’ll talk it over
-later,” he whispered.
-
-Mary-Lou had come to clean up the breakfast dishes. The past four days
-had made a shocking change in the appearance of the comely Indian girl.
-She was too apathetic to resent being excluded from their counsels; and
-Conacher and Loseis went on with their whispering.
-
-All day they alternately whispered together, and parted from each other
-to think over the matter afresh. To have this absorbing matter to talk
-over relieved the tension; the hours passed more quickly. They surveyed
-their plan from every angle, continually rejecting this expedient, and
-accepting that. Little by little they built up a reasonable-seeming
-structure. Of course the best plan they could make depended upon so many
-chances for its success, that there were many moments when they
-despaired. But at such moments Conacher would always say: “Still,
-anything would be better than this!” Whereupon they would set their wits
-to work afresh.
-
-Some hours later Conacher said: “One thing is certain. It would have
-twice as good a chance of success if we could prepare Gault’s mind
-beforehand for such a thing to happen. We ought to send him a letter.”
-
-“How could we send him a letter?” asked Loseis.
-
-Recollecting the Indian trophies that hung on the walls of Loseis’ room,
-Conacher went in there. Loseis, following, saw him take down a bow, and
-test the string.
-
-“It has hardened some,” he said: “But it will do.”
-
-Loseis, getting the idea, smiled. “But would they dare to come out and
-get it?” she asked.
-
-“Oh, curiosity is a strong motive,” said Conacher. “And anyway, I have
-suspected every night that they came part way across the square at the
-darkest time before the moon comes up, to make sure that we didn’t slip
-out.”
-
-They sat down to concoct the letter. “You must write it,” said Conacher.
-“It would be more effective.”
-
-After a couple of hours’ work and many drafts, they produced the
-following:
-
- “TO GAULT:
-
- “Why do you torture me so? I have never harmed you. Mary-Lou
- died the first night, and we buried her under the floor. Our
- water is gone. Conacher is acting so strangely I am afraid of
- what he may do. He doesn’t know I am writing this. I will shoot
- it over to you while he sleeps. If there is any decency or mercy
- in your heart let me see you ride away from this place
- to-morrow. I cannot stand this any longer.
-
- “LAURENTIA BLACKBURN.”
-
-Conacher and Loseis smiled grimly over this effusion. But Loseis quickly
-frowned.
-
-“I cannot bear to have him think I would whine for mercy like that,” she
-murmured.
-
-“Yes, but think of the pleasure of fooling him later,” Conacher pointed
-out.
-
-To send their letter they chose a moment after sunset, while there was
-still light enough to aim it. Throwing open the door, they all stood
-back on the chance of receiving a bullet from across the way: but their
-enemies gave no sign. It fell to Loseis’ part to dispatch the letter,
-since she was accustomed to handling the bow and arrow. The letter had
-been fastened around the shaft with a thread. After waiting a moment or
-two, Loseis took up her stand far enough back from the door so that she
-could not possibly be seen. Drawing the bow-string to her ear, she let
-it twang. The arrow sped across the open space, and stuck fast in the
-wall of the men’s house, a few inches from the door. Conacher slammed
-their door shut.
-
-Next morning as soon as it became light, they perceived that the arrow
-still remained fixed in the wall. Their hearts sunk, thinking that their
-ruse had failed. But as the light strengthened Loseis’ sharp eyes
-discovered that the white band around the shaft was gone.
-
-“They have it!” she cried.
-
-All day long they anxiously watched for any sign of activity on the part
-of their enemies. If any reply had been made to their letter it might
-have seriously embarrassed them, but none was made. As the endless,
-endless day finally rounded towards its close, Conacher said grimly:
-
-“It must be to-night.”
-
-Loseis nodded.
-
-They did not take Mary-Lou into their confidence until the latest
-possible moment. They supped; and the dishes were washed. Finally when
-Conacher began to lay out the bundles they were to carry, she had to be
-told. The mind of the overwrought girl was distracted by the thought of
-more danger.
-
-“Let me stay here,” she moaned. “Let me stay here and die!”
-
-“Why die?” said Conacher patiently. “We’re offering you a chance to
-live!”
-
-“I cannot do it!”
-
-“You have the easiest part of all,” Loseis pointed out.
-
-“We have told them that you are dead and buried,” said Conacher
-laughing. “Whether they believe it or not, they’re not going to bother
-about you until they catch Loseis and me. We have only got to run from
-the door to the corner of the house. There’s not one chance in a hundred
-they can get us in that space if we run abreast. Once around the corner
-we are out of range until they can get out of the house.”
-
-After long persuasion, Mary-Lou agreed to try it.
-
-“Now listen,” said Conacher, with an appearance of great cheerfulness;
-“here’s the plan. At the corner of the house we divide. Loseis and I run
-down to the flat, and strike for my dug-out, while you hit directly into
-the woods behind this house. You are to make your way entirely around
-the Post by the side hill, and cross the creek, and make your way as
-best you can to the Slavi village. Take your time to it. If you get
-there by to-morrow night it will do. When it is dark to-morrow night
-take three horses . . .”
-
-“But not my horse,” put in Loseis. “She is too well known.”
-
-“Three horses,” resumed Conacher; “and as much grub as Tatateecha will
-let you have. . . .”
-
-“They have plenty of smoked meat and smoked fish,” said Loseis.
-
-“What place can I appoint for a meeting?” asked Conacher of Loseis.
-
-“The Old Wives’ Slough. It is the furthest point that I have been with
-my father. About ten miles west of here, and the same distance north of
-the Slavi village.”
-
-“Have you been there?” Conacher asked Mary-Lou.
-
-She shook her head.
-
-“Do you know the North Star?”
-
-She nodded.
-
-“Good! Then take the horses and the grub when it becomes dark to-morrow
-night, and ride ten miles in the direction of the North Star to that
-slough in the prairie.”
-
-“There is a trail from the Slavi village,” put in Loseis.
-
-“Loseis and I will be waiting for you there,” said Conacher.
-
-“In the poplar bluff on the south side of the slough,” added Loseis.
-
-“If we are not there,” added Conacher with a smile for Loseis’ benefit,
-“why, turn around and ride back to the Slavi village.”
-
-Conacher repeated these instructions over again, and made Mary-Lou say
-it all after him. Both he and Loseis feared that in the unnerved red
-girl they had but a broken reed to lean upon. However they had no other.
-Once clear of that den of horror they hoped that she might recover
-herself somewhat.
-
-Then the packs were made. Each was to take a blanket with a small
-package of food rolled up inside it. In addition Conacher had his gun
-and an ammunition belt containing a hundred shells, and a small
-cooking-pot packed with matches, tea and tobacco. Loseis was to take a
-smaller belt of shells and a small ax. Mary-Lou was given Conacher’s
-smaller gun and ammunition for it. Everything was to be strapped on
-their backs, in order to leave both arms free.
-
-“How shall we know the proper moment to start out?” asked Loseis.
-
-“The moon does not rise to-night until after midnight,” said Conacher.
-“The darkest time will be about two hours after sundown. I will mark a
-candle and light it when the sun goes down. When it has burned two
-inches we will make a break.”
-
-“That will only give us an hour or so before the moon comes up.”
-
-“The first few minutes will decide everything,” he said, smiling at her.
-
-They were ready, of course, long before it was time to set out. Conacher
-made it his job to keep up the spirits of his little party. He suggested
-having another meal, but no one ate but himself. After that there was
-nothing to do but sit down and look at the candle. Very hard on the
-nerves. A half a dozen times Loseis sprang up like a haggard little
-panther, crying:
-
-“It’s perfectly dark. Let’s start.”
-
-To which Conacher would always reply in his calm and cheerful style:
-“No! When you settle on a thing, you must stick to it.”
-
-As the candle burned down towards the fateful mark, the three pairs of
-eyes were fixed on it in painful intensity, and three hearts rose slowly
-into three throats. The last ten minutes were the hardest.
-
-“Now!” said Conacher briskly, at last.
-
-They adjusted their packs. Under her pack Loseis wore the deflated air
-pillow fastened between her shoulders by a harness of twine contrived by
-Conacher. Both Loseis and Conacher felt that this might well be the
-moment of farewell, but neither spoke of it. It was all expressed in an
-exchange of looks. Mary-Lou was piteously striving to get her breath.
-Conacher’s last act before leaving was to throw a pailful of the
-precious water on the fire, that no reflection of the glow might betray
-them when the door was opened. The room was filled with hissing steam.
-
-“Wait a moment,” whispered Conacher in the darkness. “They might
-possibly have heard that sound. Give them time to forget it. . . . Me
-first, then Loseis, then Mary-Lou. Take hands. Run like hell around the
-corner of the house. . . . I am opening the door now. . . .”
-
-They ran out and turned, putting every nerve into it. Instantly, the
-guns across the grass roared out. They heard the twin bullets plug deep
-into the logs behind them. The guns crashed again. They gained the
-corner of the house unhurt. Immediately the cry of the coyote was raised
-not a hundred yards away; almost in their ears it seemed. It was more
-human than coyote. Their enemies were outside the house. Already they
-could hear the sound of running feet. Other cries answered the first
-one: from the hill behind; from the ravine; from the river.
-
-Loseis gave Mary-Lou a gentle push; and the Indian girl disappeared
-noiselessly into the bush back of the house. Conacher and Loseis took
-hands and raced down the grassy rise. A voice behind them shouted in
-English:
-
-“There they go!”
-
-Conacher whispered: “Make first for the creek; then double back towards
-the willows!”
-
-The surface of the natural meadow was rough, and Conacher went down
-twice, but was up again like the recoil of a spring. Loseis had the
-mysterious sure-footedness of an Indian. Behind them they heard their
-pursuers falling and cursing. Gault’s voice shouted a command in Cree.
-
-“He is telling them to make for the creek,” whispered Loseis.
-
-When they had almost reached the edge of the creek bank, they turned
-sharply to the right, and headed back obliquely across the flat towards
-the point where the dug-out was hidden. They slackened their pace that
-they might not betray their whereabouts by further falls. This maneuver
-was successful for the moment. They heard their pursuers halt at the
-creek bank. Gault called to men who were evidently approaching down the
-bed of the creek.
-
-The fugitives gained the river bank, and crawling under the thick
-willows, presently stumbled on the dug-out lying in a fissure in the
-earthen bank. So far so good. However, they were not unmindful of the
-dug-out manned by four Crees somewhere out on the river; and they waited
-awhile listening.
-
-They heard them coming up-stream, paddling at a furious rate. They
-passed close to the bank, not half a dozen yards from where Loseis and
-Conacher were crouching. Conacher gave them a minute, then started to
-slide the dug-out off the mud.
-
-“They’ll see us!” whispered Loseis in alarm.
-
-“Somebody must see us, or we can’t pull off the double suicide,” said
-Conacher grimly.
-
-They launched the dug-out and climbed in. Since the paddlers in the
-other dug-out had their backs turned to them, they could have gained the
-other shore unseen; but Conacher headed diagonally up-stream, laying
-such a course that they must be at least heard by those gathered around
-the mouth of the creek. And they were heard. A chorus of cries was
-raised. Conacher then steered straight for the opposite shore. In a
-moment they heard the other dug-out splashing after them.
-
-Immediately to the north of the high-cut bank, there was a smallish flat
-covered with grass, through the center of which a tiny stream wound its
-way to the river. It was the usual willow-bordered rivulet flowing quite
-deep between overhanging banks, which were held from caving in by the
-roots of the thickly springing willows. The branches of the willows
-interlaced overhead. This muskrat-haunted stream was an important factor
-in the plans of the fugitives; but they were not ready to use it yet.
-
-Conacher landed alongside its mouth. The instant the nose of the dug-out
-touched, they were out. The other dug-out was already half way across
-the river. They raced through the grass alongside the willow-bordered
-stream, slipping out of their packs as they ran. A hundred yards or so
-from the river, Conacher took both packs and boring through the outer
-willows, tied the packs to branches overhanging the little stream.
-
-Returning to Loseis, they doubled on their tracks, and ran for the steep
-grassy rise which culminated in the bold knoll where the two graves
-were. The Crees, having just landed, were stumbling through the grass at
-a loss. Presently the fugitives were seen, as they wished to be. With
-renewed cries to their friends across the river, the Crees set after
-them. Gault’s roaring voice was heard from the river.
-
-“They told him that we were running up the hill,” whispered Loseis; “and
-he’s telling them to work around back, and head us off on top.”
-
-“We may take our time then,” said Conacher, falling to a walk.
-
-On top of the knoll they came to a stand. The little enclosure
-containing the two graves was behind them; and behind that again, the
-grove of pines. On either side the ground sloped steeply down, and in
-front it broke off into nothingness.
-
-“Well, here we are,” said Conacher lightly; “that was easy!”
-
-“The hardest is before us,” murmured Loseis.
-
-Stepping to the edge of the cut-bank, they looked over. The precipitous
-slide of earth, almost as pale as snow at their feet, was gradually
-swallowed in the murk. The fact that they could not see the bottom of
-it, made the leap appear doubly terrible.
-
-“Does your heart fail you, dear?” murmured Conacher.
-
-“Not as long as you are beside me,” she whispered.
-
-“Remember to let yourself go limp when you hit the dirt,” he said.
-“Gravity will do the rest. I’ll be there before you, because I’m
-heavier.”
-
-He blew up the little air cushion that was strapped to her back.
-
-They could hear the Crees working around the north side of the hill. It
-was evidently expected that the fugitives meant to run back along the
-top of the ridge. Below them the river revealed itself merely as a
-grayish band, a shade or two lighter than its shores. They could just
-make out the disturbance created by two furiously driven bark canoes
-about to land below. These had headed for the south side of the hill.
-There was some underbrush on that side; and when the occupants landed
-they could be heard smashing through it. They were evidently working up
-that side with the object of coming in touch with the other party.
-
-“This is better than I could have hoped for,” said Conacher cheerfully.
-“We have got them all on the hill.”
-
-“Is it time to go now?” asked Loseis nervously.
-
-“No! No! Wait until they are right on top of us.”
-
-Somewhere back of them the two parties met on top of the ridge. There
-was a whispered consultation, then a silence, very hard for the
-listeners to bear. Conacher held Loseis’ hand tightly squeezed within
-his own. Up there under the wide spreading night sky they became queerly
-aware of their insignificance. A long silence; then from half a dozen
-sounds their sharpened senses informed them that their enemies were
-creeping towards them through the pines.
-
-Loseis caught her breath sharply, and moved towards the edge.
-
-“Steady, sweetheart,” whispered Conacher.
-
-Suddenly there was an astonished cry of: “There!” and a rush of feet.
-
-Loseis and Conacher cried out wildly, as they had rehearsed together:
-“Good-by! . . . Good-by, all!” And leaped.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
- THE SEARCH
-
-
-Loseis could never have described the sensations of that mad roll down
-the cut-bank. As a matter of fact all sensation was whirled clean out of
-her; and the first thing she knew was the mighty smack with which her
-body hit the water. Water it seemed could be almost as hard as wood. She
-went under.
-
-As she rose again, gasping and wildly reaching, her fingers came in
-contact with Conacher’s coat. In the first second she clutched him in a
-deathlike grip; in the second she remembered he had told her they would
-both drown, if she did so; and she released him. She discovered that the
-air cushion was sufficient to hold her up.
-
-Conacher whispered in her ear: “You are all right?”
-
-“I . . . I think so,” she stuttered.
-
-“Put your two hands lightly on my shoulders and I’ll tow you. Do not
-splash.”
-
-He swam softly down with the current.
-
-In the first moment there was only silence from above. Then they heard
-Gault’s excited voice:
-
-“Quick! the canoes! Search for them in the river!”
-
-The men came tearing pell-mell down the hill, and Conacher swam with all
-his strength for the mouth of the little stream.
-
-They gained it none too soon. Finding firm ground underfoot they waded
-up-stream under the arching willows. The water was up to their waists.
-They had to move at a snail’s pace to avoid splashing. As soon as the
-upper part of their bodies was exposed to the air, they realized the
-numbing cold of the water. Loseis clenched her teeth to keep them from
-chattering.
-
-Meanwhile the two dug-outs had been launched. The men shouted confusedly
-at each other. Such a search was hopeless in the dark. They could hear
-Gault savagely cursing his men. It was quite clear that he was not bent
-upon rescuing the two, but upon making sure that they did not escape.
-The voices softened in the distance, as the current carried the dug-outs
-down. Conacher and Loseis could now permit themselves to move faster
-through the water.
-
-Conacher drew Loseis along with one hand, and held the other straight
-over his head as they proceeded through the dark tunnel. An exclamation
-of satisfaction escaped him as his hand came in contact with the hanging
-packs. He took them down. A short distance further along there was a
-break in the willows on the right-hand side, and a back-water whence
-they climbed out in the grass. Streaming with water, they set off at a
-jog trot to warm up.
-
-The voices of Gault and the Crees were still receding. Simultaneously it
-occurred to Conacher and Loseis that they could now permit themselves to
-hope. Stopping, they flew into each other’s arms. It was a moist
-embrace, but none the less rapturous. After the frightful strain of the
-past days, the reaction was unnerving. In their joy and relief, they
-both partly broke down; but neither was ashamed of showing emotion.
-
-“Oh, my Paul!” murmured Loseis. “Perhaps we are going to be happy after
-all!”
-
-“Perhaps?” cried Conacher. “I should like to see anybody stop us now?”
-
-He was not, however, quite so sure as all that.
-
-The river flat gradually narrowed down to the typical coulee of the
-prairies, with the little stream running in the bottom. As the ground
-began to rise, the willows ceased, and the way became rough and stony.
-Conacher struck obliquely up the steep side of the coulee to find better
-going over the prairie. The moon rose as they gained the upper level,
-throwing a strange misty glamour over that vast, fixed, rolling sea.
-They pressed briskly ahead through the short buffalo grass which did not
-impede the feet, keeping the North Star over their right shoulders.
-Their clothes dried slowly; but the exercise of walking kept them warm.
-
-Their hearts were light. The awful bare solitudes, rise behind rise in
-endless succession, and the deathlike silence had no power to oppress
-them now. How could they feel lonely walking hand in hand free under the
-sky? Day stole upon them with enchanting beauty. The prairie was
-sprinkled with wild roses and the rose madder flower that is called
-painter’s brush. Prairie chickens fluttered from bush to bush
-companionably; and little furry four-footed creatures scurried for the
-shelter of their holes. Loseis sang as she walked; and Conacher cracked
-his jokes.
-
-The sun was rising behind them as they came to the edge of a wide,
-saucer-like depression in the prairie, holding in the bottom an oval
-pond of an astonishing blueness. It was dotted with snowy water fowl.
-All the surrounding country dimpled like a vast cheek in smooth rounds
-and hollows, was mantled with a tender green, grayish in the shadows. At
-the left hand side of the lake grew a wide patch of poplar scrub; that
-is to say, thousands of little saplings growing as thick as hair, and
-putting forth leaves of so intense a green it was like a shout in the
-morning. The whole picture was washed with rose color in the horizontal
-rays of the rising sun.
-
-Loseis drew a long breath. “I never realized how beautiful the prairie
-was!” she murmured. “It never was so beautiful,” she amended, putting
-her hand on Conacher’s arm. “How marvelous to one who has been a
-prisoner! Even if they should catch us we shall have had this!”
-
-“They’re not going to catch us,” said Conacher. “Not while I have a
-hundred shells in my belt.”
-
-Loseis pointed to the poplar scrub. “That’s the meeting place with
-Mary-Lou to-night.”
-
-“Too bad we have to waste the day waiting for her,” said Conacher. “We
-won’t hang about there, it’s too obvious a hiding-place. The high ground
-on the other side would be a good observation post. Tired?”
-
-“Tired!” sang Loseis. “I am just beginning to feel that I have legs
-again!”
-
-They headed obliquely across the depression towards a swell of land to
-the south that enjoyed a slight prominence in the gently rolling sea of
-grass. The flat appearance of the prairie was deceptive. Some of these
-insignificant bumps commanded a view for many miles.
-
-Tucked down behind the rise they found a cozy hollow with another patch
-of the vivid poplar scrub. They sat down at the edge of it to eat part
-of the food they had brought.
-
-While they were thus engaged, silently and with excellent appetite, a
-brown bear came ambling placidly out from among the saplings. He looked
-at them with a start of astonishment so comic that Loseis burst out
-laughing; then with a great “Woof!” of indignation galloped away up the
-rise.
-
-Conacher had snatched up his gun. “Fresh meat!” he cried. But with a
-reluctant shake of his head, he dropped it again.
-
-“Why not?” asked Loseis.
-
-“If we are searched for, the carcass would be found.”
-
-When they had finished eating, Conacher said: “I’m sorry I cannot let
-you have a fire; but the smoke would betray us for many miles around.
-Creep in among the trees; take off your damp clothes; wrap up in your
-blanket and sleep until I call you.”
-
-“What are you going to do?” demanded Loseis, ready to quarrel with him
-as usual over who should bear the brunt of the hardship.
-
-“I’m going to roll up and sleep at the top of the rise behind a rose
-bush,” said Conacher grinning. “If they send out a search party they may
-be expected to appear in about two hours.”
-
-“You are always talking about their searching for us,” said Loseis. “If
-Gault thinks we are dead he will not look for us. If he thinks we are
-not dead, we are certain to be caught in these empty spaces. Why worry?”
-
-“There is a third alternative,” said Conacher. “Gault thinks we are
-dead, but he cannot afford to take any chances. It seems to me he will
-send out a party to scour the prairie just as a precaution. It is up to
-us to keep out of their way until they are satisfied. It won’t be as bad
-as if they _knew_ we were here.”
-
-Loseis wished to be allowed to watch from the top of the rise, but
-Conacher carried his point.
-
-From behind the clump of roses that he had marked on the way over,
-Conacher was able to survey an expanse of country that faded into gray
-mist on the horizon. He slept for awhile as he had promised. It was
-about nine o’clock by the sun, when he perceived the first horseman, no
-more than a black dot far to the eastward; but a significantly shaped
-dot. Presently he made out another, and another at wide intervals. The
-nearest was about four miles distant.
-
-Racing back down the rise, he called to Loseis. When she answered, he
-said: “Dress as quickly as possible. We must move on.”
-
-When she appeared from among the trees, he explained what he had seen.
-“Unless I miss my guess,” he said, “they will divide and ride around the
-high ground surrounding the slough until they meet again. That would
-bring us right in their line of march. We must get over another rise.
-You can see that they are combing the country as they come. What we
-ought to do is to work around behind them.”
-
-Hand in hand like a pair of children they headed south, bent almost
-double as they climbed the rises, and racing free down the other side.
-When they had put a couple of heights between them and the slough, they
-began to work around towards the east. The prairie is not such a
-desperate place for fugitives as it might seem. It is true that from the
-high places you can see for many miles around: but there are always
-hollows into which you cannot see until you are upon them. At a glance
-it seems as if the bubbles of earth had been pushed up in meaningless
-disorder; but such is not the case. Nature sees to it that the country
-is drained. Every hollow opens into another. Conacher had the mapmaker’s
-instinct for the contour of land, and he was never in doubt as to their
-proper course. At the same time while they were hidden from their
-enemies their enemies were hidden from them. It caused the heart to rise
-in the throat to imagine a horseman suddenly appearing over the grass
-close by.
-
-After an hour’s walking and running, they came upon a good-sized patch
-of rose scrub folded into the side of a rise. Conacher stopped to survey
-it.
-
-“A perfect hiding-place if you lay flat on the ground,” he said; “yet no
-one would suppose it. Come on, let’s tackle the thorns.”
-
-Inch by inch they threaded their painful way along the ground; careful
-to rearrange the branches they had disturbed upon entering; and cutting
-with their knives a little tunnel ahead. Finally in the thickest of the
-patch they lay companionably on the warm, dry ground within whispering
-distance of each other, and lapped in delicious fragrance. Themselves
-concealed, they could see out more or less through interstices between
-the leaves.
-
-“One could fall asleep here, and dream of being in Paradise,” said
-Loseis, sniffing.
-
-“Yes,” said Conacher, disengaging a thorn; “and roll over and find one’s
-self in the other place!”
-
-They both dozed, and were awakened simultaneously by the sound of
-thudding hoofs. They waited with fast-beating hearts. A dark-skinned
-horseman rode into view along the top of the very rise against whose
-side they lay. He was less than a hundred yards away; they could
-distinguish every detail of his somewhat dandified dress.
-
-“Watusk,” whispered Loseis.
-
-At sight of the patch of scrub, the Cree reined up his horse, and sat
-staring directly at them. It caused the goose-flesh to rise upon their
-bodies; their hearts seemed to stop beating. With infinite caution
-Conacher drew his gun into position.
-
-“The horse first; then his rider,” he whispered.
-
-But after debating a moment, the Cree clapped heels to his horse, and
-rode on. Presently he disappeared. A long breath of thankfulness escaped
-from the two hidden ones.
-
-“He will never know how nearly his wife became a widow,” said Conacher.
-
-“Well, they’ve checked this place off,” said Loseis. “Shall we stay
-here?”
-
-Conacher shook his head. “This will be his second big circle around the
-slough,” he said. “If he repeats the maneuver he will pass to the south
-of us. I don’t like the notion of being hemmed in. We’ve got to think of
-to-night. If they are making the slough their headquarters they will
-camp there. Unless we head Mary-Lou off she would ride right into them.”
-
-“We must be close upon the trail between the Slavi village and the
-slough,” said Loseis.
-
-“But we’re still too near the slough. We must make further south.”
-
-Once more they took to the grass. For several hours they saw no more of
-the searchers. They made their last spell in a poplar bluff (as the
-patches of scrub are called) overlooking the trail between the lake and
-the slough, but much nearer the former.
-
-They had not been there long when they were filled with disquietude by
-the sight of another of the Crees approaching from the direction of the
-Slavi village.
-
-“He’s been in to look about,” said Conacher. “Natural enough.” As the
-man drew closer he added with a certain relief: “He doesn’t look as if
-he had discovered anything important. I guess Mary-Lou has side-stepped
-him.”
-
-Their thoughts were given a sudden new turn, when the Cree turning out
-of the trail, put his horse directly for the bluff, Conacher and Loseis
-hastily retreated within the thickest part of the miniature wood. The
-Cree could not ride in among the little trees. Dismounting, he tied his
-horse.
-
-Then began a grim game of I Spy with death for the stakes. Conacher and
-Loseis enjoyed a certain advantage, because they were aware of their
-danger, while the redskin was not. He was merely following general
-instructions to search all likely places of concealment. He was taking
-no particular care to muffle the sound of his progress, and they could
-generally follow it. When he went one way they went the other. But there
-were harrowing periods when they could hear nothing. The bluff was over
-an acre in extent, and it was impossible to see more than half a dozen
-yards through the thickly springing stems. Once he caught them in a
-corner, and they were almost forced out into the open. Another time they
-actually had a glimpse of his passing. They stood frozen in their
-tracks. With what thankful hearts they heard him return to his horse at
-last. They flung themselves down to let the hideous strain relax.
-
-They ate again. Satisfied now, that they had done their utmost, they
-rolled up in their blankets, and slept for eight hours on end. It was
-twilight when they awoke. They ate the last of the food they had
-brought.
-
-“It will be prairie chicken for breakfast if Mary-Lou doesn’t come,”
-remarked Conacher.
-
-“She will come if they have not taken her,” said Loseis confidently.
-
-“What I am chiefly afraid of,” said Conacher, “is that she will pass
-right out with fright when we rise beside the trail.”
-
-“When we were children we used to signal to each other by imitating the
-cry of the kill-dee,” said Loseis. “I will try that.”
-
-When the stars came out they moved down beside the faint track worn in
-the buffalo grass. Conacher, pulling his blanket around his shoulders,
-squatted in the grass, smoking, and Loseis leaned her cheek against his
-shoulder.
-
-“How strange!” she murmured.
-
-“What is, sweetheart?”
-
-“Us two little things out here in the middle of the bald-headed. I feel
-about an inch high under these stars.”
-
-“Better than last night,” suggested Conacher.
-
-“Rather! . . . Paul, if we ever have any children, I wonder if this will
-mean anything to them?”
-
-Conacher was more moved than he cared to show. Loseis, scarcely more
-than a child herself, dreaming of having children of her own! “Surely!”
-he said with assumed lightness. “Think how they’ll be able to put it
-over the other kids! ‘My Ma and my Pa were chased by Injuns!’”
-
-Loseis chuckled. “If we come through all right it will be a wonderful
-thing to have shared,” she murmured. “It will help us over the tiresome
-parts.”
-
-“You’re a wise little duck!” he whispered.
-
-“Why?”
-
-“Other girls refuse to admit beforehand that there could be any tiresome
-parts.”
-
-“How do you know?” she asked quickly.
-
-He swallowed his chuckle. “Oh, you learn these things from books, and
-from other men,” he said.
-
-“I know that I shall not be marrying an angel,” she said, nestling
-against him; “and I assure you that you are not.”
-
-“Angel enough for me!” he said, kissing her.
-
-There was a vibration in the stillness. At first they thought it was a
-trick of the desirous imagination; then by degrees they became sure.
-Horses were approaching along the trail at a walk. The slowness of the
-pace was eloquent of the red girl’s terrors, and of the loyalty and
-strength of will that forced her out into the night in spite of her
-terrors. Conacher and Loseis rose to their feet.
-
-Finally they made out shadowy forms in the trail. Loseis uttered the
-plaintive cry of the little bird that haunts the edges of the prairie
-sloughs. The shadowy horses stopped. There was a moment of painful
-suspense. It was not a natural place, of course, to find the kill-dee.
-
-“Risk it!” whispered Conacher. “Speak to her!”
-
-“Mary-Lou,” said Loseis softly; “we are here!”
-
-There was no answer. They apprehended through the dark that the solitary
-rider had slipped out of the saddle. Running forward they found her half
-fainting, but clinging to the horses still.
-
-She quickly recovered. Ah! what a joyful reunion that was! Sharers in
-danger!—there is no other bond quite the same as this. They all babbled
-at once. Loseis and Mary-Lou clung to each other weeping; Conacher
-embraced them both indiscriminately.
-
-“I so scare’!” Mary-Lou whispered in Loseis’ ear. “I know the Crees out
-here somewhere. I t’ink they get you sure. But I got come jus’ the same.
-When I see you in the trail I t’ink it is the Crees. I am near die
-then!”
-
-“You’re the bravest of any of us!” whispered Loseis. “Because you know
-what fear is!”
-
-While the girls whispered Conacher turned his attention to the horses.
-Mary-Lou had brought the best procurable, and he was well-pleased. She
-had brought a fair store of smoked meat and fish also, but not enough to
-see them through, of course.
-
-“Tatateecha t’ink I lyin’ till he see me start,” she explained.
-
-“Let us ride,” said Conacher. “We can talk as we go.”
-
-They mounted. The horses were still fresh and coquettish with the bit.
-What a delight it was to feel good horseflesh between the knees once
-more. Their breasts swelled with renewed hope.
-
-“Which way?” asked Loseis.
-
-“Southwest,” said Conacher; “because that is the direction they would
-least expect us to take. At daylight we’ll turn, and lay our proper
-course northwest. Save your horses.”
-
-They set off at an easy trot. When the horses settled to their work,
-they let the reins lie loose on their necks. It was safest to let these
-prairie-bred beasts choose their own footing. Now the North Star must be
-kept over the horse’s right flank. Conacher chose a bright star in the
-southwest for a beacon. As they rode they exchanged experiences.
-Mary-Lou said:
-
-“Las’ night all the Crees around the post is after you, so I have no
-trouble. I walk around the side of the hill, and cross the creek, and
-climb the ridge. I hide in the bush till daylight. I hear you cry:
-‘Good-by! Good-by!’ across the river. That cry it hurt my heart though I
-know it is a fool. I t’ink maybe you break a leg on the cut-bank. In the
-morning I see where some Crees is camp beside the trail, and I go around
-them. Then I go back to the trail and run to the Slavi village. I am
-there before the sun is half way up the sky. I sleep long.”
-
-“What did you do when the Cree came in?” asked Loseis.
-
-“Wah! He come down from the prairie when nobody is lookin’ that way. All
-are scare’! I snatch up a shawl and put it over my head like the ot’er
-women. I stay with the ot’er women. He not know me. Bam-bye he go back
-again.”
-
-The course they were following led them roughly parallel with
-Blackburn’s Lake. When the moon rose they could see it palely gleaming
-in the distance. It was an exhilarating ride; the wind created by their
-own passage blew cool about their faces; the exercise of riding kept
-them tingling. With every additional mile that they put between them and
-their enemies their hearts rose. Conacher attempted to sing. But though
-there was no danger in raising the voice here, the great brooding
-silence was too much for him. In spite of themselves they talked in
-undertones.
-
-Just before dawn they spelled alongside a poplar bluff to allow the
-horses to graze. Here the humans enjoyed the luxury of a fire again, and
-the stimulus of hot food. Though the meal was only of smoked fish
-without sauce or bread, such a complete sense of comfort is not to be
-had under civilized conditions. They groaned at the necessity of
-breaking camp.
-
-After a two-hour rest they saddled, and turned at right angles to their
-former course. The sun had risen in a cloudless sky, and the air was
-like wine. At mid-morning they calculated that they were abreast of Old
-Wives’ Slough again, but now many miles to the westward. Coming to
-another sapphire-colored slough lying under a rather prominent rise to
-the eastward, which had a well-grown poplar bluff on its slope, Conacher
-called a halt for the balance of the day.
-
-“We need sleep,” he said; “moreover it is just possible if they ride
-west to-day, that they might catch sight of us from some height or
-another. The horses will be well hidden alongside the bluff yonder.”
-
-Picketing the horses to keep them from straying, they ate again. On this
-occasion Loseis insisted on being allowed to stand the first watch; and
-Conacher dispatched her to the top of the rise, while he rolled up in
-his blanket.
-
-In the afternoon he relieved her. From the top of the rise it was
-evident that this was the highest point in many miles around. To
-Conacher lying in the grass smoking, it seemed as if half the world was
-spread before him. In that crystal clearness he could even trace the
-line of the valley of Blackburn’s River. The easterly horizon was closed
-in by the land rising on the other side of the river. The pale green sea
-of the prairie between was always the same, and never quite the same.
-Apparently every yard of it was open to his vision; but Conacher knew
-from past experience that this was not so. Every swell of the land
-melted so softly into the swell beyond that one could not guess the
-hollow between. Conacher remembered the old-time stories of how the
-Indians could steal up on the wagon-trains camped in the open prairie.
-
-As if evoked by that thought he saw Indians riding towards him then. It
-was what he was looking for and least desired to see. He glimpsed them
-as they crossed a hollow; a moment later they trotted over a little
-rise. There were three of them, they were less than a mile away; they
-were heading directly for the spot where he lay. This time an encounter
-could not be avoided. All his high hopes came tumbling down like a house
-of cards.
-
-Conacher ran down the hill to alarm his camp. There was no time to ride
-away. Best for them to keep the shelter they had. A word told Loseis and
-Mary-Lou what was upon them. They led the horses close up behind the
-bluff of trees, and tied them. They scattered the remaining embers of
-the fire, and beat them out. Conacher and Loseis took up a position
-within the trees facing the summit of the rise, gun in hand. The girl’s
-face was pale and resolute.
-
-“I can shoot straight, too,” she said quietly.
-
-They waited.
-
-“All three of them are together now,” said Conacher. “We must get them
-all. And their horses too. If we get them all it will be some time
-before Gault learns what has happened. We will still have a chance.”
-
-The three horsemen appeared at the top of the rise, and reined up. They
-were quite at their ease. Each slung a leg over his saddle to rest, and
-produced a pipe. There they stayed, silhouetted against the tender blue
-sky. One had a pair of field-glasses which was passed from hand to hand.
-Conacher and Loseis instinctively drew back a little further amongst the
-saplings. Suddenly the horses behind them whinnied; and Conacher groaned
-in bitterness of spirit.
-
-However, at that moment a small troop of wild horses appeared out of a
-depression to the north. Led by a bay stallion with arched neck and
-streaming tail, they trotted past. In the chorus of neighing and
-whinnying which arose, the sounds made by Conacher’s horses escaped the
-notice of the Crees.
-
-After what seemed like an age-long wait to the watchers hidden in the
-poplars, the three Indians slipped out of their saddles, tightened
-girths and mounted again.
-
-“Now for it!” whispered Conacher. “Do not fire until they are within a
-hundred feet. Bring down the horses first. You take the piebald and I’ll
-take the other two.”
-
-But to their amazement and delight the riders wheeled and disappeared
-the way they had come. For a moment they stared at the empty place with
-hanging mouths. Then Conacher made as if to run out from among the
-trees. Loseis clutched him.
-
-“It may be a trick!” she gasped.
-
-They waited several minutes, not daring to rejoice yet.
-
-“I _must_ go look!” said Conacher. “I must know what they are doing.”
-
-Loseis made no further effort to restrain him; and he ran up to the top
-of the rise, and flung himself down. At first he could see nothing but
-grass. Then the three riders rose mysteriously out of the grass,
-trotting away as they had come; showing their backs . . . their _backs_!
-Conacher nearly choked with joy. He waited awhile yet to make doubly
-sure. They disappeared and appeared again, holding steadily to the east.
-They shrank to mere specks in the green sea.
-
-Conacher leaped to his feet, and charged back down the hill, yelling and
-brandishing his gun. Loseis snatched up her gun warily. Not until he
-came close did she comprehend that this was a pantomime of joy. He swept
-her clean off her feet in his embrace.
-
-“They’ve gone back!” he shouted. “This was the outer edge of their
-patrol. They’ve given up the search! After this we’ve got nothing to
-contend with but nature!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
- HUNGER
-
-
-Nature! They were to discover during the days that followed that she was
-no mean antagonist. At first everything went delightfully; the sun
-warmed and cheered them by day; the stars whispered at night. The moon
-was swallowed up in the dawn now. On the shortest night of the year
-there was scarcely any darkness; then the nights began to lengthen
-imperceptibly. They rode and spelled and rode again. They built great
-fires. The character of the country never changed. The sea of green
-grass seemed to be limitless.
-
-On the third day the horse that Conacher rode sickened mysteriously. On
-the following morning it was incapable of bearing him. Loseis shook her
-head ominously.
-
-“It is a sort of distemper that attacks them in the summer,” she said.
-“He will be sick for weeks. We might as well leave him. The others may
-catch it from him.”
-
-So Conacher was obliged to set out on foot. The sick horse screamed
-piteously upon being left behind; and attempted to follow; but fell down
-in the grass, where he lay struggling feebly and watching them with
-raised head until they passed out of sight. They could not now hope to
-make more than thirty or forty miles a day, though all took turns in
-riding. And still there was no suggestion of their approach to a great
-river. The prairie rolled on as before. As far as Conacher could tell
-they had not yet even passed the crown of the watershed. They all had
-their sickening moments of doubt. Suppose there was no river?
-
-Loseis’ worst prognostications were fulfilled. The other two horses
-sickened. By the sixth day they were all on foot. Mary-Lou’s moccasins
-wore through; and they had nothing out of which to make new ones.
-Fortunately both Loseis and Conacher wore boots. The prairie which
-looked so smooth made rough walking for humans, and their progress was
-cut down, Conacher figured, to between twenty and twenty-miles [missing
-or incorrect word] a day. The eighth day passed without any sign of the
-river of promise. Conacher estimated that they had covered nearly three
-hundred miles.
-
-They had met with no game on the prairie except the ubiquitous chickens.
-Conacher was averse to wasting his precious bullets on such small
-fowl—it is very easy to miss a prairie chicken with a rifle;
-consequently they had depended on the meat and fish brought by Mary-Lou.
-On the seventh day it was exhausted, and they ate chicken. On that
-miserable eighth day some bad fairy waved a wand, and the chicken
-disappeared from the prairie. During the entire day Conacher did not
-obtain a shot. Consequently they went supperless to bed.
-
-He was up at sunrise, ranging the prairie while the girls slept. But
-with no luck. There was nothing living in sight except the gophers who
-gained the shelter of their burrows ere he could come close enough to
-hope to hit them with his clumsy gun. In desperation he did shoot at
-gophers at last, only to plug the earth. When he returned to camp, the
-girls, having heard the sound of his gun, awaited him with anticipatory
-smiles, and he had the bitterness of showing them his empty hands. There
-was no breakfast.
-
-On this first morning it was easy to turn it into a joke.
-
-“Anyway, I’m sick of meat,” said Loseis.
-
-“My people lak go ’ongry for awhile,” said Mary-Lou. “Mak’ the big feed
-taste better bam-bye.”
-
-“Well, it’ll save a lot of time,” said Conacher with a sheepish grin. He
-felt responsible for their plight.
-
-They set forth briskly enough; but were very glad to rest when
-mid-morning came. All of them were now feeling very painful gnawings,
-but they concealed it from each other. Conacher prowled over the prairie
-in vain. They listlessly resumed their march.
-
-During the course of the afternoon they came unexpectedly to the lip of
-a deep coulee with a trickle of water in the bottom. To Conacher’s
-dismay it proved to be flowing in a southerly direction. This was
-exactly opposite to what he expected. It was against all the theories as
-to the lay of this unexplored land, and he was ready to despair.
-However, there was nothing to do but to keep on the way they were going.
-
-An hour later they crossed it again. The water was now flowing north,
-and Conacher’s mind was somewhat relieved. Upon this second crossing
-they found more water than before in the streamlet, and a fringe of
-spruce trees, the first grown trees they had seen since leaving
-Blackburn’s River. They also found, what was more important to them,
-berry-bushes, and a patch of wild strawberries. Only the strawberries
-were ripe. Before eating any, they carefully collected them in their
-little cooking pot, and scrupulously divided them. There was about a
-cupful apiece.
-
-The berries were deliciously refreshing; but they seemed to have the
-effect of still further sharpening the pangs of hunger. They searched
-far up and down the coulee for more, but in vain. It was an isolated
-patch of trees and bushes.
-
-“Let us get on,” Conacher kept urging the girls. “We must reach a game
-country before our strength fails.”
-
-They wearily climbed the steep side of the coulee to the endless rolling
-prairie again, that they now hated. On this day they suffered a keener
-pain from hunger than during the days that followed. All three became
-tight-lipped and silent. Their limbs were leaden; and progress was
-painfully slow. Twice more they crossed the coulee. No more trees or
-berries. It was now evident that the general course of the little stream
-was northwest, which was in line with Conacher’s calculations. It was
-undoubtedly a tributary of the big river they were seeking: but whether
-the river were ten miles or a hundred miles further, it was impossible
-to tell. It was exasperating in their fatigued condition to climb in and
-out of the steep coulee so many times: but even so they made better time
-than they could have done by following it throughout its crazy windings.
-
-Seeing more spruce trees, they descended into it to spend the night, but
-found no berries here. They heaped a great fire and made themselves soft
-beds of spruce boughs: but their empty stomachs refused to be assuaged
-by these luxuries. Mary-Lou cut three small strips from the top of one
-of her worn-out moccasins, and boiled them, and handed them around.
-
-“Chew,” she said. “It will stop the pains anyhow.”
-
-Afterwards a curious false strength seemed to come to them. They felt no
-desire to sleep, but sat up for hours around their fire under the
-spruces, talking animatedly with flushed faces and bright eyes.
-
-“When I was a kid,” said Conacher, “I had a grand-uncle in New York, who
-was a great old high-liver. Never thought about anything but eats. He
-knew all the best restaurants in the city, and what was the proper thing
-to order in each place. He took me out to dinner a couple of times when
-I was a boy. Once we went to Delmonico’s. I have never forgotten what we
-ate that day. First oysters. I suppose you don’t know oysters, Loseis.
-Well, they are the best eating there is. Slip down your throat like
-velvet. Then a thick soup that was called potage Mongole. God knows what
-was in it. It was a combination of all the most delicious flavors you
-ever knew. Then there was something that was called Tournedos Henri
-Quatre. It was like beef, but it was the sauce that made all the
-difference. The French are wizards for sauces. We ended up with mince
-pie; good old American mince pie; and there’s nothing better! Oh, what a
-feed that was!”
-
-“The best thing I ever tasted,” said Loseis vivaciously, “was roast pig.
-Three years ago Jim Cornwall came through from the Crossing with dogs,
-and brought my father a little frozen pig on his sled for Christmas. We
-thawed him out and roasted him until his hide crackled. Oh, my dear! the
-smell alone would drive you crazy; and the taste was better than
-anything in the world. I can taste him now! Do you member, Mary-Lou?”
-
-“I remember,” said Mary-Lou, closing her eyes. “I did taste that pig
-meat. It was sweeter than young porcupine; it was sweeter than
-moose-nose or the back-fat of caribou; it was sweeter than all meat.”
-
-“And do you remember?” asked Loseis, “when they stuck the knife into him
-how a little stream of juicy fat ran down?”
-
-“We soaked it up with bread,” said Mary-Lou.
-
-The subject was inexhaustible. They discussed it with anxious, drawn,
-eager faces. It never occurred to them to laugh at each other or at
-themselves. When they finally slept they dreamed of feasting.
-
-Another day of misery followed no different from the day before, except
-that the pangs of hunger were less sharp and more enervating. It was
-hard to keep walking. It nearly broke Conacher’s heart to see the boyish
-Loseis pressing on with set face, quite unconscious of how she was
-staggering in her tracks. He took the second gun from her. She fought
-like a little spitfire to regain it, weeping out of anger and weakness.
-Her anger smoldered all the rest of the day, making the way even more
-bitter. Mary-Lou stood starvation better than either of the whites. They
-found another tantalizing patch of berries; and wasted hours looking for
-more. As on the night before, their supper consisted of a small strip of
-boiled hide apiece.
-
-On the third day of starvation it seemed a wonder that they were able to
-move at all. Nevertheless they staggered on for a few miles. To add to
-their miseries it rained copiously; and their blankets soaked up some
-additional pounds of water. All day a division existed between Conacher
-and Loseis that was harder to bear than starvation. It was due to
-nothing in the world but compassion. It made each tender heart rage to
-behold the misery of the other. Especially Conacher’s, because he told
-himself that no woman ought to be subjected to such an ordeal. He
-supposed from Loseis’ black looks that she was blaming him for having
-led her into this, and he was ready to blow his brains out.
-
-The little stream having received a tributary from the south, flowed
-with increased speed and volume. It now held a fairly straight course
-for the northwest; and it became evident that the whole country was
-sloping gently in that direction. The walls of the coulee gradually
-became higher; in the bottom it was now continuously wooded; but they
-felt too weak to climb down for a few berries. These changes in the
-country suggested that they were approaching the bottom of the
-watershed, and at midday from a rise in the prairie, Conacher at last
-beheld a blue shadow athwart the westerly horizon which indicated the
-valley of a considerable river. It seemed like a mockery now. It was a
-good twenty-five miles distant, and in their weakened state that was
-half a world away.
-
-At the end of the day they made a detour from the coulee to visit a
-small slough and a poplar bluff that they had marked from a rise. It was
-a likely place to find bear. There was no bear, but the water of the
-slough was sweet, and they determined to spend the night in that spot.
-Will it be our last camp? Conacher thought with dread in his heart. The
-sky was still threatening, and he constructed an inclined thatch of
-poplar leaves, with a fire in front for the girls. They chewed their
-strips of boiled hide. This finished one moccasin, except for the ragged
-lower part, that Mary-Lou had bound round her foot. Afterwards, when
-Loseis, with a cold face, turned to seek her blanket, Conacher felt that
-he could bear no more.
-
-“Loseis . . . !” he murmured heart-brokenly.
-
-Mary-Lou vanished away amongst the little trees.
-
-“What is it?” asked Loseis coldly.
-
-“I cannot bear it . . . !”
-
-“What?”
-
-“Your look! . . . Forgive me!”
-
-“For what must I forgive you?”
-
-“I don’t know. Whatever it is that I have done that angers you. For
-getting you into this scrape.”
-
-Her face looked very small and pinched. It worked curiously with anger.
-Her voice came unnaturally sharp: “Forgive you! What sort of talk is
-this? Are you trying to make me feel worse than I feel already? Aren’t
-you satisfied with doing most of the work, and walking twice as far to
-hunt, and carrying a double load, but you must make me feel what a
-burden I am by asking me to forgive you!”
-
-He only dimly understood the torment of this proud nature. “But Loseis
-. . . !” he protested, staring, “this is foolishness . . . !”
-
-“Of course! of course! of course! I am a fool! That is well understood!”
-
-“Listen to me,” he said doggedly. “You say I carry too heavy a burden.
-Why add to it with your cold and angry looks? The weight of two guns is
-nothing to me. It is your hard eyes that break me down.”
-
-Loseis’ reply was to burst into tears.
-
-He took her in his arms. “Don’t you love me any more?” he whispered.
-
-She crept within his arms, but she abused him still. “You fool! it is
-because I love you so, that I am always angry. It drives me wild to
-think that I should spoil the life of a man like you!”
-
-“But that’s nonsense!” said Conacher. “I am nothing in particular. A man
-only has one life. How could he spend it better? We shall go together.
-What else matters . . . Don’t you feel better now?”
-
-“A little bit,” she admitted. “But to-morrow I shall be angry with you
-again. You are too good and patient. If you turned hateful I should feel
-better. It would even things up a little.”
-
-“You’re a funny one!” he murmured.
-
-However, the air _was_ cleared; and they rolled up in their blankets
-with a bit of comfort at their hearts.
-
-When Conacher awoke next morning a light rain was drifting down. He
-pulled his blanket closer around him. Lying there like that one did not
-suffer; it was warm; the pangs of hunger did not make themselves felt; a
-comfortable numbness filled the frame. But the thought of getting up was
-hideous. For a long time he lay struggling with it. Useless for him to
-tell himself that he was the head of the party; the girls were dependent
-on him; it was up to him to find them food; he felt that he _could not_
-get up; the effort was too great.
-
-In the end he had to get up. The first few moments were the worst. He
-stood in the rain, swaying and nauseated, a black mist swimming before
-his eyes. Each morning it was much worse. If he could conquer this first
-weakness, he could go on through the day—but to-morrow morning! He
-shook that thought away. He forced himself to walk up and down,
-supporting himself by the little trees. After awhile he felt better.
-Picking up his gun, he started on his hopeless circuit of the bluff.
-
-He paused in front of the little shelter he had constructed for the
-girls. They slept. Loseis was lying with her head pillowed on Mary-Lou’s
-shoulder like a child. In her weakness she looked entirely the child,
-the sick child. At the sight of those transparent cheeks and bluish
-eyelids, Conacher’s breast was wrung with agony. The worst of overcoming
-the physical weakness was, that one then began to think again, with
-horrible clearness. How could he ask this exhausted child to go on any
-further? She was dearer to him than his life. Would it not be kinder to
-end her sufferings while she slept? She opened her eyes, and smiled at
-him enchantingly. That smile capped his agony. Swallowing the groan that
-was forced up by his breast, he smiled back, and staggered on.
-
-Like all the prairie sloughs, this one lay in a dish-like depression
-surrounded by a shallow rim of grass. Conacher had made half his round
-of the bluff, when over this rim at a distance of about a hundred yards
-appeared a lumbering black body of an astonishing bigness. For an
-instant he thought his senses were failing him; he began to tremble
-violently; but he quickly realized that it was a veritable bear. A
-bear’s eye-sight is not very keen, and the animal had not seen him. He
-drew back amongst the little trees, struggling to control his
-excitement. You _can not_ miss him! he kept telling himself.
-
-The bear was evidently making for the bluff to breakfast off poplar
-bark. Conacher realized with a pang that he was directly in the wind of
-the animal. The bear was in no hurry. He turned aside to snuff and
-scratch at the roots of a clump of roses. He was the largest black bear
-that Conacher had ever seen. The big head was dwarfed by his mighty
-rump. His black pelt was grayed with moisture. The man’s mouth watered
-ridiculously. The bear turned towards him, and his heart began to thump.
-Then the animal changed his mind, and sauntered around the rim of the
-bench. Conacher, stepping with infinite care, kept pace with him amongst
-the little trees.
-
-The bear disappeared over the edge of the rim, and Conacher’s heart
-almost broke. Should I go after him? he asked himself. No! he is bound
-to come to the bluff and the slough. The animal reappeared and hope
-flared up anew. He was heading towards the bluff again. He was no longer
-directly in Conacher’s wind, consequently the chance of getting him was
-better. But the deliberation of the beast well-nigh maddened the man.
-Bruin stood gazing off to the east as if he were debating the choice
-between this and some other feeding ground. He sat up on his haunches,
-and licked his paws. Finally he came lumbering towards the trees in a
-businesslike manner. Conacher raised his gun.
-
-Before the bear had made half the distance that separated them, though
-Conacher had not moved, the animal’s mysterious instinct warned him of
-the presence of danger. He stopped with a woof! of alarm, and turning in
-his tracks, galloped back for the shelter of the rim. Conacher fired.
-The bear’s broad beam offered him a goodly mark, and he knew by the
-tremor that went through the animal that he had hit him: but it was not
-in a vulnerable spot. He galloped on without a pause. He disappeared
-over the encircling rim of grass. A voice seemed to cry inside Conacher:
-“You have lost your last chance!”
-
-He found strength to run as if he had not been starved for four days. As
-he topped the rise, he saw the bear lying in the grass a hundred feet
-away; and a great, calm thankfulness filled his breast. It was all
-right! The animal was not dead, but disabled in his hind quarters. He
-lay with his head between his paws awaiting the end. Conacher dispatched
-him with a bullet through the brain.
-
-Crying out: “A bear! I’ve got him!” Conacher dropped to his knees, and
-started instanter to skin his prey. Presently Mary-Lou who was more
-skillful at this job than he, relieved him. Loseis stood looking on like
-a happy little ghost. They could not wait to skin the bear entire; but
-cut off a piece of meat, and ran back to the fire with it.
-
-Conacher kept saying over and over like an old woman: “Mind! Mind! Only
-a little piece at first, or it will make you sick!”
-
-“If there is meat, why not eat?” grumbled Mary-Lou.
-
-Nevertheless she obeyed; and at first only three tiny pieces were set
-upon pointed sticks to roast over the fire. It may be guessed that they
-were not _very_ well cooked before they were eaten. Conacher and Loseis
-nibbled them to make them go as far as possible. Mary-Lou saw no sense
-at all in this proceeding, but loyally followed their example.
-
-“Is that all?” said Loseis wistfully.
-
-“Mary-Lou could put some small pieces in the pot and boil them,”
-suggested Conacher. “The soup would be good for you.”
-
-“Soup!” said Loseis, making a face.
-
-“Well, by and by we will roast another little piece. To-morrow, if you
-feel all right, you can eat all you want.”
-
-There was no question of moving on that day. They ate a little more;
-slept; and ate again. Conacher and Loseis sat happily side by side under
-the shelter of the leaves, watching Mary-Lou cut off thin slabs of the
-meat, and hang them in the smoke of the fire. The Indian girl also
-contrived moccasins for herself out of squares of the hide.
-
-Next morning they awoke with bounding pulses as if they had never known
-what it was to starve. At breakfast time they feasted without stint.
-Their cheeks seemed to have filled out over night; their eyes were
-bright; their teeth gleaming. There was something so comical in the
-sight of this abrupt transformation, that they continually burst out
-laughing with their mouths full at the sight of each other’s joy.
-
-They set out again laden with as much meat as they could carry.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
- DOWNSTREAM
-
-
-As they descended by imperceptible degrees towards the river, they could
-no longer make out the line of its valley ahead. The bald-headed prairie
-now began to take on a parklike aspect. Groups of graceful, full-grown
-poplars with their greenish yellow bark became more and more numerous,
-gradually leading them into a well-grown forest of aspen trees,
-interspersed with spruce. But there were still grassy openings of all
-sizes, from pretty glades to miniature prairies. Through the trackless
-forest it was very slow going; giant raspberry bushes, now in blossom,
-barred the way; rotting trunks lay prone in every direction; and vivid
-moss treacherously masked the holes where the ancient stems had rotted
-clean out of the ground.
-
-As the afternoon wore on, and there was no end to this, no sign of any
-river, a feeling of discouragement attacked them again. Could they have
-been mistaken? And then without warning, they issued out of the trees on
-to a grassy knoll; and there, with a magnificent effect of dramatic
-surprise, lay the long-sought river at their very feet.
-
-It was a thrilling moment. That view, so cunningly masked by the belt of
-forest, was one of the finest views imaginable. It was a first-class
-river. It flowed in the bottom of a valley at least six hundred feet
-deep, and no more than half a mile across from rim to rim. From the
-opposite rim, the prairie rolled on to the horizon. It was not so much a
-valley as a deep, clean gash in the prairie. The side upon which they
-stood was mantled with the deep green of spruce, while the other side
-rolled up in fantastic knobs and terraces of buffalo grass.
-
-The river poured a smooth, yellowish green flood through the bottom of
-this mighty trough; just the color of poplar bark. It was broken by
-several high islands, covered with spruce trees, which stemmed the
-current like majestic ships. The point upon which they stood was on the
-outside of a great bend, and they could look far up-stream, where the
-river seemed to flatten out, and to issue dazzling and molten from the
-afternoon sun itself.
-
-Conacher’s first thought was: “Plenty of water! I’ll be able to make a
-raft. We’ll have some easy days now.”
-
-They gazed at the noble prospect with full hearts. Conacher in
-particular was bursting with pride. He felt like the creator of that
-river, because they had found it where he had said it would be.
-
-“We happen to have hit it just right,” he said with a transparent air of
-carelessness. “In years to come when there is a trail it will strike the
-river here. Above here, you see, it flows east of north, and at this
-point it swings around to the westward. That agrees with the Indian
-reports. It is the only river east of the Rockies that has a westward
-trend.”
-
-“It is too beautiful to be called the Mud River,” said Loseis.
-
-“After this it shall be Laurentia’s River.”
-
-“Suppose there are rapids,” suggested the matter-of-fact Mary-Lou.
-
-“It will probably flow smooth for two hundred miles,” said Conacher.
-“Then it will strike the limestone outcrop that crosses the whole
-country. We’ll find rapids, maybe cascades, there.”
-
-“And we are the first whites to see it!” murmured Loseis.
-
-“If I can bring him a good sketch map of it, it will put my boss in a
-good humor,” said Conacher.
-
-They made their way down to the water’s edge; and chose a camping spot
-on a curious tongue of land pointing downstream. At the highest stage of
-water it was an island; but it was now connected with the shore by a bar
-of dried mud. On one side of them the resistless brown flood swept down
-silently, its silken surface etched with eddies; on the other side there
-was a quiet back-water which Conacher said would be ideal for
-constructing the raft. He spent the remaining hours of daylight in
-searching for the three big, dead trees that he required for that
-purpose.
-
-They slept in great comfort on heaps of spruce boughs, with a generous
-fire between them. Even in July the nights were cold. In the silence of
-the night they discovered that the smoothly flowing river had a voice.
-It was neither a roar nor a whisper, but partook of the nature of both
-sounds. Though scarcely audible, it was tremendous; like the breathing
-and stirring of a mighty bed-fellow.
-
-The entire following day was devoted to the construction of the raft.
-Conacher cut down his trees; lopped off the branches; and chopped the
-trunks in two. He then launched his logs, and floated them together.
-During the earlier stages of his labor, he was often obliged to wade
-thigh deep into the icy water. Since he had neither spikes to fasten the
-logs, nor rope to lash them together, he was forced patiently to burn
-holes in them with his ramrod, heated in the fire. Twenty-four such
-holes had to be burned; and twelve neatly fitting wooden pegs shaped
-with the ax. Two short lengths were laid across the six logs and pegged
-down. The peg at each corner was allowed to stick up a few inches. A
-flooring of poles was then laid on the crosspieces to keep the
-passengers and their slender baggage dry. These poles were not fastened
-down, but were held in place by the pegs at each corner. Conacher’s last
-act was to burn a hole in each of the outside logs into which he drove a
-stout forked branch to serve as a rowlock. The oars were merely small
-spruce poles flattened with the ax at the broad end.
-
-The builder surveyed his completed effort with a pride that was
-difficult to conceal. “After all this work,” he said with his offhand
-air, “I shall be good and sore if we have to abandon it in a few miles.”
-
-“It is beautiful!” said Loseis.
-
-For a touch of bravura Conacher made a little hearth of clay tiled with
-flat stones on one end of his raft; and laid a fire ready to light. “So
-we can boil our meat as we travel,” he explained.
-
-“It is like a steamboat!” said Loseis.
-
-They turned in early; and were ready to push off soon after sunrise the
-following morning. This was the fourteenth morning after their departure
-from the slough where their enemies had turned back. The raft proved to
-possess ample buoyancy; they could move about on it with a certain
-freedom. The floor of poles held them safely above danger of a wetting.
-Mary-Lou lighted the fire, and put the breakfast on to cook.
-
-Loseis and Conacher sculled out of the back-water. At the foot of the
-island the current seized them as in a giant hand and drew them along.
-They took their oars inboard. There was nothing further to do. The
-tendency of the current itself was to draw them into the center of the
-stream, and keep them there. They sat down on their blankets to survey
-the scenery. The raft gyrated slowly in the eddies, giving them views up
-and down stream without so much as having to turn their heads.
-
-“This is better than walking,” said Conacher.
-
-Loseis agreed that it was; nevertheless she looked with some trepidation
-to see what each new bend of the unknown river had to show.
-
-Conacher assured her on the word of a geologist that as long as it ran
-between dirt banks there could be no serious obstruction to navigation;
-when rocks appeared, then look out! He had note-book and compass out to
-make memoranda of its course. He calculated that the current was running
-about five miles an hour.
-
-The sun was hot to-day; basking deliciously in its rays, the girl fell
-into a comfortable doze. The scenery was beautiful and monotonous; they
-looked at it, only partly aware of what they were looking at, a half
-smile fixed on their lips. Thus they recuperated from the fatigues of
-the past few days. Since the raft did not move through the water, but
-with the water, it came to seem as if it was not moving at all. The raft
-was the fixed point, and the shores were being slowly rolled past them
-like a panorama on great spools.
-
-This pleasant dream was rudely broken into by the sound of a hoarse roar
-downstream.
-
-“Rapid!” said Mary-Lou, moving towards an oar.
-
-Loseis looked reproachfully at Conacher.
-
-They edged the raft close inshore where they could land quickly if need
-be.
-
-“Let’s have a look at it before you call me a liar,” said Conacher.
-
-Rounding the outside of a bend, they came in view of the white horses
-leaping below. An exclamation of fear broke from the girls. Conacher
-caught hold of a fallen tree to stay their progress while he studied the
-white water.
-
-“Nothing but a riffle,” he announced. “Its bark is worse than its bite.
-This is a sharper bend than usual, and it’s just the water backing up on
-the outside that makes all the fuss. Notice that all the waves are
-regular and unbroken. Deep water. It will be perfectly safe to run it if
-you are willing.”
-
-“All right if you say so,” said Loseis.
-
-They cast off from their tree. Conacher and Mary-Lou each stood up with
-an oar, and Loseis crouched behind them.
-
-“Head for the roughest part near the shore,” said Conacher, “and keep
-her straight; that’s all.”
-
-Their hearts beat fast as the shores began to slip by with
-ever-increasing swiftness. The voice of the rapid was like that of a
-ravening beast. There is no other feeling quite like that upon the brink
-of a rapid. The feeling is: No power on earth can save me from it
-now—well, what the hell! They were gripped by an exquisite fear.
-Finally the heavy raft wriggled over the first and the biggest of those
-strange, fixed billows and stuck her nose in the trough. A sheet of
-spray flew back over them, whereupon they were seized by a mad
-exhilaration, and all three yelled like demons. The raft bucked over the
-short, steep billows like a rogue horse. Conacher and Mary-Lou were
-forced to their knees; and the latter lost her oar. A moment later they
-found themselves in smooth water, roaring with laughter.
-
-As soon as they had eaten their supper that night, they pushed off
-again. The girls slept while Conacher watched throughout the long
-twilight. The sunset glow alternated with the cold eastern sky as the
-raft waltzed gracefully in the eddies. They grounded her on a bar during
-the few hours of darkness; and at dawn they pushed off again; the girls
-watching now while Conacher slept. He awakened in the sunshine to find
-them laughing at the antics of the bears on the steep banks.
-
-For three days they traveled in this pleasant fashion. Mooseberries and
-black currants were ripening now. The bushes grew thickly along the
-edges of the water and wherever there were berries there were bears.
-Drifting down silently on the raft, Conacher could always get a shot in
-the early mornings. The berries made a welcome change from a diet of
-meat exclusively.
-
-As they traveled north the steep high banks gradually flattened down,
-and the current of the river slackened. Finally the high banks
-disappeared altogether; they could see nothing over the tops of the
-poplars and pines that lined the water’s edge. The course of the stream
-became very tortuous, and progress was slow.
-
-“We’re evidently coming to something,” Conacher remarked. “This country
-is a vast belt of silt deposited by the river as the result of some
-obstruction ahead.”
-
-On the fourth day the obstruction appeared in the form of a low wall of
-limestone through which the river had finally succeeded in forcing a
-passage. The rock walls were but three or four feet high, and the river
-slipped between them very swiftly and smoothly with a curious growling
-sound. On the other side the whole character of the country was changed.
-Rock appeared everywhere; and the lush vegetation of the prairies was
-gone.
-
-They had not gone far before they came to a rapid, a real rapid this
-one, with great bowlders sticking up out of it, that tore the current to
-white tatters. Landing at a safe distance above, they walked down along
-the shore to see if there was a possible channel through. Conacher was
-naturally averse to abandoning the raft which had cost him such pains.
-
-After a little study, he pointed out to the girls how it might be done.
-“It would be foolish, though, to risk the guns and ammunition and the
-ax. You girls carry the things along the shore, and I’ll take the raft
-down.”
-
-“Suppose you hit a rock?” said Loseis, paling.
-
-“Why, I’d get a ducking, that’s all.”
-
-He accomplished the feat without accident. To the watching Loseis he
-made an extraordinarily gallant figure, standing on the raft, braced and
-swaying to every movement; his resolute glance fixed ahead, while he
-paddled madly to steer it around obstructions.
-
-In the next rapid, an hour or so later, he was not so fortunate. The
-raft, in spite of his efforts, slid up on a submerged shelf of rock, and
-rearing on end, flung the loose poles in every direction. Conacher,
-jumping clear of the wreck, went down with the current. The frame of the
-raft followed him down; and he contrived to bring it ashore below; and
-the paddle too. With some new poles the raft was as good as ever.
-
-However, the rapids seemed to grow successively worse; and Loseis
-forbade him to risk his neck in the next one. They sent the raft down
-empty. After a mad voyage, battered back and forth on the bowlders, it
-came through minus its poles, somewhat loosened up but still
-practicable. They then camped for the night.
-
-On the following day they were nosing along close to the shore with the
-disquieting roar of a rapid in their ears, but apparently still at some
-distance. The view down river was cut off by a low, stony hill, sparsely
-covered with trees, around the base of which the stream wound its way.
-Suddenly Conacher perceived that the current was sucking ominously
-along-shore. That part of the shore was much cumbered with old down
-trees. He drove the raft into the naked branches.
-
-“Grab hold!” he said sharply to the girls.
-
-They missed the first tree. Fine beads of perspiration broke out on
-Conacher’s forehead. He perceived that in a dozen yards the raft would
-be beyond his control. He seized the next overhanging branch, and wound
-a leg around his improvised oarlock to hold the raft. The girls were now
-fully alive to the danger. Mary-Lou climbed into the tree, and Loseis
-swiftly passed her their precious few belongings. When everything was
-ashore Conacher let the raft go, and it lumbered around the point with
-surprising swiftness.
-
-“That’s the last of it,” said Conacher sadly.
-
-They climbed the stony hill. As they rounded the top, a hoarse, throaty
-bellowing buffeted their ears; and a moment later a wild welter of white
-water was spread before their eyes. They had seen nothing like this.
-After rounding the hill the stream straightened out, and narrowing down
-to a quarter of its usual width tumbled down as steeply as a flight of
-stairs between high wooded banks. The impression of power was
-overwhelming. The water was forced into great, regular billows which
-looked to be fifteen feet high. Each billow or ridge of water converged
-to a point in the middle; and the effect as one looked downstream was of
-a series of blunt white arrows pointing up. No boat could have lived in
-that turmoil. The raft—or what was left of it—was already out of
-sight. The three looked at each other with scared and thankful faces. A
-close call!
-
-They now had to adjust their minds to traveling on foot again—and this
-would not be anything like the rolling prairie! The first thing was to
-roll up their packs, and strap them on their backs. They then descended
-into the gorge; but found it impossible to make headway along the steep
-side, impeded with stones and down timber. They were forced to climb a
-hundred feet or so to level ground. This was scarcely better. Only those
-who have tried to make their way through a trackless virgin forest can
-appreciate the difficulties that faced them in the shape of undergrowth,
-fallen trees and holes in the earth. The débris of ages was heaped in
-their path. They guided themselves by the sound of the cascade upon
-their left.
-
-In a mile or so (which had all the effect of ten) the river fell quiet
-again, and they pushed back to its bank. It was an open question which
-was the more difficult going. Along the edge of the stream the dead
-timber brought down by the freshets was left stranded in inextricable
-tangles. Conacher finally chose a course parallel with the river bank,
-and a few yards back from the edge. Here they were at least sure of a
-supply of water. All day long it was a case of climbing over obstacles
-or through them or chopping a way. Heart-breaking work. They camped
-while it was still early, completely tired out.
-
-For day after day this continued. There was no lack of dead timber to
-make another raft: but the rapids followed each other in such close
-succession that it seemed a waste of time. It was exasperating to have
-to undergo such crushing labor with the stream running alongside ready
-to carry them in the desired direction. “If I only had a dug-out!”
-Conacher groaned a dozen times a day. But even if they could have taken
-the time to make a dug-out, there was no suitable timber in that stony
-land. The noise of their progress through the bush scared away all game;
-and they would soon have gone hungry, had it not been for the smoked
-meat which Mary-Lou had thoughtfully provided. Presently this gave out,
-and they had to lay over for a day, while Conacher hunted a bear, along
-the river. Their clothes were in rags.
-
-In ten days Conacher figured that they had made about fifty miles: but
-this was pure guesswork. It was now within two or three days of the time
-when the surveying outfit was due at the mouth of the Mud River.
-
-The three travelers were sitting gloomily on the shore of the river in a
-spot where it flowed as smoothly and prettily between poplar and
-birch-covered shores as a river in a civilized land where picnics might
-be held. The view downstream was blocked by a graceful island. Suddenly
-around that island came poking the nose of a birch-bark canoe with a
-single paddler.
-
-To those three that sight was like a blow between the eyes. They glanced
-fearfully at each other for confirmation. It was a month since they had
-seen others of their kind. They stared at the approaching canoe with
-open mouths. Then Conacher jumped to his feet and hailed. The paddler
-was arrested in mid-motion. He was no less startled by the meeting than
-they. After a moment he came paddling gingerly towards them. They saw
-that it was a white man, an odd, withered, brownish specimen, whose skin
-was all of a color with his battered hat, and faded khaki jacket.
-
-He grounded his canoe gently in the mud, and stepped out. An old smoked
-pioneer with a comically injured look which never varied. They shook
-hands gravely all around before a word was spoken.
-
-“Who are you?” demanded Conacher and Loseis simultaneously.
-
-“Bill Mitchell,” he replied with the shrug and the aggrieved look that
-were characteristic of him. “Who the hell are you?”
-
-“I am Conacher of the surveying outfit, and this is Miss Blackburn.”
-
-“Blackburn’s daughter!” exclaimed the old man with widening eyes. “Do
-you mean to tell me you’ve come down from Blackburn’s Post this away!”
-
-Conacher was not anxious to go into lengthy explanations. “We’re
-expecting to join my outfit on the Sinclair River,” he said quickly.
-“How far are we from the Sinclair?”
-
-“Matter of ten mile. There’s one rapid between.”
-
-“Well, thank God!” cried Conacher fervently. “Have you seen the
-surveying outfit?”
-
-“Spelled with them three days since,” replied the old man. “They’re
-working up-stream slow. Ought to be off the mouth of the Mud River some
-time to-morrow.”
-
-Conacher and Loseis exchanged a beaming look. All their troubles rolled
-away. “Well, we didn’t manage that so badly,” said the former,
-conceitedly.
-
-“What are you doing here?” Conacher asked of the old man.
-
-“Me?” he answered with his disgruntled look; “what do you think I’m
-doin’? I’m prospectin’ this river. It ain’t never been prospected.”
-
-“But when you get above the rapids it’s a prairie river,” said Conacher.
-“We came through three hundred miles of it, and there’s likely three
-hundred miles more above that.”
-
-“Then I’ll work up to the mountains,” said the old man undisturbed.
-
-“You fellows ought to study a little geology before you break your
-hearts with a journey like this,” said Conacher nettled. “Nobody has
-ever found any amount of gold on the easterly slope of the Rockies.”
-
-“Mebbe this river comes right through the mountains like the Spirit and
-the Sinclair,” said the old fellow obstinately.
-
-“Look at it!” said Conacher. “There’s damned little snow water in that.
-It’s pure prairie mud.”
-
-“Oh, well, I’ve come so far I might as well go see,” he said calmly. “I
-got all summer. All I want is to get into the mountains before I go into
-winter quarters.”
-
-Conacher gave him up. He described the upper reaches of the river for
-his benefit. “How will you get your canoe around the big fall?” he
-asked.
-
-“Chop a trail through the bush, and then come back for it,” said the old
-man calmly. “It don’t weigh but forty pound.”
-
-Looking into his canoe they perceived that his entire worldly goods
-consisted of three bags of flour, a box of ammunition, and a slim
-dunnage bag of odds and ends. It appeared that his gun was of the same
-caliber as that carried by Conacher. The old man looked at the other’s
-still partly filled ammunition belt desirously.
-
-“You’ll be joining your outfit to-morrow,” he said suggestively.
-
-“Tell you what I’ll do,” said Conacher. “Cache your flour here, and
-carry us down to the mouth of the river and it shall be yours.”
-
-“Don’t mind ef I do,” said Bill Mitchell.
-
-After the labors of the past days that last ten miles was like riding in
-a taxi. They whisked the light canoe around the rapid with no trouble at
-all. Below, the Mud River widened out and found its way into the
-Sinclair through a miniature delta amongst low, grassy islands covered
-with gigantic cottonwood trees that created a dim green twilight below.
-Mitchell landed them on a pine-clad point that looked down a reach of
-the greater river, several miles long. The old man did not get out.
-
-“Won’t you spell with us?” asked Conacher politely.
-
-The pioneer rubbed his hairy chin, and squinted down river as if he had
-perceived something important down there. “I guess not,” he drawled.
-“Got to be gettin’ along.” With a casual good-by, he pushed off and
-resumed his solitary journey up-stream.
-
-“What a strange creature!” murmured Loseis.
-
-“It was the presence of a lady which embarrassed him,” said Conacher.
-“He confided to me that he had not seen a white girl in seven years.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Twenty-four hours later it was Conacher who perceived, down at the end
-of the long reach, the flash of wet paddles in the sun.
-
-“Here they come!” he cried.
-
-The two girls ran to his side. For a long time they could make out
-nothing but the regular flash of several paddles like heliograph
-signals. Finally four little black objects took shape down river. The
-watchers filled with a mounting excitement that became painful to bear;
-their breasts were like dynamos humming higher and higher until the
-pitch became unendurable. They had looked forward to this meeting
-through such hardships and perils! there had been so many days when they
-despaired of accomplishing it! But here they came at last; men of their
-own kind; friends; rescuers. Conacher and Loseis felt as if their hearts
-would crack with joy.
-
-“My God! how astonished they’ll be!” said Conacher shakily.
-
-The impulse to make the most of their friends’ astonishment was
-irresistible; and the three drew back under cover of the trees. Soon
-they were able to distinguish that the approaching party consisted of
-three white men and eight Indians traveling in three big dug-outs, and a
-rough, narrow scow that was being poled along close to the shore.
-Finally Conacher recognized his especial friend.
-
-“Alec Jordan!” he murmured with a tight, warm feeling around the heart.
-“Good old Alec!”
-
-They saw that the oncoming boats intended to make a landing directly at
-their feet. It was an inevitable camping-place. The three dug-outs
-grounded almost simultaneously on the shingle. As the white men rose in
-their places, Conacher stepped out from among the trees.
-
-“Hello, fellows!” he said in a casual voice.
-
-They stared at him completely awe-struck. “My God!” they murmured in
-hushed tones; and looked at each other. The Indians in the scow pushed
-off in a panic and floated away on the current.
-
-Conacher, pale with excitement, but grinning widely, stepped down the
-bank. “I’m no ghost!” he cried. He marched up to Langmuir, the head of
-the party. “I want to report for duty,” he said simply.
-
-“Report . . . for duty!” stammered Langmuir clownishly.
-
-Jordan was the first to recover from the shock. He flung his arms around
-his friend. “Conacher! Conacher! _Conacher!_” he yelled, shaking him
-violently as if to make certain that he was flesh and blood.
-
-“How in hell did you get here?” demanded Langmuir in a voice of extreme
-bitterness, which was not really bitter.
-
-“Been waitin’ for you since yesterday,” said Conacher airily. “I cut
-across the prairie north of Blackburn’s Post, and came down the Mud
-River to head you off. Got a map of the river for you, chief, such as it
-is.”
-
-“Well, I’m damned!” said Langmuir solemnly. And the others echoed him in
-varying tones: “I’m _damned_!”
-
-Conacher was not yet done surprising them. As they turned to climb the
-bank, he said somewhat nervously: “I’ve got a couple of guests with
-me. . . .”
-
-Loseis stepped into view above. In breeches and Stetson, smiling
-merrily, yet a little apprehensively, too, she made an enchanting
-figure. The rents in her clothes, the marks of hardship in her face,
-only set off the bravery of her spirit. To those white men so long
-parted from the women of their race, it was like a miracle.
-
-“Miss Blackburn, gentlemen,” Conacher sang out. “Mr. Langmuir; Mr.
-Jordan; Mr. Seely.”
-
-They snatched off their hats. “Pleased to meet you,” they mumbled
-sheepishly.
-
-“Merciful Heaven! am I awake or dreaming!” Langmuir murmured to himself.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV
- CONCLUSION
-
-
-The meeting at the mouth of the Mud River was the beginning of a still
-longer journey for Loseis. But it was never again allowed to become an
-arduous one for her. All hands, white and red, joined together to smooth
-her way. She reigned the undisputed Princess of Langmuir’s party,
-holding them in subjection with her smile.
-
-After a laborious month ascending the Sinclair, plotting the river and
-collecting geological data and specimens, they came to a lonely trading
-outpost on the Pacific side of the mountains, called Pinnacle House. It
-stood amidst wild and beautiful surroundings in a deep green valley
-between parallel ranges. The pointed limestone peaks gave it its name.
-How strange it was to find such homely old friends as cabbages, onions
-and potatoes growing in the trader’s garden!
-
-The trader was away on his usual summer journey to bring in supplies;
-and they found his house occupied at the moment by the Reverend Patrick
-Geogehagen, a famous character of the country, better known as “Patsy.”
-Patsy was a brawny, bright-eyed wrestler for the Lord, with
-cherry-colored cheeks, and a spreading black beard that saved him the
-trouble of wearing a necktie. It was his self-imposed duty to visit and
-minister to those tribes of Indians who were too poor, too disreputable
-or too far away to attract the attention of the regular missionaries.
-
-When they hailed him he was cleaning his gun at the door of the single
-log shack that served both for store and dwelling at Pinnacle House, and
-there was nothing in his rough dress to indicate his calling. When he
-introduced himself, Conacher looked at Loseis with a quick, smiling
-question and Loseis answered it with a quick, smiling assent. Conacher
-whispered shamefacedly to Patsy, who thereupon gave him a frightful clap
-on the back, and roared:
-
-“Delighted, my boy!”
-
-Conacher took Langmuir aside. The chief wagged his head in perplexity;
-and scratched it, and grumbled:
-
-“What the deuce, Conny! Such a thing was never heard of in a party
-engaged on field work! What will it look like in my report? Oh, Lord!
-think of the explanations I will be called on to make to all the old
-women in the Department!”
-
-“Why should it appear in the report?” said Conacher. “It’s none of the
-Government’s business. Have I been any the worse worker during the past
-month?”
-
-“No, no! you’ve worked like two! . . . Hm! that’s so. Why should it
-appear? . . . Go ahead, my boy; and God bless you! I bags to give the
-bride away.”
-
-As a matter of fact, it _did not_ appear. The report of Langmuir’s party
-is filed away with many others equally decorous, and nobody in the
-Government ever suspected that they entertained a Princess during the
-summer and celebrated a wedding.
-
-There were no wedding garments in the outfit but a great shaving,
-shearing, washing and brushing-up took place. The fellows decorated the
-single room of the cabin with spruce branches and flowers from the
-mountain side. Loseis had to be married in breeches and boots because it
-was all she had. At least her clothes were neatly mended by this time.
-Her smile was the smile of a happy bride; and nobody was aware of any
-incongruity. Conacher looked as frightened as every well-disposed man is
-supposed to be at his wedding; and large fat tears rolled down the
-bridesmaid’s dark cheeks. Up to the moment of donning his vestments
-Patsy joked outrageously; he then became the priest of God. In a free
-and natural state of society these abrupt contrasts are perfectly well
-understood. Nobody thought the less of Patsy because he was a man as
-well as a priest.
-
-Patsy and Mary-Lou conspired together to produce the wedding-feast; and
-the result, considering the meager resources of Pinnacle House,
-astonished everybody. They may have been short of the fixings, but they
-had five kinds of game and fish; and to polish off with, a gigantic
-roly-poly pudding stuffed with currant jam.
-
-The speeches were no better nor worse than usual. Patsy said in part:
-
-“Sure, friends, I shall look back on this as one of the happiest days of
-me life! This morning I was not aware that you people as much as
-existed; this afternoon you are established as the friends of me heart,
-and shall never be absent from me heart while it beats. Even parsons get
-discouraged sometimes, though none of ’em would ever admit it but a
-renegade like me. This mornin’ I was sittin’ at the door of this house
-trying to make up my mind whether to visit the scrofulous Louchoux
-Indians to the northeast, or the flea-bitten Sikannis to the southeast,
-and feelin’ ready to consign ’em both to perdition. Sure, in all the
-world there is not such another lousy, thieving, crack-brained,
-worthless congregation as me own, I was telling meself, when along you
-came with this lovely girl to remind me of the existence of beauty in
-the world, and this bold lad to refresh me with the sight of manliness!
-Would I marry them? says he, blushing. Would I marry them? I was ready
-to throw my cap in the air at such a chance! That is jam in the life of
-a forgotten missionary. I consider that in joining these two I have
-performed the best act of me life. The country ought to profit by it.
-Here’s to the newly married pair! May they live long and obey the
-scriptural injunction!”
-
-To which Conacher answered:
-
-“. . . Er . . . you fellows and the Reverend Patsy . . . I rise to say
-. . . er . . . that is, to thank you . . . I’m not much of a speaker
-. . .”
-
-“No?” queried a sarcastic voice.
-
-“That’s all right, Jordan. You can laugh. I’ll live to see you married
-yet. . . . Where was I? . . . I only wanted to say, only you interrupt
-me all the time . . . er . . . to thank you on behalf of Miss Blackburn
-. . .”
-
-Uproarious laughter drowned him out.
-
-“What’s the matter with you all! . . . Oh, I see. I mean the lady beside
-me, m-m-m-my w-w-w-wife. The late Miss Blackburn . . .”
-
-Renewed laughter.
-
-“Oh, to hell with you!” said Conacher plumping down in his seat
-laughing. “If any man thinks he can make a better speech let’s hear it!”
-
-Next morning they resumed their work on the river. For two weeks longer
-they toiled up through or around the innumerable rapids, canyons,
-whirlpools, and waterfalls of the upper Sinclair, before they finally
-arrived at the little lake in which it took its source.
-
-Here Langmuir gave Conacher leave to press on ahead while the party
-cleaned up its work for the season. So Conacher, Loseis and Mary-Lou
-crossed a famous pass and descending the mountain on the other side,
-plunged all at once into the civilization which Loseis had never seen.
-Everything in the busy little coast town was strange to her; the close
-ranks of shops and houses; locomotives; automobiles; electric light and
-water from a tap. The Princess was too aristocratic in spirit to betray
-vulgar amazement; she merely looked and listened quietly. Not until she
-was alone with her husband did she reveal the wonder and astonishment of
-her childish heart. For the man it was a wonderful experience to
-introduce so fresh and ardent a soul to the great world.
-
-There was a short voyage by sea; then the return eastward by railroad
-over the mountains to the city of Prince George.
-
-In Prince George they had no difficulty in finding John Gruber, who when
-he was not running Blackburn’s outfit into the country, or bringing out
-his furs, ran a stable in town, and bought and sold horses. They found
-him in his little office, a tall, strong man with a heavy, honest red
-face, and a bald red poll surrounded by a fringe of red hair. Gruber had
-not visited Blackburn’s Post since Loseis was a child; and he did not
-immediately recognize her.
-
-“I am Laurentia Blackburn,” she said.
-
-“What!” cried Gruber, staring. “Why . . . of course you are! . . . Well,
-I’m damned!”
-
-“That’s what everybody says!” said Loseis with a rueful smile.
-
-“Where did you come from?” demanded Gruber.
-
-Loseis started to tell her story, but Gruber instantly silenced her.
-“Wait! Wait!” he cried. “We must do everything regular and proper!”
-Snatching up his hat, he hustled them through the streets to a tall
-office building. Here after ascending in an elevator (a fresh marvel to
-Loseis) they burst unceremoniously into the private office of a little,
-round, white-haired old gentleman, startling him almost out of his wits.
-
-“Here is Blackburn’s daughter!” shouted Gruber.
-
-“God bless my soul!” cried the old gentleman, agitatedly removing his
-glasses. “What proof have you of that?”
-
-“I’ve got the proof of my own eyes!”
-
-“Quietly! Quietly!” pleaded the old soul. “Sit down all. Let us proceed
-in due order if you please.”
-
-It turned out that this was Hector Blackburn’s lawyer, David Chichester.
-In simple graphic sentences, Loseis told the two men her story, while
-they glanced at each other in astonishment, and murmured in indignation
-and sympathy.
-
-When she had come to the end, Mr. Chichester said gravely: “We all felt
-that there was something that needed to be explained; but we had nothing
-to go on.”
-
-“You have later news than mine,” said Loseis eagerly; “Mr. Gruber has
-been into the country and out again. What has happened?”
-
-The two men looked at each other again. Gruber said: “Show her the
-newspaper, Mr. Chichester. That tells the whole story.”
-
-From a drawer of his desk, Mr. Chichester produced a copy of the local
-newspaper now some weeks old, folded in such a manner as to bring into
-prominence the story that he desired them to read. They were instantly
-aware of the staring headlines:
-
- ROMANTIC TRAGEDY OF THE NORTH
-
- Young Couple End All for Love
-
-Loseis and Conacher read with their heads close together:
-
-“John Gruber, the well-known horse-dealer and traveler of Prince George,
-returned yesterday from his annual trip into northern Athabasca bringing
-news of a strange and poignant tragedy at Blackburn’s Post, a distant
-trading station in the unexplored portion of the province.
-
-“For many years Mr. Gruber has acted as agent for Hector Blackburn, the
-last of the powerful free traders, who maintained an almost baronial
-state in the midst of his vast domain. Each year it has been Mr.
-Gruber’s custom to take in the year’s supplies for the Post. At a point
-about half way he would meet the outfit sent out by Hector Blackburn and
-exchange the store goods for the season’s catch of furs. This year Mr.
-Gruber waited in vain at the rendezvous. After several weeks had passed,
-a rumor reached him that Hector Blackburn had been killed by an accident
-early in June. He then pushed through the rest of the way to Blackburn’s
-Post.
-
-“He found Mr. Andrew Gault of Fort Good Hope, one of the best-known fur
-traders in the country, in charge there. Mr. Gault was well-nigh
-prostrated by a terrible happening which had taken place only two or
-three days before Mr. Gruber’s arrival. Laurentia Blackburn, the late
-trader’s only child, had killed herself by leaping from a high cliff
-into the river, in company with her lover, a young man named Paul
-Conacher attached to the Geological Survey.
-
-“It was on June third that Hector Blackburn was killed by a fall from
-his horse. His death left his daughter, a young girl, entirely alone and
-unprotected in that savage spot. There were no other white persons at
-Blackburn’s Post. Moreover it was surrounded by a tribe of ignorant
-Indians who began to get out of hand as soon as the firm control of
-Hector Blackburn was removed. Mr. Gault, hearing of these things,
-immediately rode to the girl’s assistance from his Post one hundred and
-fifty miles away.
-
-“At first the girl evinced nothing but gratitude at his coming. She
-freely put all her affairs into Mr. Gault’s experienced hands, giving
-him a power of attorney to transact the necessary business. Mr. Gault
-sent out for Hector Blackburn’s attorney who is the well-known lawyer,
-Mr. David Chichester, of this city; but this letter unluckily was lost
-somewhere on the long journey.
-
-“A few days later the young man, Conacher, turned up at Blackburn’s
-Post. He too had heard of Blackburn’s death, and was attracted by the
-rich prize offered in his only child and heiress. A handsome young man,
-of good address, his conquest of the inexperienced girl was all too
-easy. Conacher wished to get her business into his own hands, and so
-worked upon her mind with base insinuations that she turned against her
-best friend, Mr. Gault.
-
-“Mr. Gault meanwhile, as was clearly his duty, was preparing to send out
-the season’s fur to Mr. Gruber. By every means in his power, Conacher
-sought to prevent this. He was finally guilty of the murder of an Indian
-named Etzooah, a messenger of Mr. Gault’s, under circumstances of
-peculiar atrocity. The Indian was garroted as he rode through the woods,
-by a line stretched across the trail by Conacher. It then became Mr.
-Gault’s duty to apprehend the young man and send him out to justice. But
-the infatuated girl sheltered him in her own house; and standing at the
-door with a gun, dared Mr. Gault to come and take him.
-
-“Mr. Gault sent out for the police; and in the meantime contented
-himself with watching the house to prevent the murderer’s escape. His
-messenger, taking a different route, passed Mr. Gruber on the way in;
-and as a matter of fact the police arrived two days after Gruber. But
-everything was over then. On the third night Conacher and the girl
-escaped from the house, and obtaining possession of a dug-out, fled
-across the river. Closely pursued by Mr. Gault, they sought a refuge on
-top of a high cut-bank opposite the Post. When their pursuers closed in
-on them, seeing capture, disgrace and separation ahead, they joined
-hands and with a weird good-by ringing through the night, leaped over
-the edge of the gravelly cliff and were drowned in the river below.
-Though Mr. Gault searched for the bodies for many days, they were not
-found.
-
-“The police conducted an investigation into the sad circumstances. As a
-result, Sergeant Ferrie in charge of the detail expressed himself as
-satisfied that Mr. Gault had done all that any man could do in such an
-inexpressibly distressing situation. Mr. Gault remains in charge of the
-Post until such time as the Courts may issue letters of administration.
-No heirs are known.”
-
-Conacher and Loseis looked at each other in amazement.
-
-“By Heaven! what an infernally clever story!” cried Conacher. “I am not
-surprised that even the police were taken in.”
-
-“God brought us through all our dangers especially so that we could show
-this man up!” said Loseis.
-
-“We must decide on a course of action,” said Mr. Chichester fussily.
-
-“There can be but one course for my husband and me,” said Loseis
-quickly. “We will start back for our Post to-morrow.”
-
-“Naturally,” said Conacher.
-
-The other two looked a little flabbergasted at this instant decision.
-
-“The season is growing late,” objected Gruber. “Light snows have already
-fallen. Ice will be running in the rivers by the time you get there.”
-
-“But the trip _can_ be made!” said Loseis.
-
-“Oh, yes, it can be made.”
-
-“Then we’ll make it.”
-
-“One moment,” said Mr. Chichester dryly. “I suppose you know that you
-have other property beside the fur business.”
-
-“Have I?” said Loseis.
-
-He handed her a sort of statement from amongst his papers. Loseis looked
-at it, and shook her head.
-
-“I don’t understand it,” she said, passing it to Conacher.
-
-As he studied it, Conacher’s face paled. “Good God!” he muttered.
-“According to this you are worth over a million dollars. . . . Oh, after
-what they have said about me, this is terrible!”
-
-“You’ll have to make the best of it!” said Mr. Chichester with a dry
-twinkle.
-
-Loseis showed a face of quaint distress. “My dear Paul,” she murmured,
-“I’m so sorry! So sorry! I didn’t know anything about it. It wasn’t my
-fault, was it!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Gruber, who headed the party, breathed with relief when he led them
-through a pass in the hills down to the edge of the wide meadows
-surrounding Blackburn’s Lake. October had come in; and during their long
-ride across the prairie they had met with more than one snow-storm.
-Fortunately for them the snow had melted; had it remained lying on the
-prairie, or had they experienced one of the early blizzards that are not
-unknown at this season, their position would have been serious. Now,
-with the shelter of the timber at hand, they were safe.
-
-The party was well outfitted of course; but even so, what with the snow,
-the hard frosts at night and the raw, biting winds by day, traveling had
-been intensely disagreeable. They carried a small tent for the two
-women. Gruber had three hot-heads in his company who could not brook the
-slightest delay. Besides Loseis and Conacher there was young Sergeant
-Ferrie of the Mounted Police who was no less eager than the other two to
-bring down retribution on the head of Andrew Gault. The policeman’s
-professional pride had been wounded. With three troopers he had joined
-the party at the Crossing. Mary-Lou was also of the party; and six Cree
-half-breeds from Miwasa Landing. They had upwards of twenty horses.
-
-They slept for the last time on the same little point of high land
-running out into the meadows, where Conacher had been surprised by
-Etzooah four months before. The days were growing short now. About
-eleven o’clock next morning they were riding past the Slavi village on
-the opposite side of the river. The inhabitants lined up to watch them
-pass, in silent consternation. Even at the distance they could not have
-failed to recognize Loseis and the famous yellow head of Conacher.
-
-“Some of them could jump in a canoe and get to the Post with the aid of
-the current before we could,” suggested Conacher.
-
-“They have no love for Gault,” said Loseis. “There is no reason why they
-should warn them. The Slavis never look for trouble.”
-
-“Even if he should be warned, he’s got nowhere to run except back to his
-own Post,” Gruber pointed out. “And there he’d only run into the arms of
-the other party of police who went down the big river.”
-
-“Just the same,” said Sergeant Ferrie, frowning, “I’ve no intention of
-letting any other party take him. He belongs to me!”
-
-They urged their weary horses on a little faster.
-
-Suspecting that Gault might make a dash for freedom at the sight of
-them, Ferrie determined to send a party across country to head him off
-on the other trail. Two of the white troopers and two Crees were
-allotted to this duty. They turned off on the same ridge a mile from the
-Post that Gault had used. In order to give them time to reach their
-post, the rest of the party halted for their midday meal in the hollow
-beyond.
-
-When they started out again, Ferrie took command. He wished Loseis and
-Mary-Lou to remain in that spot with a guard; but Loseis would not hear
-of it. Much to her disgust she was forced to bring up the rear of the
-train. As they came in sight of the Post the men’s faces were grim. It
-had a deserted look. Gault had never succeeded in persuading the Slavis
-to return, and the grassy meadow below the buildings, yellow now, was
-empty. When they cantered up into the little square within the
-buildings, that was empty too: Women’s House, store, warehouses,
-Blackburn’s House; doors closed and chimneys cold. The bars of the
-corral were down.
-
-The men paused to consult. Presently the sound of approaching hoofs was
-heard; and the four men sent across country rode into the square,
-driving before them four mounted Indians, who were immediately
-recognizable as belonging to Gault; one of them indeed was Watusk, whom
-Loseis and Conacher had good cause to remember. He was brought up to
-Sergeant Ferrie.
-
-“Where is Gault?” demanded the policeman.
-
-“We leave him here, half hour ago,” answered Watusk sullenly. “He tell
-us to go home.”
-
-“Told you to go home!” said Ferrie, astonished.
-
-“He know you are coming,” Watusk went on impassively. “This man
-Hooliam,” pointing to one of his companions, “was at the Slavi village
-to see a girl when you ride past. He jomp in a canoe and paddle fas’ to
-tell Gault that Blackburn’s daughter and Yellowhead are not dead. They
-are comin’ back with four red-coats.”
-
-“What did Gault say to that?” Ferrie asked with a hard smile.
-
-“He jus’ smile,” said Watusk. “He look on the groun’ and tap his leg
-with his little whip. Bam-bye he say: ‘All right, boys. Get your horses
-and ride home. I will wait here for them.’ And we go.”
-
-“Then he’s still here!” cried Ferrie.
-
-Watusk pointed to Blackburn’s house.
-
-“Gault! Come out!” cried Ferrie in a strong voice.
-
-There was no answer.
-
-Ferrie tried the door of the house, and found it barred on the inside.
-He signified to his men that they were to fetch one of the heavy poles
-from the corral. Using it as a battering-ram, after two or three blows,
-the door burst in. Ferrie and Conacher entered the house together.
-
-They found Gault sitting upright in the kitchen in one of Blackburn’s
-carved chairs. For one dreadful instant they thought that he was
-laughing at them; in the next they perceived that he was dead. His
-wide-open eyes were bereft of all sense; his lower jaw was hanging down
-in a dreadful, idiotic grimace. Yet he sat as straight in the
-high-backed chair as in life. It was only upon looking closer that they
-discovered that the man with a strange, last impulse of vanity had tied
-himself into the chair, that he might be discovered facing his enemies
-in an upright position. There was a band of canvas around his chest! and
-another around his forehead; the broad-brimmed Stetson was jammed
-rakishly down on his head over the band. He had then shot himself
-through the heart with a revolver, which had slipped from his hand to
-the floor.
-
-The young men jerked their hats off; and their grim faces softened a
-little.
-
-“Well, he’s paid,” said Conacher. “We can’t feel any more hard feelings
-against him!”
-
-“It’s better so,” said Ferrie. “Nobody would want this ugly case
-advertised by a trial.”
-
-Such was Andrew Gault’s requiem.
-
-They returned outside the house, hat in hand, and all the others knew at
-a glance what they had found.
-
-If Gault in his strange preparations for death had hoped to leave upon
-Loseis a last impression of his power, his aim was not realized. She
-betrayed no wish to look at him again. Loseis’ verdict was more merciful
-than the young men’s.
-
-“So he is dead!” she murmured, clinging to Conacher’s arm. “He _would_
-kill himself, of course. . . . Poor fellow! He had never known love when
-he was young. When he was old love mocked him, and it drove him
-mad. . . . Ah! how lucky _we_ are, my dearest dear!”
-
-They returned to the house across the way where they had known such
-dreadful days and nights. But the spell of dread was lifted now. Their
-breasts were calm and free.
-
- THE END
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of A backwoods princess, by Hulbert Footner</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-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="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
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-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: A backwoods princess</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Hulbert Footner</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 4, 2023 [eBook #69702]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Al Haines, Jen Haines &amp; the online Distributed Proofreaders Canada team at https://www.pgdpcanada.net</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BACKWOODS PRINCESS ***</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0000' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='lgl' style=''> <!-- rend=';ml:10em;fs:1.25em;' -->
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:10em;font-size:1.25em;'>By HULBERT FOOTNER</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:10em;font-size:1.25em;'>__________________________</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:10em;font-size:1.25em;'>A Backwoods Princess</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:10em;font-size:1.25em;'>Madame Storey</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:10em;font-size:1.25em;'>Antennae</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:10em;font-size:1.25em;'>The Shanty Sled</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:10em;font-size:1.25em;'>The Under Dogs</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:10em;font-size:1.25em;'>The Wild Bird</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:10em;font-size:1.25em;'>Officer!</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:10em;font-size:1.25em;'>Ramshackle House</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:10em;font-size:1.25em;'>The Deaves Affair</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:10em;font-size:1.25em;'>The Owl Taxi</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:10em;font-size:1.25em;'>The Substitute Millionaire</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:10em;font-size:1.25em;'>Thieves’ Wit</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:10em;font-size:1.25em;'>New Rivers of the North</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:10em;font-size:1.25em;'>__________________________</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:10em;font-size:1.25em;'>NEW YORK:</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:left;margin-left:10em;font-size:1.25em;'>GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY</p>
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-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='bbox'>
-<div class='bboxdouble'>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;font-size:2.5em;font-weight:bold;'>A BACKWOODS</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1em;font-size:2.5em;font-weight:bold;'>PRINCESS</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;font-size:1.5em;font-style:italic;'>By</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:5em;font-size:2em;'>HULBERT FOOTNER</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/logo.png' alt='' id='iid-0001' style='width:15%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;font-size:1.5em;font-weight:bold;'>NEW &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;YORK</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;font-size:2em;'>GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='lgc' style='margin-bottom:10em;'> <!-- rend=';fs:1em;' -->
-<p class='line' style='font-size:1em;'>COPYRIGHT, <span class='it'>1926</span>,</p>
-<p class='line' style='font-size:1em;'>BY HULBERT FOOTNER</p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<div class='lgc' style=''> <!-- rend=';fs:1em;' -->
-<p class='line' style='font-size:1em;'>A BACKWOODS PRINCESS</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line' style='font-size:1em;'>—Q—</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line' style='font-size:1em;'>PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA</p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;font-size:2em;font-weight:bold;'>CONTENTS</p>
-
-<table id='tab1' summary='' class='center' style='font-size:1.25em;'>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'><span style='font-size:x-small'>CHAPTER</span></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><span style='font-size:x-small'>PAGE</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>I</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>Catastrophe</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_9'>9</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>II</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>The Burial of Blackburn</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_22'>22</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>III</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>The Slaves Without a Master</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_30'>30</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>IV</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>At Fort Good Hope</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_40'>40</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>V</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>Yellow-Head</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_51'>51</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>VI</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>The Dinner Party</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_64'>64</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>VII</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>The Cloven Hoof</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_79'>79</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>VIII</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>Heavenly Music</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_94'>94</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>IX</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>An Upset</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_102'>102</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>X</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>Contraband</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_118'>118</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>XI</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>A Meeting</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_133'>133</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>XII</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>Fur</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_140'>140</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>XIII</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>The Fur Goes Out</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_156'>156</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>XIV</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>The Discovery</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_167'>167</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>XV</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>Shadowing</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_179'>179</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>XVI</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>With Conacher</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_190'>190</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>XVII</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>The Meeting</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_201'>201</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>XVIII</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>Confusion</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_207'>207</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>XIX</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>Preparing for Danger</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_216'>216</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>XX</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>Besieged</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_228'>228</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>XXI</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>A Leap for Freedom</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_239'>239</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>XXII</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>The Search</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_255'>255</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>XXIII</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>Hunger</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_273'>273</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>XXIV</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>Downstream</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_287'>287</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>XXV</td><td class='tab1c2 leader-dots tdStyle1'><span>Conclusion</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle0'><a href='#Page_305'>305</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;font-size:2em;font-weight:bold;'>A BACKWOODS PRINCESS</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='9' id='Page_9'></span><h1 class='nobreak'>CHAPTER I<br/> <span class='sub-head'>CATASTROPHE</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>S</span>pring</span> was in full tide at Blackburn’s Post, but
-Laurentia Blackburn and the four Marys were
-confined to the Women’s House by rain. There sat
-the girlish Princess surrounded by her handmaidens
-in the midst of a rude magnificence which best sets off
-a beautiful woman. Her feet were hidden in a
-superb polar bearskin which had come down from
-the Arctic in trade; and the chair in which she sat
-was completely covered by the frosted pelt of a
-grizzly, his huge head hanging down over the back.
-She was a black-haired Princess with something untamed
-about her like the creatures whose pelts decorated
-her chamber. Around her neck hung an
-astonishing necklace of great pearls strung alternately
-with water-worn nuggets of gold. Her black dress
-was worked at the neck and wrists with an Indian
-design in brightly dyed porcupine quills.</p>
-
-<p>The four Marys were Indian girls, small and
-comely, with glistening copper faces, and raven hair
-drawn smoothly back from their brows. They were
-clad alike in black cotton dresses, with doeskin moccasins
-upon their feet; and a stranger would have
-been hard put to it to tell them apart. However, he
-would presently have perceived that one of them
-stood in quite a different relation to her mistress from
-the others. This was Mary-Lou who was of the
-Beaver tribe, whereas the others were only Slavis.
-She was the Princess’ foster sister. She could speak
-English. All four girls looked at their mistress with
-fear and respect; but only Mary-Lou’s face was
-capable of softening with love. She was reading aloud
-from “The Lady of the Lake.”</p>
-
-<p>The others were Mary-Belle; Mary-Rose and
-Mary-Ann. The first-named crouched in front of the
-small fire which had been lighted to mitigate the
-dampness out-of-doors. It was her task to see that
-it neither went out, nor became hot enough to scorch
-the Princess’ face. The other two sat on a bearskin
-engaged in embroidering velvet-soft moccasins with
-gayly colored silks. None of them could understand
-a word of what Mary-Lou was reading from the
-book; and the gentle, droning voice was fatally conducive
-to sleep. The Princess watched them lazily
-through the lowered fringe of her black lashes; and,
-when a head was seen to nod, she exploded like a
-fire cracker.</p>
-
-<p>“Sit up straight! Your head is going down between
-your shoulders! Before you are twenty-five
-you will be the shape of a sack of hay! Your husband
-if you ever get one at all will look for another
-wife!”</p>
-
-<p>It especially terrified the girls to be scolded in the
-English they could not understand. This particular
-rebuke was addressed to Mary-Belle but all three of
-the Slavis cringed, and their dark eyes turned helplessly
-this way and that like a frightened deer’s.
-Mary-Lou looked apprehensive, too, expecting her
-turn to come next.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, go on with the book,” said Loseis crossly.
-The name Laurentia, being unmanageable on the
-tongue of the Indians, they had given her this one,
-which means “little wild duck.”</p>
-
-<p>The tremulous voice resumed.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, shut the book!” Loseis cried immediately
-afterwards. “It is a foolish book! It tires my
-ears!”</p>
-
-<p>“Shall I get another book?” faltered Mary-Lou.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the use? We have read them all. They
-are no better than this book. All foolish, goody-goody
-books!”</p>
-
-<p>All four red girls sat scared and silent.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis jumped up as if she had strong springs in
-her legs. “Can’t you say something, any of you?
-Are you all struck dumb? You can chatter fast
-enough among yourselves when I am not there!”
-She amplified her remarks in the Slavi tongue.</p>
-
-<p>They were struck dumb indeed, then. They looked
-at each other helplessly, each one mutely begging her
-neighbor to speak.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, leave me! leave me! you foolish pudding
-faces!” cried Loseis, waving her hands. “Or I shall
-have to beat you!”</p>
-
-<p>They faded into the kitchen with alacrity. Only
-Mary-Lou looked back.</p>
-
-<p>“Mary-Lou, you stay here,” commanded Loseis.
-“I’ve got to have somebody to talk to!”</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou leaned shyly against the door frame;
-pleased at being called back, yet terrified, too. Loseis
-paced up and down the room like a slim black panther,
-her eyes shooting greenish sparks.</p>
-
-<p>It was a broad, low room with but two tiny windows,
-glass being such a difficult article to bring in
-seven hundred miles by pack train. There was a
-capacious fireplace, cunningly built out of rounded
-stones from the creek bed. The log walls had been
-plastered with clay, hardened now almost to the consistency
-of brick; and overhead was spread a canvas
-ceiling cloth to keep in the warmth. Walls and ceiling
-had been washed with a warm terra cotta color,
-which made a rich background for the beautiful furs.
-Over the carved bedstead in the corner was flung a
-robe made of hundreds of raccoons’ tails, the black
-stripes worked into an elaborate geometrical design.
-There were other robes made of otters’ skins, of
-lynx paws, of silver foxes. On the walls hung many
-beautiful examples of Indian handicraft.</p>
-
-<p>Glancing at the drooping head of the red girl,
-Loseis cried: “Mary-Lou, you’ve got as much spirit
-as a lump of pemmican! When you sit by the fire I
-wonder that you do not melt and run down in
-grease!”</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou’s head went lower still, and her eyes
-filled.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing this, Loseis became angrier still. “There
-you go! Of course you’re <span class='it'>good</span>! That’s what makes
-me mad! Because I’m not good at all! I’ve got the
-temper of a fiend! Well, do you suppose I enjoy
-losing it? .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I know I ought to say I’m sorry now,
-but it sticks in my throat!”</p>
-
-<p>“I not want that,” murmured Mary-Lou. “I am
-lovin’ you anyway.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I love you, too,” grumbled Loseis,
-shamefaced as a boy. “But I wish you weren’t so
-humble. It’s bad for me. This is Blackburn’s Post
-on Blackburn’s River; all this is Blackburn’s country,
-and I’m Blackburn’s daughter. There is nobody to
-stand up to me. I am too young to be the mistress.
-I don’t know anything.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. That white man laughed
-at me as one laughs at a child!”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis had stopped her pacing. Her head hung
-down. “I ought to have a white woman to tell me
-things,” she said wistfully. “In all my life I have
-seen but one woman of my own kind. That was the
-governess my father brought in for me. I used to
-mock her. But now I wish I had her back. She
-had nice manners.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. He laughed at me.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>She strayed to the second little crooked window,
-which was at the end of the room furthest from the
-fireplace. It overlooked a natural meadow below,
-where the tepees of the Slavis were built upon both
-sides of a creek which emptied into the main stream
-just beyond. In front of the Post the main river
-described a great convex bend, so that Loseis could
-look both up-stream and down. This bend was
-formed by a bold promontory of a hill which forced
-the river to go around its base. The point of this
-hill had been sliced off by the water, leaving a precipitous
-yellow cut-bank facing the Post. On the summit,
-startlingly conspicuous against a group of dark
-pine trees, was a fence of white palings enclosing a
-tiny plot with a cross rising out of it. By day and by
-night too, that grave dominated the Post.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! if only my mother had lived!” sighed
-Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me read the book again,” suggested Mary-Lou,
-to divert her mind.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis shook her head impatiently. She came away
-from the window. “I am not in the humor for it.
-I guess it is too fine for me.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” She resumed her
-uneven pacing. “Mary-Lou,” she suddenly cried in
-a voice full of pain, “when a man and a woman love
-I am sure they do not think such elegant thoughts as
-are in that book. Ah! the heart burns a hole in your
-breast! It is impossible to think at all!”</p>
-
-<p>The red girl’s eyes followed her, full of compassion.</p>
-
-<p>Observing that look, Loseis said sharply: “You
-must not think I am in love with that white man,
-Conacher. Oh, no! I was just imagining. I am far
-from loving him. I hate him!”</p>
-
-<p>“You are not hating Conacher,” murmured Mary-Lou
-sadly. “Why say that to me?”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis stamped her foot. “I tell you I hate him!”
-she cried. “That is enough for you! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. What
-right had he to treat me like a child? I am Blackburn’s
-daughter. My father is the master of this
-country. And who is this white man? A poor man
-in a canoe with only two servants! Nobody ever
-heard of him before. My father was angry at his
-coming, and I was angry. We do not want white
-men coming here to spoil the fur trade!”</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou’s silence suggested that she was far
-from being convinced.</p>
-
-<p>“A poor man with no outfit at all!” Loseis repeated
-louder. “Yet he held his head as if he was as good
-as my father! He must be a fool. He talked to me
-as if I was anybody at all, and his eyes laughed when
-I became angry .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. !” In the midst of her tirade
-Loseis suddenly broke down. “Oh, I wish I could
-forget him!” she cried, with the angry tears springing
-to her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>This sign of weakness gave Mary-Lou the courage
-to glide to her mistress, and wreathe her arms about
-her. “I think Conacher was a good man,” she whispered.
-“His eyes were true.”</p>
-
-<p>These words were very sweet to Loseis; but she
-would not openly confess it. However, she gave
-Mary-Lou a little squeeze, before withdrawing herself
-from her arms. “No,” she said; “I shall stand
-by my father. My father is the finest man living.
-Conacher is gone. I shall never see him again. I
-shall quickly forget him.</p>
-
-<p>“It was only because he took me by surprise,” she
-went on with an eagerness in which there was something
-pathetically childlike. “When he came paddling
-down our river with the two Beaver Indians I was
-like one struck on the head. It was like a white
-man falling from the skies. No white man ever came
-down our river before; and he so young and strong
-and full of laughter! He wore no hat; and the sunlight
-was snared in his yellow hair. I never saw hair
-like that.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“He like you, too, ver’ moch,” ventured Mary-Lou.
-“I was there when he landed. I saw it burn
-up like fire in his blue eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I saw that, too,” murmured Loseis, averting
-her face. “But why did he change right away?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because you treat him like poor, dirty Slavi,”
-said Mary-Lou. “No white man take that.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is because I was so confused,” whispered
-poor Loseis. She suddenly covered her face with
-her hands. “Oh, what will he be thinking of me!”
-she groaned.</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou’s eyes were all sympathy; but she could
-think of nothing to say.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis drifted back to the window, where she
-stood with her back to Mary-Lou. After awhile,
-without turning around, she said in an offhand, experimental
-sort of voice: “I have a good mind to see
-him again.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou merely gasped.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, not meaning anything in particular,” Loseis
-said quickly. “There never could be anything between
-us. But just to show him that I am not a redskin,
-and then leave him.”</p>
-
-<p>“How could you see him?” faltered Mary-Lou.</p>
-
-<p>“He is camped with his outfit alongside the Limestone
-Rapids, one hundred miles down,” Loseis went
-on in that offhand voice. “He has to break the rocks
-with a hammer, and study them where they split.
-It is what they call a geologist.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” Her assumed
-indifference suddenly collapsed. “Let us go to see
-him, Mary-Lou,” she blurted out breathlessly. “We
-could make it in a long day’s paddling with the current;
-three days to come back if we worked hard.
-We wouldn’t let him know we had come to see him.
-We would say we were hunting.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Oh! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” gasped Mary-Lou. “Girls
-do not hunt.”</p>
-
-<p>“He doesn’t know what <span class='it'>I</span> do!” cried Loseis. “I
-<span class='it'>must</span> see him! It kills me to have him thinking that
-I am a common, ignorant sort of girl! Let us start
-at daybreak to-morrow!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no! no!” whispered Mary-Lou, paralyzed by
-the very thought. “Blackburn .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Blackburn .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. !”</p>
-
-<p>“He couldn’t say anything until we’d been and
-come,” said Loseis coolly. “Anyhow, I’m not afraid
-of my father. My spirit is as strong as his. He can’t
-shout <span class='it'>me</span> down!”</p>
-
-<p>“No! No!” reiterated the red girl. “If you go
-after him like that, he think little of you.”</p>
-
-<p>In her heart Loseis recognized the truth of this,
-and she fell into a sullen silence. After awhile she
-said: “Then I will make him come back here. I will
-send a message.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Oh, not a letter, you foolish
-girl!” she added in response to Mary-Lou’s startled
-look.</p>
-
-<p>“What kind of message?”</p>
-
-<p>“I will make a little raft and send it floating down
-on the current,” said Loseis dreamily. “I will set up
-a little stick on the raft, with a ribbon tied to it, a
-piece of my hair. I think that will bring him
-back .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe it float past his camp in the nighttime,”
-said Mary-Lou, in her soft, sad voice. “How you
-know?”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I will send down two,” said Loseis. “One
-in the day and one in the night. He will see one of
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou was astonished by the cleverness of this
-idea.</p>
-
-<p>“And then when he comes back,” said Loseis quite
-coolly. “I will say that I did not send it. I will say
-that it is a custom of the red girls to make offerings to
-the Spirit of the River. I think that will make him
-feel pretty small. But I shall not laugh at him. Oh,
-no! I shall be very polite; polite and proud as Blackburn’s
-daughter ought to be. And I shall send him
-away again.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou looked somewhat dubious as to the
-feasibility of this program; but held her tongue.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall send him away again,” repeated Loseis with
-great firmness, “and after that I shall think of no man
-but my father. Before Conacher came my father was
-enough for me; and after he has gone my father will
-be enough. I am lucky to have such a father; so
-handsome and brave and strong-willed.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” Loseis
-suddenly became dreamy again. “But Conacher was
-not afraid of my father. That young man was not
-afraid of my father. I have never seen that before.
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou permitted herself to smile tenderly.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing it, Loseis colored up hotly, and became very
-firm again. “Never mind that! There is nobody like
-my father! He is the finest man in the world! I shall
-be a better daughter to him after this. I will do
-everything he wants. Ah! my father is like a
-king .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. !”</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou was suddenly drawn to the end window
-by some disquieting sounds from the Slavi village below.
-She cried out in surprise: “Jimmy Moosenose is
-running between the tepees.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do I care?” said Loseis, annoyed by this interruption.</p>
-
-<p>“He is running fast,” said Mary-Lou, her voice
-scaling up. “He speaks to the people; they throw up
-their hands; they run after him; they fall down.
-There is something the matter!”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis, alarmed, ran to join her at the window.
-Together they watched the old Indian come laboring
-up the little hill to the grassy bench on which the buildings
-of the Post stood. Jimmy Moosenose was a
-Beaver Indian, and Blackburn’s right-hand man by reason
-of being the only man beside the trader himself,
-who could speak the English and the Slavi tongues.
-There were no white men at Blackburn’s Post.</p>
-
-<p>When Jimmy passed beyond range of their vision
-the girls transferred themselves to the other window.
-The Indian struck across the grass straight for their
-door. A tatterdemalion crowd of natives and dogs
-streamed after him. Fear clutched at Loseis’ brave
-heart; and she became as pale as paper. An instant
-later Jimmy Moosenose burst in. The others dared
-not follow him through the door.</p>
-
-<p>“What is the matter?” demanded Loseis haughtily.</p>
-
-<p>At first the old man could only pant and groan,
-while his body rocked in despair. Loseis seized him as
-if she would shake out the news by main strength.</p>
-
-<p>“Speak! Speak!” she cried.</p>
-
-<p>“Blackburn .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. !” he gasped. “Blackburn .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. !”</p>
-
-<p>“My father! Hurt! Take me to him!” said Loseis
-crisply. She made as if to force her way out through
-the crowd.</p>
-
-<p>“They .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. are bringing him,” faltered the old man.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis fell back against the door frame. “Bringing
-him?” she echoed faintly.</p>
-
-<p>The old man’s chin was on his breast. “Blackburn
-dead!” he said.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis’ arms dropped to her sides; her widened eyes
-were like tragic black stars. “Dead?” she repeated in
-quite an ordinary voice. “That is impossible!”</p>
-
-<p>Speech came to the old man. “It was the black stallion,”
-he cried. “I tell Blackburn, many tam I tell
-him that horse kill him some day. He jus’ laugh. He
-say: ‘I lak master that horse.’ Wah! what good
-master when both are dead! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. It was the high cut-bank
-at Swallow Bend. Blackburn, he spur that horse
-to edge of bank to mak’ him rear and wheel. Blackburn
-he is laugh lak a boy. The horse is crazy
-mad. He put his head down. He no stop. He
-jomp over. He jomp clear in the air. Wah!
-when I see that, my legs are lak water! When
-I look over the bank there is nothing but water.
-Both are gone. We get canoe. Down river I see
-Blackburn’s leg stickin’ out. We pull him out. His
-neck is broke.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>The crowd gathered outside the house, broke with
-a common impulse into a weird, wordless chant of
-death, the women’s voices rising piercing shrill.
-There was no sound of human grief in it; and the
-open-mouthed copper-colored faces expressed nothing
-either; the bright, flat, black eyes were as soulless as
-glass. They pointed their chins up like howling dogs.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis clapped her hands to her head. “Stop that
-ungodly noise!” she cried.</p>
-
-<p>Even old Jimmy looked scandalized. “They sing
-for Blackburn,” he protested.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop it! Stop it!” she cried. Forcing her way
-out, Loseis ran to meet the cortège that was crawling
-up the rise towards Blackburn’s house.</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='22' id='Page_22'></span><h1>CHAPTER II<br/> <span class='sub-head'>THE BURIAL OF BLACKBURN</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>H</span>ector Blackburn’s</span> own room revealed a
-beautiful austerity fitting to the chamber of
-death. It was plastered and ceiled like the room of
-Loseis, but the color was a cool stone gray. The few
-articles of furniture that it contained had all been constructed
-in the old style, carved and polished by the
-owner himself, who had a taste that way. The lustrous
-pelts were more sparingly used here.</p>
-
-<p>The narrow bedstead with its four slender columns
-had been dragged into the center of the room. Upon
-it lay the body of Hector Blackburn clad in decent
-black clothes; his big hands crossed on his breast. Beside
-the bed knelt Loseis, her rapt gaze fixed on her
-father’s face. Six feet two in height, and forty-eight
-inches around the chest, he made a splendid figure of
-death. There was not a white thread to be seen in
-his spreading black beard, nor in the plentiful wavy
-hair of his crown. To be sure, the high red color was
-strangely gone out of his transparent cheeks; and the
-passionate features were composed into a look of
-haughty peace. For sheer manhood, truly a father to
-be proud of.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis thought of the feats of strength and daring
-that had made his name famous throughout the Northwest
-Territories; how he had strangled a full grown
-black bear with his naked hands; how he had leaped
-from his canoe at the very brink of the American
-Falls and had brought safely ashore an Indian who
-was clinging to a rock. He had been even more remarkable
-for his strength of will. The last of the
-great free traders, he had defied the power of the
-mighty Company, and had prospered exceedingly. He
-held his vast territory against all comers, by the power
-of his personality alone. Thinking of these things
-Loseis’ mind was confused. There lay his still body
-before her eyes, but what had become of the wild
-energy which had lately animated it? Surely, surely
-that could not be blown out like a candle flame.</p>
-
-<p>Dragging herself to her feet, she went into the adjoining
-kitchen. She had had no opportunity to
-change her dress, but in an impulse of grief had torn
-off the gay embroidery; and now she was all in black
-like the corpse. In the kitchen Mary-Lou sat huddled
-on the floor, with her arms wrapped around her head.
-Jimmy Moosenose stood beside the open door, looking
-out, a withered, bent little figure, but still capable
-of activity. As Loseis entered he said in an expressionless
-voice:</p>
-
-<p>“They have gone.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who?” asked Loseis sharply.</p>
-
-<p>“The people; all the people.”</p>
-
-<p>She ran to the door. It was true; every tepee was
-gone from the meadow below. Except for certain
-litter abandoned in their haste there was no sign that
-a village had ever stood there. The Slavis had taken
-flight and vanished like a cloud of insects.</p>
-
-<p>“Where have they gone?” demanded Loseis in astonishment.
-Though she had been born amongst
-them she did not understand this inscrutable, timid,
-savage race. It was impossible for any white man to
-know what went on inside their cramped skulls, Blackburn
-used to say. He had ruled them without making
-any attempt at understanding.</p>
-
-<p>“Gone up river,” muttered Jimmy.</p>
-
-<p>“For why?”</p>
-
-<p>“They moch scare’.”</p>
-
-<p>“But they are familiar with death. Death comes
-to all alike.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy Moosenose cast an uneasy look towards the
-room where the dead man lay. He was near enough
-akin to the Slavis to share in their fears. “They think
-ver’ powerful strong spirit live in Blackburn’s body,”
-he muttered. “Now that spirit free they not know
-what it do to them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, what nonsense!” cried Loseis helplessly.</p>
-
-<p>“What we do now?” asked Jimmy fearfully.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis looked him over. “Are you man enough to
-ride all night?” she asked brusquely. “The trail is
-good.”</p>
-
-<p>“What trail?” asked Jimmy with a terrified face.</p>
-
-<p>“To Fort Good Hope to fetch the parson,” said
-Loseis in surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“It is ondred-feefty mile,” faltered Jimmy.</p>
-
-<p>“What of it? Two days to go and two to come.
-You can drive three spare horses before you. I don’t
-care if you kill them all.”</p>
-
-<p>“I not man enough for that,” said Jimmy shaking
-his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Well six days to go and come then. I’d go myself,
-but I know you two wouldn’t stay here alone.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy’s and Mary-Lou’s frightened faces testified
-eloquently to that. Jimmy shook his head. “No
-good! No good!” he said. “It is summer time now.
-He no keep six days.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis groaned aloud. In her desperate helplessness
-she looked like a little girl. “How can I bury
-him without a parson!” she cried.</p>
-
-<p>“You have the parson’s little book,” said Jimmy.
-“You can say the prayers from that. It is just as
-good.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis turned her back on them, that they might
-not see her childish, twisted face. “Very well,” she
-said in a strangled voice; “I will be the parson.”</p>
-
-<p>“What I do now?” asked Jimmy Moosenose.</p>
-
-<p>“First you must make a coffin.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is no planks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, tear down the counter in the store!” cried
-Loseis with a burst of irritation. “Must I think of
-everything?”</p>
-
-<p>“You tell me how big?” asked Jimmy, with another
-glance of sullen terror towards the inner room.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I will measure,” said Loseis. “And the coffin
-must be covered all over with good black cloth from
-the store. Mary-Lou will put it on with tacks. And
-lined with white cloth. While you are making it I will
-go across the river, and dig the grave. We will bury
-him to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is well,” said Jimmy with a look of relief.
-“Then the people come back.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, the people!” cried Loseis with a flash of angry
-scorn. “They are well-named Slaves!”</p>
-
-<p>At the end of May in the latitude of Blackburn’s
-Post it does not become dark until nearly ten; and it
-was fully that hour before Loseis, having completed
-her task, returned dog-weary, across the river. During
-the balance of the night she sat wide-eyed and dry-eyed
-beside her dead, her hands in her lap, planning
-in her childlike and passionate way how best to conduct
-everything next day with dignity and honor.</p>
-
-<p>At sun-up Jimmy Moosenose was despatched to the
-river shore to construct a raft, the light bark canoes
-that they possessed not being sufficient to ferry the
-coffin across. No flowers were available so early in
-the season, and Mary-Lou was set to work to twist a
-handsome wreath of the crisp green leaves of the high-bush
-cranberry. Neither Jimmy nor Mary-Lou could
-be induced to enter Blackburn’s room, so Loseis herself
-dragged the completed coffin in beside the bed;
-and she unaided, managed somehow to lift the body
-into it. In life Hector Blackburn had weighed more
-than two hundred pounds. It was Loseis, too, who
-nailed the lid on the coffin with an aim no better than
-any other woman’s. Those crookedly driven nails
-distressed her sorely.</p>
-
-<p>When Jimmy came up from the river, they slipped
-short lengths of pole under the coffin, and rolled it to
-the door. Outside the house, since there was nothing
-in the nature of wheels at Blackburn’s Post, they
-hitched an old horse directly to the coffin, and dragged
-it at a slow pace over the grass down hill to the river.
-Jimmy led the horse, while Loseis and Mary-Lou
-walked behind, steadying the coffin with ropes affixed
-to each side. During this part of the journey Loseis
-was all child. Every time the coffin [word missing in original] over an unevenness
-her heart was in her mouth. “Oh! Oh!
-Oh!” she cried involuntarily; and her agonized eyes
-seemed to add: “My darling! did that hurt you?”</p>
-
-<p>At the river edge they worked the coffin onto the
-raft with rollers and short lengths of plank; and
-Loseis draped the Post flag upon it, and placed the
-green wreath. Jimmy and Mary-Lou propelled the
-raft across with long poles, while the slender, black-clad
-figure of Loseis stood looking down at the coffin
-like a symbolical figure of Bereavement. In her grief-drowned
-eyes there was a look of piteous pride, too;
-for the black coffin with its flag and green wreath
-looked beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>The smooth brown river moved down in silky
-eddies; the freshly budded greens of poplar and willow
-made the shores lovely, backed by the grave, unchanging
-tones of the evergreens. Behind them the
-low, solid buildings of the Post crouched on the bench
-above the river with a sort of human dignity; before
-them rose the steep grassy promontory with the waiting
-grave on top. Over their heads smiled the Northern
-summer sky of an enchanting tenderness of blue
-that is not revealed to lower latitudes.</p>
-
-<p>Landing upon the further shore they caught another
-horse—there was no lack of horses at Blackburn’s
-Post. In order to drag the coffin up the rough,
-steep hill it was necessary to construct a travois of
-poles to lift the front end clear of the ground. The
-horse was fastened between the poles as between
-shafts. At the top of the hill Loseis had removed the
-palings; and the new grave yawned beside the old one.
-She had dug the shallow hole with sloping ends, that
-the horse might walk right through, leaving his burden
-in its place.</p>
-
-<p>The animal was then liberated; and Loseis stood on
-one side, prayer-book in hand, with Jimmy Moosenose
-and Mary-Lou facing her on the other. It was a
-meagerly attended burial for the great lord of that
-country. Loseis read the noble prayers in a grave
-voice charged with emotion. The sound of it caused
-the tears to run silently down the smooth cheeks of
-Mary-Lou; but Jimmy merely looked uncomfortable.
-The feelings of white people were strange to him. He
-had given his master a doglike devotion while he
-lived; but he was dead now, and that was an end to it.</p>
-
-<p>“Man that is born of woman hath but a short time
-to live and is full of misery,” read the brave young
-voice. “He cometh up and is cut down like a flower;
-he fleeth as it were a shadow, and never continueth
-in one stay. In the midst of life we are in death; of
-whom may we seek for succour but of Thee, O Lord,
-who for our sins art justly displeased?”</p>
-
-<p>When she came to the end of the service, Loseis
-dropped the book and involuntarily broke into an extempore
-prayer, standing with straight back and lifted
-face like an Indian, her arms at her sides. Her words
-were hardly couched in the same humble strain as
-those of the book; but the passionate sincerity of the
-speaker redeemed them from irreverence.</p>
-
-<p>“O God, this is my father. He was a strong man,
-God, and you must make allowances for him. You
-gave him a proud heart and a terrible anger when he
-was crossed, and it would not be fair to judge him
-like common men. He could have done anything he
-wanted here, because he was the master, but he was
-always square. Every season he paid the Indians half
-as much again for their fur as the Company would
-pay, and that is why the Company traders spoke evil
-of him. He was hard and stern to the Indians, but
-that was the only thing they could understand. How
-else could you deal with a tribe of slaves? Be merciful
-to my father, O God! for he would never ask mercy
-for himself; and let him see my mother again, for that
-was all he wanted. Amen.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy Moosenose picked up the spade with a
-businesslike air, and threw a clod on the coffin. At
-the dreadful sound that it gave forth, a sharp cry
-broke from Loseis. She wrapped her arms about her
-head and fled away down the hill.</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='30' id='Page_30'></span><h1>CHAPTER III<br/> <span class='sub-head'>THE SLAVES WITHOUT A MASTER</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>W</span>hen</span> the three mourners landed again on their
-own side of the river, Jimmy and Mary-Lou
-looked at Loseis at a loss. What to do next?</p>
-
-<p>Rousing herself, Loseis said wearily: “Jimmy, you
-must fix up the counter in the store. Fix it with split
-poles until we can make some plank. Mary-Lou,
-fetch a hatchet and come with me.”</p>
-
-<p>On the river shore some hundred yards downstream,
-hidden by a clump of willows in case Jimmy
-Moosenose should be inclined to spy on what they
-were doing, Mary-Lou under Loseis’ instructions built
-a tiny raft out of dead branches. To the raft Loseis
-fixed a little pole to the top of which she tied a
-streamer of black. She launched the raft on the current,
-and with big, childish eyes watched it float
-around the bend.</p>
-
-<p>“I am not sending for Conacher to come to me,”
-she said haughtily to Mary-Lou. “But when a white
-man dies it is customary to let men know.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. To-night
-I will push off another one. One or the other
-he will see.”</p>
-
-<p>Within an hour the Slavis returned as mysteriously
-as they had departed. They must have had an outlook
-posted to report upon the burial of Blackburn. To
-Loseis their actions seemed perfectly senseless; for
-Jimmy had said it was the spirit of Blackburn that
-they dreaded, yet as soon as his body was hidden underground
-their fears departed. They set up the
-tepees in their former places, and went about their
-usual occupations as if nothing had happened. Loseis’
-breast burned with anger; and she wanted to go
-down and give them a piece of her mind. However,
-Jimmy dissuaded her.</p>
-
-<p>“No good! No good!” he said. “It is over now.
-They not understand white man’s ways.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a sharp ring of anxiety in his voice that
-caused Loseis to stare in haughty surprise. She thoroughly
-despised the Slavis. However, she said nothing.
-She and Mary-Lou went off to their house to
-sleep.</p>
-
-<p>Down on the flat it was the women who were erecting
-the tepee poles, and drawing the covers over them.
-They no longer used skins for this purpose, Blackburn
-having persuaded them of the superior advantages of
-the canvas that he sold. In the same way the whole
-tribe had learned to wear white men’s clothes out of
-the store. While the women worked, the men sat in
-groups smoking and talking in that queer clicking
-tongue that few white men have ever mastered.
-Their talk was light and punctuated with laughter;
-but it was clear from their uneasy glances towards the
-white man’s buildings that they were not speaking
-their hearts. As a matter of fact the Indians are quite
-as adept in insincere small talk as their white brethren.</p>
-
-<p>From time immemorial the Slavis have been known
-as a small, weak people; and this particular branch,
-cut off from their fellows on the distant shores of
-Blackburn’s River had further degenerated as a result
-of too close inter-marriage. They were a weedy
-lot, and like all weak peoples, shifty-eyed. As is always
-the case, the men showed up worse; hollow chests and
-spindle shanks were the rule; the whole tribe could
-not produce one stalwart, handsome youth. But they
-were not poverty-stricken. They all wore good
-clothes, and lived in new, weather-proof tepees. They
-hunted the best fur country in all the North, and for
-twenty years Blackburn had jealously guarded it for
-them.</p>
-
-<p>From where they sat Jimmy Moosenose could be
-seen splitting poles in front of the store, and carrying
-them in. Without appearing to, the men were all
-watching him. The groups of talkers fell silent.
-They could not meet each other’s eyes. A curious
-look of dread flickered in their faces; that which had
-directed the whole course of their lives for so many
-years had been suddenly removed, and they were all
-at a stand.</p>
-
-<p>By twos and threes they began to drift up the grassy
-rise, their vacant eyes drifting this way and that.
-There was something peculiarly ominous about their
-purposelessness, their lack of direction. They
-squatted down on their hunkers, making a rough semi-circle
-about Jimmy. They no longer spoke among
-themselves, nor did any volunteer to help Jimmy; they
-simply squatted and stared at him with their unwinking
-animal-like eyes. Jimmy affected to take no notice
-of them; but his forehead became moist with a sudden
-fear. He was reminded that he was of alien
-blood to these people, and that they were thirty to
-his one. And there were five times that number more
-in their summer camp at Blackburn’s Lake.</p>
-
-<p>At length the silence, the unwinking stares became
-more than Jimmy could bear. “Where is Etzooah?”
-he asked, affecting indifference.</p>
-
-<p>Etzooah was one whom Jimmy suspected of being
-a trouble maker. He was a bigger man than the
-others; and was said to have Cree blood. More than
-once in the past his sharpness had displeased Blackburn,
-who, however, tolerated him because he was the
-best hunter in the tribe.</p>
-
-<p>“Etzooah gone to the lake to see a girl,” said one.</p>
-
-<p>From the way the others grinned it was clear this
-was a lie. Jimmy was much troubled that they
-grinned openly in his face. Had Blackburn been in
-the store behind him they would never have done that.
-Jimmy glanced desirously in the direction of the
-Women’s House, and his watchers marked that
-glance.</p>
-
-<p>One said, affecting the stupid look of a crafty
-schoolboy: “Are you the trader now?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Jimmy, “Loseis is the mistress here.”</p>
-
-<p>The ugly little men bared their blackened teeth; and
-a squall of laughter rocked them on their heels.
-There was no true merriment in the sound. It ended
-as suddenly as it began. It struck an icy fear into
-Jimmy’s breast. He was all alone; all alone.</p>
-
-<p>“Go back to your lodges!” he said, drawing himself
-up, and imitating the voice of Blackburn.</p>
-
-<p>They neither moved nor spoke; but squatted there
-staring at him.</p>
-
-<p>He dared not repeat the order. Shouldering his
-poles, he started into the store. Of one accord the
-Slavis rose, and came pushing through the door after
-him. Flinging down his poles, Jimmy spread out his
-arms to bar their way.</p>
-
-<p>“Get out!” he cried. “There is no trading to-day.”</p>
-
-<p>Keeping their eyes fixed on his, they continued to
-push in. They walked right into Jimmy, forcing him
-back. What was he to do? His instinct told him that
-the moment he showed fight it would be all up with
-him. He picked up one of his poles and started to
-nail it into place, grumbling to himself, and making
-believe to ignore them.</p>
-
-<p>They stood about the store watching him with affected
-sleepiness through half-closed eyes. One of
-them, keeping his eyes fixed on Jimmy, thrust a hand
-into an opened box and pulled it out full of dried apricots.
-All the instincts of thirty years of trading were
-outraged by this act, and Jimmy forgot his fears.</p>
-
-<p>“Put it back!” he cried, brandishing the hammer.
-“Get out, you thieves! You half-men, you dirty
-slaves!”</p>
-
-<p>None moved, nor changed a muscle of his face.
-The man with the apricots held them in his hand, waiting
-to see what Jimmy would <span class='it'>do</span>. What he said was
-nothing to them. He might as well have been storming
-at the wind. Finally, half beside himself with
-rage, Jimmy ran to the back of the store where the
-guns were kept.</p>
-
-<p>Instantly the little men sprang into noiseless activity.
-One picked up a short length of pole, and darting
-after Jimmy on soft pads like a lynx, hit him over
-the head with it, before he could turn. In a flash
-they were all about him, their dark faces fixed in
-hideous grins, each trying to strike. They used tinned
-goods for weapons; one secured the hammer; one
-snatched up a heavy steel trap which he held poised
-aloft waiting for Jimmy’s head to appear. The whole
-mass swayed from this side to that, toppling over the
-goods on either side. Jimmy went down, and they
-had to bend over to hit him. They were as voiceless
-as squirming insects. There was no sound but the
-sickening blows that fell.</p>
-
-<p>When they finally drew back a shapeless huddle was
-revealed, lying in blood. Panic overtook the feather-headed
-Slavis, and they ran out of the store to look
-anxiously in the direction of the Women’s House.
-Nothing stirred there. They returned inside the
-store. They did not consult together, but appeared
-to act as instinctively as animals. There was a window
-at the back of the store. They pried it out frame
-and all, and hastily shoved the broken body through
-the hole, careless of where it fell. The instant it was
-out of sight they forgot about it, nor did they trouble
-to put the window back.</p>
-
-<p>Alone in the store, the Slavis betrayed a curious
-timidity. It seemed as if the ghost of Hector Blackburn
-restrained them still. They overran the place
-like ants, peering into everything, stroking the objects
-that they desired, but forbearing as yet to pick them
-up. At intervals panic seized them, and they swept
-in a cloud to the door to look over towards the Women’s
-House. Some of the Slavi women and children
-had been attracted from the tepees. These never
-ventured through the doors, but hung about outside,
-expressing no concern one way or the other; merely
-waiting to see how it all turned out.</p>
-
-<p>At length one man ventured to eat of the dried apricots;
-another split the top of a can of peaches with a
-hatchet; and instantly looting became general. Boxes
-were smashed, and bags ripped open, pouring their
-precious contents on the floor. Food in the North is
-not to be lightly wasted. Articles of clothing were the
-chief prizes; the only way to secure them was to put
-them on, one on top of another. Sometimes two
-pulled at the same garment, snarling at each other.
-But they never fought singly. They were dangerous
-only in the mass.</p>
-
-<p>In the middle of this scene suddenly appeared
-Loseis, her black eyes blazing. A terrified Mary-Lou
-cringed at her heels. Every Indian in the store, dropping
-what he was about, instantly became as immobile
-and watchful as a surprised animal. Loseis glared
-about her speechless. She was as much aghast as she
-was angry, for such a scene was beyond anything she
-had ever conceived of. But she was not afraid. She
-turned to the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Jimmy! Jimmy!” she called peremptorily.</p>
-
-<p>She waited in vain for an answer.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is Jimmy?” she demanded haughtily.</p>
-
-<p>None answered her.</p>
-
-<p>She dispatched Mary-Lou in search of him.</p>
-
-<p>The situation was beyond words. Loseis’ eyes
-darted silent lightnings at one man after another.
-The scattered Slavis slyly edged together. No single
-pair of eyes could meet hers, but she could not
-cow more than one man at a time; and the bright, inhuman
-eyes of the others remained fixed on her face.</p>
-
-<p>Finally with a magnificent gesture Loseis pointed to
-the door. “Get out!” she said.</p>
-
-<p>No man moved.</p>
-
-<p>That was a terrible moment for the high-spirited
-girl. A look of astonishment appeared in her eyes.
-Suddenly her face crimsoned with rage; she flew at
-the nearest man, and started pommeling him with her
-little fists. The man ducked under her blows, and
-sought to evade her. He pulled another man in front
-of him; whereupon Loseis transferred her blows to
-this one. All the others looked on with faces like
-masks. And so it went. The mysterious prestige of
-the white blood sanctified her, and they dared not
-strike back; they resisted her with that senseless animal
-obstinacy that drives masters mad with rage.
-They were satisfied to let her pommel them, knowing
-that she must tire of it in the end. And what then?
-It was like fighting a cloud of flies. They would not
-be driven out of the store. When one was driven
-out, as soon as Loseis went for another, he returned.</p>
-
-<p>She drew off at last. In that moment she knew
-the unspeakable agony of an imperious will that finds
-itself balked. She nearly died of her rage. But she
-faced it out. She admitted to herself that she was
-balked. The last two days had matured her. Fortunately
-for her, under all the passion and wilfulness
-of her nature there was a solid substratum of commonsense.
-Commonsense warned her that it would be
-fatal to make the least move in the direction of the
-guns at the back of the store. She could not force
-the senseless savages to obey her; well, commonsense
-suggested that she use guile. Loseis had an inspiration.</p>
-
-<p>Just inside the door of the store, behind a rough
-screen of wood, Blackburn had a little desk with a
-cover that lifted up. Loseis went to it, and took out
-a sizable book stoutly bound in gray linen and red
-leather. Every Slavi knew that book. It was Blackburn’s
-ledger. Loseis appeared around the screen
-carrying the ledger; and up-ending a box beside the
-door, sat herself upon it with the book spread on her
-knees.</p>
-
-<p>“You wish to trade?” she said to the men at large.
-“It is good. Take what you want. I will put it down
-in the book.”</p>
-
-<p>The eyes of the Slavis bolted; and they moved uneasily.
-The spell of their strangeness was broken.
-To their simple minds there was magic in those
-scratches by which white men’s thoughts might be conveyed
-to any distance that they chose; or stored up in
-a book to be brought out years afterwards unchanged.
-In particular, Blackburn’s ledger had always been held
-in superstitious awe as the source of his “strong medicine.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis looked at the man nearest her, and thumbed
-the pages of the book. “Mahtsonza,” she said; “a
-Stetson hat; two skins. A Mackinaw coat; five skins.
-Wah! you have two coats? Ten skins!”</p>
-
-<p>Mahtsonza began to slide out of his stolen clothing.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis turned to the next. “Ahchoogah; a bag of
-rice; one skin. The bag is spoiled, and you must pay
-for all. You can carry it away.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a sudden rush for the door; but Loseis,
-springing up, barred the way. “I have all your
-names,” she cried. “Whatever is taken or spoiled will
-be written down, and all must pay a share!”</p>
-
-<p>Then she stood aside and let them slink by, a
-ridiculously crestfallen crowd of little bravoes.</p>
-
-<p>For the moment Loseis had won—but at no small
-cost. The instant they were out, the reaction set in.
-All the strength seemed to run out of her limbs; she
-sank down on the box covering her face with her
-hands. The fact of her appalling solitariness was
-made clear to her. She dared not look into the future.</p>
-
-<p>Presently Mary-Lou came back. “No can find
-Jimmy,” she said. “Nobody see him.”</p>
-
-<p>Proceeding to the rear of the store to survey the
-damage, the two girls came upon the wet, dark stain
-spreading over the floor. The instant she saw it,
-Loseis knew what had happened and went very still;
-but Mary-Lou cried out: “Look, the window is out!”
-and must needs stick her head through the hole to
-look.</p>
-
-<p>A piercing shriek broke from the red girl; she fell
-back half witless with terror into Loseis’s arms.</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='40' id='Page_40'></span><h1>CHAPTER IV<br/> <span class='sub-head'>AT FORT GOOD HOPE</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>A</span>t Fort Good Hope</span> on the big river, the free
-trader Andrew Gault and his financial backer
-David Ogilvie, stood by the flagpole concluding their
-business, while the steam-launch <span class='it'>Courier</span> waited in the
-stream below to carry Ogilvie down river.</p>
-
-<p>Outside of the towns, Fort Good Hope was the
-most enterprising and progressive Post in that country.
-The original log buildings were now used as
-bunk-houses for the half-breed employees; while on
-one side rose the magnificent dwelling of the trader,
-built of clapboards in the “outside” style and having
-fancy porches with turned pillars; and on the other
-side the equally modern store with plate glass windows
-imported at God knows what expense and
-trouble; and a huge sign. This sign was the occasion
-of considerable humor throughout the country, since
-there was nobody who required to be told whose store
-it was.</p>
-
-<p>This was by no means all of the improvements at
-Fort Good Hope. Gault had built and now operated
-a steamboat on the river, which connected with a line
-of wagons across the ninety-mile portage to Caribou
-Lake, and so kept him in touch with the world. By
-means of the steamboat he had imported an electric
-light plant, a sawmill and a steam process mill for
-grinding and bolting flour. The land along the river
-was rich, and Gault had established farmers there.
-They were only frozen out about one year in three;
-and that was their loss, not Gault’s. His flour, raised
-and milled on the spot, he was able to sell to the Indians
-at an enormous profit.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of all this, when Gault made up his accounts
-with Ogilvie, the financier pursed up his mouth in a
-grudging fashion, and Gault who was a bitter, proud
-man, ground his teeth with rage.</p>
-
-<p>“Your improvements are fine, fine,” said Ogilvie
-dryly; “the Post looks almost like a village on the railway.
-But my dear man, all this only returns a beggarly
-ten or fifteen per cent on the investment. I need
-not point out to you that our company is accustomed
-to receive two profits on every transaction. In other
-words we do not want the cash that you remit to us;
-we want fur. And I’m sorry to see that your consignments
-of fur have been growing less every year.”</p>
-
-<p>The trader was silent out of anger; and Ogilvie
-went on: “The history of all the old posts is the same.
-With the advance of civilization the fur is always retreating.
-With your steamboats and your sawmills
-you are hastening the process, my dear Gault. At the
-other old posts as the fur recedes they reach after it
-with sub-posts and trading stations. Why don’t you do
-something of the sort? You are in a better strategic
-position than any of them, because off to the northwest
-here you have a vast land that is still written down
-unexplored on the maps. Why don’t you get that fur?”</p>
-
-<p>“As you know,” muttered Gault, “on the northwest
-I am blanketed by Hector Blackburn.”</p>
-
-<p>Ogilvie shrugged. “Why remain blanketed?” he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you propose?” asked Gault bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, the specific measures must be left to you,” said
-Ogilvie hastily. “You are the man on the ground.
-But of course our company will back you up in anything
-you undertake. The old rough stuff has gone
-out of fashion, but the principle is the same. To put
-it bluntly, Gault: buy him out or drive him out.”</p>
-
-<p>“The entire resources of our company would not
-buy him out,” said Gault. “The man is drunk with
-pride at having the name of the last free trader.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well then?” said Ogilvie meaningly.</p>
-
-<p>“As to driving him out, I mean to do that; but I
-must await my opportunity. He’s in an almost impregnable
-position.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why did you let him get in such a position?” murmured
-Ogilvie. “You were on the ground first.”</p>
-
-<p>“He had all the luck,” said Gault bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>“Why is his position so impregnable?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, for one thing he has a tribe of Indians completely
-under his thumb. Those are the Slavis, the
-most ignorant and primitive race of them all. Once
-they covered this whole country, but have gradually
-been pushed back by the Crees and other tribes. They
-have some other name, but I don’t know what it is.
-All the other Indians call them Slavis. Well, Blackburn
-has got this people penned up in his own country,
-where no whites can communicate with them. He deliberately
-trades on their ignorance and superstition.
-He has persuaded them that I am a devil and that
-black magic is worked at this Post, and no power under
-Heaven can persuade them to come within fifty
-miles of me.”</p>
-
-<p>Ogilvie laughed. “Not bad,” he said. “Why don’t
-you outbid him for fur? That might work a miracle.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have tried it,” said Gault grimly. “He is willing
-to go higher than the company is willing to let me go.”</p>
-
-<p>“But surely a year or two of that, with his ruinously
-expensive transport would break him,” said Ogilvie.</p>
-
-<p>“Blackburn is as rich as Crœsus,” said Gault bitterly;
-“and he’d risk every cent of it to beat me.
-What is more, he is entirely independent of transport.
-When they run out of food over there, he sends his
-cheaper furs to me for flour, and I have to take them,
-because I need the fur. Blackburn trades horses for
-fur. He has in the triangle between his river, the
-foothills and the Mud River, a vast natural range for
-horses. God knows how many thousands of head he
-has. The fame of them has spread all over the country.
-He can afford to sell them cheap since they cost
-him nothing. The Sikannis Indians bring their fur
-all the way from British Columbia to trade for horses.
-The Indians from Wabiscaw and eastward cross the
-river here right under my nose, carrying their fur to
-Blackburn for horses.”</p>
-
-<p>“You say you are awaiting your opportunity,” said
-Ogilvie; “how will you know when that comes?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have a spy at Blackburn’s Post,” said Gault. “It
-wasn’t easy to find him, because nobody can speak
-their damned language but Blackburn. This man,
-Etzooah, is the son of a Cree father and a Slavi
-mother, and is able to mix with the Slavis as one of
-themselves.”</p>
-
-<p>“What good do you expect that to do you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Etzooah talks to the Slavis in my interest. However,
-that is not what I am counting on.” Gault
-smiled disagreeably. “Blackburn is a headstrong, passionate
-man, and a hard drinker. He treats the Slavis
-like dogs. He believes there is nobody to call him to
-account. Some day he will go too far. Then I’ll have
-the law on him. He runs his whole show single-handed.
-Won’t tolerate a white man near him. Consequently
-if he were removed, even for a while, the
-whole thing would fall into confusion. That will be
-my chance.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have heard there was a daughter,” said Ogilvie
-idly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, a black-haired she-devil in her father’s own
-image!” said Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, good-by until next Spring,” said Ogilvie.
-“I wish you every success. If Blackburn were out of
-the way this would be the greatest Post in the country.”
-He looked around him with assumed regret.
-“You have made so many improvements it would be
-a pity if we had to close you out. But of course
-we must have the fur.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Good-by.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Good-by.
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault watched him go with rage and bitterness
-making his heart black. Damn all financiers and
-officials who fattened on the labors of better men than
-themselves! Gault had not told him the full history
-of his relations with Hector Blackburn; but no doubt
-Ogilvie knew anyhow, for it was common gossip
-throughout the fur country; how Gault and Blackburn
-had come to grips a dozen times during the past
-twenty years, and Gault had been invariably and
-humiliatingly worsted. He too, was a ruthless and
-determined man, and when he thought over these
-things it was almost more than he could bear.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk'/>
-
-<p>Andrew Gault was a bachelor, living alone in his
-monstrosity of a yellow clapboarded house. A handsome,
-lean, grizzled man in his early fifties, with a
-cold and polished manner that one would hardly expect
-to find in a fur-trader. It was a point of pride
-with Gault never to allow himself to go slack. For
-all he was seven hundred miles from town, his house
-was well-furnished, his servants well-trained. These
-last were of the Cree tribe, a handsomer and more intelligent
-race than the miserable Slavis, but not so
-manageable.</p>
-
-<p>Some days after the visit of Ogilvie, Gault, having
-finished his breakfast, remained sitting at the table,
-gloomily staring at the cloth, and abstractedly crumbling
-pellets of bread. His mind was forever traveling
-the same weary round without finding a way out.
-Thoughts of Hector Blackburn poisoned his very being.
-How to get back at him; how to ruin him. Ah!
-his enemy seemed to be intrenched at every point!
-Blackburn could laugh at him. Stronger measures
-must be taken now, for certain ruin stared Gault in
-the face. Somehow, Blackburn’s own weapons must
-be turned against him. Could not the ignorant Slavis
-be incited to rebellion? They must have their own
-medicine men or conjurers, and these fellows could
-generally be bought. He, Gault, must get hold of
-Etzooah before the next fur season set in.</p>
-
-<p>Toma, Gault’s old house-servant entered the room.
-He was excited. “Wah! Man come from Blackburn’s
-Post,” he announced.</p>
-
-<p>To Gault this had the effect of a miracle. He
-sprang to his feet. “What man?” he cried.</p>
-
-<p>“Name Etzooah,” said Toma.</p>
-
-<p>“Bring him to me! Bring him to me!” shouted
-Gault. “Let none else come in until I call.”</p>
-
-<p>Toma shuffled out of the room, and Gault had time
-to compose himself. It was very bad policy of course,
-for a white man to betray his emotion before a native.
-The trader reseated himself.</p>
-
-<p>Etzooah came sidling around the door, awe-struck
-at finding himself admitted to the great house, and exhibiting
-a witless grin. He was a small man with a
-bullet head set between muscular shoulders. His thick
-coarse hair was cut straight across his forehead in the
-Slavi style, and straight around at his neck behind.
-He wore good store clothes with a gay worsted sash
-about his middle. For business reasons the spy
-affected an air of good-natured, giggling imbecility,
-which would deceive nobody who knew the Indians.
-His little eyes were as quick and sharp as a weasel’s.</p>
-
-<p>“What news?” asked Gault curtly.</p>
-
-<p>“Blackburn is dead,” said Etzooah, laughing heartily
-and silently.</p>
-
-<p>Gault caught his breath. For an instant he lost all
-self-control. The upper part of his body sprawled
-across the table; his eyes seemed to start from his
-head. “Dead?” he gasped; “dead? .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. You are
-sure?”</p>
-
-<p>“I see him die,” said Etzooah, with silent pantomime
-of delight. “Him black horse jomp over high
-cut-bank. Him neck broke. Him drown afterwards.
-When him pull out of river him head loose lak a berry
-on the bush.” Etzooah illustrated.</p>
-
-<p>A shock of joy does not kill. Gault stood up
-straight and arrogant; a warm color came into his
-pale cheeks, and his eyes shone like a boy’s again.
-“By God! this news is good to my ears!” he cried.
-“You shall never go hungry, Etzooah.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. When
-did it happen?”</p>
-
-<p>“Two days,” said Etzooah. “At noon spell.
-Right away I tak’ two horses; ride all night. Only
-stop for one little sleep yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did anybody know you came?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I sneak away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hm!” said Gault stroking his chin. “Then they’ll
-know that you were my man all the time.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Oh,
-what does it matter now! Everything is in my hands.
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Had Blackburn sent his fur out yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. Roundin’ up pack horses when him kill.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then that is <span class='it'>my</span> fur now! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. What will the
-Slavis do without their master?”</p>
-
-<p>Etzooah shrugged expressively. “No can tell.
-Slavis lak crazy children. Not know what they do.
-Maybe they run wild now; kill the girl and steal the
-store goods. No can tell.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault’s face darkened. “By God!” he cried. “If
-the Slavis get out of hand, it would bring in the police.
-I don’t want the police nosing into this. I will ride
-back to-day. Toma! Toma! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. You, Etzooah,
-eat in my kitchen, and take a sleep.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Toma,
-you——————!”</p>
-
-<p>The old man came shuffling in.</p>
-
-<p>“Fetch Moale from the store. Bestir yourself!
-Afterwards get out my riding-suit, my saddlebags, my
-traveling blankets, and all things necessary for a
-journey!”</p>
-
-<p>Joe Moale was the “bookkeeper” at Fort Good
-Hope, otherwise Gault’s second in command. Technically
-a white man, a flavor of the red race clung
-about him; he was probably a quarter breed. He was
-reputed to be a relative of Gault’s. An educated man,
-as able and intelligent as any white man in the company’s
-employ, he was as inscrutable as an Indian.
-He was a well-built man of middle height, not uncomely
-in his wooden fashion. It was impossible to
-guess his exact age, but he was much younger than
-the trader. He served Gault with absolute and unquestioning
-faithfulness, but there was no affection in
-the glance that he bent on his master. With true
-redskin patience he was waiting for Gault to die.</p>
-
-<p>“Blackburn is dead!” cried Gault, striding up and
-down in his dark exultation.</p>
-
-<p>“The news has already spread about the Post,” said
-Moale, unmoved.</p>
-
-<p>“Can we both get away together?” asked Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“Why not? The fur is all in. At this season Claggett
-can keep the store.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I want you to come with me. We must start
-within an hour. Round up the four smartest lads
-you can put your hands on, and a dozen of our best
-horses. We must make a good appearance, you understand.
-Six of us will be more than enough to
-handle the beggarly Slavis.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Blackburn is dead!”
-he cried for the mere pleasure of repeating the words.
-“And his business is ours!”</p>
-
-<p>“What will you do about the girl?” asked Moale
-stolidly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, a miss of eighteen,” said Gault contemptuously.
-“She will give me no trouble .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I’ll be
-her guardian, her trustee,” he added with a satanic
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>“She’ll be rich,” said Moale.</p>
-
-<p>“Not when I’m through with her.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not referring to the Post, nor the horses,” said
-Moale. “Blackburn sends out near a hundred thousand
-dollars worth of fur per annum. He don’t import
-but a fraction of that in goods. The balance
-must be salted down somewhere.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault stopped and stared. A new light of cupidity
-broke in his face. “Why, sure!” he said, a little bemused
-with the glittering picture that rose before
-his mind’s eye. “My mind must be wandering!
-Shouldn’t wonder if it amounted to a million! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”
-He went on muttering to himself: “It would be the
-best way anyhow. Nobody could question what I did
-then. And I shouldn’t be doing it for the company
-neither but for myself!” His voice suddenly rang
-out. “By God! I’ll marry the girl!”</p>
-
-<p>Going to the sideboard, he examined his face anxiously
-in the mirror. “Joe,” he said, “if you didn’t
-know my age, how old would you call me?”</p>
-
-<p>Whatever Moale’s thoughts might have been, he
-concealed them. “About thirty-eight,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Hardly that,” said Gault confidently. “If it
-wasn’t for the gray in my hair I could pass for thirty-five
-easy. I wish to God I could lay my hands on
-some hair dye.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can make a good black dye out of nutgalls,”
-said Moale.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, go to it!” cried Gault. “Get a move on
-you now. We must sleep at Blackburn’s Post to-morrow
-night .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Oh, my God! suppose we were to
-find that the Slavis had got out of hand and murdered
-the girl!”</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='51' id='Page_51'></span><h1>CHAPTER V<br/> <span class='sub-head'>YELLOW-HEAD</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>L</span>oseis</span> sat on a bench at the door of the store.
-The Princess was very pale, and her lips were
-pressed tight together. In her brave, proud eyes was
-to be seen the piteous, questioning look of a child: Why
-must I suffer so much? Just inside the door of the
-store Mary-Lou was squatting on the floor with her
-head buried in her arms. Loseis had to be brave for
-both.</p>
-
-<p>The buildings at Blackburn’s Post formed three
-sides of a grassy square, the fourth side being open to
-the river. The store faced the river, flanked by a
-warehouse on each side. On Loseis’ right was the
-Women’s House, and opposite it Blackburn’s House
-and his stable. All the buildings were constructed of
-logs, and roofed with sods, now sprouting greenly.
-Nothing could have been rougher, nevertheless the
-buildings seemed to belong in that place; and there
-was a pleasing harmony in their arrangement. Out
-in the middle of the grassy square rose a tall flagpole.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis and Mary-Lou had taken up their abode in
-the store. At this season of the year the stock of
-goods was much depleted, and Loseis was in no great
-concern about losing what was left; but knowing the
-Indian nature, she was well aware that if the Slavis
-were not prevented from helping themselves, they
-would soon get out of hand altogether.</p>
-
-<p>In the store there was plenty of food to their hand;
-as for water, Loseis obtained it after dark by creeping
-down to the small stream where it wound around
-the flank of the little plateau. All night a little lamp
-burned in the window of the store. Night-attacks
-were not at all in the Slavis’ line; but Loseis wished
-them to be reminded whenever they looked that way,
-that somebody was on guard. All day the door of
-the store was allowed to stand open; while the two
-girls permitted themselves to be seen passing unconcernedly
-in and out, and performing their household
-tasks out in front. Their only defense lay in this appearance
-of unconcern.</p>
-
-<p>Three days and three nights of cruel anxiety had
-passed, and the fourth night was approaching. Loseis
-had not reflected much on her situation; it simply
-wouldn’t bear thinking about. She had just gone
-ahead and done what came to her hand at the moment.
-During the first night the body of Jimmy Moosenose
-had disappeared. The Slavis either buried it hastily
-in some out of the way spot, or threw it in the river.
-Like the children they were, they believed that if only
-the body were hidden the crime could never be
-brought home to them.</p>
-
-<p>None of the Slavis had ever approached the store.
-Apparently they were pursuing their ordinary avocations
-as if nothing had happened; the dogs and the
-children fought; the women fished, cooked the meals,
-and made moccasins; the men loafed and smoked. As
-she looked down at them the sight of their inhuman
-indifference caused Loseis’ heart to burn. Senseless
-animals! she ejaculated to herself a dozen times a day.</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou came out of the store. The Indian girl
-was unable either to apply her hands to any work or
-to sit still. Her copper face had become grayish, and
-her eyes were distracted with terror. She looked
-down over the tepees, biting her lip.</p>
-
-<p>“More have come,” she said hoarsely.</p>
-
-<p>“You imagine that,” said Loseis. “I have seen nobody
-come.”</p>
-
-<p>“They not let you see them come,” said Mary-Lou.
-“Sleep in their friends’ tepees. But I see more canoes
-in the creek.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what of it?” said Loseis with a grand parade
-of indifference. “They’re harmless.”</p>
-
-<p>“Like coyotes,” said Mary-Lou. “They are sitting
-down to wait for us to die!”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis sprang up nervously. Her face was working.
-“You are like a raven croaking all day!” she
-cried. “That does no good!”</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou caught hold of Loseis imploringly.
-“Let us go from here!” she begged. “All night I
-listen! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. My brain is turned to ice. I don’t know
-what I am doing! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. As soon as it is dark let us
-take horses and go. They not know until to-morrow
-that we are gone. Never catch us then. It is only
-ondred-feefty mile to Fort Good Hope.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis detached the clinging hands. “It’s no good
-going on this way,” she said harshly. “I will not run
-from Slavis.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou fell on her knees, clutching Loseis’ skirt,
-babbling incoherently in her terror. Loseis raised her
-face to the sky, clenching her teeth in despair. How
-much of this have I got to stand? she was thinking.</p>
-
-<p>Then she saw the Slavis begin to run to the river
-bank. “Look! Look!” she cried. “Something is
-coming up the river!”</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou scrambled to her feet. Whatever it was
-in the river, it was approaching close under the bank.
-They could see nothing. The Slavis were yelling and
-pointing.</p>
-
-<p>“It is Conacher!” screamed Mary-Lou.</p>
-
-<p>“NO! No! No!” cried Loseis in a voice as taut
-as an over-stretched violin string. “It is just a Slavi
-coming up river. Anything is enough to get them going.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is Conacher!” screamed Mary-Lou. “If it was
-a Slavi they would run down to the water. They stop
-on the bank. They are a little afraid. See! they look
-at us. It is somebody for us. It is Conacher!”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis felt that if she allowed herself to believe it
-and was then disappointed, it would kill her. “No!
-No!” she said faintly. “It is too soon!”</p>
-
-<p>And then the yellow head rose above the bank.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis collapsed suddenly on the bench and burst
-into tears. Her whole body was shaken. Mary-Lou
-fell on her knees with a scream of joy. “Conacher!
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Conacher!”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis struggled hard to regain her self-control.
-“Stop that noise!” she said angrily. “Go into the
-store. He mustn’t think that we want him so badly!”</p>
-
-<p>Laughing and crying simultaneously, Mary-Lou
-went staggering into the store.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis remained on the bench watching, with her
-hands in her lap. The tears were called in; and she
-furtively wiped away their traces. Conacher had his
-two Beaver Indians with him. These lingered to
-fraternize with the Slavis, while the white man came
-striding across the natural meadow to the foot of the
-rise. He was bare-headed as usual. A newcomer in
-the country, the fame of his curly, yellow pate had
-already spread far and wide. Alongside the Slavis
-he loomed like a young giant. Loseis had seen him
-take a Slavi man by the collar in each hand, and lift
-them clear of the ground. To the waiting girl he was
-like a god come in answer to her prayer.</p>
-
-<p>She was very quiet when he reached her, her smile
-tremulous. The change in her from the arrogant
-little Princess who had used him so despitefully on his
-first visit was so striking, that at first Conacher could
-only stand and stare. They never thought to greet
-each other. Finally Conacher exhibited the little black
-streamer, limp from being clutched in his warm hand.</p>
-
-<p>“What does this mean?” he asked simply.</p>
-
-<p>“My father is dead,” said Loseis. “Four days
-ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Heaven!” cried Conacher. “And you all
-alone here! What did you do?”</p>
-
-<p>“I buried him,” said Loseis, spreading out her
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>“<span class='it'>Yourself!</span>”</p>
-
-<p>“There was no other to do it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my God!”</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou had crept out of the store again. “They
-kill Jimmy Moosenose,” she said, nodding in the
-direction of the Slavis. “And break into the store.”</p>
-
-<p>“I put them out again,” said Loseis, quickly and
-proudly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, God! what awful things have been happening
-here!” cried Conacher aghast.</p>
-
-<p>His sympathy caused Loseis to tremble dangerously
-again. “Oh, it will be all right now,” she said swiftly.
-“One white man is enough to put fear into the heart
-of these dogs.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher looked at that brave and piteous figure,
-and was caught up in a very hurricane of the emotions.
-He was mad to enfold her in his arms; to comfort
-the child, to love the woman, but a feeling of chivalry
-restrained him. It appeared unseemly to intrude his
-love in the moment of her grief; he turned away abruptly,
-searching distractedly in his mind for some
-expedient to tide him over the dangerous moment.</p>
-
-<p>“I must go fetch my fellows before they are contaminated
-by the Slavis,” he said in a strangled voice,
-and strode away down the slope again.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, he does not love me,” murmured Loseis with
-extreme sadness.</p>
-
-<p>“You are wrong,” said Mary-Lou. “It was speaking
-in his eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>“No! No! No!” said Loseis violently. Nevertheless
-she was secretly comforted.</p>
-
-<p>She went bustling into the store. “Come! we will
-close up the store now, and go to our own house.
-Conacher will be hungry. We must cook a big meal.
-There is still some canned apples and canned butter
-in the store. Ahchoogah brought in a moose to-day.
-I will take a haunch of it for Conacher. I will take
-the biggest fish for Conacher, too. Be quick! Be
-quick! I will go down and get the other Marys to
-help you.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Later, Loseis and Conacher were sitting at the door
-of the Women’s House, while the appetizing odors
-came stealing out. A heavy constraint was upon
-them; they could not meet each other’s eyes. The
-man, looking down, marveled at the delicacy of
-Loseis’ shapely hands, lying loosely in her lap. What
-a rare, fine creature to find in these rude surroundings!
-Her beauty and her proud manner intimidated
-him. Who was he to aspire so high? The girl wondered
-sadly why the man did not speak. He had only
-to speak!</p>
-
-<p>When he did speak it was not in the tone that she
-longed to hear. “What are you going to do?” he
-asked, matter-of-fact.</p>
-
-<p>To Loseis the solution was simplicity itself. Conacher
-was to stay there, and everything go on as before.
-But it was not seemly for her to propose this. She
-shrugged. “I don’t know,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“But you must have thought something about what
-you would do,” he said surprised. “You can’t stay
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis’ heart sunk. She said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>“Fort Good Hope cannot be but a hundred miles or
-so across the height of land,” he went on.</p>
-
-<p>“A hundred and fifty,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“I have heard there’s a white woman at Fort Good
-Hope,” said Conacher. “She’s the parson’s sister.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do I want with the parson’s sister?” demanded
-Loseis with a spice of resentment.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher looked at her helplessly.</p>
-
-<p>I would go to Fort Good Hope to the parson with
-Conacher if he asked me, thought Loseis, and a deep
-blush overspread her neck and face. She turned away
-her head to hide it.</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t stay here,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“I am not going to give up my father’s Post, and
-allow the Slavis to strip the store,” said Loseis with
-spirit. “Besides, the whole season’s catch of fur is
-stored in the warehouse, waiting to be shipped outside.
-It is worth many thousands of dollars.”</p>
-
-<p>“How is it sent out?” asked Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“Every Spring when the grass is grown sufficiently
-to graze the horses, it is sent overland by pack-horse
-to a warehouse that my father has on the prairie near
-the crossing of the big river. That is three hundred
-miles. Jimmy Moosenose was always sent with the
-horses and men. Seventy horses and fifteen men beside
-the cook. In that warehouse they find the grub
-for next year and the store goods which are put
-there by John Gruber, my father’s outside man. They
-bring the grub back, and leave the fur in the warehouse,
-and John Gruber gets it afterwards. My
-father never allowed the Slavis to meet the Crees
-in John Gruber’s outfit. It is time for them to start
-now. John Gruber will be waiting many days at the
-Crossing.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you’ve no one to send now,” said Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I must go myself,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“My God! not alone with a gang of redskins!”
-cried Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“They would not dare harm me,” said Loseis
-proudly.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe not,” cried Conacher violently. “But just
-the same I couldn’t stand for that!”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis’ sad heart looked up a little. He did care
-a little what became of her.</p>
-
-<p>And then he spoiled it by adding: “No white man
-could!”</p>
-
-<p>“We must find somebody to go with you,” he presently
-went on; “and then you can continue on outside
-with your father’s agent.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is all the grub and store goods waiting to
-come in,” objected Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“That will have to be sold,” said Conacher. “The
-Company will buy it.”</p>
-
-<p>“There are all my father’s horses across the river,”
-said Loseis; “many thousands of head. During the
-summer hay must be cut for them around the shores
-of our lake; or next winter they will starve.”</p>
-
-<p>“But my dear girl,” said Conacher, “you cannot
-go on doing business here now that he is gone!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?” demanded Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“Why .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. why .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” stammered Conacher. “A
-woman trader! Why such a thing was never heard of!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it will be heard of now,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher ascribed this to mere bravado. What a
-spirited little thing she was! Like a plucky boy; but
-with all the sweetness of a woman. “We must send
-to Fort Good Hope for help,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Do not speak to me again of Fort Good Hope!”
-said Loseis. “Gault, the trader there, was my
-father’s enemy.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher knew nothing of the feuds of the country.
-“Yes, yes,” he said soothingly; “but a tragedy like
-this wipes out old scores. Gault would not take
-advantage of your situation.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are an outsider,” she said. “You do not
-know Gault.”</p>
-
-<p>“No man would!” insisted Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“I will not hand over my father’s Post to Gault!”
-cried Loseis. “That would bring my father out of his
-grave!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not hand it over to him,” protested Conacher.
-“But just let him advise you. He is the only one
-that can tell you what is best to do; who can arrange
-things. There is no other white man within hundreds
-of miles.”</p>
-
-<p>Then it had to come out. “I already know what
-to do,” said Loseis, very low. “If you would help
-me, we could do it all together.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher groaned, and clutched his head. “Oh,
-God! you don’t understand!” he cried. “And what
-must you be thinking of me! What a chance to be
-offered to a man, and I can’t take it!” He tried
-desperately to explain to her. “You see, I am not
-free like the men of this country. I am a government
-employee, tied hand and foot to my work. My
-whole Summer’s work has been laid out for me. And
-my little piece is only a part of a great survey of
-this whole country. I am appointed to join with another
-party at Great Slave Lake on a certain date,
-and we in turn must proceed up the Liard River to
-another rendezvous on the Yukon. If I fail, the
-whole fails. Don’t you understand?”</p>
-
-<p>She did not wholly understand. “I heard you tell
-it,” she said a little sullenly.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher jumped up, and paced the grass in an
-agony of indecision. He was teetering on the brink.
-If Loseis had raised her eyes to his face, he would
-have fallen at her feet, and allowed the government
-to go to the devil. But she kept her eyes sullenly
-down. And then before either spoke again, with a
-smart thudding of hoofs and creaking of saddle
-leathers, a well-turned out company of six men and
-several spare horses came down the trail behind the
-Post, and trotted out into the little plaza.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk'/>
-
-<p>Gault had caught sight of Conacher’s yellow head
-as soon as he came over the brow of the hill. He
-reined up sharply, his face going pinched and ugly.
-“A white man here!” he said furiously to Moale.
-“Who the devil can he be?”</p>
-
-<p>Moale drew up at his side. “That will be
-Conacher,” he said in his unconcerned way. “I have
-heard talk of his yellow head.”</p>
-
-<p>“A <span class='it'>young</span> man!” said Gault; and cursed him thickly
-and fervently.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s on a government survey down to Great Slave
-Lake and beyond,” said Moale indifferently. “He
-won’t be able to interfere with us.”</p>
-
-<p>But Gault rode down the hill with a black heart.
-The young man had got in his innings first; and now
-fifty-three must stand comparison with twenty-three,
-and the dyed black head be measured against the
-famous golden one.</p>
-
-<p>By the time he rode around the buildings of the
-Post his face was perfectly composed and solicitous, of
-course. He sat his horse with conscious grace. Flinging
-himself off, he tossed the reins to one of the
-Crees, and came quickly to Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Blackburn,” he said, “the moment I heard
-of your terrible loss I jumped on my horse to come
-to you. I cannot express to you how shocked and
-grieved I am. Your father and I were not good
-friends, but that is all past now. Believe me, I am
-most completely at your service.”</p>
-
-<p>The watching Conacher considered that this was
-very handsomely said. How much better than he
-could do it! he thought with a sigh. He had no
-reason to share in Loseis’ suspicions of Gault. A load
-was lifted from the young man’s heart. Gault’s fine
-outfit inspired confidence. Loseis would be all right
-now, and he could go on about his work. But before
-he left he would ask her to wait for him. The idea
-that this old man might prove to be a rival, never
-entered Conacher’s honest heart.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis received Gault with a manner no less finished
-and proud than his own. “You are welcome,” she
-said gravely. “My father’s house”—she indicated
-the building opposite—“is at your disposal. If you
-wish to put up your horses the stable is behind it.
-Or you can turn them out anywhere. Dinner here in
-half an hour.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault bowing, expressed his thanks. He then
-turned inquiringly towards Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>That young man said: “I am Paul Conacher of
-the geological survey.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault thrust out his hand with the appearance of
-the greatest cordiality. “I am delighted to meet you,”
-he said. “It is a great satisfaction to find that Miss
-Blackburn is not alone here.” He gave Conacher a
-meaning glance that suggested as between man and
-man it would be well for them to discuss the situation
-together.</p>
-
-<p>This was quite in line with Conacher’s ideas, and
-the two walked off together towards the house opposite.
-Loseis watched them go under stormy brows.
-She saw Gault place his hand affectionately on the
-young man’s shoulder, and her lip curled.</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='64' id='Page_64'></span><h1>CHAPTER VI<br/> <span class='sub-head'>THE DINNER PARTY</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>G</span>ault</span> and Conacher returned to the Women’s
-House for dinner. Gault had changed to a
-well-cut black suit with linen of the finest quality, and
-a little discreet but handsome jewelry. Poor Conacher,
-having no change, showed up at a disadvantage beside
-him. When they beheld Loseis both men caught
-their breath in astonishment. She was wearing one
-of the “outside” dresses which her father had been
-accustomed to import that he might have the pleasure
-of seeing her in them. This one was of black
-velvet cunningly and simply draped, and showing no
-touch of color. Around her neck hung a string of
-pearls that made Gault open his eyes; not the one
-with the gold nuggets; but a long plain string of beautifully
-matched stones. The innocent Conacher had
-no notion but that it was a string of pearl beads such
-as his sisters wore.</p>
-
-<p>The table was laid for four in Loseis’ own room.
-She seated Moale facing her; Conacher at her right;
-Gault at her left. The trader who was sensitive to
-these little things, bit his lip at this arrangement, but
-was obliged to put up with it. Conacher never noticed
-that he had been given the seat of honor. There was
-fine china and silver on the table; and the food was
-wonderful, including delicacies which Gault himself
-could not command at Fort Good Hope, such as currant
-jelly; the joint of moose meat cunningly larded
-with bacon, and served with cranberry sauce; an apple
-pie. The three comely Marys in black dresses and
-snowy aprons moved noiselessly about the table, while
-Mary-Lou oversaw all in the kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>To Conacher, after weeks on the trail, it was like
-a taste of Heaven; and Gault was obliged to confess
-to himself that the establishment while rude, nevertheless
-had a better style than his own. Loseis with
-her hair done up on top of her head looked like a
-Princess indeed, and the trader gloated at the thought
-of seeing her enthroned at <span class='it'>his</span> table. He pictured a
-glorious future for Fort Good Hope. The thought
-of Conacher gave him little concern now. He had put
-down the young man to his own satisfaction as a fool.</p>
-
-<p>The trader dominated the table. The lamplight
-was favorable to him, and he knew it. None would
-have thought of terming him an old man. His manner
-was perfection. Open-browed, courteous, half-apologetic,
-he kept them entertained with stories of
-the country; and both of the young people were to a
-certain extent fascinated by his charm. During the
-meal business was not to be touched upon.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! what a privilege it is to have a lady at the
-table!” said Gault wrinkling up his eyes, and showing
-his big white teeth.</p>
-
-<p>(Rather like the wolf in the fairy-tale; thought
-Loseis; but I suppose some would call him a fine-looking
-man.)</p>
-
-<p>“Hear! Hear!” said Conacher. The young man
-felt like a hobbledehoy alongside the elegant Gault;
-but he harbored no malice. Poor Conacher’s heart
-was oppressed by the sight of Loseis in her bravery.
-Could this be the rude little spitfire that he had dared
-to laugh at upon their first meeting?</p>
-
-<p>“That is what we miss in the North,” Gault went
-on; “the civilizing touch of lovely woman! It is
-terrible the way men go to seed in this country. It
-is a fact that when a man’s manners go, his morals
-are bound to go too. Ah! my dear Miss Blackburn,
-if we had more like you to grace our lonely posts we’d
-all be better men!”</p>
-
-<p>(Why haven’t I the face to say such things? thought
-Conacher.)</p>
-
-<p>Loseis smiled a little wanly. She was secretly confused
-by the trader’s glibness. She had never known
-a man like this.</p>
-
-<p>Later they sat down in front of the small fire that
-had been lighted to drive away the evening chill;
-Loseis in her hammock-chair, the men on either hand
-sitting stiffly in the straight-up-and-down chairs that
-Blackburn had carved. What remained on the table
-was silently whisked into the kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>“You may smoke if you wish,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>Gault produced, wonder of wonders! a full cigar
-case, and offered it to the younger man. The fragrance
-of the genuine Havana spread around.</p>
-
-<p>“Well!” said Conacher; “I never expected to get
-anything like this north of Fifty-eight.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, with my improved transport,” said Gault
-carelessly, “I can have in pretty much anything I
-want.”</p>
-
-<p>It now became necessary to speak of business.
-Gault inquired if the season’s fur had been sent out.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>The trader might almost be said to have purred
-upon hearing that. Indeed, fearing himself that he
-might be betraying too much complacency about the
-mouth, he rubbed his upper lip, and gave a little
-cough. “I will charge myself with that,” he said
-comfortably. “Make your mind quite easy.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis looked unhappy, but said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” Gault went on with the air of one
-who must be fair at whatever cost to himself, “being
-your father’s competitor, his rival as you might say,
-it is not proper that I should be your sole advisor.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis looked at him in surprise. Dared he to
-speak of that? Her confusion increased. This man
-was too much for her.</p>
-
-<p>“I am mighty glad that Conacher is here,” said
-Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“But I must return down the river to-night,” said
-Conacher. “I am already many days behind my
-schedule.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis’ eyes were close-hid now. “To-night?” she
-echoed softly. “But you paddled all last night to get
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher affected to laugh, while his hungry eyes
-sought her averted face. Loseis could have read there
-that he didn’t want to go; but she wouldn’t look.
-“Oh, going downstream’s a cinch,” said Conacher.
-“Two of us can sleep at a time in the dug-out, while
-the third man keeps her in the middle of the current.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis was silent.</p>
-
-<p>“To-night!” said Gault. “Ah, that’s too bad! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-However, I can take my measures before you go .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Does your father employ a man of business, a lawyer,
-outside?” he asked Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“None that I know of,” she said, “except John
-Gruber.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Gruber,” said Gault in his purring voice
-(Moale at the other end of the row, listened to all
-this with a face like a sardonic mask), “an excellent
-fellow, too. But too ignorant a man to serve you in
-this crisis.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I am sure your father must have had
-wide interests outside of the fur business,” he said
-insinuatingly.</p>
-
-<p>“If he had, I know nothing about it,” said Loseis.
-“He got business letters every year when the outfit
-came in, but he did not show them to me. I know
-nothing of business.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not,” said Gault soothingly. “Have you
-looked for those letters since his death?” he asked,
-betraying more eagerness than was perhaps in the
-best of taste.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Loseis, shortly.</p>
-
-<p>Gault was pulled up short. “Hm!” he said, stroking
-his chin. “Hm! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” Finally he got a fresh
-start. “Well, if Blackburn employed an attorney outside,
-Gruber will know his name. Gruber carried all
-his letters out, and brought the answers back. I will
-write to Gruber. And if Blackburn has no lawyer
-already, I will send for the best one obtainable, and
-will arrange special means of transport for him. We’ll
-have him here in five or six weeks at the outside.
-Lastly I will send for a sergeant and detail of the
-police, so that the murder of Jimmy Moosenose can
-be investigated. Until they come, in order that the
-Slavis may not take fright, we will allow them to
-suppose that the murder has been forgotten.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher nodded in agreement with this; Loseis
-felt that she was being crowded to one side.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll start my letters off to Fort Good Hope at
-sun-up,” Gault went on. “Unfortunately my steamboat
-has gone up to the head of navigation, and won’t
-be back for a month; but by the time the messenger
-reaches the post, my launch will have returned from
-carrying Mr. Ogilvie down to the Chutes. The launch
-can make the Crossing in a week. Gruber will be
-waiting there.”</p>
-
-<p>It all sounded so businesslike and proper, Loseis
-could take no exception to it. The smooth voice, arranging
-everything, afflicted her with a sort of despair.</p>
-
-<p>After some desultory talk, Gault arose, saying:
-“With your permission I will go and write my letters
-now, so that Conacher may see them before he goes.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis bowed in acquiescence. She thought: I can
-talk to Conacher while he is away. But Gault looked
-sharply from one to another, and added in his polite
-way: “I’d be glad of your help in composing them,
-Conacher.” Loseis’ heart sunk. The two went out
-together arm in arm. Moale followed his master as
-a matter of course.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis was left staring into the fire. Mary-Lou
-came to the door and looked at her full of loving
-solicitude; but Loseis made believe not to know that
-she was there. The simple Mary-Lou could be of no
-help to her in this situation. Loseis, whose nature
-it was to act instantaneously without thinking, was all
-at sea on this flood of words. Everything was mixed
-up in her mind. Maybe Gault is a true man, she
-thought; maybe he means what he says. Conacher is
-satisfied. And if he is lying what can I do anyhow?
-I know nothing.</p>
-
-<p>In due course they returned (without Moale) and
-the letters were laid before Loseis. It appeared that
-Gault packed a little typewriter in his outfit, and
-Loseis, though she looked at the letters indifferently,
-secretly marveled at the neat clear printing. How
-could one contend against a man like this! She
-scarcely read the letters. The lengthy sentences
-merely dizzied her.</p>
-
-<p>It goes without saying that they were admirably
-expressed letters. There is no need of reproducing
-them here, since Gault had not the slightest intention
-of letting them reach their destinations. They were
-to be conveniently lost en route.</p>
-
-<p>“I am satisfied if Conacher is,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Gault has thought of everything,” said
-Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>Soon Conacher said, affecting to make light of his
-heavy heart: “Well, I’ve sent my men down to launch
-the dug-out. I must be getting aboard.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault said quickly in his hearty way: “I’ll go down
-and see you off.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher looked wistfully at Loseis, and hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis rebelled at last. She did not feel able to
-dispute Gault in matters of business, but if he dared
-to interfere with her own private concerns, let him
-look out! She stood up very quickly, and her chin
-went up. “First I want to take Conacher to the store,
-and give him some grub to take,” she said coolly.
-“You wait here, Mr. Gault.” Her eyes sought his
-unafraid, and the trader’s eyes trailed away.</p>
-
-<p>“Why of course!” he said in his hearty way. But
-his affable smile had a sickly look now. As they went
-through the door he shot a baleful glance after them.
-That was a black half hour for him, obliged to sit
-there, grinding his big teeth and picturing the two
-young creatures together in the dark. Just when
-everything had seemed to be going his way, too!</p>
-
-<p>Outside, the black sky was crowded with stars big
-and little, all focused on that pair of mortal lovers.
-The earth was so still one seemed to hear the whisper
-of starlight. Loseis drew a great breath of relief.
-Why that load was suddenly lifted from her breast
-she could not have told. She involuntarily slipped
-her hand under Conacher’s arm, and he pressed it
-hard against his ribs. They walked, pressing close
-together, the blond head brooding low over the black
-one. There was no confession of love. They were
-still afraid of that word. And anyhow this was confession
-enough. With happiness their hearts became
-as breathlessly still as the night.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s not go to the store,” whispered Conacher.
-“I don’t need any grub.”</p>
-
-<p>“I just said that,” whispered Loseis. “I wanted to
-be with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you dear! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. you dear! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. you dear!”
-he murmured tremulously.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis pressed his arm. “Let’s go down on the
-flat,” she whispered. “He might come to the door
-to watch us.”</p>
-
-<p>They went down the grassy slope. For a long
-time they did not speak. They walked at a snail’s
-pace, arms linked, hands clasped, and heads leaning
-together. At last a little whimpering sound was heard
-from Loseis. That brave heart owned its weakness
-at last.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Paul!” she faltered. “Oh Paul, <span class='it'>must</span> you
-go?”</p>
-
-<p>“I must! I must!” he cried in pain. “But I will
-arrange things just as quick as I can, and come back.”</p>
-
-<p>“It will be so long!” she said sadly.</p>
-
-<p>“But at least you are safe now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, safe .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. maybe!”</p>
-
-<p>“If you are afraid, come with me. I will take care
-of you.”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” she said quickly. “That would not be acting
-right towards my father.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I am not afraid of
-any danger. But .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. but I cannot see what is before
-me! I do not like that man!”</p>
-
-<p>“He seems to be on the square,” said Conacher
-anxiously. “He has provided for everything better
-than I could.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is so terrible for me to have to be with somebody
-I do not like,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“You have your own house,” said Conacher. “And
-your girls. You need only talk to him about business
-matters.”</p>
-
-<p>“He is so ugly!” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“You silly girl!” said Conacher fondly. “Gault’s
-considered a very fine-looking man!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not to me! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. You are beautiful, my Paul. In
-the dark I can see your beauty!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Loseis! you must not say such things!” he
-said, genuinely distressed. “It is not fitting from you
-to me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?” she asked wilfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Because .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. because .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. by comparison with
-you I .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Oh, Loseis, I ought to be kneeling at your
-feet!”</p>
-
-<p>“What good would you be to my feet?” she asked,
-nestling against him. “I like it better this way.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher laughed suddenly and delightedly in his
-throat.</p>
-
-<p>“Well .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. ?” said Loseis, leaving her interrogation
-in the air.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?” he asked anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you make me <span class='it'>say</span> it!” she cried vexatiously.
-“Do you think I am beautiful?”</p>
-
-<p>The question rendered him nearly speechless. He
-pressed her hand hard against his cheek. “Oh,
-Loseis!” he stammered. “I .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. you .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I
-can’t tell you. I’m just a blundering fool when it
-comes to expressing my feelings. Why, you have
-made a new world for me. When I think of your face
-it drives me out of my senses. I can’t think of the
-words for it!”</p>
-
-<p>She pillowed her cheek happily in the hollow inside
-his shoulder. “Then you must find words!” she said.
-“You must never stop telling me. My ears are greedy
-to hear it. Of all the world, I only care to be beautiful
-for you!”</p>
-
-<p>In sight of the darkly flowing river they came to a
-stop. They could hear the murmuring voices of the
-two Beaver Indians at the water’s edge. They drew
-apart. For a long while they stood there not touching
-each other in dumb unhappiness and constraint.
-They were both new at this lovemaking business.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Conacher at last, like a schoolboy
-trying to carry it off flippantly, “I must make a
-break .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” she cried, hurt to the quick. “Is that all
-you care?”</p>
-
-<p>He dropped his absurd pretense. “It is like death
-to leave you now,” he murmured, brokenly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, good-by,” she said suddenly in an unnaturally
-high-pitched voice. And turned as if to run
-forthwith.</p>
-
-<p>He caught hold of her. “No! No!” he cried.
-“Not like this!”</p>
-
-<p>She struggled in his arms. “Let me go! Let
-me go!” she whispered in a desperate voice. “I can’t
-stand these good-bys. I like a thing ended quickly.
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Let me go!”</p>
-
-<p>Holding her within one arm he tried to turn up her
-face to his. “Loseis .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. dearest .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. before I go,”
-he whispered imploringly. “<span class='it'>Please</span>, Loseis.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. To
-remember all those lonely nights .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>She resisted with all her strength. “No! No!
-No! No! Not yet! If you kiss me I shall never
-be able to let you go! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Ah, let me go while I
-want to go!”</p>
-
-<p>That naïve cry touched his heart. He released
-her. The instant she was released she lost all her
-desire to run. She stood there in front of him, very
-still.</p>
-
-<p>“You had better go,” he said shakily.</p>
-
-<p>“Put your hands behind your back!” she whispered
-breathlessly. “Stoop down a little.”</p>
-
-<p>He obeyed.</p>
-
-<p>Like lightning her arms went around his neck, and
-her lips were pressed hard against his. Then like a
-shadow she was gone. Through the dark her caressing
-whisper came back to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Come back soon, dear!”</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk'/>
-
-<p>When Loseis got back to the Women’s House, Gault
-was sitting there by the fire, smoking a fresh cigar.
-He sprang up with a pleasant, fatherly sort of smile.
-His eyes dwelt lightly on Loseis’s face, but she had
-an impression just the same, that they were boring
-into her. Well, let them bore! At the business of
-hiding her heart she was fully his match. She showed
-him a smooth, untroubled face.</p>
-
-<p>“Has he gone?” asked Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“I expect so,” said Loseis. “I did not go down
-the hill with him.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault rubbed his lip. He didn’t know whether or
-not to believe her.</p>
-
-<p>He felt his way carefully. “Conacher seems like
-a fine young fellow,” he remarked. “Have you known
-him long?”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis remained standing by the fire. “Oh, he
-stopped here for three days,” she said coolly. “But
-I scarcely saw him then.”</p>
-
-<p>“How did he learn so soon of your father’s death?”</p>
-
-<p>“I never thought to ask him,” said Loseis with a
-clear brow. “By moccasin telegraph, I suppose. The
-Slavis are continually traveling up and down the river.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is too bad that he is in the government employ,”
-said Gault.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis had no intention of discussing the man she
-loved with another man. She remained silent. She
-had a good capacity for holding her tongue. It was
-her only defense against Gault’s smooth talk; and
-it was a better defense than she realized.</p>
-
-<p>Gault was obliged to go on and answer the question
-without its having been asked. “They never come
-to anything,” he said. “They are no more than
-clerks all their lives.”</p>
-
-<p>“So I have heard,” said Loseis indifferently.</p>
-
-<p>Gault was deceived by her coolness. He argued
-that she was too young to be able to hide her feelings
-so consummately. She did not care for the young
-geologist. Their meetings had been too few and
-brief for any serious damage to be worked. He began
-to feel better.</p>
-
-<p>“How did you learn of my father’s death?” asked
-Loseis unexpectedly.</p>
-
-<p>Gault determined to tell the truth, since it must
-become known anyway. “The Indian Etzooah brought
-me the news. Did you not send him?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“Well!” said Gault with an air of astonishment.
-“I suppose he must have started off blindly on his own
-account.”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t know he could speak English,” said
-Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“He can’t. Only Cree.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nobody here knew that he could speak Cree,
-either,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>Gault allowed the subject to drop. “While you
-were away I have been sitting here thinking over your
-affairs,” he said, enveloping Loseis with his smile.</p>
-
-<p>Oh, Heaven! she thought; is he going to start talking
-again? How can I endure it without Conacher
-here to keep me in countenance! In desperation she
-feigned to hide a yawn behind her hand.</p>
-
-<p>Gault had no recourse but to take the hint. “You
-are worn out!” he said solicitously. “And no wonder.
-I will retire now. And to-morrow we can talk.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis’ heart sunk. To-morrow!—and all the succeeding
-to-morrows! Should she never be able to
-escape his talk! “You are very kind,” she murmured
-politely.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-night,” said Gault, offering her his hand.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis either had to give him hers, or come to an
-open quarrel. With an inward shiver of repulsion,
-she laid her hand within his, keeping her eyes close
-hid. “Good-night,” she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>Good God! how beautiful she is! thought Gault;
-with her mixture of haughty pride and shyness (for
-so he took it). I’d take her if she didn’t have a
-cent! A genuine desire was mingled with the calculation
-in his eyes; he bared his teeth in what he intended
-to be an ardent smile. In his youth Gault
-had been famous for his big white teeth, and he did
-not realize that their luster was somewhat diminished.
-For a moment he clung to the cool, limp hand.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear, dear girl!” he murmured. “If you only
-knew how my heart goes out to you in this hour of
-affliction. My only desire is to serve you!”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis gritted her teeth in a torment of repulsion.
-Grinning at her in that disgusting way, while his hard
-eyes sought to pry into her heart? She could <span class='it'>feel</span>
-his grin, though she kept her eyes down. Her hand
-trembled with the desire to snatch itself away, and
-smack his leering old face. But above all she was determined
-that Blackburn’s daughter should not be revealed
-to this fine gentleman as a savage uncultured
-girl, and she commanded her repulsion.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-night .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. good-night,” repeated Gault with
-a touch of archness, that looked to the future. He
-hastened out with a debonair swing. Loseis’ fiery
-eyes bored holes in his back.</p>
-
-<p>Crossing the grass, Gault exulted within himself.
-“A half-formed child,” he thought; “an experienced
-man can make whatever he chooses of her! And by
-God, what natural elegance! what pride! what beauty!
-I am in luck!”</p>
-
-<p>While within the room he had just left, Loseis
-scowled at her offending hand, and rubbed it violently
-on her skirt.</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='79' id='Page_79'></span><h1>CHAPTER VII<br/> <span class='sub-head'>THE CLOVEN HOOF</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>N</span>ext</span> morning before Loseis had breakfasted,
-Gault was back at the Women’s House, knocking
-deprecatingly at the door.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry to disturb you so early,” he said, “but I
-forgot something last night; and I’m holding my messenger
-now until I can get it from you.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is that?” asked Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“May I come in?” he said smiling.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis led the way into her room.</p>
-
-<p>Gault had several sheets of paper in his hand. “If,
-as I suspect,” he began in the smooth voice which so
-exasperated Loseis without her knowing why, “Blackburn
-has sums of money lying in the bank outside, that
-belongs to you, of course; but you could not draw
-against it unless the bank was already in possession of
-your signature. Therefore, in order to save time, I
-propose to send out several specimens of your signature
-now. I will put them in the hands of your lawyer,
-who will in turn pass them on to the bank.”</p>
-
-<p>This sounded all right to Loseis, who proceeded to
-write her name on each of the four blank sheets that
-Gault passed her. Loseis had had small occasion
-to practice the art of handwriting, and it was but
-slowly that she formed the great round letters of her
-official name.</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;'><span class='it'>Laurentia Blackburn</span></p>
-
-<p>“Laurentia!” murmured Gault in a fond voice.
-“What an odd name.”</p>
-
-<p>“I believe I was named after a chain of mountains,”
-said Loseis dryly.</p>
-
-<p>“But how dignified and melodious!” he said.
-“Laurentia .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Laurentia .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. !”</p>
-
-<p>She shot an irritated glance at him through her
-lashes. Had the man nothing better to do than to
-stand there mouthing her name in that ridiculous fashion!
-Loseis privately detested her name. Jane
-would have been more to her fancy.</p>
-
-<p>Gault gathered up the sheets, and made as if to
-go. At the door he paused: “I say,” he said, like
-one speaking to a child, “isn’t there something at Fort
-Good Hope that you would like my messenger to bring
-back to you? I have a regular ‘outside’ store at
-Good Hope, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, thank you,” said Loseis quickly. “Nothing
-at all!”</p>
-
-<p>“Just the same,” said Gault with that arch smile of
-his, “I will see if we cannot find something that will
-please you!”</p>
-
-<p>As he went through the door Loseis involuntarily
-flung up her arms crying: “Oh, give me air! Give
-me air!”</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou came running in to see what was the
-matter.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis kicked a fur rug violently to one side, and
-banged open the little window. “Oh, that man is like
-a bearskin tied over one’s head; like a feather bed
-upon one!” she cried. Standing back from the window
-she angrily apostrophized the receding figure of Gault.
-“Yes, you! you! If I have to see you every day I shall
-suffocate!” Turning around and beholding the amazed
-figure of Mary-Lou, Loseis suddenly embraced her, and
-dropping her head on her shoulder, burst into tears.</p>
-
-<p>“But what is the matter?” gasped Mary-Lou.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know!” wailed Loseis. “I must be crazy!
-He speaks fair and honest; he is always polite and
-kind .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. but .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. but I <span class='it'>can’t stand</span> the man!”</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk'/>
-
-<p>Before the morning was out Gault was seen returning.
-Loseis, who had persuaded herself that she was
-a fool, schooled herself to receive him politely. He
-was accompanied this time by one of his Crees, who
-was carrying a neat leather-covered box by its handle.
-Gault never performed such menial tasks for himself.
-There was enough of the child in Loseis to be rendered
-intensely curious by the sight of that box.</p>
-
-<p>The trader dismissed his servant at the door, and
-brought the box in himself. Upon being laid on the
-table and opened, a most fascinating and complicated
-little machine was revealed, all shining with nickel-plate
-and black lacquer. Loseis had not the remotest
-idea of what it was for.</p>
-
-<p>“This is the typewriter; the writing-machine,” explained
-the trader. “I have another one at the Post
-which I have sent for. In the meantime I want to
-present this to you. I thought it might amuse you to
-practice on it; and it will certainly save you time.
-Now that you are a business woman, you will have
-many letters to write.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis’ heart was touched by this seeming act of
-kindness. She felt remorseful. “That is very good
-of you,” she said, blushing. “It is true, I am a miserable
-writer. But I shall never be able to learn this.”</p>
-
-<p>“On the contrary,” said Gault. “It is very simple.
-Sit down at the table and I will show you now.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis obeyed; and Gault drew up another chair
-close beside her. He explained to her how to put the
-paper in; how to shift the carriage back and forth;
-how to start a new line. For the rest all you had
-to do was to strike the proper letters. In ten minutes
-Loseis had mastered the idea of the thing. She was
-fascinated with this new toy (she had possessed so
-few toys in her life) but was made horribly uncomfortable
-by the enforced proximity of Gault’s head to
-her own. He was chewing some sort of medicated
-candy that gave his breath a strong, pungent odor.
-Loseis hated strong smells of every kind.</p>
-
-<p>“Now let me try it all by myself,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Go ahead! Go ahead!” he said, but did not withdraw
-himself at all. When he saw her at a loss, he
-would grab hold of her finger and guide it to the
-right key. Loseis shivered internally.</p>
-
-<p>Finally her discomfort became more than she could
-bear. “I cannot do a thing if you hang over me like
-that,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>Gault leaned back in his chair with a great laugh.
-“So independent!” he said teasingly.</p>
-
-<p>However, he held himself away from her, and
-Loseis proceeded with her slow punching of the keys.
-How strange and fascinating to see the words stand
-up upon the paper! She had never possessed so
-marvelous a toy as this. As soon as Gault was out
-of the way she would start a letter to Conacher. How
-astonished he would be!</p>
-
-<p>In a minute or two Gault’s head was as close as
-ever to hers. Loseis tried to ignore the fact, but it
-was impossible to do so. She was aware, through a
-subtle feminine sense, that he was not paying any attention
-to the typewriter now. He was too still. She felt as
-if something precious were being drawn from her that
-she had no intention of yielding to any man save one.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go on with this this afternoon,” she said nervously.
-“I have to do something else now.” At the same
-time she attempted to slide sideways out of her chair.</p>
-
-<p>Gault caught her hand. “Ah, don’t stop,” he said
-a little thickly. “You look like such a cunning little
-student, bending over your work. Where did you get
-that wonderful black hair of yours .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. ?”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis was up like a wild thing then, and backing
-off to the far end of the room. “How dare you!
-How dare you!” she said breathlessly. “Take yourself
-out of here, and your machine too! Or I’ll fling
-it after you! Did you bring it here only as an excuse
-to insult me!”</p>
-
-<p>Gault rose also. “Well!” he cried, laughing heartily.
-But there was an ugly look in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>His laughter immediately brought about a reaction
-in Loseis. She realized that she was making far too
-much of a trifle. This was not the way for a well-born
-girl to act. She told herself that it was only
-because she had come to love another man that she
-found this one detestable. She lowered her head, and
-a hot blush flowed over her cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sorry,” she muttered unwillingly. “I am out
-of sorts this morning. I did not mean what I said.”
-In the very act of saying this Loseis’ heart accused
-her of cowardice. She felt hopelessly confused. Oh,
-how difficult it was to be well-bred and ladylike.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, that’s all right!” cried Gault heartily. “It
-is perfectly natural at such a time. I’m sorry I displeased
-you. I assure you I feel nothing for you, but
-the deepest respect and sympathy! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I’ll leave you
-now. Do amuse yourself with the typewriter.”</p>
-
-<p>As he walked away from the house he murmured
-to himself: “A skittish filly! I must proceed more
-slowly. Gad! it’s difficult though!” Thus he deceived
-himself, as middle-aged gentlemen bent on gallantry
-are so apt to do. He felt delightfully ardent.
-At the same time though, a nasty little anxiety continued
-to plague the back of his mind.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Loseis paced up and down her room,
-wondering for the hundredth time within the past
-twenty-four hours, what was the matter with her, that
-she felt so hopelessly divided. This was a new feeling
-for her. However the shining little typewriter <span class='it'>was</span>
-fascinating. She presently sat down to compose a
-letter to Conacher; and forgot her troubles. Another
-little raft carried her letter downstream.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk'/>
-
-<p>Every afternoon Loseis opened the store. It was
-a point of pride with her to comport herself in all
-respects towards the Slavis as if nothing had happened.
-She often visited their village, interesting herself
-in all their concerns, as she considered fitting in
-a prudent mistress towards her childish and feather-brained
-servants. They were shy with her, and none
-came to trade at the store. Loseis, shrugging, was
-content to bide her time. Hunger would tell in the
-end. For twenty years now, the Slavis had been accustomed
-to the white man’s flour, tea and sugar, and
-the present generation could not do without them.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis and Mary-Lou sat on the bench outside the
-store. Mary-Lou had been reading aloud, but her
-mistress had silenced her, because she wished to think.
-Loseis was unpracticed in the exercise of thinking
-things over, and she found it both difficult and painful.
-This was the question on which she split: was Gault
-a scoundrel? All his acts and words seemed to be
-above reproach; but Loseis’ heart stubbornly misgave
-her. Could she trust her heart? She reflected that
-her father had never betrayed any hesitation in calling
-Gault a scoundrel; but Loseis had had plenty of
-examples of her father’s wrong-headedness. She
-adored him, but had no great opinion of his judgment.
-It was by his strength and energy that Blackburn had
-forged ahead, not by wisdom. And so the weary
-round continued. To one of Loseis’ downright nature
-it was torture to remain in a state of indecision.</p>
-
-<p>At the door of Blackburn’s House fifty yards distant
-from where they sat, the Indian Etzooah was to be
-seen ostentatiously cleaning a pair of Gault’s boots. It
-suggested itself to Loseis as rather curious that Gault
-should choose the ignorant Slavi for a body-servant,
-when he had the more civilized Crees. She recollected
-that on various occasions during the past few days
-she had seen Etzooah hanging about looking self-conscious.
-The thought popped into her head that
-perhaps Gault had set him as a spy on her movements.
-Well, supposing that to be so, here was a chance to
-turn the tables on the trader. Through Etzooah she
-might be able to learn if Gault had lied to her.</p>
-
-<p>She called to Etzooah in her ordinary manner of
-offhand assurance. When he came to her cringing
-and grinning in his imbecile fashion (you could read
-nothing in that grin of the Slavis) she said coolly:</p>
-
-<p>“I need a man. There are some goods in the store
-to be moved.”</p>
-
-<p>Leading him inside, she had him shift some bags of
-flour from one place to another. This done, she
-presented him with a plug of tobacco, and let him
-know that he had done all she required. They returned
-outside, and Loseis bade Mary-Lou go on
-with the reading.</p>
-
-<p>Etzooah, as Loseis expected, did not leave them,
-but, making his face perfectly vacant, squatted down
-in the grass at the other side of the door, and proceeded
-to shave a pipeful of tobacco from the plug,
-careful not to spill a crumb. Loseis allowed Mary-Lou
-to read for awhile, then she started slightly as
-if a thought had just occurred to her, and motioned
-to the girl to stop.</p>
-
-<p>“Etzooah,” she said (speaking in the Slavi tongue
-of course) “it comes to me that I have not thanked
-you for fetching Gault from Fort Good Hope. That
-was well done.”</p>
-
-<p>Etzooah grinned. “Gault is a good man,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“You speak truth,” said Loseis gravely. “How did
-it come that you set off without telling me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Wah!” said Etzooah, “you were attending upon
-the body of Blackburn. It was not right for me to
-go to you at such a time. I just caught some horses
-and went.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was well thought of,” said Loseis. “How did
-you make yourself understood to the white men?”</p>
-
-<p>“I speak the Cree,” said Etzooah.</p>
-
-<p>“Wah!” said Loseis politely. “That was not known
-to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“My father was a Cree,” said Etzooah. “It is
-well known.”</p>
-
-<p>“I had forgotten,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>Without changing a muscle of her face, or raising
-her voice at all, Loseis shifted to English. “Etzooah,”
-she said, “the Slavis are saying to each other that you
-were false to your own people. They are angry because
-you brought Gault here.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Do not move
-suddenly or you are a dead man. Mahtsonza is hiding
-behind the corner of the store with a gun in his
-hands waiting to shoot you!”</p>
-
-<p>Etzooah’s copper face changed to a livid ash-color.
-Suddenly with a single movement he bounded to his
-feet, and inside the door of the store. Loseis stood up
-with a scornful laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“Go back to your master,” she said, pointing. “I
-only wished to find out if you could speak English.
-You are a spy!”</p>
-
-<p>Etzooah slunk away. Still only half convinced that
-he had been tricked, he kept glancing fearfully over his
-shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis was filled with a fierce exultation. Now she
-<span class='it'>knew</span>! No more indecision. To be sure, when she reflected,
-her solitary and desperate situation might well
-appall the stoutest heart; but at the moment she was
-only aware of the relief of getting rid of that suffocating
-sense of futility. Now she would know what to
-do! Her father was right about Gault; and her own
-heart had not played her false.</p>
-
-<p>She closed the store, and took Mary-Lou back to
-their house.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis’ nature knew no half measures. Having
-recognized Gault as her enemy, she was prepared to
-fight. She did not blink the danger of her position.
-She no longer had any illusions about the fate of
-those letters which the trader had so impressively despatched
-outside. She realized that Gault himself
-stood between her and any possible succor, and that
-he intended to keep her cut off from her kind until he
-should have obtained what he wanted. Well, she
-quickly resolved upon a course of action. Her only
-hope lay in bringing her wits into play. Gault must
-not be allowed to suspect that she saw through his
-schemes. Etzooah, she knew, would never dare confess
-to his master that he had betrayed himself.
-There was a fatuous side to Gault’s character; and
-she must play on that. Perhaps through his own folly
-she might defeat him in the end.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly Loseis clapped her hands to her head with
-a cry of dismay. She had suddenly recollected that all
-her father’s papers were in his desk in the room where
-Gault was sleeping, and the desk was not even locked!
-While he was alive of course, nobody would have dared
-venture into Blackburn’s room uninvited, much less
-touch his papers. Loseis beat her fists against her head,
-and groaned in bitterness. What an ignorant childish
-fool she had been to neglect a thing so important!</p>
-
-<p>She ran to the window to look across at the men’s
-house. She could not tell whether Gault was within
-or not. On the spur of the moment she sent Mary-Lou
-across to invite Gault and Moale to supper with
-her. Mary-Lou returned to say that the two men had
-ridden up to the lake (ten miles distant) to have a
-look at the Slavi village there. Loseis then ventured
-across herself.</p>
-
-<p>Etzooah was in the kitchen of the house. He received
-her with his customary witless grin, and edged
-in front of the door to the inner room as if to keep her
-out. Loseis caught her breath in astonishment, and
-her eyes fairly blazed on the man.</p>
-
-<p>“Stand aside, dog of a redskin!” she cried. “This
-is my father’s house, and Gault is only a guest here at
-my pleasure!”</p>
-
-<p>To the terrified Indian it seemed as if the little
-figure had grown a foot. He slunk aside, and Loseis
-went into her father’s room, closing the door after her.</p>
-
-<p>Upon her first glance at the desk it was apparent to
-her that Gault had stolen a march on her; though she
-did not immediately understand the significance of
-what he had done. The desk was a handsome piece
-after the Colonial style made by Blackburn himself.
-It had four drawers below, and a flap which lifted
-down to form the writing table. The drawers and the
-flap alike were fastened shut by strips of papers, caught
-down by clots of sealing wax. Going closer Loseis
-saw that the wax had been impressed with Gault’s ring.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis smiled bitterly. Her first impulse was to
-tear open these flimsy seals; but she held her hand.
-No; the damage was already done; if anything had
-been abstracted, how was she to know? Better to
-keep Gault in ignorance of the fact that she had been
-there. She did not believe that Etzooah would tell
-him, unless it occurred to Gault to question him. A
-Slavi never volunteers any information to a white man.
-The upshot was that Loseis turned around, and went
-home.</p>
-
-<p>The invitation to supper was repeated later. When
-Gault came over it was a changed Loseis who greeted
-him. Her uncertainty was gone. Danger stimulated
-her; all her faculties were sharpened. She had put on
-one of her prettiest dresses; her dark eyes sparkled
-with topaz lights; and she gave Gault smile for smile.
-The trader was charmed. She is coming ’round, he
-thought; I knew she would.</p>
-
-<p>Moale saw deeper. His inscrutable eyes followed
-Loseis with a new respect. Moale served his master
-very faithfully, but he was like the Slavis in one respect;
-he never volunteered any information.</p>
-
-<p>Supper was quite a jolly occasion. Loseis listened
-attentively to Gault’s stories; and was prompt with
-her applause. The trader visibly expanded; and
-Moale’s expression as he watched him became even
-more sardonic than usual. During the course of the
-meal, Loseis said with an innocent air:</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Gault, all my father’s papers are in that desk
-in your room. Will you go over everything with me
-to-morrow, and explain it.”</p>
-
-<p>He wagged a protesting hand in her direction.
-“No, no, no,” he said; “nothing must be touched until
-the lawyer comes.”</p>
-
-<p>“That cannot be for weeks yet,” said Loseis, “and
-in the meantime I am curious to .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have sealed the desk,” said Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“Sealed my father’s desk?” said Loseis, opening
-her eyes wide.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear girl, consider my position,” he said. “I
-am an interested party in these matters—or at least
-I will be so considered; and I have to lean over backwards
-in the effort to avoid anything which would look
-like taking an unfair advantage. Imagine my feelings
-upon retiring that first night, when I found myself
-alone in the room with all the private papers of my
-late rival in business! I was shocked; shocked. If
-the desk had been locked, and the key in your possession
-it would have been all right; but upon trying it—for
-my own protection, I found that it was open.
-Fortunately Moale was in the kitchen. I instantly
-called him in, and sealed up the desk in his presence.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t you let me know?” asked Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“It was late. You had retired.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t you speak of it next day?”</p>
-
-<p>“I never thought of it. It is customary when a
-man dies to seal up his papers until his attorney can
-take charge. I did it as a matter of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps his papers are not there after all,” said
-Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps not,” said Gault, with a seeming open
-look. “I only moved the cover with my thumb for
-about a quarter of an inch to find out if it was locked.
-I know no more than the man in the moon what the
-desk contains.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis lowered her eyes. What a fool he must
-think me! she thought—well, it is just as well that he
-should think me a fool.</p>
-
-<p>“Did Blackburn possess a safe?” asked Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Loseis. “Nobody ever stole anything
-from my father.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I could say the same,” said Gault ruefully.
-He went on to tell the story of the Scotch half-breed
-who had brought a black fox skin to his post to trade,
-and had then replaced it with a clumsy imitation, almost
-under the trader’s nose. It appeared that he
-had worked the trick in turn at every post on the big
-river; but was apprehended at Fort McMaster on his
-way out. Loseis, smiling at the story, permitted Gault
-to suppose that it had caused her to forget the sealed
-desk.</p>
-
-<p>After the meal, Gault sent Moale away on a manifestly
-trumped-up errand. Loseis was not sorry to
-see him go. She was a little afraid of his unchanging,
-watchful gaze. He never spoke unless he were addressed.
-As for Gault, it was curious that now she
-knew he was her enemy, she no longer dreaded to be
-left alone with him.</p>
-
-<p>She drew up the hammock-chair to the fire. “You
-must take this chair to-night,” she said. “And light
-one of your delicious cigars.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. There,” she said
-presently, “that is just like the happy nights when my
-father came to sit with me.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault’s smile became a little bleak. He didn’t
-want to be regarded as a father. He stole a look at
-Loseis to see if this could be an intentional dig; but
-her face expressed only an innocent pleasure in seeing
-him comfortable.</p>
-
-<p>She perched herself on one of the straight-backed
-chairs beside him, with her heels cocked up on the
-rungs. “Have you ever been married, Mr. Gault?”
-she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said the trader, a little uncertain as to what
-was coming next.</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?” asked Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said he, looking noble, “I could not bear
-to expose the kind of woman that I wished to marry
-to my rude life in the wilderness.”</p>
-
-<p>“How lonely you must have been!” murmured
-Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>Gault felt reassured. This was the sort of talk a
-man had the right to expect from a white woman. He
-settled himself for a comfortable heart to heart talk
-by the fire. “Ah, yes,” he said with a far-away look;
-“I have had my bitter times! People call me a hard
-man; they do not know! They do not know!”</p>
-
-<p>The corners of Loseis’ mouth twitched demurely.
-“Tell me all about yourself,” she murmured.</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='94' id='Page_94'></span><h1>CHAPTER VIII<br/> <span class='sub-head'>HEAVENLY MUSIC</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>A</span>t</span> noon of the fourth day after his setting-out,
-Gault’s messenger returned from Fort Good
-Hope driving several laden pack-horses before him.
-The horses were unpacked at the door of Blackburn’s
-House, and the goods carried in. From their windows
-opposite, Loseis and the four Marys full of
-curiosity, watched and speculated on the contents of
-the various packages. The natural consequence of
-Blackburn’s having forbidden all traffic across the
-height of land was that Fort Good Hope loomed in the
-imagination of his people as a sort of fabulous place.
-Anything might come from there.</p>
-
-<p>By and by Gault was seen coming across the grass
-accompanied by a breed with a canvas duffle bag over
-his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“More presents for you!” cried Mary-Lou clasping
-her hands.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis permitted all the girls to be present while the
-bag was unpacked. Gault disregarded them. Thrusting
-his arm into the bag, he produced the various articles
-with a tender and proprietary smile upon Loseis.
-The Princess at such a moment was like any other
-young thing; breathless with anticipation, all her difficulties
-and dangers forgotten. First came several
-packages of novels, and an exclamation of pleasure escaped
-her. Novels had been forbidden her; and she
-had had no more than tantalizing tastes of their contents
-in the installments appearing in the magazines
-which drifted to Blackburn’s Post from time to time.
-Next came boxes of chocolates and other candies
-specially packed in tin. Next bottles of perfumes of
-various sorts, and boxes of strongly-scented soaps.
-As soon as Gault was out of the way, Loseis distributed
-these amongst her hand-maids. Next a box of elegant
-writing paper; pink, with gold edges.</p>
-
-<p>“For you to write to me upon when I am gone,”
-said Gault with his fond smile.</p>
-
-<p>(May that be soon! thought Loseis.) Aloud she
-said: “How pretty!”</p>
-
-<p>The most astonishing present came, as was most
-fitting, from the bottom of the bag. From a little
-card-board box Gault took a shining nickel cube, having
-a sort of cup at one end, covered with glass.
-When you pressed a spring in the cube, light most
-miraculously appeared behind the glass. Loseis took
-it gingerly in her hands, gazing at it with wide and
-wondering eyes. The four red girls drew back, a little
-afraid.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you can’t get the full effect of it until
-dark,” said Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“This is the electric light of which I have read,”
-said Loseis in a hushed voice. “How strange and
-beautiful!”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a box of extra batteries when it gives out,”
-said the trader.</p>
-
-<p>Batteries meant nothing to Loseis. The gleaming
-torch had laid a spell upon her imagination. She
-switched it on and off. How strange, how strange
-this little light that she summoned and dismissed with
-a touch of her finger, like a fairy servant!</p>
-
-<p>“If you went through the Slavi village some night
-with that in your hand it would create a sensation,”
-said Gault laughing.</p>
-
-<p>His laughter jarred on Loseis. “No use frightening
-them for nothing,” she said. “I might need it some
-time.”</p>
-
-<p>In the beginning it would have irked Loseis very
-much to receive these presents from Gault, but now she
-felt no qualms. He is counting on getting it back many
-times over, she thought.</p>
-
-<p>During the course of the afternoon, Loseis and her
-girls were astonished to see Gault’s men climbing to
-the roof of Blackburn’s House. Alongside the chimney
-they affixed a tall pole. When it was up, wires were
-strung from it to the top of the flagpole in the middle
-of the little plaza. Loseis’ curiosity could no longer
-contain itself. She went across to ask what they were
-doing.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait until to-night,” said Gault, smiling. “You
-are dining with me to-night. Afterwards there is to
-be a surprise.”</p>
-
-<p>That dinner was full of new things for Loseis. A
-crowning touch was supplied by a potted geranium in
-the center of the table, bearing three scarlet blossoms.
-Never before had that flower bloomed at Blackburn’s
-Post. A cry of admiration broke from Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“The parson’s sister sent it to you with her compliments,”
-said the trader. “She has them blooming all
-winter in her parlor.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis’ heart suddenly went out to this unknown
-sister of her own color. “What is she like?” she
-asked shyly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, just what you’d expect a parson’s sister to be,”
-he said indifferently.</p>
-
-<p>The food was strange to Loseis; but for the most
-part highly agreeable. First there was a queer, spicy
-soup. Mulligatawney, Gault called it, and Loseis
-laughed at the ridiculous-sounding word. It must have
-come out of a can, she reflected. This was followed
-by a great roast of beef which is extraordinarily esteemed
-as an article of food up North, simply because
-it is so hard to come by. (“A steer was slaughtered
-at Fort Good Hope expressly for you,” said Gault to
-Loseis with a bow.) With the roast beef were served
-potatoes and stewed tomatoes, both novel dishes at
-Blackburn’s Post. For dessert came on a plum pudding,
-likewise out of a can; and this Loseis considered
-the best thing she had ever tasted. There were, besides,
-small dishes containing olives which the guest
-did not like; and salted almonds which she did.</p>
-
-<p>Pride forbade Loseis to betray any further curiosity
-concerning the “surprise” but with every mouthful she
-took, she was thrillingly conscious of an oblong box
-that rested on a small table at the side of the room,
-covered by a cloth. That must be the surprise of
-course. It had a most exciting shape.</p>
-
-<p>After the table had been cleared, Gault sought to
-tease her, by lighting up his cigar in leisurely fashion,
-while he talked of indifferent matters. But he didn’t
-get any change out of Loseis, who sat quietly with her
-hands in her lap, looking at the fire.</p>
-
-<p>Finally he said: “Wouldn’t you like to know what is
-under that cloth?”</p>
-
-<p>“Whenever you are ready,” said Loseis politely.</p>
-
-<p>Gault laughed, and jerked the cloth away. Loseis
-beheld a beautiful box of a polished red wood, having
-in the front of it several curious black knobs with indicators
-and dials above them. The whole apparatus
-was suggestive of magic. Gault began to turn the
-knobs, and Loseis, holding her breath, prepared herself
-for anything to happen; red and green flames perhaps,
-with a Jinn springing up in the middle.</p>
-
-<p>When it came, it let her down suddenly from that
-awful suspense. It was not startling at all, but sweet.
-Music mysteriously filled the room, coming, not from
-that box, but from an unknown source. It melted the
-heart with its sweetness. It resembled the music of
-a violin with which Loseis was familiar, but infinitely
-fuller and richer, with strange, deep undertones that
-caused delicious shivers to run up the girl’s spine.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, what is it? What is it?” she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“Music from Heaven,” said Gault grinning.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment she believed him. Closing her eyes,
-she gave herself up to the entrancing sounds. It was
-too beautiful, too beautiful to be of this earth. Yet it
-was not strange; it seemed like something she had always
-been waiting for; it satisfied a longing. It caused
-her to think of her father and of her lover. The
-thoughts of death and of love became intermingled in
-her mind, intolerably sweet and bitter. The tears
-swelled under her eyelids.</p>
-
-<p>Then Gault destroyed the spell that he himself had
-evoked. “It’s coming through fine, to-night,” he remarked
-to Moale. “No interference.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis dropped down to earth. A recollection came
-to her. “It is the radio,” she said quietly. “I have
-read of that, too.”</p>
-
-<p>It was a music of many voices, now loud, now soft;
-one voice then another spoke above them all; then all
-were raised together. Shrill, merry voices running up
-and down like laughter; voices as plaintive as the
-laughter of loons at dusk; deep, sonorous voices that
-suggested courage and endurance. Loseis tried in vain
-to pick out the tune. It had a meaning; but one could
-not grasp it. It was like listening to the whole world.</p>
-
-<p>“What makes such music?” she whispered.</p>
-
-<p>“Orchestra,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis had met with this word in books; but she did
-not know the meaning. She would not ask.</p>
-
-<p>“A whole crowd of instruments together,” said
-Gault. “Little fiddles, medium size fiddles, and big
-fiddles; wooden horns and brass horns of every size
-and shape; and a row of drums.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where is it coming from?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“From the station in Calgary.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis was lifted up on the wings of wonder again.
-From Calgary! A thousand miles away! She visualized
-the long ten miles ride to the Lake; and tried to
-imagine a hundred times ten miles. It was too much;
-the mind could not take it in. She thought of the night
-outside, and suddenly it became clear to her why the
-silence of Northern nights was so profoundly disturbing.
-It was not a silence at all; the night was full
-of these voices from all over the world, winging
-through the sky, and the heart was sensible to them,
-though the ears were deaf.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you do it? How do you do it?” murmured
-Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it would take old Marconi to explain that,”
-said the trader laughing.</p>
-
-<p>Ah! will Paul and I ever listen to such music together?
-thought Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>The music came to an end. After a pause a man began
-to speak. This affected Loseis even more
-strangely than the music. A man speaking to them in
-a quiet, friendly voice, as if he was there beside them!
-And he was not there. A spirit was amongst them
-without its body. Awe gripped Loseis. She shivered,
-and looked over her shoulder. Gault watching her,
-chuckled, and she shrank sharply into herself again.</p>
-
-<p>The man was giving a humorous account of how he
-went with his wife to buy a hat. He spoke of the
-crowds of people in the streets, and the gayly decorated
-shop windows. Loseis was too much filled with
-wonder of the voice to pay heed to the story. He
-said: “I met her at the Palliser Hotel this afternoon.”
-Yet he was a thousand miles away! He said:
-“I took her into the restaurant, and when she said she
-wasn’t hungry, I prepared myself for the worst.”
-Gault and Moale laughed, and Loseis looked at them
-in surprise. A thousand miles! A thousand miles.</p>
-
-<p>It was a jolly, friendly voice that reassured the
-child’s heart of Loseis. And it was clear that he was
-speaking to others whom he knew to be as honest and
-kind as himself. Loseis had a sudden vision of the
-populous, kindly world lying outside, and her breast
-yearned over it. The friendly voice seemed to bring
-her so close, to admit her to that world. But a realization
-of her loneliness swept over her. There was that
-thousand miles of prairie, muskeg and forest lying between.
-Alone! Alone! worse than alone, for she was
-hedged about with false and lying men who wished her
-ill. Ah! If she could only communicate with the honest
-people, they would not let her come to harm.
-Drawn quite out of herself, Loseis rose to her feet,
-stretching out her arms.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, if I could only speak to him!” she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>Gault laughed heartily. “That would require a
-whole transmitting station,” he said. “Quite a different
-matter from getting it.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis dropped back in her chair. She glanced at
-the trader with involuntary dislike. What a coarse
-animal under his fine manners! she thought.</p>
-
-<p>When the concert came to an end, Gault said: “To-morrow
-night, we’ll get the Slavis into the kitchen,
-and spring it on them,” he said laughing. “Lordy!
-what a scatteration there will be!”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis got up to go. “You will do what you like, of
-course,” she said coldly. “But do not expect me to
-come.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why?” asked the surprised Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a beautiful, wonderful thing,” said Loseis,
-looking wistfully at the red box. “I should not care to
-see it made a mock of.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well, in that case,” said Gault quickly, “no
-Slavis! I brought this over solely to give you pleasure,
-Princess!”</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='102' id='Page_102'></span><h1>CHAPTER IX<br/> <span class='sub-head'>AN UPSET</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>G</span>ault</span> and Moale were breakfasting in the men’s
-house.</p>
-
-<p>“How about the fur here?” asked Moale.</p>
-
-<p>“All in good time,” said his master.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you got the key to the warehouse?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. But of course I have to make out that it’s
-sealed up in the desk.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t see what you expect to gain by that bit of
-flummery,” said Moale.</p>
-
-<p>“No?” said Gault sarcastically. “I am keeping the
-girl out of her father’s papers, am I not? .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I
-know what I am doing. Suppose some one should
-come in here? Everything would be found in order;
-Blackburn’s will, his accounts, his letters. I have
-taken nothing, because there was nothing I wanted;
-it was sufficient for me to read it all.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was in his will?” said Moale curiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he left everything to the girl, of course. That
-doesn’t signify anything, because if there was no will,
-the courts would award it to her anyway.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’d like fine to have a look at that fur,” said
-Moale with glittering eyes. Fur was his passion. If
-he had other passions, he kept them hid.</p>
-
-<p>“You are to keep away from the warehouse for the
-present,” said Gault peremptorily.</p>
-
-<p>“I have read the inventory,” said Moale. “There
-are ten black fox skins of the first quality. I have
-never seen so many at one time. Those alone will
-bring from a thousand to fifteen hundred each. Besides
-the silver and the cross foxes; the mink, otter
-and fisher. The whole lot is worth well above a hundred
-thousand at present prices.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite that,” said Gault. “But I’m playing for a
-bigger stake, and I don’t intend to jeopardize it by
-making any premature move.”</p>
-
-<p>“How much is the girl worth?” asked Moale slyly.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” said the other coolly.</p>
-
-<p>Moale lowered his eyes; he knew very well that
-Gault was lying; but did not care to let him see that he
-knew. Presently he said: “The news of Blackburn’s
-death will be all over by now. That fool Etzooah
-let it out at our post before I could stop his mouth.
-And Conacher carried the news north with him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I had no thought of keeping it secret,” said Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“How about Gruber, then? If you keep him waiting
-too long at the Crossing, he’s likely to come down here
-to see what’s up.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve written to Gruber telling him that if he will
-wait a few weeks, I’ll send him the fur as soon as I
-can arrange matters.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe that letter won’t satisfy him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if he comes he shall have the fur. It will
-be a good way of getting him away from here again.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should hate to see that fur get out of our hands,”
-said Moale. “That’s real; that’s the goods! Whereas
-the other thing .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” He shrugged.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a fool,” said Gault contemptuously. “The
-girl is all but ready to drop into my arms. All I need
-is a little time.”</p>
-
-<p>Moale looked down at his plate again.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of the confidence that Gault had expressed,
-this conversation brought forward the little worrying
-anxiety that lingered in the back of his mind. Here
-were the days passing one after another, and could
-it be honestly said that he was making progress with
-Loseis? Sometimes he was sure he was—sometimes
-not so sure. She was such a baffling creature; at one
-moment as open and easily moved as a child and the
-next moment revealing a maturity of mind and an
-originality that startled him. At other times she was
-as provoking and secretive as an Indian. To be sure
-of late she had been generally friendly, even sympathetic;
-but try as he would, he could not get their relations
-on the man and woman plane, the plane of
-courtship. Loseis eluded him like a sprite.</p>
-
-<p>In his heart Gault cursed the time that must be
-wasted in wooing a civilized miss. They managed such
-things better in a simpler state of society, when the
-girl would have been hit over the head, and dragged
-off without more ado. Women have never really
-become civilized, he thought; they need to be beaten
-still. Well, having an eye to the outside world, he
-could not actually do this, but should he not apply the
-principle? Perhaps he had been too gentle, too considerate
-a wooer. That only set her up in her own
-opinion. It was ridiculous to suppose that a mere slip
-of a girl who didn’t know her own mind could resist
-a mature and strong-willed man like himself. The
-time had come for him to overbear her by the mere
-force of his personality. She would thank him for it
-in the end. A Loseis, humbled and loving; Ah! what
-a seductive picture!</p>
-
-<p>Gault had his horse brought, and mounting, rode
-across to the Women’s House, well aware that he appeared
-to the best advantage on a horse. He knocked
-at the door without dismounting, and when Loseis appeared,
-she was obliged to look up at him, proudly
-holding his seat, and making believe to soothe his
-horse, while secretly fretting him with his off heel.
-But no light of admiration appeared in Loseis’ clear
-eyes. She took horsemanship as a matter of course.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you ride up to the lake with me?” asked
-Gault. “I have grub for two. I think you ought to
-show yourselves to the Slavis just to remind them that
-you are the mistress here.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis cocked an eye at the sky. It was like an inverted
-bowl of palest turquoise. “Surely!” she cried.
-“I’m longing for a ride. Give me five minutes to
-change my skirt.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Rose was sent running to fetch Loseis’ horse.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis and her horse appeared simultaneously.
-This was the first time that Gault had beheld the girl’s
-riding costume. It comprised Strathcona boots;
-breeches; a blue flannel shirt; and a flat-brimmed man’s
-hat set crookedly on one side of her head. The shirt
-was open at the neck, and under the collar she had
-knotted a gay red and yellow kerchief. She turned
-up her face to the sky, all open, drinking in the light
-with joy; and Gault, observing her hair, softer and
-blacker than anything else in Nature, the tender brilliance
-of her eyes, and her flower-petal lips, felt a pain
-like a needle go through his breast, and lost his sense
-of mastery.</p>
-
-<p>He thought: The devil is in it, that she is able to
-hurt me so! She must never be allowed to suspect her
-power.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis vaulted on her horse. They trotted down
-the rise, and passing between the tepees, splashed
-through the small stream. Clawing their way up the
-further bank, their horses broke into a gallop in the
-clean grass. Summer had pronounced her benediction
-on the North, and the world was like a freshly painted
-picture. Loseis, who was ahead, sang out:</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, what a day for a ride!” To herself she
-added: “If that was Conacher pounding along behind,
-I should be the happiest girl alive!”</p>
-
-<p>Their way led more or less close to the river. There
-were but two horse trails leaving Blackburn’s Post;
-that to Fort Good Hope, and this one which, after
-circling the easterly shore of Blackburn’s Lake, struck
-south to the distant rendezvous near the Crossing.
-Rich bottom lands alternated with occasional gravelly
-ridges to be crossed. Conversation was impossible;
-for horses trained to the trail will not travel abreast;
-however Gault, knowing that they would be out all
-day, was content to bide his time.</p>
-
-<p>Descending into a lush meadow, already fetlock
-deep in grass, Loseis clapped heels to her horse, and
-set off, yelling like an Indian. Her sorrel mare laid
-her ears back and went like the wind. She would have
-yelled too if she could. The sight brought that needle-pain
-back to Gault’s breast, by reminding him that
-his day for yelling and running was forever past.</p>
-
-<p>In another meadow they came upon a herd of
-horses quietly feeding, and Loseis paused to look them
-over. These were the broken horses kept on this
-side, while the wild horses ranged across the river.
-Blackburn on the day he was killed, had been engaged
-in rounding up these horses to take out the fur.</p>
-
-<p>When they rode up on top of the ridge which
-formed the cut-bank known as Swallow Bend, all
-Loseis’ gayety was quenched. She slipped out of her
-saddle, and without speaking, handed her rein to Gault
-to hold. Creeping to the edge of the bank, she looked
-over. In the gravelly stuff below she could easily follow
-the marks where the horses had first struck, and
-then rolled down into the water. A wild regret filled
-her heart, and her tears ran fast.</p>
-
-<p>They were still falling when she returned to Gault,
-and silently received her rein. Her grief was as natural
-and spontaneous as her gayety had been an hour
-before. The ageing man bit his lip and cursed her in
-his heart for being so beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>Just below the lake they forded the main stream
-through a brawling shallow rapid, the Slavi village being
-on the other side. Scores of tepees rose here, as
-well as several log shacks built in imitation of the
-white man for winter use. Their coming was beheld
-from afar, and a tremendous commotion arose in the
-village; the news was shrieked from tepee to tepee.
-Upon their entrance a dead silence fell; and the Slavis,
-like school children all adopted a look of vacant stupidity
-as a cover for their embarrassment. Loseis did
-not dismount; but rode up and down, speaking to this
-one and that.</p>
-
-<p>Tatateecha, the head man of all the Slavis came
-to her stirrup. He was a round little man, distinguished
-amongst all the tribe by his fleshiness. The
-responsibilities of headship had given him more steadiness
-of character too, but not much more. Loseis
-did not hold him accountable for the excesses at the
-Post. Tatateecha made a flowery speech of welcome
-to Loseis; and another to Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“You are wasting your breath,” remarked Loseis.
-“He does not understand your tongue.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is he the trader now?” asked Tatateecha slyly.</p>
-
-<p>“No!” said Loseis with a flash of her eyes. “He is
-my guest.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Do you wish to trade with him?” she
-added.</p>
-
-<p>“No! No!” said Tatateecha earnestly. “He has
-the name of a hard trader. They tell me that the
-people at Fort Good Hope are always poor.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, then,” said Loseis. “Serve me, and I
-will deal with you justly and fairly as my father did.
-You never knew want when he was alive.”</p>
-
-<p>Tatateecha’s eyes twinkled. To be talking in this
-manner under the very nose of the proud Gault appealed
-to the Slavi sense of humor.</p>
-
-<p>“This man wishes me ill,” Loseis went on. “He
-would take my post from me. I look to you and your
-people to be my friends, and help me to keep what is
-my own.”</p>
-
-<p>Tatateecha in his redskin style swore fealty. Unfortunately
-he was not to be trusted far.</p>
-
-<p>“I have another thing to say,” Loseis went on.
-“The man who fetched this man into our country—I
-do not name him because this man would hear me; you
-know the man I mean. That false person is this person’s
-spy, so beware how you open your hearts to him.
-I have finished.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis and Gault rode on. They left Tatateecha
-looking rather scared, but Loseis told herself that at
-least her speaking to him would do no harm.</p>
-
-<p>“What were you talking about?” asked Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he was apologizing for the way his people behaved
-in the store, and I was telling him it had better
-not happen again,” said Loseis carelessly.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond the village the land rose to a low bluff which
-commanded a prospect of the lake. Here they turned
-out their horses, and sat down in the grass to eat.
-After the pleasant, diversified country they had ridden
-through, an astonishing panorama met their eyes.
-The whole earth suddenly flattened out. They were
-upon the only bit of high ground that approached the
-lake. In front of them a sea of water and a sea of
-grass stretched to the horizon; and it was impossible
-to say where the one ended and the other began. On
-either hand in the far distance ran the bordering hills.
-The only thing there was in sight to break that tremendous
-flatness was a flock of wild swans a mile or
-more away, fluttering their wings in the sun.</p>
-
-<p>When they had satisfied their hunger, Gault bethought
-himself that it was time to take a firm tone
-with Loseis. He said bluntly:</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know, you’re a damn pretty girl.”</p>
-
-<p>He prepared himself for an explosion; but Loseis
-surprised him again.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I know it,” she said coolly; looking at
-him with a slanting smile.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know it? You’ve never seen any
-white girls.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, one knows such things anyhow,” she said
-shrugging.</p>
-
-<p>“Has any man ever told you?” demanded Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Loseis, clear-eyed as the sky; but thinking
-of Conacher nevertheless.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m telling you,” said Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks,” said Loseis with a quick smile.</p>
-
-<p>The smile annoyed the trader. It seemed to express
-something other than gratitude. “Do you know what
-they sometimes call me?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis shook her head.</p>
-
-<p>“Kid-Glove Gault. An allusion to my manner, of
-course. Everybody knows that it conceals an iron
-hand. I have been through a hard school, and I have
-come out hard. I choose to be courteous because I
-despise those who surround me. I have taught myself
-to stand alone.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis became very uncomfortable. Why does he
-tell me all this? she thought.</p>
-
-<p>“Look at me!” he said peremptorily.</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head, pressing her lips together. If
-I did, I should burst out laughing in his face, she
-thought.</p>
-
-<p>Gault was not ill-pleased by her refusal. It seemed
-to testify to his power. “There is another side to my
-nature,” he went on, “which I have never revealed to
-a living soul. All the softer feelings which other men
-scatter in a hundred directions I have saved up for
-one!”</p>
-
-<p>Mercy! ejaculated Loseis to herself.</p>
-
-<p>“But it is not to be given lightly,” said Gault. “I
-am a proud, jealous, and violent man. I may be led
-by one whom I trust, but never driven. I shall never
-let down my guard until I am assured that the one I
-have chosen is worthy .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>This sort of talk put Loseis on pins and needles—she
-could not have told why. Her body twitched, and
-her face was all drawn up in a knot of comical distaste.
-She kept her head averted from Gault. Oh,
-if he would <span class='it'>only</span> stop! she was saying to herself.</p>
-
-<p>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. of my confidence,” he went on; “such is my
-character. I am not trying to excuse it. I have long
-been indifferent to both praise and blame. The
-woman who places her hand in mine must .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis could stand no more. Springing to her feet,
-she ran back towards the place where the horses were
-grazing.</p>
-
-<p>“Excuse me a moment,” she called over her
-shoulder. “I must water my horse.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault with a black face had sprung up to follow
-her. But he checked himself. That would be <span class='it'>too</span>
-ludicrous for one of his years and dignity. Besides,
-she could probably run faster than he. He ground
-his teeth with rage. “A coquette!” he muttered. “By
-God! I’ll tame her!”</p>
-
-<p>All the way home he glowered at her back, but
-Loseis could not see that.</p>
-
-<p>After supper she went across to hear the radio concert
-in some trepidation; but Gault received her with
-his usual smooth and well-controlled face; and she
-felt relieved. He treated her with the most exquisite
-courtesy. This high manner may have concealed terrible
-fires within; but Loseis was not worrying about
-that. She gave herself up to the music.</p>
-
-<p>After it was over, Gault walked home with her.
-That rare day had been succeeded by a still rarer
-night. Low in the southerly sky hung a great round
-moon. Measured by the standards of southerly latitudes,
-the moon behaves very eccentrically up there.
-After describing a short arc across the southern sky,
-she would go down in an hour or so not far from
-where she had risen. In the meantime she held the
-world in a breathless spell of beauty. In that magical
-light the rude buildings of the Post created a picture
-of old romance. There was a silvery bloom upon the
-grass; and the velvety black shadows suggested unutterable
-meanings that caught at the heart. The
-shadow of Gault’s house reached almost to Loseis’
-door.</p>
-
-<p>They paused there; and Loseis looked around her
-with a tight breast. (Is he somewhere under this
-moon thinking of me?) “This is the night of the
-whole year!” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we are free, white, and twenty-one,” said
-Gault. “Why go to bed? .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The best place to see
-moonlight is on the river. Come out in a canoe with
-me for an hour.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis’ intuition warned her not to go—but one
-does not always listen to one’s intuitions. She was
-tempted. He can’t do any more than talk, she
-thought; I guess I can stand it. I shall be looking
-at the moonlight, and thinking of the other one.
-“Very well,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Go in and get a coat,” he said. “I’ll come back
-for you in two minutes.”</p>
-
-<p>He hastened back to his own kitchen. One of his
-Crees was sent down to the creek mouth to find a
-canoe. Of the others, one played a banjo and all
-could sing the old-fashioned songs that are still current
-in the far North. These were stationed on a
-bench outside the kitchen door with orders to sing,
-<span class='it'>not loud</span>. After all there was something magnificent
-about Gault. In his dark way he had imagination.
-But he was fifty-three years old!</p>
-
-<p>When they got down to the water’s edge the Cree
-was holding the canoe for them to step into. By
-Gault’s orders he had chosen not one of the usual bark
-canoes of the Slavis which are little more than paper
-boats, but a dug-out of which there were several lying
-in the creek. These heavier and roomier craft are
-however, no more stable than the others. Loseis perceived
-that a nest of blankets and pillows had been
-arranged for her in the bottom.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I like to paddle,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Give me the pleasure of looking at you in the
-moonlight,” murmured Gault.</p>
-
-<p>Again Loseis felt strong compunctions; but it
-seemed too ridiculous to back out then; especially with
-the Indian looking on. She got in; and Gault, taking
-his place in the stern, paddled out into the main
-stream.</p>
-
-<p>Heading the canoe down river, he allowed it to
-drift. That brought Loseis reclining under his eyes
-in the full shine of the moon; while he, sitting up on
-the thwart, was blackly silhouetted against the light.
-Presumably it was very lovely on the river—Loseis
-observed how the face of the water seemed to be
-powdered with moon-dust; and at any other time her
-heart would have been melted by the distant strumming
-of the banjo, and the muted voices; but now it
-was all spoiled for her by that silhouette. How
-could she think of Conacher while the other man’s
-eyes were boring into her. She was sorry she had
-come. She became sorrier when Gault began to
-speak.</p>
-
-<p>“You are beautiful!” he said in a masterful voice.
-“I want you!”</p>
-
-<p>At first Loseis was only conscious of astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>“Want me?” she echoed blankly.</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow I shall send over to my Post for the
-parson,” he went on, coolly. “He may bring his sister
-with him to attend upon you. We shall be married
-in your house. It will be more fitting.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis was literally struck dumb. She sat up
-straight, trying to peer into the shadowy face that
-was almost invisible to her, her mouth hanging open
-like a child’s.</p>
-
-<p>Gault laughed fondly. “Do not look so frightened,”
-he murmured. “I will take good care of you
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. little sweetheart.”</p>
-
-<p>A little strained note of laughter was surprised out
-of the girl. The last word sounded so funny, shaped
-by those stiff old lips.</p>
-
-<p>Gault ascribed it to nerves. It did not put him off
-at all. “As soon as we are married,” he went on.
-“Let us take advantage of the Summer season to make
-a trip outside. A handsome spirited girl like you will
-enjoy seeing the cities. You shall have everything that
-your heart desires. And we will be able to attend
-to the business of your father’s estate. I don’t mean
-places like Edmonton or Calgary. What would you
-say to New York .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. London?”</p>
-
-<p>As he talked on a chill of terror struck to Loseis’
-breast. He seemed so very sure of himself! The
-fond, elderly voice made her feel like a little girl
-again. “Do I <span class='it'>have to</span> marry him?” she asked herself,
-trembling.</p>
-
-<p>The river was very high. The muddy borders
-which would show themselves later, were now completely
-covered. The overhanging willows trailed
-their branches in deep water. Without noticing it,
-they had drifted close to the easterly shore.</p>
-
-<p>Gault’s ardor increased. He dropped forward in
-the bottom of the dug-out, and crept closer to Loseis.
-Putting a hand down on either side of her for support
-and balance, he strained towards her. Loseis
-got a hateful whiff of the scented breath again.</p>
-
-<p>“Seal it with a kiss, sweetheart,” he murmured.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis’ blood rebelled, and all uncertainty left her.
-She was no longer the child, but an aroused woman.
-She wriggled her body further forward in the dug-out,
-out of his reach.</p>
-
-<p>“Easy! Easy!” he cried sharply; “or you’ll have
-us over!”</p>
-
-<p>“Marry you!” cried Loseis with a burst of clear
-laughter that flayed him raw. “You ugly old man!
-The husband I have chosen is not like you!”</p>
-
-<p>Gault drew in his breath with a moan of rage; and,
-careless of the danger, began to creep towards her.
-At that instant a willow branch brushed against the
-girl’s hair. Springing up, Loseis embraced a whole
-mass of the leaves within her arms, and swung herself
-out. Under the violent propulsion of her body, the
-narrow craft rolled over in a twinkling, and Gault was
-precipitated into the water.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis sank into the icy water up to her neck, and
-hung there, dangling from her branches. For a moment
-there was silence; then Gault’s head emerged
-from the river, and the night was shattered by a roar
-for help. Loseis saw him seize the canoe, and knew
-that he was in no danger of drowning. He was no
-more than twenty feet from her, but drifting away on
-the current.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis worked her way along her slender branches,
-to thicker branches, and finally gained a footing on
-firm ground. Gault, drifting downstream continued
-to roar for help. Making her way across the flat below
-the Post, Loseis met Moale, and the Crees running
-in response to their master’s cries. The Slavi
-village was in an uproar.</p>
-
-<p>“Gault is in the river,” said Loseis coolly. “He’s
-in no danger. Get canoes and go after him.”</p>
-
-<p>Reaching her own house Loseis found the terror-stricken
-girls huddled in a group. At the sight of
-her drenched clothing, Mary-Lou clasped her hands
-tragically.</p>
-
-<p>“What has happened?” she gasped.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis did not answer her immediately, but only
-leaned back against the door with widening eyes. For
-suddenly she had realized what <span class='it'>had</span> happened, and
-was appalled by the certain consequences. She alone
-there with that pack of terrified girls!</p>
-
-<p>“Bar the door,” she said. “Shutter the windows.
-We’ll have to stand a siege now! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. No, wait!”
-she cried as they moved to obey her. “We must have
-weapons. The men won’t be back for half an hour.
-I’ll fetch guns from the store!”</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='118' id='Page_118'></span><h1>CHAPTER X<br/> <span class='sub-head'>CONTRABAND</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>A</span>ll</span> night long Loseis and her girls listened in
-trepidation, but none approached their house.
-In the morning, Loseis, disdaining to remain under
-cover any longer, sallied out of the house to find
-Gault, and have it out with him. Anything was better
-than uncertainty.</p>
-
-<p>The trader was at breakfast in the kitchen of the
-men’s house. Seeing Loseis at the door, he rose
-quickly, showing a smooth, composed face, but with
-eyes as hard as agate. “Good morning,” he said with
-extreme politeness; “I trust that you received no hurt
-from your ducking last night. I was coming over
-directly to inquire. How inexcusably careless of me!
-I shall never forgive myself!”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis waved all this aside. “I should like a few
-words with you,” she said as politely as he.</p>
-
-<p>“Please come in,” said Gault. He indicated the
-inner room.</p>
-
-<p>“I would be glad if you would step outside,” said
-Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly!”</p>
-
-<p>They walked away from the door, followed by the
-sharp, secret glances of the Crees. Gault rubbed his
-upper lip. Under the mask he wore, an uneasiness
-made itself felt. Certainly he had not expected Loseis
-to look him up, nor could he guess what was coming.</p>
-
-<p>She wasted no words in coming to the point. “When
-you heard of my father’s death you hastened over
-here to help me, you said. If your intentions were
-good, I thank you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you doubt it?” asked Gault sharply.</p>
-
-<p>She spread out her hands. “What difference does
-that make now? Whether you wished to help me or
-not it would be impossible under the present circumstances.”
-She paused for a moment. It required a
-strong nerve to say this to Andrew Gault. “I must
-therefore ask you to leave the Post as soon as possible.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a silence. Gault stared at her incredulously.
-In spite of his iron self-control a blackish
-flush spread under his skin. Infernal passions
-were raging under his mask. But he fought them
-down. He said nothing. He fell back a step, that
-Loseis could not see his face without turning squarely
-around.</p>
-
-<p>“Well?” she said sharply. “Have you nothing to
-say?”</p>
-
-<p>“What is there to say?” he murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“You could refuse to go,” said Loseis proudly.
-“If you refused to go, of course I could not make
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I could not refuse,” said Gault with a sort of hollow
-reverberation of his usual full and courteous
-tones. “You put me in an extraordinarily difficult
-position. I do not think you should be left alone here;
-but of course I cannot stay.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall manage very well,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sorry you think so badly of me,” said Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I shall not think badly of you, if you will only
-leave me alone,” said Loseis quickly. “I shall always
-be grateful to you!”</p>
-
-<p>Silence again. Gault literally ground his teeth.
-After awhile he was able to say: “You are mixing up
-two things together.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are mistaken,” said Loseis. “The two things
-are quite separate in my mind. I have had all night
-to think them over.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you wish me to leave Mr. Moale here to assist
-you?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“No, thank you,” said Loseis firmly. “Furthermore,
-I should be greatly obliged if you would carry
-Etzooah back with you.”</p>
-
-<p>For the fraction of a second the flames broke
-through Gault’s mask. “Suppose you needed a messenger!”
-he cried.</p>
-
-<p>“I should not choose Etzooah to be my messenger,”
-said Loseis quietly.</p>
-
-<p>He quickly controlled himself. “Very well,” he
-said; “we will be off as soon as we can get our traps
-together. Say to-morrow morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, suit your convenience, of course,” said Loseis
-politely.</p>
-
-<p>Gault’s expression changed. His hard eyes turned
-askance on the girl. “Upon consideration,” he said,
-more smoothly than before, “I am sure we will be able
-to get away late this afternoon. We can make our
-first camp up on the prairie, where we will at least be
-out of your sight.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis bowed; and they parted out in the middle of
-the little square.</p>
-
-<p>When Gault re-entered the kitchen of the men’s
-house, he did not speak. The expression on his face
-was frightful to see. One by one the Crees, making
-believe to have noticed nothing amiss, slipped outside.
-Even Moale did not care to face that look. He
-sauntered out after the others. Gault sat down as if
-to finish his meal; but he touched no food. He merely
-sat there with his hands on the edge of the table and
-his head lowered, thinking; thinking.</p>
-
-<p>Finally he rose; and going into Blackburn’s room,
-coolly produced a key, with which he opened a wall
-cupboard. From it he took an earthenware jug, one
-of several on the shelves; and locking up the cupboard,
-carried the jug back to the kitchen table. Removing
-the cork, he smelled of the contents, but did
-not taste. It was a known thing in the country that
-Gault was not a drinking man. He called out to have
-Etzooah sent to him.</p>
-
-<p>When the grinning Indian stood before him, Gault
-said curtly: “This afternoon, just before supper time,
-I shall be starting away from here. You are to come
-with me.”</p>
-
-<p>Etzooah nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Etzooah,” the trader continued, fixing his burning
-glance on the man, “do the Slavis know the taste of
-whisky?”</p>
-
-<p>“Wah!” said the Indian, showing his blackened
-teeth; “Tatateecha know it. And some of the old
-men. Twenty-five years ago there was a party of
-Klondikers went down this river. They had whisky.
-They hand it round. Blackburn had whisky too, but
-he did not give the people any.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can you teach the younger men to drink it?” asked
-Gault with an ugly smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Wah!” said Etzooah, with his silent laugh. “No
-need teach! All know what whisky is. The story of
-the white man’s stomach-warming medicine is often
-told over the fire.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good!” said Gault. “When we leave here to-day,
-you may take them that jug of Blackburn’s whisky.
-Let it be carried out of the house with the other
-things when we are packing up. Just before we start,
-you may go down behind the house, that the white
-women may not see you, and give it to Mahtsonza for
-all. Do not tell them that I sent it. Say that you
-found it in Blackburn’s room, and I never missed it,
-because I am not a whisky-drinker.” Gault leaned
-across the table, and lowered his voice. “And tell
-them as if not meaning anything by it, that there are
-four more jugs in the little cupboard on the wall of
-Blackburn’s room.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” said Etzooah, grinning still. “What if
-there is trouble after?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll take care of that,” said Gault coolly. He had
-recovered his self-control.</p>
-
-<p>“All right. All right,” said Etzooah.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk'/>
-
-<p>During the course of the day, Loseis cast many an
-anxious glance across the way. Certain obvious preparations
-for departure were immediately set under
-way; the pole on the roof was taken down, and the
-wire rolled up on spools; the pack-horses which had
-been turned out in the meadow across the creek, were
-rounded up, and driven into the corral attached to
-Blackburn’s stable. So much done, Gault could have
-left within an hour had he chosen, but a long time
-passed before any further move was made.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, towards the end of the afternoon, the
-Crees began to carry their bedding rolls out of the
-kitchen. The horses were led out and saddled, their
-packs adjusted, and the hitches thrown. By five
-o’clock all was ready for the start. After another
-wait, Gault came marching over to the Women’s
-House. Loseis met him at the door.</p>
-
-<p>Exhibiting his finest manner, he smiled politely.
-“I know this must be disagreeable to you,” he said,
-“but I thought it better to keep up appearances before
-my servants and yours. I have come to say good-by.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was expecting you,” said Loseis. “I wish to return
-the various gifts which you .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no!” said Gault sharply. “Do not put that
-slight upon me before these redskins. Surely you
-have done enough.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” said Loseis, “if you feel that way about it,
-it does not matter, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>He immediately recovered himself. “Let us appear
-to take a friendly good-by of each other.”</p>
-
-<p>“Surely,” said Loseis. “Perhaps you will take a
-letter out for me? I understand that the mail is carried
-from Fort Good Hope every month.”</p>
-
-<p>“Charmed!” said Gault.</p>
-
-<p>She gave him the letter which had been written during
-the afternoon. It was addressed to Gruber at the
-Crossing. She realized that if the first letters had
-not been sent out, this one would hardly be allowed to
-go; still, it was a chance that must not be neglected.</p>
-
-<p>Gault, standing hat in hand, said with his polite
-smile: “I shall give myself the pleasure of sending
-over from time to time, until assistance reaches you
-from the outside. Though you repudiate it, I still
-feel responsible for you.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis smiled back—a little quizzically. Is it worth
-it? her smile said.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-by,” said Gault, putting out his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-by,” said Loseis, letting hers lie within it.</p>
-
-<p>He strode back to his waiting party, and swung himself
-into the saddle. The Crees cried to the pack-horses,
-and all set off briskly out of the inclosure, disappearing
-behind the store. Presently they were to
-be seen on the trail above, trotting up the incline;
-smart, well-found, arrogant, modeled upon the style
-of the old Company. Loseis breathed more freely.
-To be sure, they were not gone yet, for Gault had
-said they would camp for the night on the edge of
-the prairie. She was not in the least deceived by his
-politeness. There would be another night of anxiety
-to face, but not so keen as the previous night; for the
-violence of his rage must have abated somewhat.
-Loseis realized that she had not so much to fear from
-violence now, as from the man’s cold craft.</p>
-
-<p>She went into her house. The supper was waiting.
-The thoughtless red girls, thinking only that Gault
-was gone, were all smiles. Loseis had Mary-Lou to
-sit down with her at table, in the effort to keep at bay
-that ghastly feeling of solitude that crept over her
-like the coming of night. Alone! Alone! Alone!
-And so long before she could hope for succor! She
-gave the girls a highly comic account of Gault’s proposal
-the night before, laughing loudly herself. Anything
-to keep the bogies at bay!</p>
-
-<p>It was about an hour afterwards when they first began
-to realize that something was amiss in the Slavi
-village. There was an ungodly sound of singing going
-on. The Slavis frequently made the twilight hours
-hideous with their wordless chanting. Loseis was accustomed
-to it. To-night it was different; it had an
-insane ring; they were burlesquing their own performance,
-and screaming with laughter. It was significant
-too, that the voices of the women were not to
-be heard. Loseis scarcely knew what drunkenness
-meant, or she would have understood sooner.</p>
-
-<p>She went to the little window at the end of the room
-which overlooked the river flat. Though it was eight
-o’clock the sun had not yet dropped out of sight. All
-the Slavi men were gathered in a rough circle around
-a fire on the creek bank. There was no order in the
-company; some lay about; some danced with extravagant
-gestures. The ordinary dance of the Slavis was
-a decorous shuffle. The women were nowhere to be
-seen. Every moment the scene became more confused,
-and the yelling louder.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving the window, Loseis said: “I am going down
-to see what is the matter.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou flung herself upon her mistress: “No!
-No! No!” she cried in despair.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis was very pale. She firmly detached the
-clinging hands. “There is nothing else to be done,”
-she said simply. “If I do not notice this, my influence
-over them is gone!”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis went sedately down the grassy rise, neither
-hurrying, nor hanging back. Her back was straight;
-her face composed. Her look of proud scorn lent a
-strange poignancy to her childishness. Her heart
-might have been fluttering like a frightened child’s,
-but nobody could have guessed it. Mary-Lou, seeing
-her face, wept aloud, without knowing what it was
-that had moved her so.</p>
-
-<p>As Loseis came near, the Slavis around the fire fell
-quiet and still. Only one of them jumped up, and ran
-away, carrying something. Loseis recognized the
-figure of Mahtsonza. He ran across the stepping-stones
-of the creek, and climbed up the further bank.
-The rest of them were orderly enough now: but their
-drunken, swimming eyes and hanging mouths told a
-tale.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis stepped into the middle of the circle.
-“What means this howling that beats against my
-ears?” she demanded. “Are your brains full of ice?
-(The Slavi phrase for insanity.) Is this a pack of
-coyotes or men?”</p>
-
-<p>None answered her. They merely looked stupid.</p>
-
-<p>Mahtsonza, a furlong off by this time, and feeling
-himself safe, turned around exhibiting the earthenware
-jug. He insolently turned it up to his lips.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis recognized the style of the jug. Her heart
-sank at the young man’s act of open defiance; but no
-muscle of her face changed. “Now I understand,”
-she said coldly. “Blackburn’s whisky has been
-stolen.”</p>
-
-<p>“No steal,” muttered the man called Ahchoogah.
-“It was a gift.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who gave it?” demanded Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>There was no answer.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis stepped to the nearest tepee, and stuck her
-head through the opening. Within, a crowd of dejected
-women and children, crouched around a tiny
-fire on the ground.</p>
-
-<p>“Where did they get it?” demanded Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>A voice answered: “Etzooah brought it.”</p>
-
-<p>All was clear to Loseis. She sickened with disgust
-that a man big and powerful as Gault could stoop to
-so cowardly a trick.</p>
-
-<p>Returning to the men she said in a voice of scorn:
-“Call Mahtsonza back. Drink what is left. Drink
-until you lie like rotten logs! When you return to
-yourselves you shall be punished!”</p>
-
-<p>By this she meant that a fine would be entered
-against each man’s name on the books. Letting her
-eyes sweep around the circle as if to fix each face in
-her memory, she stepped out of the circle, and returned
-to her house without looking back.</p>
-
-<p>The moment the door closed after her, the yelling
-broke out again, now with a clear note of defiance and
-derision. They wished her to understand that though
-they could not face out her strong glance, behind her
-back they spat at her. Looking out of the end
-window she could see them capering about, indulging
-like children in an outrageous pantomime of derision
-directed towards her house. Loseis quickly turned
-away. It was a bitter, bitter dose for her pride to
-swallow. “They should be whipped! They should
-be whipped!” she said, with the tears of anger springing
-to her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>However, she felt a little better when she reflected
-that there was only one gallon of whisky between
-about forty men. It was only because they were
-totally unused to the stuff that it had affected them
-as quickly and so violently. The effect could not last
-long.</p>
-
-<p>As on a former occasion at the suggestion of
-danger, Loseis found that the three Slavi girls had
-quietly vanished. “Let them go!” she said shrugging.
-“They would only be in our way.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis determined that she and Mary-Lou should
-sleep in the store. As long as she could keep them
-out of the store, she held the whip hand. When the
-two of them appeared outside the house, carrying their
-beds across the square, jeers and yells greeted them
-from below. Mary-Lou’s coppery cheeks turned
-grayish with fear; but Loseis’ chin went higher.</p>
-
-<p>“Cowardly dogs!” she said. “If I went down there,
-their voices would dry up in their throats.”</p>
-
-<p>As soon as it began to grow dark, she set the lighted
-lamp in the window of the store, to remind the Slavis
-that she was on guard.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly afterwards the whole gang swept up into
-the little square within the buildings. They all carried
-branches and sticks; one or two had lighted brands
-from the fire below. Yelling and capering like
-demons, they piled their fuel in the center of the space,
-and set fire to it. In a few seconds the flames were
-leaping high, illuminating every corner of the square,
-and throwing the fantastic leaping shadows of the savages
-against the house fronts. Through the little window
-of the store, Loseis watched them with a stony
-face. To bring their orgy within the very confines of
-the Post! A hideous chill struck into her breast. If
-they dared so far, what might they not dare!</p>
-
-<p>Soon, like the savages they were, they lost interest
-in their bonfire. The noise quieted down somewhat.
-Loseis ventured to hope that the effect of the spirit
-might be beginning to wear off. The jug was not
-visible. Presently she noticed that their attention was
-concentrated on her father’s house. Some of them
-were nosing around it like animals; others stood senselessly
-trying to peer through the dark panes; near the
-door a man was haranguing his fellows, waving his
-hand towards the house, Loseis could not hear his
-words.</p>
-
-<p>The crowd around the door increased. Finally one
-ventured to put his hand on the latch. The door was
-not locked. It swung inward, and all the Slavis fell
-backward in affright. The same man who had opened
-the door, crept back on all fours, and sticking his head
-inside, uttered a senseless yell. The others shrieked
-with laughter. Still, they dared not venture in. They
-gathered together in a close body outside the door,
-and the sound of their jabbering reached Loseis
-faintly. Suddenly those at the back began to push,
-and the first ones were thrust inside. Instantly they
-all swept in. With a sickness of the heart, Loseis saw
-one run back to the fire, and snatch up a pine branch
-with a burning end.</p>
-
-<p>The girl groaned. It affected her like an act of sacrilege.
-Blackburn was indeed dead when these miserable
-savages feared not to overrun his house. She
-expected to see his private papers scattered out of the
-door; she waited for the house to burst into flames.</p>
-
-<p>However, destruction was not their present aim.
-They reappeared almost immediately, yelling in triumph.
-He who came first held another jug aloft; and
-others followed; Loseis counted: two .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. three .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-four! Her chin went down on her breast. Well .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-this is the end, she thought.</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou had seen, too. “Quick! we must go!”
-she gasped. “They will kill now! Quick! through
-the little window at the back!”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis slowly shook her head. “No! You can go.
-I stay. As long as I am here they will not dare to
-enter the store.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look! Look!” cried Mary-Lou. “What they
-care now? They will kill you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” said Loseis somberly; “but I will not run
-from Slavis. You go.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou dropped to her knees, and hid her face
-in Loseis’ skirt. “No! No!” she whispered. “I
-never leave you.”</p>
-
-<p>Pandemonium had broken loose outside. Some had
-rifled Blackburn’s wood pile; and armful after armful
-of fresh fuel was thrown on the fire. The Slavis took
-leave of what little humanity they had. The jugs
-were snatched from hand to hand; tipped up to thirsty
-mouths; and snatched away again. But even in their
-drunkenness they did not fight amongst themselves.
-The fighting instinct was absent in this degenerate
-people. It was an ugly thing to see the miserable little
-creatures, born under the shadow of fear, and obliged
-to cringe to all men, now released of their fears by
-whisky. They expressed their freedom by throwing
-their heads back and howling like dogs; and by
-dancing around the fire with legs and arms all abroad
-like jumping-jacks. The great, round moon, rising a
-little higher to-night, looked down on this scene with
-her accustomed serenity.</p>
-
-<p>Finally they began to turn their attention to the
-store. At first they did not dare to approach; but one
-or another would hide behind his fellows and squall
-derisively in the direction of Loseis. The others
-would laugh in the childish way of savages. These
-were merely animal cries, without words. Later
-Loseis began to hear the word Burn! cried from one
-to another. She shivered internally. Meanwhile the
-jugs were still circulating, rousing them to a pitch of
-frenzy.</p>
-
-<p>At last a man snatched up a stick with a burning
-end. Instantly a dozen others followed his example.
-Loseis knocked out a pane of glass with her elbow;
-and put the barrel of her gun through the hole.</p>
-
-<p>But the Slavis never reached the store. Something
-caused them to freeze where they stood. The whole
-mad, shifting scene suddenly became fixed like a
-picture. Then they dropped their torches and fled;
-vanishing in the silent manner peculiar to themselves.
-You could scarcely see how it happened; you looked
-again, and they were not there. A moment or two
-after the sound had reached their ears it came to
-Loseis within the house. It was the distant pounding
-of many hoofs on the trail.</p>
-
-<p>When Gault and his men rode into the little square,
-Loseis was standing at the open door of the store.
-She still had the gun over her arm. Gault flung himself
-off his horse.</p>
-
-<p>“Good God! what has happened?” he cried. “I
-heard the racket clear to my camp, and jumped on my
-horse. Are you hurt?”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis slowly shook her head.</p>
-
-<p>“Is any damage done?”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis indicated the empty jugs lying scattered
-about. “None; except that my father’s whisky has
-been drunk up,” she said dryly.</p>
-
-<p>“My God!” cried Gault. “The brutes! I hated to
-leave you this afternoon, but I didn’t expect to see my
-fears materialize this way. Now you see, don’t you,
-that I was right. You cannot be left here alone.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis did not speak. She looked at him steadily,
-her lips curving in a slow smile of scorn. She was
-thinking: Let him babble! It only makes him out a
-fool. I shall not tell him all I know. To keep silence
-gives me a power over him.</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='133' id='Page_133'></span><h1>CHAPTER XI<br/> <span class='sub-head'>A MEETING</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>A</span>longside</span> a vast inland sea whose further
-shores were lost under the horizon, a tall young
-white man was cooking his supper in the open. The
-meal was going to be better than usual, for, having
-been camped in the same spot for a week, he had
-been able to secure game. On a spit before an ingeniously
-constructed fireplace of stones, a wild goose
-was roasting. The young man turned the spit, and
-basted his fowl. He kept the wooden spit from catching
-fire by the simple expedient of basting that
-also. At a little distance two Indians looked on with
-covert scorn at their master’s elaborate arrangements.
-What a lot of trouble to take to eat! They had been
-content to impale their goose for awhile on a stick
-inclined over the fire; whence they snatched it scorched
-on one side and raw on the other.</p>
-
-<p>The young man, while taking an innocent pleasure
-in his own ingenuity, was thinking how unsatisfactory it
-was to cook your own dinner. When it first began to
-sizzle you became weak with hunger; but the continued
-spectacle took the fine edge off your appetite
-long before the meat was done.</p>
-
-<p>A dug-out nosed its slender length around a near
-point, and a shrill hail electrified them all.</p>
-
-<p>“Conacher, thank God!” cried the young man.</p>
-
-<p>The two Indians ran down to the water’s edge; but
-their master would not leave his goose which was
-browning beautifully.</p>
-
-<p>From the dug-out landed an exactly similar outfit;
-that is to say a tall young white man and two Indians.
-The two white men clasped hands, and their eyes
-beamed on each other. However, they were shy of
-betraying emotion before the reds, and their greeting
-was distinctly casual.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, old bean! Where the hell you been? The
-boss has gone down the lake, leaving me to fetch you.
-Do you know that you’ve held up the whole blooming
-survey?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a long story,” said Conacher. “Oh boy! is
-that a roast goose I see? Let me get my teeth into it,
-and then I’ll tell you.”</p>
-
-<p>When they had thoroughly discussed the goose,
-they lighted their pipes; and Alec Jordan invited
-Conacher to fire away. Jordan was about three years
-older than Conacher; and they were tried friends.
-The Indians around their own fire, were out of earshot.</p>
-
-<p>“What delayed you?” said Jordan. “It was downstream
-work all the way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gad! it’s good to have a white man to talk to!”
-said Conacher. “I’m damn thankful it’s you, old
-scout. I couldn’t have told the others.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why this emotion?” asked Jordan humorously.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it concerns a woman,” said Conacher, looking
-away.</p>
-
-<p>His friend’s face hardened. “An Indian?” he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“No, damn you!” cried Conacher indignantly.
-“What do you think I am?”</p>
-
-<p>Jordan opened his eyes. “But between here and the
-Rocky Mountains,” he said, “around Blackburn’s
-Lake, and down Blackburn’s River, what else is
-there?”</p>
-
-<p>“There is Blackburn’s daughter?” murmured Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“Oho!” cried Jordan. “I forgot about her.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Indeed, I thought she was still a little girl.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t josh it!” muttered Conacher. “This is the
-real thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry, old man,” said Jordan, touching his
-shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“Blackburn is dead,” said Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“I knew it,” said Jordan. “The boss knew it, too.
-But it never occurred to us to connect your delay with
-his death. We figured you would have been past his
-Post before the date of his death.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was,” said Conacher. “But I went back.”</p>
-
-<p>He went on to tell the whole story; how he had first
-come to Blackburn’s Post, of the trader’s ungracious
-reception and the daughter’s scornful one; how he had
-gone on down the river; how the little raft had come
-floating by his camp with the pathetic black streamer;
-and how, yielding to an impulse that he had scarcely
-understood, he had hastened up-stream. He ended his
-story with the coming of Andrew Gault to Blackburn’s
-Post.</p>
-
-<p>“I could leave her then with an easier mind,” he
-said. “Gault knew everything to do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” said Jordan; but in so uncertain a tone, that
-Conacher asked him sharply:</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?”</p>
-
-<p>Jordan looked at him queerly; and the lover’s anxious
-heart was filled with alarm.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you keeping back?” he demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know as I ought to tell you,” said Jordan
-slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s just gossip. We’ve got our work to do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you put me or our work first?” demanded Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, since you put it that way, you!” said Jordan.</p>
-
-<p>“Then tell me.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what can you do, now?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind. You tell me, and I’ll make up my
-mind what I can do. I’m a grown man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Jordan, “when you told me that Gault
-had come to the aid of Blackburn’s daughter I couldn’t
-help but think it was like the wolf coming to save the
-lamb.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I know,” said Conacher impatiently, “something
-of that sort occurred to me, but hang it all! no
-white man could be blackguard enough to take advantage
-of a young girl in that situation!”</p>
-
-<p>Jordan smiled affectionately at his friend. “You’re
-young, my son,” he murmured. “I don’t know as I
-would put it by Gault.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I suppose you’ve never
-heard the full story of Blackburn and Gault?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, how should I?” said Conacher. “Coming
-from the mountains.”</p>
-
-<p>“True, this is your first season. I’ve been in the
-country three summers, and I’ve picked up all the gossip.
-It’s one of the stock stories of the country how
-Blackburn and Gault have been fighting each other
-for twenty years, and Blackburn has beaten out Gault
-at every turn. Gault had to obtain financial assistance
-outside. But here’s a new piece of information that
-came to me pretty straight. Nothing can be hidden in
-this country. It seems that Ogilvie, Gault’s backer,
-told Gault on his last visit to Fort Good Hope that
-the Company would fire him if he didn’t succeed in
-putting Blackburn out of business.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher’s face darkened with anxiety. “I wish I
-had known that!” he muttered. “How did you hear
-of Blackburn’s death?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yesterday, before the boss pulled out, we got mail
-from Good Hope by the half-breed Modest Capeau.
-When he left the fort the news of Blackburn’s death
-had come; and Gault had gone over there.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”
-Jordan hesitated, with an embarrassed glance at his
-friend.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, out with it!” said Conacher sharply.</p>
-
-<p>Jordan shrugged. “According to the gossip at Fort
-Good Hope, Gault said that he was going to marry
-the girl.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher jumped up. “Oh, my God!” he cried
-agitatedly. “That old man! What the devil will I
-do!”</p>
-
-<p>Jordan followed him. “How about the girl?” he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“She loves me, Alec,” said Conacher simply.</p>
-
-<p>Jordan gripped his shoulder. “Old fellow .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-you deserve to be happy!” he said warmly.</p>
-
-<p>“Happy!” cried Conacher bitterly. “I never should
-have left her!”</p>
-
-<p>“But you had to leave her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh hell, what does the government matter in a
-case like this.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Wait a minute. I must try to
-think this out. How far can you trust this gossip?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well I’m bound to say this is more than common
-gossip,” admitted Jordan. “It was Joe Moale, the
-man closest to Gault, who told the fellows he had
-heard Gault swear that he would marry the girl.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-But she won’t have him, of course. No doubt everything
-will be all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, God! don’t try to smooth things down!” cried
-Conacher. “She is completely in his power. The only
-Indian who could speak English was murdered .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Of course she’ll reject him! And then what? Then
-what? Oh, my God! think of the girl being left in
-the power of the man she had turned down! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-I never should have left her. But how could I stay
-with all you waiting for me? .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Well, it’s different
-now. I’ve done the bit of work that was entrusted to
-me. I can put all the data in your hands. After this
-they can get along without me if they have to.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“My God! Paul, what are you talking about?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going back,” said Conacher quietly.</p>
-
-<p>“You <span class='it'>can’t</span> go back! Think of the row that would
-be kicked up!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll have to face it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll lose your job. Where will you get another?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s true, nobody wants a geologist but the government.
-But I’m young; I’ll make out somehow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my God! this is terrible!” cried Jordan.
-“We’re so shorthanded already!”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you blame me?” demanded Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>Jordan’s expression changed. “No, I don’t blame
-you, really,” he said. “Go on back, and God bless
-you! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But it’s me that’s got to face the boss.
-You know what he is. At the first mention of a girl
-he will think the worst. He’s depending on your
-Indians, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Take them,” said Conacher. “Your dug-out is
-big enough to carry all five. I couldn’t pay them anyhow.
-All I want of the government is enough grub
-to see me through.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s foolhardy to travel alone!” cried Jordan.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right,” said Conacher. “I’m not going
-to break a leg this trip. I can’t afford to. The only
-thing that bothers me is, it’s all up-stream work. I
-can’t make but twenty miles a day.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish it was me,” said Jordan enviously.</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='140' id='Page_140'></span><h1>CHAPTER XII<br/> <span class='sub-head'>FUR</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>Q</span>uite</span> early in the morning, Loseis, issuing out
-of her house, was greatly astonished to see the
-door of the little fur warehouse standing open, and
-the bales of fur being carried out by Gault’s Crees.
-This warehouse flanked the store on the left hand side
-as you faced the river; on the other side there was a
-similar building for the storage of flour. Loseis’
-breast grew hot at the sight; and without more ado,
-she marched across. Gault was not in sight; Moale
-was directing the Crees.</p>
-
-<p>“What does this mean?” demanded Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>Moale turned his flat, inscrutable black eyes to the
-girl’s face. The dash of Indian blood lent a touch
-of mystery to Moale’s olive face. It was a comely
-face; but so expressionless it was impossible to tell the
-man’s age. “I beg your pardon?” he said in his pleasant
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>“You heard me!” said Loseis in a passion. “By
-what authority have you broken into my warehouse,
-and helped yourself to my fur?”</p>
-
-<p>It was quite true that Moale had opened one of the
-bales for no reason except the pleasure of seeing and
-stroking the marvelous pelts of the black foxes. He
-was a connoisseur. He said smoothly: “Mr. Gault’s
-orders, Miss. I thought you knew.”</p>
-
-<p>“I did not know,” said Loseis, “and I will trouble
-you to have the fur carried back again, and the door
-locked.”</p>
-
-<p>Moale scratched his head. “I’d be glad if you’d
-talk it over with Mr. Gault,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis imperiously beckoned to the nearest Cree.
-“Man!” she said, “tell Gault that I would be glad to
-have a few words with him.”</p>
-
-<p>While they waited for Gault, Moale busied himself
-with tying up the opened bale. He did not speak; but
-he looked at Loseis curiously and wistfully, when she
-was not aware of it.</p>
-
-<p>Gault was presently to be seen approaching from
-the men’s house. He did not hurry himself. “Good
-morning,” he said, raising his hat. His manner had
-changed. He was still polite, but it was an insolent
-politeness. His eyes were as hard as glass.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis welcomed the change. It permitted her to
-come out into the open. “Why did you give orders
-to get out my fur?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“It must be sent outside without further delay,”
-said Gault coolly.</p>
-
-<p>“Am I not to be consulted?” asked Loseis, running
-up her eye-brows.</p>
-
-<p>“It did not seem worth while to do so,” said Gault.
-“You have set yourself in opposition to me at every
-point. Just the same I have a responsibility towards
-you that I am obliged to fulfill.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am the mistress here,” said Loseis in a rage.</p>
-
-<p>“You are not of age,” said Gault coolly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you are not my guardian!”</p>
-
-<p>“No. But whoever may take your affairs in charge,
-will look to me as the only man on the spot, for an
-accounting. If the fur is not sent out at once you
-would lose the market for an entire season.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis turned away biting her lip. Whenever he began
-to talk in this vein with glib use of legal and business
-terms, she was helpless. Her instinct told her
-that he was merely cloaking his evil intentions in
-smooth words, but she had not experience enough to
-be able to strike through to the truth.</p>
-
-<p>“Besides,” Gault went on, “if we do not get the fur
-to the Crossing, Gruber will get tired of waiting for it.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis caught at this. “So,” she said, “you are
-sending it to Gruber, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“I expect to,” said Gault cautiously, “but I must
-reserve myself full freedom of action. He has got to
-satisfy me that he can dispose of it to the best advantage
-of your interests.”</p>
-
-<p>“When does it go?” asked Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“By the usual route?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I am sending it to Fort Good Hope; and
-thence by my launch to the Crossing.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis felt that here was a point she could stick on.
-“I would rather have it go by pack train as usual,
-direct to the Crossing over the prairie,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“That would take two weeks longer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just the same, I request you to send it in that
-manner.”</p>
-
-<p>“I must decline.”</p>
-
-<p>The red flags flew in Loseis’ cheeks. “You have
-said that it was my fur,” she said. “Very well, I order
-you to send it out as I desire.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault, cool and hard; frankly enjoying the spectacle
-of her anger, said: “And I decline to do so.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis observing that she was furnishing him with
-enjoyment, contrived by a miracle to control herself.
-“Thank you very much,” she said coolly. “I was just
-trying to find out where I stood. Shall you accompany
-the consignment?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Gault darkly, “I remain here to look
-after you.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis bowed, and marched back to her own house.
-Gault looked after her, rubbing his lip. His thin
-mouth was twisted with anger and bitterness. By
-God! there was a spirit in the girl! Never had she
-seemed so desirable to him as at that moment. Moale
-too, looked after her with a deep wistfulness in his
-mysterious eyes. The tang of red blood cut him off
-from any hopes in that direction.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis put her feet down like a little princess; but
-her eyes were stinging with tears. She conducted an
-orderly retreat, while her heart was bursting with
-mortification. It was intolerable to be so proud and
-so helpless. Helpless! Helpless! Her sex, her
-loneliness, her ignorance delivered her three times
-over into the power of this man. She was certain
-now that he intended to rob her, and she could do
-nothing!</p>
-
-<p>During the whole day the preparations went on.
-The pack-saddles were got out; and the fur was
-divided into lots of a suitable size for a horse load.
-Gault sent Moale to the Women’s House with a
-polite message requesting Loseis to come to the store
-to issue the necessary grub. She proudly handed over
-the key, telling them to take what they required, and
-leave a memorandum of it.</p>
-
-<p>In the afternoon the horses were rounded up. As
-many were put into the corral as it would hold, and
-the rest picketed in the square. Upwards of seventy
-horses were required for the entire outfit. To make
-any sort of progress between twelve and fifteen men
-would be needed to pack and unpack the horses twice
-a day. Moale and two of the Crees were going, while
-the other two remained to wait upon Gault. Loseis
-observed that Ahchoogah, Mittahgah and others of
-the Slavis who had accompanied the fur train on other
-years, were working willingly enough with the horses.
-This started a train of thought in her mind.</p>
-
-<p>Gault is too strong for me, she told herself; why
-shouldn’t I trick him if I can?</p>
-
-<p>With the passing of danger, the three Slavi girls
-had come sidling back into the kitchen of the Women’s
-House, and Loseis indifferently took them in, partly
-because she was accustomed to having them wait on
-her; and partly because they furnished a useful link
-with the Slavi village below. She now called Mary-Belle
-to her.</p>
-
-<p>“Can it be true,” she asked, “that Ahchoogah, Mittahgah,
-and other men are going to Fort Good Hope?
-That place is dangerous for Slavi men.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wah! they would not go to that place!” said
-Mary-Belle with a look of terror. “There is bad
-medicine in that place! Gault has said if they will
-drive the horses as far as the red spring, the water of
-which makes men and horses sick and well again, he
-will give each man a Stetson hat and a mouth-organ.
-Blackburn never had mouth-organs in his store. The
-red spring is half way between the two rivers. Gault
-says for the Slavis to leave the horses there and come
-home. Musqua (one of the Crees) is riding fast to
-bring the Crees from Fort Good Hope. Moale and
-Watusk (the other Cree) will watch the horses and
-the fur at the red spring until they come. So there is
-no harm.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis let the subject drop.</p>
-
-<p>After supper, choosing a moment when she believed
-that Gault and Moale were still at the table, she went
-over to the store. Fastening the door behind her, she
-climbed through the back window, and making her
-way down to the creek shore, followed it down to the
-Slavi village. Of course if Gault happened to look
-out of the end window of his house, he could see her
-amongst the Slavis; but then it would be too late to
-interfere with her purpose.</p>
-
-<p>The air was still full of a pleasant warmth, and the
-Slavis having just eaten, were squatting in groups outside
-the tepees, laughing and chatting in their ceremonious
-way. It is only in the presence of a white
-man that the Indian is taciturn. By this time the men
-had thrown off the alcoholic poison which had made
-them sick for days, and a general feeling of well-being
-was in the air. Fathers fondled their little sons, and
-abused their womenfolk; and the latter accepted it
-with equanimity.</p>
-
-<p>At the approach of Loseis a dread silence fell upon
-them, and they drew a walled look over their dark
-faces. It was the first time she had visited them since
-that terrible night, and they expected the worst. But
-Loseis was bent on playing a part to-night. Her face
-was as smooth as their own, and much blander.
-Allowing them to suppose that she had forgotten what
-had happened, she addressed this one and that by
-name with grave politeness; promised a mother medicine
-for her sick child, and handed out peppermint
-lozenges to the little boys who were the idols of the
-tribe. Nobody would have thought of giving the little
-girls candy.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis sat down on an overturned dug-out, with the
-manner of one who is prepared to hold agreeable discourse.
-The Slavis began to gather round, but always
-with that absurd pretense of not letting their left hands
-know what their right hands were doing. Loseis was
-very wonderful to them, too wonderful to inspire affection;
-awe was nearer the word.</p>
-
-<p>At first she talked of the stage of water in the river;
-the promise of a full crop of berries; the scarcity of
-rabbit; all subjects of first-rate importance to the
-Slavis. Ahchoogah, the oldest man present, in order
-to prove how bold he was, undertook to answer her
-politely to her face. When Loseis perceived that she
-had gathered the audience she wanted, she went on
-casually:</p>
-
-<p>“The wind is from the setting sun. There will be
-no rain. It is well. The men who are going to-morrow
-will see Fort Good Hope in five sleeps.”</p>
-
-<p>A tremor of uneasiness passed through her listeners.
-“No, no!” said Ahchoogah. “We are not going
-to Fort Good Hope. At the red spring we will
-turn back.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is Gault’s talk,” said Loseis courteously.
-“All know that Gault’s talk hides a snare. When you
-get to the red spring you will not want to turn back.
-Gault’s medicine will draw you on. It is very strong
-medicine. It’s name is electricity. I know it, because
-Gault brought me a little piece of it when he came
-here. The girls at my house have told you that. It
-opens its eye in the dark.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis paused to allow this to sink in. She fancied
-that she perceived fear behind the blank masks of the
-Slavis; but could not be sure. None spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“I have heard of many strange things at Fort Good
-Hope,” she went on with an air of indifference that
-the Slavis could not outdo. “Men say that Gault is
-Old Man’s partner. Old Man say to Gault; I lend
-you my strong medicine, but when you die you must
-be a dog to my sledge. Gault thinks he will cheat Old
-Man, by going away to the white man’s country to
-die. Maybe so. I do not know such things. I hear
-them told.”</p>
-
-<p>She paused again. The men looked down their
-noses. A woman crept to Loseis’ feet, and twitched
-her skirt.</p>
-
-<p>“Loseis, tell my son not to go,” she said tremulously.</p>
-
-<p>“If he wants to go, what is that to me?” said Loseis
-with an air of surprise. “He will see strange things.
-When Gault claps his hands—Wah! there is light.
-Gault catches the voices of the air on his wires and
-brings them into his room. He did that in my father’s
-house and I made him stop, because I did not want the
-Powerful Ones to fix their eyes on me! Etzooah has
-told you these things. At Fort Good Hope Gault
-keeps great beasts fastened to the earth. They have
-fire in their bellies and they do his bidding. When
-they open their mouths you can see the fire, and steam
-hisses through their nostrils as from many kettles in
-one. When they are hungry they scream so that a
-man falls flat on the ground to hear it. These fiery
-beasts eat men too, and Gault is always worried because
-he has no men to spare. So he is glad when
-strangers come to Fort Good Hope.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis rose, feeling that she could hardly better this
-conclusion. She held out her hand in turn to Ahchoogah,
-to Mittahgah, to Mahtsonza and the others there
-that she knew were going next day. “Good-by.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Good-by. You are good hunters. You bring me
-plenty of fur. I am sorry that you go.”</p>
-
-<p>She returned home. It was impossible to tell how
-the Slavis would react next day; but she had done her
-best.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk'/>
-
-<p>Early next morning Loseis was at her window.
-Nothing was changed. The horses were still picketed
-in the square; and the Crees were lounging about the
-doorway of the men’s house. The lordly Crees had
-no notion of bestirring themselves while there were
-Slavis to do the hard work. By and by Gault appeared
-in the doorway, and with vigorous pantomime
-of anger evidently demanded to know why nothing
-had been started. He was told; whereupon Etzooah
-was dispatched down to the Slavi village in a hurry.</p>
-
-<p>From the other window Loseis watched Etzooah
-haranguing the Slavis, and expostulating with them.
-It was all in vain. He was finally obliged to return
-cringing to Gault, shrugging, spreading out his hands
-in significant by-play. Gault’s face turned black, and
-he aimed a furious kick at Etzooah, that the wily redskin
-dodged. Gault went inside; while Etzooah
-slipped around the house. Gault reappeared carrying
-an ugly quirt. Summoning his Crees with a jerk of
-the head, he set off down the rise. The tall redskins
-followed with cruel grins of anticipation.</p>
-
-<p>Back at the end window, Loseis saw the miserable
-little Slavis driven like sheep by the five tall men. But
-sheep were never used so brutally. The sneaking Etzooah,
-reappearing from the creek-bed, pointed out
-the wanted ones, who were driven up the rise with incontinent
-kicks and cuffs, and the furious lashing of
-the whip. Squeezing their bodies together to offer as
-small a mark as possible, the diminutive savages
-darted this way and that, to find that they could only
-escape punishment by running straight ahead. The
-Crees yelled with laughter. The Slavis, cowering,
-made haste to start packing the horses, and Loseis
-made up her mind that she had lost.</p>
-
-<p>Oscillating between the two windows, she presently
-saw that the Slavis below were striking their tepees,
-and piling everything pell-mell into the canoes, and
-she took heart again. She knew the Slavis better than
-Gault did. Either Gault did not notice what the
-people were about, or he disdained them. There was
-no interference with them. They presently set off in
-a cloud up-river, paddling as if the devil were behind
-them. So precipitate was their departure that a small
-boy who had gone down amongst the willows to set
-muskrat snares, returned to find his village wiped off
-the flat. After prowling around to see if by chance
-any scraps of food had been overlooked, the child set
-off composedly up-river by the horse-track.</p>
-
-<p>Soon afterwards Loseis perceived that Gault was
-having trouble with his gang. In the process of saddling
-the pack-horses, some of the Slavis had disappeared.
-The four Crees were sent off in different
-directions to round them up. This was a fatal move,
-because Gault and Moale could not possibly watch all
-the others, and Etzooah would always play double.
-The Slavis, on their part, have an uncanny faculty of
-choosing the moment when no eye is upon them to
-fade away silently: to slip behind a building, to roll
-down the creek bank, to lose themselves in the bush of
-the hillside. In spite of Gault’s whip, and his terrible
-voice, his crew literally melted away before his eyes.
-After making long detours, they would rejoin their
-people somewhere above. Even weakness is not without
-its resources.</p>
-
-<p>When the Crees returned empty-handed, the Slavis
-were reduced to five. These were all but surrounded;
-nevertheless, it was presently discovered that there
-were but four, without anybody being able to say what
-had become of the fifth. In any case it would have
-been impossible for such a small number of men to
-pack and unpack seventy horses twice a day. Gault
-gave up. The remaining Slavis were dismissed with
-kicks, and the trader, doubtless in a hellish rage, strode
-back to his house. Near the door, the grinning
-Etzooah spoke to him. For an instant Gault showed
-a murderous face in Loseis’ direction; then went inside.
-Loseis experienced a feeling of the sweetest
-triumph.</p>
-
-<p>However, within an hour, two of the Crees with
-their bedding and grub set off on the easterly trail, and
-her heart sunk again. In four or five days they would
-be back with a swarm of Crees from Fort Good Hope.
-What good would four days do her? She had only
-succeeded in prolonging the agony.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing the last of their people disappear, the Slavi
-girls exhibited the frantic, unreasoning fear of half-broken
-horses deserted by the herd. Loseis scornfully
-let them go. They slipped around behind the Women’s
-House, and were not seen again.</p>
-
-<p>The pack-horses had been turned out again; and
-the fur carried back into the little warehouse. The
-lock of the warehouse had been forced out of respect
-to Gault’s pretense that the key was sealed up in
-Blackburn’s desk, and no other lock was put on. The
-door was held shut by a propped pole.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Gault had not returned the key to the
-store; and after waiting a few hours, Loseis sent
-Mary-Lou across the square with a polite request for
-it. The girl returned without it, and bearing a message
-equally polite, to the effect that henceforward
-Gault would relieve Miss Blackburn of the trouble of
-attending upon the store. Until her duly constituted
-representative arrived, he would administer it together
-with the rest of her property.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis was never the one to take this lying down.
-She instantly marched over to the store. The door
-was fastened with a padlock through staples. Loseis
-bethought herself that there were crow-bars somewhere
-about the post. However she found an easier
-way. Gault had overlooked the fact that the little
-back window was out. Loseis climbed through, and
-obtaining a file and a new lock from the store, returned
-to the front of the building and set to work. It was a
-long job in her inexperienced hands; but she was supported
-by the agreeable thought that Gault was watching
-her. By the end of the afternoon she found herself
-inside. Putting in the rear window, she fastened
-the new lock, and returned to her house to supper
-dangling the keys from thumb and forefinger.</p>
-
-<p>After supper Moale came over. Loseis received
-him at the outer door. Whatever his private feelings
-may have been did not appear. He said in an impassive
-voice:</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Gault instructs me to say that you and your
-girl must prepare to go out to Fort Good Hope when
-the fur goes in four or five days’ time. He can no
-longer take the responsibility of keeping you here
-while the Slavis are in open rebellion.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis laughed scornfully. “He can always find
-respectable-sounding words, can’t he?” she said.
-“You’re a white man, aren’t you? I should think you
-would feel ashamed to be the carrier of such lying
-words.”</p>
-
-<p>Moale’s face changed not a muscle. Some secret
-feeling made him proof against her scorn. He was
-not altogether white. He had not looked directly in
-her face.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis’ temper got the better of her. “You tell
-Gault, I shan’t go!” she cried.</p>
-
-<p>In his even voice Moale said: “I am instructed to
-say that Mr. Gault is prepared for that.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis shut the door.</p>
-
-<p>During the hours that followed she walked up and
-down her room, half beside herself with balked rage.
-What possible answer was there to this latest threat
-of Gault’s. He had hinted at using force. He intended
-to lay hands on her. To Loseis’ flaming blood
-there were only two possible answers: to kill herself or
-to kill Gault. The first alternative she immediately
-rejected; that was the counsel of weakness. Nothing
-would please Gault better than for her to kill herself.
-She would kill Gault then, before he should lay hands
-on her. But ah! <span class='it'>dared</span> she take the life of a white
-man? She had had so vivid an experience of death
-taking a man in his strength.</p>
-
-<p>Besides there were three other men. She could not
-hope to shoot them all before she was seized. She
-would be carried out anyhow. She visualized the
-horrors of a trial of which she knew so little; she
-imagined the cloud of lies that would beat her down.
-She had no one to speak for her but Mary-Lou; and
-Mary-Lou would never be allowed to speak. And if
-she were, the simple red girl would be struck dumb
-with terror. Disgraced! Disgraced! thought Loseis.
-Parted from Conacher without hope in this life. She
-buried her face in her hands. I must not kill him!
-she thought in terror. I must not let myself kill him.
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But how can I help it if he lays hands on me!</p>
-
-<p>If Gault had come over without warning to seize
-her, Loseis would have snatched up a gun, and shot
-him without thinking about it. But with devilish cunning
-he had sent to tell her of his intention. He was
-giving her four days in which to go mad with trying
-to find a way out when there was none.</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou was terrified by the expression on her
-mistress’ face. She held out her arms imploringly.
-“Please .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. please to go to bed,” she whispered.
-“You will sleep. To-morrow you feel better.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sleep!” cried Loseis. “I shall never sleep again!”</p>
-
-<p>“Please .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. please,” persisted Mary-Lou. “Please
-stop walking.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go to bed, you,” said Loseis angrily. “Let me be
-by myself. Close the door after you.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou went sadly out.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis pressed her knuckles against her temples. I
-must be quiet! she told herself. I must think what I
-am doing! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Quiet! The only thing that would
-quiet me would be to go across and call him to the
-door and shoot him! Ah, then I could sleep! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I
-must not think such things! I must not! I must always
-be telling myself it would not end things to kill
-him; it would only begin worse things! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But what
-is the use? I know I shall suddenly kill him! If he
-lays hands on me! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. If I were a man he would not
-dare! She flung her arms above her head. “O God!
-why didn’t you make me a man! It is too hard to be a
-girl!”</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk'/>
-
-<p>It had been dark for some time. To-night the
-silence was even more complete, for no child whimpered
-in the tepees, and no Slavi dog barked. Loseis
-was pulled up all standing by hearing a gentle tapping
-on the glass of the window alongside the kitchen door.
-These nights the inside shutters were always closed.
-She instinctively flew to her gun which was standing in
-the corner; but put it down again, smiling scornfully
-at herself. It was not in this manner that an attack
-would be made.</p>
-
-<p>Returning to the window, she said firmly: “Who
-is there?”</p>
-
-<p>A whisper came winging back: “Conacher.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis’ heart failed her; her legs wavered under
-her; she struggled to get her breath. Then in a
-flash life and joy came crowding back until she felt
-as if she would burst. She clapped a hand over her
-mouth to hold in the rising scream of joy. Gault must
-not know! “Oh, Paul! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Oh, Paul!” she murmured,
-fumbling blindly for the latch of the door.</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='156' id='Page_156'></span><h1>CHAPTER XIII<br/> <span class='sub-head'>THE FUR GOES OUT</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>L</span>oseis</span> and Paul Conacher sat on the great white
-bear rug before the fire. Said Loseis, concluding
-her tale:</p>
-
-<p>“He gave me to understand through Moale, that he
-would stop at nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“The scoundrel!” muttered Conacher. “He was
-trying to terrorize you. In reality he cannot touch
-your rights here, unless you sign them away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sign?” said Loseis sharply. “I have signed my
-name four times on blank sheets of paper for Gault.
-I had clean forgotten that.” She described the circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>“Obviously a trick,” said Conacher. “If you had
-known anything about banking methods, you would
-have seen through it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am so ignorant!” said Loseis humbly.</p>
-
-<p>“How could you be expected to know!” said Conacher.
-He mused. “I wonder how in thunder he expects
-to use those signatures.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Were they at the
-top, in the middle or at the bottom of the sheets?”</p>
-
-<p>“Towards the bottom,” said Loseis. “He pointed
-his finger, and I wrote.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course!” said Conacher. “Then he could fill
-in anything he wanted above your signature.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis leaned towards him. “What does it
-matter?” she said dreamily. “We are together!”</p>
-
-<p>“You darling!”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis was too happy to remain sitting still.
-Springing up, she threw back the little shutter. Outside
-it was broad day. “The day of my happiness!”
-she murmured. Sticking her head through the kitchen
-door, she called out: “Mary-Lou! Quick with my
-breakfast. I must set off!”</p>
-
-<p>“So soon?” said Conacher. “It’s not four.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gault mustn’t see me start. If he tried to interfere,
-you would be drawn into it, and everything
-spoiled.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll see you come back.”</p>
-
-<p>“That doesn’t matter. I shall have settled everything
-with Tatateecha then.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can we depend upon the Slavis?” asked Conacher
-anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“If it was to fight, never! But to play a secret
-trick at night, oh, yes! that’s just in their line.”</p>
-
-<p>“And I?” asked Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“You must stay close to the house all day. This
-shall be your room now .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Ah! the happy room!
-Do not go near the windows.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Where did you
-leave your dug-out last night?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hidden under the willows about a furlong downstream.
-I thought I had better communicate with you
-before showing myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“You did right! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. If the Slavis were here your
-dug-out would be discovered within an hour, but Gault
-will never find it.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. You must sleep all you can to-day.”</p>
-
-<p>“You must sleep too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! happiness has made me over! I need no
-sleep! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. However, I will be sensible. I will be
-back from the lake in three or four hours, and will
-sleep all day in the kitchen. Neither of us will get any
-sleep to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t altogether like your plan,” said Conacher
-frowning. “I should be the one to stay here.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are wrong in that,” said Loseis earnestly.
-“There is nothing of any value here. All Gault cares
-about is the fur. The post of danger is with the fur,
-and you have that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why shouldn’t you and I take it out together?”</p>
-
-<p>“No! If I left the Post, it would give Gault an
-excuse to say that I had given up my rights here.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how can I leave you alone again?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, nothing can harm me now!” cried Loseis. “I
-am guarded by happiness! I will do everything quite
-willingly that Gault forces me to do, and just be
-patient until you and Gruber come back. There is a
-sergeant of police at the Crossing. Bring him back
-too. Oh, Gault will be quite different when he knows
-that help is on the way. He has to think of the law,
-then.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher was silenced: but he did not look altogether
-convinced. They sat down to their breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>“It is like being married!” said Loseis with a sigh
-of content. “Mary-Lou, have you cooked enough for
-a man’s breakfast?”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis’ own horse and her saddle were in the stable
-behind the men’s house; therefore unavailable. Having
-improvised a halter out of a piece of rope, she
-therefore set off on foot; and catching one of the
-broken horses in the meadow beyond the creek, she
-rode it in the Indian fashion, bareback.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk'/>
-
-<p>At half-past eight she was back again. Turning the
-horse loose, she hid the halter in a bush, and returned
-across the stepping-stones. Gault was pacing up and
-down in front of his house. From this position he
-could not see her until she started to mount the rise.
-It was impossible for him to tell from what direction
-she had come. At sight of her, notwithstanding his
-self-command, his face sharpened with curiosity; and
-he changed his course in order to intercept her.
-Loseis was seized with a slight sense of panic. He
-must not read anything in my face! she told herself.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning,” said Gault, politely.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning,” returned Loseis. Alas! for all
-her care, she could feel the dimples pressing into her
-cheeks, and she knew that her eyes were shining. She
-kept her lids lowered, but that in itself was a giveaway,
-for she had been accustomed heretofore to look
-Gault straight in the eye.</p>
-
-<p>By the brief silence which succeeded, she knew that
-his suspicions were aroused. “You are up early,” he
-remarked in a carefully controlled voice.</p>
-
-<p>“I just went down to see if the Slavis had left a
-canoe that I could use,” she said carelessly.</p>
-
-<p>“I did not see you go,” said Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“It must have been an hour ago,” said Loseis. “I
-went for a walk, the morning was so pleasant.” (I
-should not be explaining things like this, she thought.
-I ought to be proud and angry with him.)</p>
-
-<p>“If you want a canoe my men will make one for
-you,” said Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, thank you,” said Loseis quickly. “It was
-just a fancy. One must have something to do.”</p>
-
-<p>She had not stopped walking, and they came to her
-door. Loseis bowed.</p>
-
-<p>“May I come in for a moment?” asked Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“Sorry,” she said quickly. “We are not ready
-for visitors so early. But if you wish to speak to me
-here I am.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it will keep until later,” said Gault. He
-touched his hat, and watched her through the door.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher was waiting for her in the inner room.
-Loseis flung herself in his arms.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, you are really here!” she murmured. “It was
-not a dream! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. If Gault could see me now!” she
-added with a laugh, like a chime of little bells.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher pressed the hair back from her forehead.
-He had been watching through the window, and his
-face was dark. “It makes me see red to have that man
-speak to you,” he muttered. “What was he after?”</p>
-
-<p>“Wanted to know where I’d been?” said Loseis.
-“Of course I didn’t tell him. But I’m afraid I gave
-away a good deal in my face. I have him badly worried.
-I hope it won’t cause him to sit up to-night, or
-set a watch on us.”</p>
-
-<p>“All is arranged then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Tatateecha will land a hundred men in the
-second river meadow at ten o’clock. They will wait
-there until it becomes dark. We’ll only have about
-four hours of darkness, and the moon will be shining.
-It cannot be helped; we must put our trust in silence.
-Slavis are the quietest animals there are.”</p>
-
-<p>A few hours later, Loseis, sleeping in the kitchen,
-was awakened by Mary-Lou who said that Gault was
-coming across.</p>
-
-<p>“He must be allowed to come in,” said Loseis. “Say
-that I am sleeping. It will give me a moment to prepare.”</p>
-
-<p>She hastened into the other room. Awakening Conacher,
-she said:</p>
-
-<p>“Gault is coming. I must let him in here in order
-to put his suspicions to sleep. Get under the bed.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher, still bemused with sleep, obeyed her; and
-Loseis, with a rapid survey of the room, gathered up
-whatever was his, and thrust it after him. The robe
-of raccoons’ tails hung down over the edge of the bed
-concealing all. She went to the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Come in,” she said, affecting to conceal a yawn.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sorry to have disturbed you,” said Gault
-smoothly. His eyes swept around the room, taking
-everything in. It was not that he expected to find
-anyone there; he was merely trying to discover what
-secret source of support Loseis had found. He gave
-her a hard look as much as to say: What are you
-sleeping in the morning for?</p>
-
-<p>Loseis, having had time to prepare, was fully mistress
-of herself. “Last night I was too angry to
-sleep,” she said coolly.</p>
-
-<p>“Hum!” said Gault, rubbing his lip. “That is what
-I came to talk to you about.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis held herself in polite readiness to hear what
-he had to say.</p>
-
-<p>“We mustn’t quarrel,” said Gault. He buttered his
-harsh voice; but his eyes were still boring into the girl.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t wish to quarrel,” said Loseis mildly. “But
-when you tell me you are going to banish me from my
-own home .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“You refuse to co-operate with me,” said Gault,
-spreading out his hands.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t give me a chance,” said Loseis. Inwardly
-she was quaking dangerously with laughter.
-If he knew what was under the bed!</p>
-
-<p>“You are so young!” said Gault deprecatingly.</p>
-
-<p>“However young I am,” said Loseis, “what is mine,
-is mine!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I may have been a little too hasty,” said
-Gault with the air of one who was making an immense
-concession. “Let us try to make a fresh start.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis reflected that if she allowed a reconciliation
-to take place she would never be able to get rid of
-him. “Perhaps I have been hasty, too,” she said, “but
-I can’t forgive you yet. Give me another twenty-four
-hours .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Come to breakfast to-morrow, and I
-promise to meet you half way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Done!” cried Gault, showing all the big teeth. I
-am wearing her down! he thought. Women do not
-mean all they say! “Expect me at eight,” he said,
-making for the door.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher crawled out from under the bed with a
-very red face. “It’s good he went!” he growled. “I
-couldn’t have stood it much longer.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. What did
-you want to ask him to breakfast for?”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis was charmed to see Conacher betraying jealousy.
-“While I have him here no discovery is likely
-to be made,” she said. “Every hour’s start that you
-can gain will help.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I hope he comes after me, that’s all,” said
-Conacher grimly.</p>
-
-<p>At ten o’clock that night Loseis and Mary-Lou
-came out of their house arm in arm, and stood in
-front of the door linked together, gazing up at the
-serene moon. Behind them crouched Conacher.
-Across the way Gault’s house was in the blackest
-shadow, and they could not tell but that the door might
-be standing open, and some one watching them from
-within. Making out to be lost in contemplation of the
-moon, the two girls, always taking care to present a
-double front to a possible watcher, edged to the corner
-of the house. Conacher then darted around behind.
-He was to make his way around the outside of the
-square and meet them beside the creek in half an hour.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis went back to close the door of her house,
-and the girls continued their stroll. From the middle
-of the square they could make out that the door of
-Gault’s house was closed. They descended to the bank
-of the main stream, and came back again. Having
-by this maneuver satisfied themselves that they were
-not being followed, they returned down the rise, picked
-up Conacher at the creek, and crossed the meadow
-beyond. Upon the gravelly ridge which bounded it on
-the other side, they came upon Tatateecha and his
-silent men, squatting on the earth with their backs to
-the moon like a patch of little bushes.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher was presented to Tatateecha as the friend
-of Loseis who must be obeyed in all things. Conacher
-himself could only issue his orders by means of signs.
-Being a white man, and therefore not to be trusted
-where absolute silence was required, he was sent down
-into the second meadow to wait. The little Slavis deployed
-in the first meadow, and slowly closing up,
-urged the horses slowly back over the ridge. In the
-second meadow they could be packed without danger
-of arousing the sleepers at the post. For this operation
-the light of the moon would be invaluable.</p>
-
-<p>Led by Loseis, the whole tribe then crept back in
-single file through the grass towards the Post. They
-crossed the creek, not by the stepping-stones, but
-higher up, immediately below the steep bank at the
-back of the men’s house and the little warehouse.
-Leaving her men at the bottom of the bank, Loseis
-went up to make a reconnaissance. She crept up to the
-wall of the men’s house, and rounding the front corner,
-edged, a foot at a time to the door. Laying her
-ear to the crack, she was rewarded by hearing heavy
-snores within. No watch was being kept. What had
-Gault to fear from two girls?</p>
-
-<p>Returning to her men, Loseis gave the signal, and
-the business of the night began. Loseis herself removed
-the pole that propped the warehouse door, and
-let it back softly against the wall. One of the Slavis
-was posted close to the men’s house with instructions
-to croak like a bull-bat if there was any sound of movement
-from within. Inside the warehouse Loseis would
-have been thankful to use her electric torch, but was
-afraid of precipitating a panic amongst the Slavis.
-However the fur had all been divided into half loads
-for a horse, each half load being a load for a man.
-Silently the endless procession wound in and out. A
-long line of little men waited in the moonlight at the
-door. Nobody stumbled, or dropped his load. There
-were a hundred bundles of fur. Afterwards the pack-saddles,
-saddle-cloths, hitching-gear had to go. Loseis
-breathed a little prayer of thankfulness when at last
-she propped the pole against the closed door, exactly
-as it had been before.</p>
-
-<p>There was still the grub to be got from the store;
-but as this was passed out through the rear window,
-and carried away behind the warehouse, the danger
-was not so great.</p>
-
-<p>The easterly sky was full of cool light when the
-hitch was thrown over the last pack, and pulled home.
-The head of the train had already started. Tatateecha
-rode first to make the trail. Conacher lingered to say
-good-by to Loseis. His heart failed him.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, come too,” he urged her. “Here are plenty of
-spare horses. Let me take care of you!”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, dearest!” she said. “Before we had gone
-twenty miles Gault would be up to us, and the Slavis
-would stampede. We’d have to wait for Gault’s
-Crees after all. But if you can only get the Slavis
-fifty or sixty miles from home into a strange country,
-you couldn’t drive them away from the grub-boxes. I
-am hoping that two days may pass before Gault discovers
-the loss of the fur.”</p>
-
-<p>“He will see that the horses are gone,” objected
-Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“They are accustomed to wander from one meadow
-to another along the river.”</p>
-
-<p>The last Indian had passed out of sight. Conacher
-took the girl in his arms. “You are asking the hardest
-thing in the world of me,” he groaned. “And that is
-to leave you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! don’t make it harder for me,” faltered Loseis.
-“It is the only way!”</p>
-
-<p>“Damn the fur!” said Conacher. “It makes me
-out a mere fortune-hunter. I wish you had nothing!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not worrying about what you are,” said Loseis.
-“My heart tells me. For myself, I care nothing about
-the fur. It was my father’s. I would feel that I had
-been false to him, if I let Gault fool me out of it. I
-could never respect myself. I am Blackburn’s daughter.
-I cannot allow the name of Blackburn to become
-a joke in the country.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m only a tail to the Blackburn kite,” grumbled
-Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis laughed a little, and pressed him close. “I
-shall make it up to you,” she whispered. “You shall
-be my lord and master. Isn’t that enough?”</p>
-
-<p>“That makes me feel worse,” he said. “I’m not
-worthy.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis put a loving hand over his mouth. “Enough
-of that talk,” she said. “You love me, don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Until death,” he murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“Me too, until death,” she whispered passionately.
-“That makes us equal. This talk of fortunes and
-worthiness is less than nothing.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Now you must
-go.”</p>
-
-<p>“They ride so slowly,” pleaded Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“Get on your horse, dearest; I must not be seen returning
-to-day.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher obeyed with a heavy heart. He leaned
-out of the saddle for a final embrace. They clung together.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-by,” whispered Loseis. “Good-by, my dearest
-love. Come back soon!”</p>
-
-<p>Swiftly withdrawing herself from him, she gave his
-horse a smart slap; and it carried him away.</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='167' id='Page_167'></span><h1>CHAPTER XIV<br/> <span class='sub-head'>THE DISCOVERY</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>D</span>awn</span> was rosy in the East when Loseis got
-home; but the moon had set, and the little square
-within the buildings was full of shadows. There was
-no stir of life about the men’s house; the door was still
-closed. Loseis slipped thankfully within her own
-door. Mary-Lou, being of no help in packing the
-horses, had been sent home some hours before.</p>
-
-<p>In her first feeling of relief, Loseis threw herself on
-her bed, and was instantly asleep. But at six her subconscious
-anxiety awoke her again; and the instant
-she awakened, she was at the window. The door of
-the men’s house now stood open; and the two tall
-Crees were respectively splashing in a basin and brandishing
-a towel outside the door. They had learned
-this trick from the white man. Etzooah squatted on
-the ground near by, grinning derisively. The Slavis
-did not believe in washing. If they ever yielded to this
-weakness, it was in secrecy.</p>
-
-<p>One of the Crees went off to the stable; and presently
-returned leading Gault’s own horse, a rangy,
-half-bred chestnut from the “outside.” Gault appeared
-from the house fully accoutered, and Loseis’
-heart seemed to drop into a hole in her breast. Suppose
-he rode along the river trail; any man not absolutely
-blind must perceive the marks of the passage of
-the fur train. However, to her relief, he trotted
-diagonally across the square, and started up the trail
-behind the store.</p>
-
-<p>Freshening himself up to come courting again,
-thought Loseis with curving lips.</p>
-
-<p>Her next anxiety was that Moale, actuated by his
-passion for fine furs, might visit the warehouse to look
-them over. But Moale did not appear outside the
-cabin. Loseis saw smoke rising from the chimney, and
-supposed that he must be acting as cook for the time
-being. So she left the window to prepare herself for
-the day.</p>
-
-<p>In due course Gault returned from his ride. He
-went within to refurbish himself; and promptly on
-the stroke of eight was to be seen striding across the
-square, very stiff and handsome and black.</p>
-
-<p>Quite a picture, thought Loseis in a detached way;
-but not for my album. She spoke through the door
-to Mary-Lou. “Let him wait in the kitchen for a
-moment. We must not appear to be too eager.”</p>
-
-<p>When she opened the door, Gault was standing
-there, hand on hip, looking every inch the chief, and
-fully aware of it. He presented a smooth face to her,
-with a hard and wary eye. He did not know exactly
-what to expect. Loseis, making her own face expressionless,
-greeted him politely.</p>
-
-<p>“Come in,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>The table was ready spread in the inner room, and
-they sat down to it, outvying each other in cool politeness.
-Gault was thinking: She asked me here this
-morning. It’s up to her to show her hand. And
-Loseis was thinking: I have everything to gain by
-keeping him guessing. Let him make the first move.
-So it was:</p>
-
-<p>“This fried rabbit is delicious, Miss Blackburn.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad you like it. I was sorry there was no
-other fresh meat. The Slavis say that a man may
-starve on rabbit.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Slavis may say so: but it satisfies me. I can
-never get it cooked so well as this. It needs a woman.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I have read that the most famous cooks are
-always men.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I was speaking of our country. I have had
-many a good man cook on the trail; but they seem to
-lose their cunning in a house.”</p>
-
-<p>“My usual cook is the Slavi girl that I call Mary-Ann,”
-said Loseis. “But she has run off with the
-others.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault shrugged in a commiserating fashion. This
-was getting on dangerous ground.</p>
-
-<p>The trader was at a serious disadvantage in this
-fencing, because he wanted the girl, wanted her intolerably,
-whereas she was indifferent to him. Gault
-did not know the cause for it; but his senses were
-aware that Loseis was revealing a new beauty these
-past two days. Her dark eyes were fuller and more
-beaming; her very skin seemed to radiate a mysterious
-quality of light. All this made the man a little sick at
-heart; but he could not altogether give up hope,
-either. She asked me to breakfast, he told himself;
-what does that mean but that she is beginning to come
-round. Very often a woman is most scornful just at
-the moment when she is preparing to give in. I should
-hang off a little now.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Loseis was thinking: Five hours! They
-will be making their first spell. Fifteen miles. I told
-Tatateecha to cut it down to three hours on the first
-day. Then five hours on the trail, and camp for the
-night thirty miles from here. Gault’s Crees cannot
-arrive before to-morrow night at the earliest. My
-people will then have sixty miles start.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis’ beauty teased Gault to such an extent that
-he was forced to make overtures to bring a little
-warmth into that composed face. “Shall I send to
-the lake village to fetch Mary-Ann back?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no!” said Loseis. “I prefer to ignore her. I
-shall be in a better position to deal with her when she
-comes crawling back of her own accord.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was merely thinking of your comfort,” said
-Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“You are very kind.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault could no longer keep it in. “Well, am I forgiven!”
-he asked in a jolly sort of way.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis gave him no answering smile. “I am no
-longer angry with you,” she said coolly. “I am just
-neutral. I am waiting to see what happens.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault was a good deal dashed. She is just playing
-with me! he thought angrily. But Oh God! that pure,
-pale skin, that proud averted glance! With an immense
-effort he controlled himself. “There is no need
-for you to leave this place,” he said with a reasonable
-air.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of showing the gratitude that he expected,
-she said in a slightly surprised voice: “Of course
-there isn’t!”</p>
-
-<p>“But if we are to remain here together,” he said,
-nettled, “you must make it possible for me to work
-with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“It seems to me that you are putting the cart before
-the horse,” said Loseis softly.</p>
-
-<p>Gault ground his teeth together. This child to be
-taking such a tone to him! “My dear girl!” he said
-loftily, “I must be the one to decide what is best for
-us until some better qualified person appears.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis thought: I must not make him too angry. I
-must lead him along. She said in a more amicable
-tone: “We are just talking in a circle.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault contrived to laugh again. “Of course we
-are!” he cried. “Well, what do you propose? You
-promised to meet me half way.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will do anything that you suggest,” said Loseis
-with an alluring mildness, “provided you explain the
-reasons for it.”</p>
-
-<p>The blood rushed to Gault’s pale face. He had to
-restrain himself from reaching for her hand. “That
-is all I could ask!” he cried.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” Loseis slyly went on, “I will even go out
-to Fort Good Hope when you send the fur, if it is
-necessary.”</p>
-
-<p>A doubt occurred to the trader—this was such a
-violent face-about: but she looked so adorable when
-she said it, that he waved the doubt away. “Splendid!”
-he cried. “I now say to you that there is not
-the slightest necessity for your going to Fort Good
-Hope!”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis smiled at him at last, a slow, oblique, curious
-smile, having infinitely more meaning than the
-trader suspected. It carried him clean off his feet.
-His hand shot out.</p>
-
-<p>“Shake!” he cried.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis could not control the impulse of her blood
-that forced her to rise suddenly (she had finished her
-breakfast) and to say with cool distaste: “Oh, please
-not. I hate to paw.”</p>
-
-<p>And Gault’s blood was aware of the true significance
-of that recoil, but his vanity would not acknowledge
-it. He sat glowering at her half-hurt, half-angry,
-a pathetic sight at fifty-three. “Oh, sorry,” he said
-in a flat voice. “It is instinctive amongst men.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know,” said Loseis, trying to smooth things over.
-“But I am not a man.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Do smoke one of your delicious
-cigars. I have missed them during the last
-few days.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault allowed himself to be deceived. “My pet
-weakness!” he said, smiling at Loseis rather killingly.</p>
-
-<p>They were tempted outside. Loseis’ gaze involuntarily
-swept the heavens. No cloud in sight; not the
-filmiest of vapors to dim the inverted bowl of blue.
-There would be no rain for days. It was well.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you expecting?” asked Gault smiling.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, nothing!” she said with a shrug. “My father
-always looked at the sky when he came out of doors.
-I suppose I caught the habit from him.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Shall we
-walk down to the river? Things have been so mixed
-up lately, all my habits are broken up. I need exercise.”</p>
-
-<p>“Delighted!” said Gault. “.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. There is not going
-to be any more quarreling, is there?” he added with
-his fond smile.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope not,” said Loseis demurely.</p>
-
-<p>They paused at the edge of the river bank. The
-view was filled in by the bold high point opposite, with
-the old grave and the new grave side by side on top
-within the extended palings. The sight of the grassy
-mound and the earthy mound aroused a poignant emotion
-in Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>Do <span class='it'>they</span> know what I am going through? she wondered.
-Ah! I hope not! I should not want their
-peace to be disturbed!</p>
-
-<p>Gault, watching the girl’s face, said with a heavy
-gravity: “I have not yet had the opportunity to visit
-Blackburn’s grave. I trust I may be permitted to pay
-that tribute. He was a great man!”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis turned back from the river. She did not care
-to share her emotion with <span class='it'>him</span>. The hypocritical
-words sickened her slightly. “Of course!” she said
-coolly. “Why not?”</p>
-
-<p>A hard nature! said Gault to himself.</p>
-
-<p>However as they sauntered back through the grass,
-which was now bestarred with pale crocuses, Loseis
-exerted herself to charm him, and God knows that was
-not difficult. Matters went swimmingly again. Gault
-expanded. He could see himself bending elegantly
-and solicitously to the slim and lovely girl. It was
-a sensation one had never experienced in that rude
-country.</p>
-
-<p>As they mounted the rise to the little plateau, Gault
-was saying: “I am expecting my men back to-morrow
-afternoon with some fresh supplies from Good Hope.
-I trust you will give me the pleasure of dining with
-me. The fare will not be as good as that you provide,
-but perhaps it will have an element of novelty.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>And at that moment they perceived Moale running
-towards them like a madman.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis’ heart sank. All her trouble to fool him was
-for nothing, then! Immediately afterwards she went
-hard all over. Now for it! Well, let it come!</p>
-
-<p>“The fur is gone!” yelled Moale.</p>
-
-<p>“<span class='it'>What!</span>” cried Gault, with an affronted air, that
-was almost comic.</p>
-
-<p>“The warehouse is empty!” cried Moale waving his
-arms. “Gone! Gone! All gone!” Nothing else
-could so have aroused that wooden man.</p>
-
-<p>Gault and Loseis now stood at the top of the rise.
-The trader turned to the girl with a towering look.
-“By God!” he said, softly at first, then louder: “By
-God! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. You have hidden the fur!”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis, holding herself very straight, looked away
-with a maddening air of unconcern, and held her
-tongue.</p>
-
-<p>“She has sent it out!” cried Moale. “The saddles
-are gone; the horses are gone! I have sent Watusk
-along the trail to pick up their tracks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where is the fur?” demanded Gault of Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>She reflected that the truth was bound to come out
-immediately. “I have sent it out,” she said coolly.
-“It was mine.”</p>
-
-<p>The two men stared at her open-mouthed, bereft of
-speech. Finally Gault got his breath back, and his
-anger.</p>
-
-<p>“You foolish girl!” he cried. “You have lost it
-then! The Slavis are useless without a leader.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis thought it just as well to let them know that
-they had more than the Slavis to deal with. “They
-have a leader,” she said with an offhand air. “My
-friend Mr. Conacher is in charge of the pack-train.”
-How sweet it was to flick that name so carelessly in
-Gault’s rage-distorted face.</p>
-
-<p>Another silence. Gault’s face looked perfectly witless
-in its astonishment. Then it crimsoned, and the
-storm broke. In his passion the man’s coarse nature
-brazenly revealed itself.</p>
-
-<p>“You lying hussy!” he cried. “All the time you’ve
-been showing me your demure face, you’ve been secretly
-receiving your lover! Lies! Lies! Lies!
-Nothing but lies behind that smooth face! All morning
-you have been lying to me to pave the way for his
-escape! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>The girl faced him, surprised at first, then royal in
-her anger. “How dare you!” she cried. “You accuse
-me of lying, you! <span class='it'>you!</span> Why should I not lie to you?
-You, whose whole presence here has been a lie since
-you told me Etzooah could not speak English! You!
-with your mouth full of hypocritical talk, pretending
-to be my friend while you plotted to rob me! You unspeakable
-blackguard! It was lucky for me that I
-found a true friend!”</p>
-
-<p>Gault’s face turned blackish; and his lips drew back
-over his teeth. He raised his clenched fists over his
-head as if to strike Loseis down. But the scared
-Moale touched his arm, and the blow never descended.
-A terrible shudder went through Gault’s frame. He
-turned and strode stiffly away. At the door of his
-house he curtly dismissed Moale, and went in alone.</p>
-
-<p>Inside her own door, Loseis’ knees weakened under
-her, and she was glad to sink into a chair. She covered
-her face in the effort to shut out that truly frightful
-picture of rage. After all she was only a girl.
-Ah! how thankful she would have been to have Conacher
-at her side then!</p>
-
-<p>Her weakness was but momentary. She hastened
-to the window, standing far enough back to keep her
-face from showing at the pane. It was essential for
-her to know what Gault was going to do. Suppose he
-and his men rode after Conacher, she would have to
-follow, and let the Post look after itself. Impossible
-to remain inactive! Her horse was as good as the
-best. Should she not ride at once to warn Conacher?
-Her horse was in the stable with Gault’s horses. But
-there were other horses she might catch. No! No!
-First she must see what Gault was going to do.</p>
-
-<p>The Cree, Watusk, returned, and the four men
-were hanging around outside the door, at a loss what
-to do. Suddenly Moale went in as if summoned by a
-call. He immediately reappeared, spoke to the others,
-and they all went into the corral and stable. In
-due course they came out leading all of Gault’s remaining
-horses, eight in number, ready saddled; some to
-be ridden, others to carry packs. They began to carry
-out their belongings from the house.</p>
-
-<p>Now I must start! thought Loseis in a fever. But
-a more prudent voice restrained her. You mustn’t
-let Gault see what you’re going to do!</p>
-
-<p>When the little train was ready, Gault came out of
-the house. To Loseis’ astonishment he kept on across
-the square. He was coming to speak to her. She began
-to tremble all over. Just the same, she was glad
-that she had stayed. She went to the door, and waited
-for him in an unconcerned pose. He should never
-guess that her heart was pounding.</p>
-
-<p>Gault had only partly succeeded in regaining his
-composure. He was lividly pale; his lips moved with
-a curious stiffness; and there was an ominous triangular
-furrow etched in his forehead. Without looking
-directly at Loseis, he said in a controlled voice:</p>
-
-<p>“I have done my best to look after your affairs.
-You have rejected my efforts at every turn. Well, if
-you have found somebody else to advise you, there is
-nothing further for me to do here. I am returning to
-Fort Good Hope.”</p>
-
-<p>With that, he faced about, and went to his horse.
-Loseis had not said anything at all. The others were
-waiting in the saddle; and as soon as Gault mounted
-they set off, Gault staring stiffly ahead of him, the
-others looking askance at the girl lounging in the doorway.
-Around the store, and up the side hill at the
-back.</p>
-
-<p>The instant they were out of sight Loseis sprang
-into action. Without waiting for so much as coat or
-hat, she ran across to the stable, and flung saddle on
-her horse. It was perfectly evident to her that Gault
-was still lying. If he had, as he pretended, given up in
-disgust, he would have ridden away without a word.
-The fact that he felt it necessary to advertise his giving
-up was to her proof positive that he was not giving up
-at all.</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou, seeing her mistress prepare to ride away,
-realized that she would be left the last living soul at
-Blackburn’s Post. Panic seized her. Running across
-the square, she met Loseis leading her horse out of
-the stable.</p>
-
-<p>“Take me! Take me!” she gasped.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis was obliged to curb her headlong desire to be
-off. “Well .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. well .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” she said impatiently.
-“The buckskin is in the stable. I will saddle him for
-you. Run back to the house. Fetch some grub.
-Shove my riding clothes in a saddlebag. I’ll change
-on the trail.”</p>
-
-<p>As she tightened girths, Loseis reflected: Etzooah
-is familiar with the triangle of country between the
-two trails, from having trapped it in the winter.
-There is no cross trail, but it would be possible to lead
-their horses through the bush, and across the coulee.
-Take a little time, though. I shall be on the southerly
-trail ahead of them.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But suppose they steal back
-here first to spy on me .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. ?</p>
-
-<p>A hard little smile wreathed Loseis’ lips. Hastily
-tying the horses to the corral fence, she flew across the
-grass again. Meeting Mary-Lou coming out of the
-house, she ordered her to put down the things, and
-help her. In the house, Loseis tore the mattress off
-her bed, and dragging it into the kitchen ripped it open.
-It was stuffed with moss. Wetting the moss from the
-barrel of water which stood within the door, she arranged
-it in the fireplace in such a way that it would
-smolder a little at a time.</p>
-
-<p>“That will last out the day,” she said smiling.
-“Come on; let’s go!”</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='179' id='Page_179'></span><h1>CHAPTER XV<br/> <span class='sub-head'>SHADOWING</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>L</span>oseis</span> and Mary-Lou rode hard through the
-river-meadows and over the gravelly ridges.
-There was no danger that anyone who followed would
-be able to pick out the prints of their horses’ hoofs
-in the confusion of tracks left by the fur train. When
-they gained the shelter of the wooded country, some
-six miles from the Post, Loseis pulled up to a walk.
-It is impossible to think at a gallop. She wished to
-canvass all the possibilities of the situation again.</p>
-
-<p>She thought: The further they went along the trail
-before striking across, the harder it would be to get
-over. Therefore if they intended to come this way
-they would turn off as soon as possible. They would
-now be behind me.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But I do not <span class='it'>know</span> that Gault
-intends to ride after the fur, though that is the likeliest
-thing for him to do. How foolish I would look if
-I dashed ahead to warn Conacher, and then Gault
-never came. Gault might be planning to steal back to
-the Post, and seize it. Or he might have some devilish
-trick in mind that would never occur to me.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I
-will not ride on until I make sure that he is on this
-trail.</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible to hide with horses alongside a
-traveled trail. The horses are certain to betray you
-by whinnying at the approach of other horses.
-Therefore, Loseis was obliged to ride on four miles
-further to the Slavi village at the foot of the lake.
-Here she sent Mary-Lou across the river with instructions
-to turn the horses out, and to lose herself
-amongst the Slavis.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis walked back along the wooded trail, looking
-for a suitable place of concealment. The river ran
-close alongside. On the river there was a fringe of
-berry bushes at the base of the trees; but the water
-sparkled through the interstices of the stems. No
-room to hide there. The other side was more open; a
-thick brown carpet of pine needles that smothered all
-undergrowth. Loseis began to run in feverish impatience.
-Suppose she was surprised before she could
-hide herself.</p>
-
-<p>At last in a place where the sun broke through, she
-came upon a thick clump of the high-bush cranberry
-on the inshore side of the trail. She walked up and
-down the trail surveying it from every angle. It would
-serve! She crept in, careful to leave no tell-tale marks
-of her passage. She constructed herself a little cave
-amongst the leaves, that would permit of a certain
-freedom of movement without betraying her by a
-rustle. Here she crouched within two yards of the
-trail.</p>
-
-<p>It was very difficult to compose her impatient blood
-to wait. The swollen river moved down, whispering
-and sucking under the bank. Overhead a smooth,
-smoky-colored whisky-jack fluttered like a shadow
-from branch to branch, cocking a suspicious eye down
-at her. Would he betray her? thought Loseis
-anxiously. However he made up his mind after awhile
-that she was a fixture, and faded away. In the distance
-Loseis could hear the children and the dogs of
-the Slavi village. A dozen times within a quarter hour
-Loseis looked at her watch; and each time put it to
-her ear to make sure it had not stopped.</p>
-
-<p>A whole hour passed, and another one on top of
-that. Loseis was beginning to ask herself if she were
-not on a fool’s errand. What ought she to do? What
-ought she to do? Then she heard a sound that caused
-all uncertainty to vanish: hoof-beats on the hard-packed
-trail. It was then two o’clock. As the sound
-drew closer her brow knitted; only one horse; that was
-not what she had expected; why should they send one
-man in pursuit of Conacher?</p>
-
-<p>A minute later Etzooah rode by in the trail. He
-was not hurrying himself at all; his horse was single-footing
-it gently; and the Indian rode with his near leg
-thrown over the saddle horn, his body all relaxed and
-shaking in the untidy native style. Etzooah, unaware
-of being observed, looked thoroughly well pleased with
-himself. He hummed a chant under his breath, and
-from force of habit his beady black eyes watched on
-every side of him. Sharp as they were they perceived
-nothing amiss in the clump of high-bush cranberry.</p>
-
-<p>When he had passed, Loseis after making sure that
-there were no more coming, issued out of her hiding
-place, and started back for her horse, considering.
-Her first impulse was to ride after Etzooah, but she
-dismissed it with a shake of the head. No! No personal
-danger threatened Conacher from Etzooah’s
-coming. This was just part of some tricky game that
-Gault was playing. Etzooah might safely be left to
-Conacher to handle. She must find out what Gault
-was about. There lay the real danger.</p>
-
-<p>Obtaining her horse, and bidding Mary-Lou to remain
-where she was, Loseis rode back towards the
-post. Having ridden about two miles, an intuition
-warned her to dismount and lead her horse, that she
-might not give undue warning of her passage. Shortly
-afterwards the mare suddenly threw up her head and
-whickered. A moment later Loseis heard more hoof-beats;
-several horses this time, pounding in a measured
-way that suggested they were being ridden by men.</p>
-
-<p>Turning her horse, Loseis mounted and rode back
-a hundred yards or so to a small stream that fell into
-the river. Dismounting in the water, she cut her mare
-sharply across the withers, sending her galloping on
-in the direction of the Indian village. Wading up the
-little stream, she presently climbed the bank, and making
-a detour among the pines, pressed herself close in
-to the stem of a young tree, with branches growing
-down to the ground. It was not a perfect hiding-place;
-she was further from the trail.</p>
-
-<p>The riders approached. They were walking their
-horses now. Gault, Moale and one of the Crees; the
-other, Watusk, was missing. They had left their pack-horses
-behind them. So they are not going far!
-thought Loseis. Gault’s face, when he was alone
-with his men, wore an expression that he had never
-permitted Loseis to see; a look of naked brutality that
-made the girl shiver. It is the natural expression of
-that face, she thought.</p>
-
-<p>Even before she could see their faces, Loseis heard
-Gault and Moale talking back and forth. The first
-words she heard distinctly were spoken by Gault. He
-said:</p>
-
-<p>“It must have been somewhere along here. I heard
-a horse run off along the trail. I had not heard it before
-that. Sounded like some one might have been
-waiting here.”</p>
-
-<p>“A loose horse startled away by our coming,” suggested
-Moale. “There are plenty of them along the
-river.”</p>
-
-<p>“They don’t often run alone,” Gault pointed out.</p>
-
-<p>“A Slavi, then. I suspect they prowl up and down
-this trail.”</p>
-
-<p>“We don’t want them prowling around us,” growled
-the trader.</p>
-
-<p>“Let Musqua cry like the Weh-ti-go,” said Moale.</p>
-
-<p>The Cree, grinning, threw back his head and uttered
-the long-drawn, wailing screech that is supposed to be
-the cry of that dreadful spirit.</p>
-
-<p>“They will say that it is Blackburn,” said Moale
-chuckling.</p>
-
-<p>There was a silence.</p>
-
-<p>“We mustn’t go too far,” said Gault. “Or we’ll be
-on top of the Slavi village.”</p>
-
-<p>“What are you looking for?” asked Moale.</p>
-
-<p>“A dead tree alongside the trail that we can pull
-over.”</p>
-
-<p>For some reason these words struck a cold fear into
-Loseis’ breast. The riders passed out of earshot.</p>
-
-<p>The trail wound in and out among the trunks as
-woodland trails do, and you could never see more
-than twenty-five yards or so ahead or behind. As
-soon as the men had gone, Loseis issued from her
-hiding-place, and started to follow on foot. She could
-still hear the murmur of their voices but not what they
-said. The leisureliness of their progress puzzled her.
-They were not going much further. What could they
-be up to? And the remaining Cree; what had become
-of him?</p>
-
-<p>She heard them pass through the little stream that
-crossed the trail. A short distance beyond they
-stopped, apparently for the purpose of holding a consultation.
-Loseis approached as close as she dared,
-but could not make out their words. After awhile
-they left the trail. From the sounds that reached her,
-Loseis understood that they were leading their horses
-away amongst the trees. She went forward as far as
-the stream, and ascended the bed of it, thus keeping
-roughly parallel with the course they were taking.</p>
-
-<p>For a couple of hundred yards back from the river,
-the forest was perfectly flat, and for the most part
-clear of undergrowth. The ground then rose steeply,
-and on the hillside young trees and bushes crowded
-up. The little stream came down through a ravine
-full of bowlders. Loseis, concentrating on the faculty
-of hearing, gathered that men and horses had made
-their way back to the foot of the rise, where they had
-gone into camp for a spell.</p>
-
-<p>She climbed up the side of the ravine to a point
-well above their heads, and then edged cautiously
-around the hill until she was directly over the voices.
-Thereupon she began to let herself down softly, softly,
-an inch at a time, choosing every foothold with circumspection,
-snaking her body through the bushes with
-care not to create the slightest rustling. Loseis as a
-child had not played with the Slavi children for nothing.</p>
-
-<p>She discovered at last that they had established
-themselves at the base of a gigantic bowlder embedded
-in the side of the hill. The smoke of their little fire
-was rising over the top. Loseis, descending from
-above, worked her body by slow degrees out on top of
-the bowlder, where she lay perfectly hidden, about fifteen
-feet above their heads. It would have been too
-risky to attempt to peep over the edge of the stone,
-but whether she could see them was immaterial to her,
-so she could hear.</p>
-
-<p>Her cautious progress around the hillside had consumed
-a good bit of time, and when she arrived above
-the camp it was still. For a long time she could hear
-nothing but the uneasy nosing of the horses, that had
-no forage in that spot. They must have been tied,
-for they did not move about. Loseis knew the men
-were still below her, for she detected a faint aroma of
-tobacco, apart from the fumes of burning pine. At
-last, startlingly, Gault’s quiet voice resolved itself
-out of the stillness. He might have been speaking to
-herself.</p>
-
-<p>“No, don’t put any more on. If any of the Slavis
-happen to be traveling up on the bench, the smoke
-would attract them. Just keep it going until we’re
-ready to eat.”</p>
-
-<p>Moale asked: “When will you eat?”</p>
-
-<p>Gault replied: “We can only eat once. Put it off
-until evening.”</p>
-
-<p>Then silence again. Loseis feared that that which
-she so desired to hear must already have been talked
-out between them.</p>
-
-<p>By and by she heard a horse single-footing it rapidly
-in the trail.</p>
-
-<p>“Here comes Watusk,” said Moale.</p>
-
-<p>From the sounds which succeeded Loseis made out
-that Musqua had been stationed alongside the trail to
-intercept Watusk. They could presently be heard approaching
-with the horse, through the trees below.
-As soon as they were within speaking distance Gault
-said sharply:</p>
-
-<p>“Well?”</p>
-
-<p>A voice, presumably Watusk’s, replied: “Blackburn’s
-daughter, and the Beaver girl are at the post.”</p>
-
-<p>The listening Loseis smiled to herself.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you see them?” asked Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“N’moya. They were in the house. How could
-I look in the house without showing myself? There
-was smoke coming out of the chimney. For an hour
-I watched it from the branches of a pine tree where
-the trail goes over the hill.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe Blackburn’s daughter had left the Indian
-behind.”</p>
-
-<p>“N’moya.”</p>
-
-<p>“Watusk is right,” put in Moale’s voice. “After
-everybody else was gone, no Indian would stay there
-alone; not with that new-made grave in sight!”</p>
-
-<p>“It is well,” grumbled Gault.</p>
-
-<p>There was more talk about eating. Gault indifferently
-told the breeds they could take theirs if they
-wanted, but they would get no more until morning.</p>
-
-<p>More time passed. As is always the case with men
-waiting an event, they found but little to say to each
-other. Sometimes the Crees discussed their own concerns
-in low tones. Sometimes they all fell silent for
-so long that Loseis supposed they had fallen asleep.
-Then suddenly Gault and Moale took up the thread of
-a conversation as if it had been dropped but a moment
-before.</p>
-
-<p>“Couldn’t we hang a noose in the trail?” asked
-Moale.</p>
-
-<p>“No way of keeping a noose spread,” returned
-Gault. “It’s better to stretch the tracking line across
-the trail from tree to tree at such a height that it will
-catch him under the chin. I hope it breaks his damn
-neck. Most likely though, it will only yank him off
-his horse.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis’ blood slowly congealed as she listened.
-There could be no doubt who the “him” was that they
-referred to.</p>
-
-<p>“Then we’ll jump on him,” Gault went on; “and tie
-him up, and lay him in the trail, and pull the tree over.
-I’ve got it all figured out. The branches of that tree
-will stick out over the edge of the bank, consequently
-the trunk will lie flat on the ground and break his
-back.”</p>
-
-<p>“It may not kill him outright,” suggested Moale.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis heard a horrible chuckle. Gault said: “Oh,
-I’ll stick around until he dies. I don’t care if he lingers
-a bit. I hope he’ll have sense enough to take in what
-I’ve got to tell him. If he lingers too long I’ll stop
-his breath. You fellows can ride on. I’ve got the best
-horse. I’ll overtake you. We’ll all have to ride like
-hell to get to Fort Good Hope in time to establish a
-proper alibi.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a brief silence, then:</p>
-
-<p>“But there won’t be any trouble. Unless he’s found
-to-morrow, the coyotes and the wolverines will have
-picked him clean. And in any case the fallen tree, the
-broken back will tell their own tale. I’ll recover the
-letter, of course, before I leave him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hadn’t we better keep a watch alongside the
-trail?” Moale asked uneasily.</p>
-
-<p>“Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“He might come along before dark?”</p>
-
-<p>“Impossible. I told Etzooah after he had located
-the camp, not to show himself until the position of the
-sun showed eight o’clock. You can trust a Slavi to
-keep cover. If Conacher jumped on his horse that
-minute and ran him the whole way he couldn’t get
-back here till near midnight.”</p>
-
-<p>At last they had named their intended victim!</p>
-
-<p>“My only fear is that it may be daylight before he
-gets here,” said Gault. “But of course we’ll get him
-anyhow.”</p>
-
-<p>“He may suspect a trick, and not come at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, sure!” said Gault unconcernedly. “But we
-had a damn persuasive argument to use. If he don’t
-come by daylight we’ll go after him.”</p>
-
-<p>“And afterwards,” said Moale, “what you going to
-do afterwards?”</p>
-
-<p>Again the chuckle! “By and by I’ll ride back to
-Blackburn’s Post to resume my courtship.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’ll be mourning for the other one then.”</p>
-
-<p>“What of it? It wouldn’t be the first time that a
-woman consoled herself with the next best thing. It’s
-a very good time to tackle a woman. She’s tender
-then.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis had heard enough. She commenced to work
-herself backward off the rock. She inched her way up
-hill in the same manner that she had come down. She
-was doubly careful now, for another life beside her
-own depended on her success. When she had got
-high enough to be out of earshot, she turned in the
-other direction from that she had come, and making a
-wide detour, regained the trail a good furlong beyond
-Gault’s camp, and set off to recover her horse.</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='190' id='Page_190'></span><h1>CHAPTER XVI<br/> <span class='sub-head'>WITH CONACHER</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>C</span>onacher’s</span> spirits rose somewhat with the sun.
-It was impossible for a healthy man to be altogether
-miserable under that tender, beaming sky. The
-lovely, changing prospects of the parklike country
-through which Blackburn’s River flowed, made the
-heart swell. Conacher loved, and was loved in return.
-An apparition of the exquisite Loseis continually swam
-before his eyes. He was anxious; but he kept saying
-to himself as a civilized man will: Oh well, nothing
-serious can happen nowadays.</p>
-
-<p>In the more open places, it was thrilling to see the
-long, laden train of horses stretching ahead; winding
-over a ridge; trotting down into the bottoms. The
-imagination was arrested by the thought of the riches
-stored in that endless succession of brown packs. It
-was like a picture to illustrate an old fairy tale.
-Thoughts of Aladdin and Sindbad flitted through the
-young man’s mind. Riches!—not represented by a
-trifling row of figures in a book, but visibly spread
-before his eyes. Come to think of it, Aladdin married
-a princess, too. An insipid miss in bloomers according
-to the pictures; nothing like the darkly vivid Loseis!</p>
-
-<p>Among other directions for the journey, Loseis
-had warned Conacher not to allow the Slavis to cross
-the river to loiter in their village. It occurred to the
-young man that he would not be able to prevent this
-while he brought up the tail of the procession, so he
-took advantage of one of the river meadows to urge
-his horse to the head of the line. By Tatateecha’s
-crestfallen look at his approach, he judged that he
-had acted rightly. It was his first good look at the
-rotund, greasy little head man of the Slavis. Tatateecha
-was better favored than the run of the Slavis;
-but that was not saying much. He had a neat, Buster
-Brown hair-cut, and a red fillet bound around his brow.</p>
-
-<p>Tatateecha edged his horse out of the line, and fell
-back to consult with the next man. They were like
-a pair of children conspiring together, with sharp,
-calculating glances at Conacher. The white man affected
-not to notice them. Presently Tatateecha came
-back to him all smiles. Conacher had had no experiences
-of the Slavis, but he knew something about the
-Indian nature in general. He’s going to try to put
-something over on me now, he thought.</p>
-
-<p>Tatateecha by means of animated signs conveyed
-to Conacher that his village lay a short way ahead;
-and that it would be the best place to spell. Splendid
-grass for the horses.</p>
-
-<p>“Not on your life!” said Conacher, with vigorous
-pantomime of denial. He indicated to Tatateecha
-that there would be no spell until the sun had traveled
-a space equal to two hours.</p>
-
-<p>The Slavi broke into speech; but Conacher had
-him at a disadvantage there, by not understanding a
-word of it. The white man continued to point to the
-sun. Tatateecha became aggrieved; almost tearful
-in his protestations. Then, bringing his horse close to
-Conacher’s he signified with a winning air, that he himself
-was perfectly willing to go further; but the rest
-of the men would refuse to go at all, unless they were
-permitted to say good-by to their families. Conacher
-replied by signs that if they refused to go and fetch
-the grub and ammunition, when the snow covered the
-ground there would be no grub, no meat, and the
-people would starve. This argument was unanswerable,
-and Tatateecha fell back sulking.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly afterwards the village hove in sight across
-the river. The people lined up on the edge of the
-bank yelling; and Conacher’s men yelled back. All
-knew that the white man could not understand their
-tongue; and Conacher guessed that they were making
-pretty free with him. It was a trying situation; but
-he preserved his imperturbable air.</p>
-
-<p>The river issued out of the lake by means of a
-wide, shallow, brawling rapid. At the present high
-stage of water, there was but one possible place to
-ford, and this could not be managed even on horseback
-without danger of a wetting. At the point where the
-trail forked, Conacher backed his horse into the arm
-which ran down the bank, and held him there blocking
-the way. The Slavis jabbered angrily from one
-to another; the whole train was brought to a stand.</p>
-
-<p>Tatateecha approached Conacher to expostulate.
-The white man pointed with his whip down the main
-trail. Tatateecha attempting to speak again, Conacher
-suddenly urged his horse forward, and cutting
-the Indian’s horse smartly across the flank, sent him
-careering down the main trail, the only way that was
-open. The train got in motion again. The other
-Slavis, seeing that Conacher meant what he said, filed
-past him sullenly. The people across the river fell
-silent. Conacher fell in at the tail of the procession
-again. Ten minutes later his feather-headed Slavis
-were singing and chaffing each other in the best temper
-imaginable.</p>
-
-<p>But Conacher had to keep a sharp look-out for deserters.
-Time and again, one or another of the Slavis
-edged his horse in among the trees with the object
-of circling around and gaining the trail behind Conacher.
-The white man found that he could best defeat
-this maneuver by falling back a quarter of a mile. In
-that position he would come face to face with the astonished
-deserter, who thought he had already eluded
-him. Caught in the act, they made no attempt to resist
-his commanding voice. When they spelled at last,
-Conacher, without appearing to, anxiously counted
-his men. He had lost one. With dinner in prospect
-there was no danger of their making off. As soon as
-they had eaten he distributed plugs of tobacco.</p>
-
-<p>Upon reaching the lake the trail turned sharp to
-the eastward for some miles. In order to provide a
-firm footing it had to encircle the edge of the wooded
-country, far back from the water. The vast lake
-meadows at this season were like a saturated sponge
-underfoot. For three sleeps, Tatateecha explained,
-they would be traveling alongside these meadows; and
-then, climbing through a pass in the hills, would come
-to the prairie, where they would find the buffalo grass
-which made horses fat. This bottom grass filled them
-up, but did not stick to their ribs. Tatateecha was
-very ingenious in the sign language. When they
-spelled he was perfectly good-humored again; attaching
-himself to Conacher like a friendly child.</p>
-
-<p>For two full hours they allowed the horses to feed,
-before rounding them up again. Conacher would
-dearly have liked to sleep (as all the Slavis did) but
-dared not. However, because of the tobacco he had
-handed out, or because they were getting too far away
-from home, or for some other reason, the Slavis appeared
-to have reconciled themselves. There were
-no further attempts to desert. It was impossible to
-tell what was going on inside their skulls.</p>
-
-<p>Then for five hours longer they continued on their
-way. The character of the route never changed. For
-mile after mile the brown ribbon of earth threaded in
-and out amongst the trunks of the pines, climbing the
-little unevenness of ground; crossing small water-courses.
-On their left hand the vast sea of grass was
-generally in sight through the trees, with a suggestion
-of water on the horizon; sometimes for considerable
-distances the trail followed the actual line between
-grass and timber.</p>
-
-<p>At about six o’clock they halted for the night. It
-seemed a pity not to take advantage of the four remaining
-hours of daylight; but when Conacher looked
-at the grass-fed horses, sweaty and drooping, he perceived
-the necessity for camping. The horses were
-turned out in the grass; the Slavis built their fire at
-the foot of the bank; while Conacher spread his bed
-on top in a grove of pines running out to a point,
-whence he could survey both horses and men.</p>
-
-<p>He spent the early part of the evening fraternizing
-with his men amidst great laughter when, as frequently
-happened, the language of signs broke down.
-About eight o’clock he retired to his own little fire
-above, and rolled up in a blanket. The sun had not
-yet sunk out of sight; but it was planned to start at
-four next morning. As he lay there day-dreaming, he
-was greatly astonished to see a Slavi Indian quietly approaching
-between the trees at the back of the point.</p>
-
-<p>He sat up. All the Slavis looked very much alike
-to him; but he instantly recognized that this was not
-one of those who had accompanied him all day.
-There was a suggestion of secrecy in his approach.
-A rather better physical specimen than the average
-Slavi, his face bore the childish, deceitful grin that
-was characteristic of them all. His teeth were blackened
-and broken; on the whole, an unpleasant-looking
-individual. He held out an envelope towards Conacher;
-and the young man leaped to his feet full of a
-vague alarm.</p>
-
-<p>“Who are you?” he asked involuntarily.</p>
-
-<p>The Indian, grinning, shook his head like a dog,
-and pointed to his ear; the usual sign for not understanding.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher pointed to himself, and said “Conacher.”
-He then pointed to the Indian.</p>
-
-<p>“Saltahta,” said the man.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher took the envelope. It bore no superscription.
-Tearing it open, his heart was filled with
-warmth at the sight of Loseis’ signature in big round
-characters. The letter had been written on the typewriter
-in the stammering style of the beginner. Conacher
-had had such a letter from Loseis down river.
-This one was brief.</p>
-
-<p>“There is something wrong here. Gault is plotting
-mischief. I am afraid. The man who takes this to
-you is a good man. Let him go with the outfit, and
-you come back to me.”</p>
-
-<p>As he read, all Conacher’s warmth was chilled.
-Suspicion leaped into his mind full-grown. There was
-a vagueness about the letter that was not like Loseis.
-Moreover he doubted if she would ever confess to being
-afraid, even if she were afraid. And why should
-she sign her full name; Laurentia Blackburn. On the
-other letter it had been simply Laurentia. He remembered
-the sheets that Gault had made her sign
-for him, and smiled to himself. Really, the plot was
-too transparent. He, Conacher, was to be drawn off,
-and the fur diverted to Gault’s uses under guidance of
-this Indian. Loseis had told him of a Slavi who was
-in Gault’s pay.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly putting his finger on the man’s breast,
-Conacher said: “Etzooah.”</p>
-
-<p>The Slavi looked at him with perfect, stupid blankness,
-and shook his head. “Saltahta,” he repeated.</p>
-
-<p>“Tatateecha!” called Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>The little head man came climbing up the bank.
-Whatever his astonishment at the sight of the newcomer,
-nothing showed in his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is this man?” demanded Conacher, putting
-his finger on the Slavi.</p>
-
-<p>“Saltahta,” said the newcomer quickly.</p>
-
-<p>“Saltahta,” repeated Tatateecha like a parrot.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher bit his lip. With a jerk of his head he
-dismissed Tatateecha. The other man made as if to
-follow.</p>
-
-<p>“You stay where you are!” cried Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>Whether or not the man understood English, the
-gesture which accompanied the words was amply significant,
-and he stopped in his tracks. He began to
-whine pitifully in his own tongue, pointing to his lips
-and hugging his stomach.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t give a damn how hungry you are,” said
-Conacher. “I mean to keep you under my eye until
-I decide what to do.”</p>
-
-<p>The Indian sat down at the foot of a tree, and
-pathetically exhibited his empty pipe to the white man.
-Conacher tossed him the remainder of a plug of
-tobacco, which he began to shave with an air of philosophic
-indifference.</p>
-
-<p>There was an agonizing struggle going on in Conacher’s
-breast. Though he had every reason in the
-world to believe that letter a trick, he found that he
-<span class='it'>could not disregard it</span>. There was still one chance
-in a thousand that it was genuine, and it was a chance
-he could not take. He had been unwilling enough in
-the first place to leave Loseis; this little doubt tipped
-the scale. With that doubt of her safety in his mind
-he recognized that it would be simply impossible for
-him to go on day after day always putting a greater
-distance between them. “Oh, to hell with the fur!”
-he said to himself; and in that moment his mind was
-made up.</p>
-
-<p>But he had no notion of swallowing Gault’s bait (if
-such it was) whole. He lit a pipe to stimulate his
-mental processes, and puffed at it leaning against a
-tree, and gazing down at the innocent-eyed Indian
-speculatively. He thought: I shall take you back with
-me, my man. Tatateecha is a good way from home
-now, and he’s been over this route many times. He
-ought to be able to deliver the fur to Gruber. But in
-any case I’d sooner trust him than you. Whether you
-like it or not, you shall come back with me.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed important to Conacher not to allow the
-newcomer to communicate with the other Slavis. Removing
-the handkerchief from about his neck, he
-therefore forced the astonished Indian to put his
-hands around the tree behind him, and firmly bound
-his wrists together. The captive loudly and plaintively
-protested; it was clear that things were not
-turning out in the way that he expected.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher then went down the bank to consult with
-Tatateecha. None of the Slavis had rolled up for the
-night. Their faces were perfectly wooden; but the
-white man sensed a certain strain in the atmosphere.
-Evidently Tatateecha had told them of the newcomer’s
-arrival, and it had excited them. As well as
-he could, Conacher signified to the head man that he
-was going back to Blackburn’s Post; and that he
-wanted two of the least tired horses to be
-caught.</p>
-
-<p>Pointing up to the top of the bank, Tatateecha
-asked an eager question.</p>
-
-<p>“He goes with me,” said Conacher, illustrating
-with signs.</p>
-
-<p>He thought he saw a look of relief appear in the
-Slavi faces. However they volunteered no information.
-Again he asked Tatateecha the man’s name, and
-received the same answer: “Saltahta.” Strange creatures!
-Apparently they knew of no way of dealing
-with the strong and terrifying white man except to
-hide as much as possible from them.</p>
-
-<p>Men were sent away to catch the required horses,
-and Conacher took out pencil and note-book to write
-his letter to Gruber. He wished to do this in the
-sight of Tatateecha, knowing what a superstitious
-reverence all the remoter tribes have for the act of
-writing. And it was quite true that Tatateecha, out
-of the corners of his eyes, followed every move of the
-pencil with a look of uneasy awe. Conacher wrote:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p>“Hector Blackburn was killed on June 3rd by falling
-over a cliff with his horse. Matthew Gault has
-come to Blackburn’s Post where he is trying to take
-advantage of the helpless situation of Blackburn’s
-daughter. She has written to you, but supposes that
-the letter has not been allowed to go through. We
-are sending you the fur in charge of Tatateecha because
-we have nobody else. If you get this letter send
-us help quickly. Send the police if possible; at any
-rate send white men. I have promised Tatateecha a
-credit of one hundred skins if he places this letter in
-your hands.”</p>
-
-<p>“Paul Conacher, Dominion Geological Survey.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Conacher inclosed this letter in the torn envelope,
-since he had no other, and offered it to Tatateecha.
-The Indian received it gingerly and wrapped it in a
-fold of the gay worsted sash he wore. Conacher
-explained whom it was for, and told Tatateecha he
-should receive goods to the value of a hundred skins
-when it was delivered. To convey the figure, the
-white man patiently broke up tiny twigs to the required
-number. Tatateecha’s eyes widened in delighted
-cupidity. In that moment he could be depended
-on; the question was, could his feather-head
-hold to a resolution long enough to carry it through?</p>
-
-<p>The two horses were driven up on top of the bank.
-The Slavis jeered and pointed at the predicament of
-the one who called himself Saltahta. If it had been
-Tatateecha or Conacher himself, they would have
-done just the same. By Conacher’s orders, they
-offered to feed the captive, but he refused it. When
-his horse, which was found tied to a tree near by, was
-led in, it was discovered that he had plenty of bread
-and meat tied to his saddle.</p>
-
-<p>Saddle and bridle were transferred to one of the
-fresher horses, and the man was bidden to mount.
-His hands were tied behind him; and his feet tied with
-a loose thong under the horse’s belly. The Slavis
-yelled in derision, and slapped their thighs. Conacher
-would have given a good deal to have understood the
-epithets they bestowed on the prisoner. A leading
-rein was improvised out of a piece of tracking line.
-Tying blanket and food to his own saddle, Conacher
-mounted, and rode off leading the other horse.</p>
-
-<p>For a long time he could hear the laughter of the
-Slavis. He wondered if they could make any more of
-the situation than he could, or if their laughter was as
-meaningless as it sounded. In the hands of these
-crack-brained savages, he bitterly reflected, rested not
-only the fate of that fortune in skins, but also the
-hope of Loseis and him receiving help from the outside
-world.</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='201' id='Page_201'></span><h1>CHAPTER XVII<br/> <span class='sub-head'>THE MEETING</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>T</span>hree</span> hours later the two horses were still jogging
-in the same manner along the forest trail.
-In the beginning the prisoner had sought to make as
-much trouble as possible by beating his heels against
-his horse’s ribs, rendering the animal almost unmanageable.
-Conacher had then put him in front, telling
-him to beat away, whereupon the Slavi had become
-very quiet. The tiring horse hung back more and
-more, and in order to make any progress at all, Conacher
-had been obliged to take the lead, and pull the
-other after.</p>
-
-<p>The moon was now high. Little moonlight penetrated
-through the trees, but the general brightness
-made traveling easier. A slow trot was the best that
-Conacher could get out of the horses. Even that
-pace was not without danger at night. Had not the
-trail been freshly cleaned up that day for the passage
-of the fur train, they could not have done it.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher figured that he was within two or three
-miles of the Slavi village. In two hours more he
-would make Blackburn’s Post. His heart leaped at
-the thought of rousing Loseis up in the middle of the
-night. How astonished she would be! He would
-hold her in his arms again! He urged his horse forward,
-and gave the leading rein a jerk.</p>
-
-<p>Not but what he had certain doubts, too, of his reception.
-Loseis might blame him for returning;
-would want to send him away again perhaps. Conacher
-firmly shook his head in the darkness. No!
-whatever the truth of the situation, it was better for
-them to remain together. Nothing should persuade
-him to leave her again.</p>
-
-<p>As Conacher, dreaming, jogged along between the
-half-seen pillars of the pines rising into obscurity, his
-wearied horse threw up his head and whinnied. The
-rider instinctively drew up to listen. A sound of fear
-broke from the man behind. Presently, out of the
-stillness of the forest came a faint, answering whinny
-from ahead. Clapping heels to his horse, Conacher
-rode to meet it.</p>
-
-<p>The Slavi moaned in fear. “Stop!” he said.
-“It is not good. There is nobody here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ha!” said Conacher. “You have found your English,
-eh?” He continued to urge his horse forward.</p>
-
-<p>They turned into a natural avenue through the trees
-where the moonlight came flooding down. At the end
-of this glade, seen first as a dim gray ghost, and gradually
-resolving itself into the lineaments of life, they
-perceived a motionless horse and rider blocking the
-trail. For a second, such a sight in that awful solitude
-caused even Conacher’s heart to fail; but he did
-not pull up. As for the Indian, a strangled squall of
-terror escaped him, and he fell to gibbering incoherently.
-He was perfectly helpless. Tied as he was,
-he could not throw himself off his horse without the
-certainty of being trampled.</p>
-
-<p>Drawing closer, a wild, joyous suspicion sprang up
-in Conacher’s breast; then certainty. It was Loseis
-in her boy’s dress, sitting astride the sorrel mare.
-Flinging themselves off their horses, they flew to each
-other’s arms, careless of the on-looker.</p>
-
-<p>“Loseis, my darling!” murmured Conacher.
-“What are you doing here?”</p>
-
-<p>She was all woman then. “Oh, Paul .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Oh,
-Paul .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. !” she faltered. “I came to warn you.
-Gault is waiting in the trail to kill you!”</p>
-
-<p>“To kill me!” he echoed amazed.</p>
-
-<p>A hasty, confused explanation took place. They lowered
-their voices that the Indian might not overhear.</p>
-
-<p>“I did not send you that letter,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“I know it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why did you come back then?”</p>
-
-<p>“I <span class='it'>had</span> to come.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Do you blame me?”</p>
-
-<p>“No! No! It is all right. If you had not come
-they would have ridden after you. I can best take
-care of you here.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher laughed half in delight, half sorely.
-“You take care of me! I like that! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. How did
-you know they had sent me a letter?”</p>
-
-<p>“I crept up to them in the woods. I listened.” She
-gave him the gist of what she had overheard.</p>
-
-<p>“Good God!” cried Conacher in his simplicity.
-“Think of anybody wanting to kill <span class='it'>me</span>!” Catching
-hold of the leading line, he jerked the Indian into the
-full moonlight. “Who is this man?” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Etzooah,” said Loseis with half a glance.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought so,” said Conacher grimly. “According
-to the letter he was to have gone with the outfit; but
-I thought I had better bring him with me.”</p>
-
-<p>“You did well,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>Tying the horses to trees, they walked away a little
-in the trail. For awhile they were completely filled
-with the joy of being together again. The difficulties
-ahead had to wait.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my darling, when I realized that it was you,
-my heart nearly burst with joy. It was so unexpected,
-so lovely to find you waiting quietly in the moonlight!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Paul, it makes up for everything to have
-known you! I don’t care what happens now.”</p>
-
-<p>“You must have been waiting here alone for hours.
-How could you dare to do it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I had to do it. I never thought twice
-about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are the bravest girl in the world!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no! I’m just an ordinary girl who is in love
-with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t deserve it!” he murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“Well .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. neither do I!”</p>
-
-<p>When they returned to earth, Conacher said simply:
-“What shall I do with this Indian now? Put a bullet
-through his head?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no! no!” said Loseis nervously. “There must
-be no killing.”</p>
-
-<p>“They started it,” said Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“I wanted to kill Gault myself,” said Loseis
-quaintly; “but I struggled against it.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher laughed. “Little fire-eater!” he said,
-hugging her close.</p>
-
-<p>“We must be serious now,” she said pushing him
-away.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll have to turn the man loose then,” said Conacher.
-“And let him find his way to his friends on
-foot.”</p>
-
-<p>“That will be best,” said Loseis. “They are waiting
-about four miles from here. It will give us time
-to get out of the way.”</p>
-
-<p>“The horses are so tired,” exclaimed Conacher.
-“And it must be eighteen miles to the fur-camp. They
-will die under us before we get there.”</p>
-
-<p>“But we are not going there,” said Loseis. “If I
-had meant that, I would have ridden right through.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where else can we go?” said Conacher, opening
-his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Gault and his men would be up with us almost as
-soon as we broke camp in the morning. The Slavis
-would run away. How could we protect ourselves
-there in the open? Neither you nor I would ever be
-seen alive again. How easy for Gault to explain that
-there had been an accident. There would be no witnesses
-but his men.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you propose then?” said Conacher
-gravely.</p>
-
-<p>“I have been thinking about it all these hours. We
-will go back to Blackburn’s Post. There we will be
-on our own ground. There are strong buildings to
-protect us, and plenty of grub and ammunition. It
-would be more difficult for Gault to make out that
-there had been an accident there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right!” said Conacher. “You have a head on
-you! Whatever happens we will never be parted
-again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never!” she said going to his arms.</p>
-
-<p>“One of us will not be left!”</p>
-
-<p>“I swear it!” she said kissing him.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher felt the strength of ten men coursing
-through his veins. “Come on!” he said briskly.
-“How do you propose to get by the men waiting in the
-trail?”</p>
-
-<p>“We will take a canoe at the Slavi village. Mary-Lou
-is waiting there. She will stick to us. She is not
-brave, but her heart is true.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good!” said Conacher. “Now for this red-skinned
-blackguard. How about taking him with us
-to the Post? Gault would then ride after the fur at
-daybreak and we’d gain a day.”</p>
-
-<p>“What good would that do us?” said Loseis. “He
-would be back at the Post by night. And in the meantime
-the Slavis would be scattered. Tatateecha is our
-best hope of getting help from the outside.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” said Conacher. “But it goes against
-the grain to turn the scoundrel loose.”</p>
-
-<p>Taking out his knife, he proceeded to cut the cringing
-Indian’s bonds. “You filthy wretch!” he cried;
-“you mangy, verminous coyote! If you got your
-deserts I would be sticking this knife between your
-ribs! Go back to your master and tell him .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wait!” cried Loseis. “Not a word! Gault won’t
-know how much we know. Let him guess!”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher swallowed his anger. Etzooah slipped
-from his horse, and crawled on the ground like a
-whipped cur.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis and Conacher mounted and rode on, driving
-the third horse in front of them. Etzooah, cramped
-from his long confinement in bonds, staggered along
-slowly behind them.</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='207' id='Page_207'></span><h1>CHAPTER XVIII<br/> <span class='sub-head'>CONFUSION</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>W</span>hen</span> he came to the Slavi village after his long
-walk, Etzooah crossed the ford, and sticking his
-head inside the first tepee, awakened the sleepers with
-a yell. He demanded to know if Yellow-Head and
-Blackburn’s daughter had been seen. A grumbling
-voice replied that they had taken a canoe and gone
-down river. Searching for a horse, Etzooah perceived
-that the whites in their haste had turned out
-their horses without unsaddling them. The sorrel
-mare eluded him; she disliked the Indian smell; but
-he caught the horse he had already ridden so far. It
-would serve for the short distance he had still to go.
-Refording the river, he proceeded along the trail.</p>
-
-<p>It was not Gault’s habit to confide in his creatures
-any further than he was forced to. Etzooah’s job
-had been to steer the fur train east across the prairie
-and hit the big river at Fisher Point, where the fur
-could be picked up later by the launch and a scow
-from Good Hope. Etzooah might have guessed that
-a short shrift was waiting for Conacher at Blackburn’s
-Post, but he had been told nothing of the details
-of the plot, which, indeed, had been concocted
-after his departure. Etzooah expected to find Gault
-and his men camped within a mile or so of the Post,
-where he had left them earlier that day.</p>
-
-<p>Ere he had gone two miles beyond the Slavi village,
-the miserable Indian rode fairly into the trap set for
-the white man. He was pounding along at a good
-rate over this well-traveled part of the trail, one knee
-hooked around the horn of his saddle, as was his
-custom. The thin line, stretched as taut as a wire
-across the trail, caught him under the chin, and lifted
-his body clear of the saddle. His knee held him; the
-horse reared; Etzooah’s head was dragged back between
-his shoulders. As the horse’s forefeet dropped
-back to the ground, there was a horrible soft crack
-heard. The man’s body came away from the saddle,
-and dropped limply in the trail. The terrified horse
-ran on.</p>
-
-<p>There was a loud laugh of bravado amongst the
-trees. Gault stepped out into the trail. “Worked like
-a charm!” he said. “I think his neck is broke.”</p>
-
-<p>Moale dropped to one knee beside the huddled
-body, and struck a match. “God! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. It’s Etzooah!”
-he gasped.</p>
-
-<p>“Etzooah! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Etzooah .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. !” said Gault stupidly.</p>
-
-<p>The match had dropped from Moale’s nerveless
-fingers. He fumbled with another. At last the little
-flame sprang up. “Look!” he said. “Look!”</p>
-
-<p>“God Almighty!” cried Gault. “What’s he doing
-back here?”</p>
-
-<p>Moale was feeling under the man’s head. “He’ll
-never tell you,” he said grimly. “His neck is broke.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault said anxiously: “See if he has the letter on
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>A search revealed that the letter was gone.</p>
-
-<p>“Then he has been to Conacher,” said Gault.
-“Drag him into the bush, and we’ll go get that white
-man.”</p>
-
-<p>“If his body should be found .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” suggested
-Moale. “Hadn’t we better drop the tree on him as
-planned for the other?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hell! I’m not going to waste that trick on a redskin!
-I may want it later. Pitch him in the river.
-The current will carry him far beyond the sight of
-mankind.”</p>
-
-<p>But as Moale started to obey, Gault changed his
-mind again. “Wait,” he said. “I’ll help you to hoist
-his body out of way of the coyotes. Conacher was the
-last man who saw Etzooah alive, understand? We
-will use that later.”</p>
-
-<p>The Indian’s body, still warm, was hung over two
-spruce branches. The Crees were summoned to fetch
-the horses from their hiding-place, and Gault and his
-three men rode south.</p>
-
-<p>It was full day and the Slavis were packing the
-horses, in the spongy meadow, when the four big men
-rode violently down the little pine-clad point. Instantly
-the Slavis jumped on horses and scattered far
-and wide in the sea of grass.</p>
-
-<p>Gault had his eye on Tatateecha. “Let them go,”
-he shouted to his men. He caught the plump headman
-by the collar as he was climbing on a horse, and
-flung him in the grass. “Now then!” he said with an
-oath. “Where’s the white man?” It was a simple
-matter to signify Conacher’s curling yellow hair and
-blue eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Another discomfiture awaited the furious trader.
-Tatateecha, delighted to find that Conacher, and not
-himself, was the object of Gault’s wrath, gave, in
-signs, a graphic and perfectly truthful account of how
-Etzooah had arrived the night before and had given
-Conacher a letter; and how Conacher after reading
-the letter had put Etzooah on a horse tied hand and
-foot and had ridden back, leading him. Tatateecha
-said nothing about the letter Conacher had given him,
-which was burning a hole in his stomach at that
-moment.</p>
-
-<p>Gault swore violently, and Tatateecha edged out of
-reach of his boot. The trader was forced to apply to
-Moale in his perplexity. “What do you make of it?”
-he said. “Etzooah was not tied up when we found
-him?”</p>
-
-<p>Moale shrugged. “One thing is clear,” he said,
-“We’ve passed Conacher somewhere.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then catch fresh horses and we’ll ride back!”
-shouted Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“The fur? .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” suggested Moale, casting desirous
-eyes on the scattered bales.</p>
-
-<p>“To hell with the fur! I’m going to get that white
-man first!”</p>
-
-<p>At six o’clock in the morning they were back at the
-Slavi village. Splashing through the ford, the first
-native they came upon was a bent crone, too old to get
-out of the way. Out of her dim eyes she looked at
-Gault with indifferent scorn. In reply to the usual
-question about the white man with the curling hair the
-color of the sun, she told in signs that he had ridden
-there in the night when the paleness of the sky was in
-the north (midnight). Etzooah was not with him
-then. The white man turned out his horse, took a
-canoe, and paddled down river.</p>
-
-<p>“Gone back to the girl,” growled Gault. “But
-what in hell could have warned him that we were laying
-for him in the trail!”</p>
-
-<p>Moale suddenly perceived the well-known sorrel
-mare grazing amongst the other horses. She was still
-saddled and bridled. The eyes almost started out of
-his head. “Look!” he cried pointing.</p>
-
-<p>It was one of the nastiest shocks that Gault had
-received. He stared at the animal with hanging jaw.
-“How did that mare get here?” he demanded
-hoarsely.</p>
-
-<p>The old woman replied by signs that Loseis had
-come with Conacher in the night.</p>
-
-<p>“What!” shouted Gault. “<span class='it'>What!</span> .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Why in
-hell didn’t you say so before?”</p>
-
-<p>The very old woman looked at him calmly. Her
-glance said: You didn’t ask me!</p>
-
-<p>The furious Gault was incapable of dealing with
-her. Moale, calmer and warier, plied her for further
-information. She described how Loseis had been up
-and down in the trail all day. Loseis must have seen
-Etzooah pass at midday, but she had not come back
-to the village for her horse until near evening.</p>
-
-<p>“Then in God’s name what was she doing all afternoon?”
-muttered Gault, a certain fear striking into his
-rage.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing further was to be learned here. The four
-men rode on in the direction of Blackburn’s Post.
-Moale and the two Crees gave their master a good
-dozen yards’ lead in the trail. The passions of hell
-were working in the trader’s black face. Moale was
-gray and the Indians yellowish with fatigue and apprehension.
-It was a safe guess that all three would
-have been glad then to get out of this ugly business;
-but they were bound to their master a hundred times
-over; there was no possibility of dissociating their fortunes
-from his. They were not bothered by moral
-scruples; but they feared that Gault’s passions had
-mastered him to such an extent that he was no longer
-capable of listening to the counsels of prudence.</p>
-
-<p>At a point about a mile short from the Post, they
-turned out of the trail, and followed the summit of
-one of the gravelly ridges, picking their way slowly
-through the scrub. Soon the timber and brush became
-too thick for them to guide their horses through, and
-they were obliged to dismount and lead them. After
-a mile and a half of the roughest sort of going, which
-included the crossing of a gorge-like coulee, they came
-out on the trail to Fort Good Hope in a little prairie
-dotted with clumps of poplars. Here they had left
-their outfit the day before, and had turned out their
-remaining horses hobbled.</p>
-
-<p>They cooked and ate a meal in sullen silence. Afterwards
-Gault dispatched Moale into the Post to spy
-out the situation.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell her,” he said with stiff and bitter lips, “that
-I couldn’t rest for thinking of her alone there, and
-I sent back to ask if she was all right.”</p>
-
-<p>Moale, in his impassive way, set off without expressing
-any opinion as to the usefulness of this errand.</p>
-
-<p>He was back by the time the sun had completed a
-quarter of its journey across the sky. Gault was sitting
-hunched up in the grass almost precisely as he had
-left him. In twenty-four hours the trader had not
-slept. He sprang up at the sight of Moale.</p>
-
-<p>“Well?” he demanded with cruel eagerness.</p>
-
-<p>“I found the two girls in the Women’s House .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”
-Moale began.</p>
-
-<p>“Alone?” snarled Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“Alone. Everything looked as usual. When I delivered
-your message, Loseis listened politely, but her
-eyes were full of hard laughter. She did not believe
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did she say?”</p>
-
-<p>“She told me to thank you, and to tell you that there
-was nothing she required.”</p>
-
-<p>“What then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Conacher, having seen me come, came hurrying
-across from the men’s house.”</p>
-
-<p>“Without concealment?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why should there be any concealment? They cannot
-know that Etzooah is dead. They think Etzooah
-has told us all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Damnation!” muttered the trader. “I am all in
-the dark! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Go on!”</p>
-
-<p>“Conacher had a gun over his arm.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“A gun?” echoed Gault in angry alarm.</p>
-
-<p>“A gun. I did not have any talk with Conacher.
-He left it to the girl.”</p>
-
-<p>“What else did she say?”</p>
-
-<p>“She asked me where we were camped. I replied
-that we had made but a short stage yesterday, because
-you were anxious about her. It amused her to hear
-me lie. She didn’t say anything; but only looked at
-the three-bar brand on my horse’s flank.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault broke out in furious cursing. “You fool!
-Why didn’t you change to one of the horses we left
-here?”</p>
-
-<p>“Those horses are not broke for riding.”</p>
-
-<p>“You could have managed.”</p>
-
-<p>“What difference does it make?” said Moale impassively.
-“They know all.”</p>
-
-<p>“How <span class='it'>can</span> they know?” cried Gault. “Go on!”</p>
-
-<p>“I told her that we had come upon a bunch of her
-horses, and I had borrowed one to ride back, so I
-could save my own. She knew I was lying, of course.
-Her horses do not range on this side of the coulee.
-But she said nothing. She asked me politely if I would
-eat before riding back. I had just eaten, but I said
-I would, thinking I might learn something by staying.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Beaver girl served me in the kitchen. While
-I was eating Loseis and Conacher were talking together
-outside the house. They talked low, but my
-ears are very sharp. I caught enough of the words
-to be able to piece together the sense of the whole.
-Conacher wanted to tell me everything, and try to win
-me to their side. I heard him say: ‘Insane with jealousy.’
-He meant you. His idea was that there was no
-reason why I should risk my neck for you. But the
-girl would not agree. She said you had only sent me
-over there to get information, and if they told me anything
-it would be playing right into your hand. So
-nothing was told me. When I had eaten, some more
-polite speeches were made, and I rode away.”</p>
-
-<p>“You think .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. ?” said Gault, knitting his brows.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sure that they know all,” said Moale. “The
-girl must have been skulking in the woods yesterday
-afternoon. She has doubtless learned the Slavi
-tricks of hiding and moving softly. The way Conacher
-snatched up his gun shows what they expect of
-us.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault revealed the big teeth in an ugly smile. “Well
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” he said slowly, “we won’t disappoint them.
-We’re in so deep now, we’ve got to go the whole
-way.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. ?” asked Moale with his enigmatic
-eyes fixed intently on Gault’s face.</p>
-
-<p>Gault nodded somberly. “The girl <span class='it'>and</span> the man,”
-he said. “Before anybody comes in.”</p>
-
-<p>Moale shrugged acquiescently.</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='216' id='Page_216'></span><h1>CHAPTER XIX<br/> <span class='sub-head'>PREPARING FOR DANGER</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>A</span>s</span> soon as Moale rode away Loseis, Conacher and
-Mary-Lou held a council. The sense of common
-danger drew them very close together; their hearts
-were soft towards each other. The whites treated the
-Indian girl exactly as one of themselves. But poor
-Mary-Lou was not of much help to them. Terror had
-her in its grip again.</p>
-
-<p>The sunshine drew them outside the door of the
-Women’s House. Loseis cast her eyes about the
-scene. “Ah! how beautiful the world is!” she murmured.
-“Only men spoil it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Cheer up!” said Conacher stoutly. “They haven’t
-got us yet!”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not mind danger!” said Loseis quickly. “But
-such wickedness hurts my breast. It spoils life!”</p>
-
-<p>“I know,” said Conacher. “You cannot believe in
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, never mind our feelings,” said Loseis with
-a shake of her black mane. “What have we got to
-expect now?”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve got the time it will take Moale to ride to
-his master and report,” said Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“But he’s waiting close by, of course,” said Loseis.
-“He may even be watching us from the top of the
-hill.”</p>
-
-<p>“The simplest thing would be for Gault to ride
-down and break in the door with an ax,” said Conacher.
-“If he does, I’ll blow the top of his head off,”
-he added grimly.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis shook her head. “Gault never does the
-simple thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“He may lose his head.”</p>
-
-<p>“Moale is there to remind him to be cautious.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-No! Gault will never attack us in the open. Not
-while we stick together. I feel that from the inside.
-He doesn’t care what you would think; but he is too
-conceited to let me <span class='it'>see</span> what a beast he can be.”</p>
-
-<p>“When it came to the final point,” said Conacher,
-“I don’t believe he could harm you.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s <span class='it'>got</span> to kill me now,” said Loseis simply. “I
-know too much.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher walked around the Women’s House,
-studying it. When he returned he said: “I think we
-had better make this our fortress. There are no
-windows in the back; it will be the easiest building to
-defend. And more comfortable for you girls. I’ll
-bring over my bed and bunk in the kitchen. You two
-take the inner room.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. That is, if you agree.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are the captain,” said Loseis with a warm
-glance.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we won’t quarrel over who’s the boss,” said
-Conacher. “Our first job must be to stock up with
-food, water, ammunition and firewood.”</p>
-
-<p>They scattered to these tasks, glad to have something
-to occupy their hands. Expecting momentarily
-to be interrupted, they worked hard and swiftly,
-always keeping their ears sharpened for hoof-beats on
-the trail. But there were no alarms. Midday came;
-they finished their work; and Blackburn’s Post still
-basked undisturbed in the sunshine.</p>
-
-<p>While Mary-Lou cooked the dinner, Conacher took
-stock of their supplies. There was ample food, firewood
-and ammunition—they had taken care to transfer
-the entire stock of ammunition from the store;
-but the water supply gave him cause for anxiety. The
-entire stock of vessels capable of holding water consisted
-of three small kegs, half a dozen pails and some
-small pots. The Slavis carried water in birch-bark
-receptacles.</p>
-
-<p>“Barely a week’s supply,” said Conacher ruefully.</p>
-
-<p>“If the worst comes to the worst we’ll have to cut
-out washing,” said Loseis smiling. “The Slavis get
-along without washing.”</p>
-
-<p>After dinner they lounged in front of the house
-again. This was the hardest time to put in. The uncertainty
-of what to expect kept them keyed up to a
-painful pitch. Conacher wished to creep up to the
-top of the hill to reconnoiter; but Loseis would not
-hear of it.</p>
-
-<p>“Would you take me with you?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“No, of course not!” said Loseis. “You know very
-well we might walk smack into a trap.”</p>
-
-<p>They endlessly discussed their chances.</p>
-
-<p>“If Tatateecha makes thirty miles again to-day,”
-said Conacher; “that will complete one-fifth of the
-whole distance.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Better not count too much on Tatateecha,” warned
-Loseis. “He is as reliable as water.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know,” said Conacher. “But there’s no harm in
-figuring.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Say he makes the warehouse in eight
-more days. If Gruber started back instantly—and of
-course he would on getting my letter; he could make
-the return journey in five days, or even four if he had
-plenty of horses. In twelve days then, we may begin
-to look for relief. After all twelve days is not so
-much.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“But Gault will be counting those twelve days, too,”
-said Loseis in a low tone. “He will not let them pass
-without acting.”</p>
-
-<p>Seeing how the Indian girl’s head was hanging
-down, and her face twitching, Loseis said kindly:
-“Mary-Lou, why don’t you take a horse, and ride to
-the Slavi village? You can stay with the other Marys.
-You would be quite safe there. And you can’t do us
-any good by staying here.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou, without looking up, slowly shook her
-head. “I not like live in tepee,” she murmured.
-“Please, I want stay with you.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis gave her a hug. “Surely!” she said. “But
-I hate to see you so broken up.”</p>
-
-<p>“I all right,” said Mary-Lou in a strangled voice.
-She hastened into the house.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher and Loseis came together. They walked
-in the grass with linked arms.</p>
-
-<p>“Sweetheart,” murmured Conacher; “you hide it
-well, but you are suffering too!”</p>
-
-<p>“You mustn’t feel sorry for me,” said Loseis, “or
-I’ll feel sorry for myself then.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. It’s only not
-knowing what to expect! When I see what I have to
-do, I’ll be all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“If I could only get you away from it all!”</p>
-
-<p>“I have been through it alone,” said Loseis. “Now
-I have you!”</p>
-
-<p>Later in the afternoon Conacher was sitting by himself
-at the door, still revolving their chances of receiving
-help from the outside, when suddenly he perceived
-a bark canoe with two figures in it coming down
-the river.</p>
-
-<p>“By God! here’s something to break the suspense!”
-he cried, leaping up.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis ran to the door. But when she saw the
-canoe her face showed no relief nor gladness. She
-suspected who was in it.</p>
-
-<p>And when the canoe landed in the creek mouth,
-presently an all-too-familiar little rotund figure rose
-over the top of the bank.</p>
-
-<p>“Tatateecha,” said Loseis in a listless voice.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher’s face fell like a child’s. He groaned
-aloud in his anger and disappointment. “Oh, the
-miserable cur!” he cried.</p>
-
-<p>“What would you expect of a Slavi?” said Loseis,
-shrugging.</p>
-
-<p>They waited for him in a bitter silence. Tatateecha
-came plodding up the grassy rise with the air
-of a guilty schoolboy. His companion remained in the
-canoe. Reaching the top, Tatateecha, with an absurd
-pretense of not seeing Conacher and Loseis, headed
-straight across towards the store. Loseis summoned
-him peremptorily. He came like a dog to get his
-whipping, twisting his body, and grinning in sickening
-fear. Still trying to make out that nothing was the
-matter, he said something to Loseis that caused her
-to laugh a single bitter note.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?” demanded Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“He is out of tobacco,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my God!” cried Conacher. “Tobacco!
-When we were counting on him to bring us help!”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis held up a restraining hand. “You will only
-frighten him stupid,” she said. “Let me find out
-what happened.”</p>
-
-<p>The miserable Tatateecha told his story to Loseis,
-who translated it for Conacher. “He says, early this
-morning when they were packing up for the start,
-Gault, and his three big men suddenly rode into their
-camp, and the Slavis jumped on horses and spread in
-every direction. Gault, when he found you were gone,
-turned right back, but Tatateecha couldn’t round up
-the Slavis by himself, he says. One by one they gained
-the trail and galloped home; and there was nothing
-for it but for him to come home too.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. It may be
-true. It has the sound of truth.”</p>
-
-<p>“Leaving all the fur and the pack-horses where they
-were, I suppose,” said Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis shrugged. “I expect that was bound to be
-lost,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“And he calls himself their head man .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. !”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis concealed her bitter disappointment under a
-mask of indifference. “He isn’t worth swearing at,”
-she said. “Give him a plug of tobacco, and let him
-go.”</p>
-
-<p>Tatateecha began to argue for two plugs of
-tobacco; Conacher with a threatening gesture, sent
-him flying down the hill.</p>
-
-<p>Supper time was approaching when all further uncertainty
-was put to an end by the sound of many
-hoofs pounding down the trail above the Post. Loseis
-and Conacher prudently retired within the house, and
-barring the door, each took up a position at one of
-the little windows looking out on the square. Mary-Lou
-declined to come to the window. Conacher was
-in the kitchen; Loseis in her room, and the door open
-between. Conacher opened his window. Between
-his feet rested the butt of his express rifle; and he
-grasped the barrel in one hand.</p>
-
-<p>Presently a numerous cavalcade rode into the grassy
-square. It seemed to the watchers as if they would
-never stop coming. Besides Gault and Moale they
-counted sixteen well-mounted Indians; big, able-looking
-fellows; mostly having a claim to a distant
-white ancestor in all probability. There were also
-several laden horses, and a number of spare ones.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s brought his army against us!” said Conacher
-with scornful laughter.</p>
-
-<p>“They don’t know what they’re going to be used
-for,” answered Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“Might be a good thing for me to tell them,” suggested
-Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“Useless,” said Loseis. “There’s never been any
-police stationed at Fort Good Hope, and they can conceive
-of no authority higher than Gault’s.”</p>
-
-<p>Reining in, Gault pointed down to the river flat
-where the Slavi village had lately stood. The Indians
-rode on down the grassy rise with their pack-horses
-and spares; and began forthwith to make camp.
-Gault and Moale were left sitting their horses side
-by side. Gault, well aware that he was being watched,
-never looked towards the Women’s House. To all
-appearances he was as ever, the elegant gentleman;
-perfectly turned out; his face smooth and bland. He
-had allowed the rein to fall on his horse’s neck. One
-hand rested on his hip; and with the other he gesticulated
-gracefully towards the camp below, as he
-issued his instructions to the deferential Moale.</p>
-
-<p>“Quite the beau ideal,” said Loseis dryly at her
-little window.</p>
-
-<p>“So that’s my would-be murderer!” said Conacher
-at his. “Gives you a funny feeling to set eyes on him
-when you know.”</p>
-
-<p>Moale dismounted and went to the door of the
-Men’s House, where he knocked.</p>
-
-<p>“Feeling his way,” said Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“It will be amusing to hear what excuse he gives
-for coming back here,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher raised his gun. “Loseis,” he said soberly,
-“the quickest way to end this matter would be for me
-to shoot him off his horse as he sits there.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis ran to his side. “No, Paul, no!” she cried
-agitatedly.</p>
-
-<p>“It would be the best way,” he insisted. “He
-means to kill us if he can. Suppose he gets one of us
-and the other is left. I’m a pretty good shot. I could
-get him easily now. It would end it. These other
-men have nothing against us.”</p>
-
-<p>“No! No! No!” she cried. “Not until he attacks
-us! I couldn’t bear it!”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher allowed the butt of his gun to thump on
-the floor again. “Very well,” he said a little sullenly.
-“Still, I think it would be the best way.”</p>
-
-<p>Receiving no answer at the door of the men’s
-house, Moale faced about, and came towards them.
-Conacher and Loseis watched him with heads close together.
-Moale’s comely olive face was, as always,
-perfectly expressionless.</p>
-
-<p>“What sort of man is this?” asked Conacher grimly.</p>
-
-<p>“Who can tell?” said Loseis. “He is neither white
-nor red.”</p>
-
-<p>They opened the door, and stood side by side within
-the frame to receive him, Conacher with his gun
-across his arm. At sight of the gun Moale’s eyes
-narrowed, but he made no reference to it in speech.
-Bowing to Loseis, he said in his gentle voice:</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Gault wishes to know if he may speak with
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“But why not?” said Loseis coolly. “Speech is
-free.”</p>
-
-<p>“If he comes unarmed,” added Conacher grimly.</p>
-
-<p>Moale stabbed him with a lightning glance of his
-strange eyes, but did not speak. Bowing to Loseis
-again, he turned and went back to Gault.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis and Conacher remained standing in the doorway.
-The girl said earnestly:</p>
-
-<p>“Paul dear, when he comes, you must hold your
-anger in.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not going to truckle to him,” said Conacher,
-angry already.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not! If we showed fear we would be
-lost. But if we become angry they will use it as an
-excuse to attack us, and we will be lost, too. We must
-show neither fear nor anger, but only coldness. My
-heart tells me that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you’re right, of course,” groaned Conacher;
-“but you’re asking almost too much of flesh and
-blood!”</p>
-
-<p>After a brief colloquy with Moale, Gault dismounted,
-and came striding towards them with measured
-steps. He had retained the lordly air of the old-time
-trader. His self-control was marvelous; he kept
-his head up, and looked from Loseis to Conacher with
-brazen coolness. But there was a sort of glassy guard
-over his eyes. You could not see into them.</p>
-
-<p>“He has his nerve with him,” grumbled Conacher
-in unwilling admiration. “Marching up to the gun
-like this, with empty hands.”</p>
-
-<p>“He may have a pistol,” suggested Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“He’d have to draw it,” said Conacher coolly.
-“And my gun is in my hands.”</p>
-
-<p>As he drew close, Gault’s eyes flickered once. It
-must have been like a knife in his breast to see Conacher
-and Loseis pressed together companionably in
-the door of their house like a little family. But this
-was the only sign of feeling he gave.</p>
-
-<p>“Good evening,” he said to Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“Good evening,” returned Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>Gault went on: “I was somewhat surprised to learn
-from Moale, when he returned to me to-day, that Conacher
-was with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Were you?” said Loseis dryly.</p>
-
-<p>“You told me that he had gone with the fur.”</p>
-
-<p>This was too much for Conacher’s honest simplicity.
-“You know damned well what brought me back!” he
-cried.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis laid a restraining hand on his arm. Gault
-continued to look at Loseis as if Conacher had not
-spoken. There was a silence which seemed to bristle
-with pointing knives.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course it was clear to me that the Slavis would
-never be able to carry through alone,” Gault resumed.
-“And as I happened to meet the men I had sent for
-from Fort Good Hope just then, I turned around and
-brought them back with me, to offer them to you to
-take out your fur. They are experienced and intelligent
-men, and can travel anywhere.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis took thought before answering. Why does
-he trouble to give me all this palaver when he knows
-he has only to go and get the fur? It occurred to her
-that candor on her part would be the best means of
-disconcerting him. She said coolly:</p>
-
-<p>“The Slavis have already returned. The fur has
-been abandoned at the spot about thirty miles from
-here, where you saw it early this morning.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault changed color slightly. He could not guess
-how she had learned this so soon.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, there it lies,” Loseis went on. “I do not
-mean to give you permission to go and get it. On the
-other hand I cannot prevent you from doing so.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault appeared to be debating the question with
-himself. He finally said: “It is clearly my duty to
-save this valuable property. I shall therefore send the
-Crees after it to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“As you will,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>Gault made to go; and then turned back as if struck
-by a new thought. “I shall be returning to my own
-post,” he said. “My first thought was to send Moale
-out with the fur; but your situation cannot be very
-comfortable here. If you and Conacher would like
-to accompany the fur train, Moale may remain here
-to guard your property until you return.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis smiled coldly. So this was what he had been
-leading up to!</p>
-
-<p>Conacher’s blue eyes widened with indignation.
-“Well, I’ll be damned!” he cried. “If this
-doesn’t.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis touched him warningly. “I thank you,” she
-said to Gault with hard sweetness. “Mr. Conacher
-and I both thank you. We offer you all the thanks
-that is due to your most generous offer. But <span class='it'>under
-the circumstances</span>, we prefer to remain here.”</p>
-
-<p>Gault’s face was like a wall. He bowed to Loseis,
-and left them.</p>
-
-<p>“By God .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. !” began Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“Hush!” said Loseis. “Anger just gives him an
-opening to get angry too. But coldness mixes him all
-up.”</p>
-
-<p>“What a fool he must be to think .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“He is not a fool,” interrupted Loseis. “He knew
-exactly what he was doing. You see he was not sure
-if we knew that he meant murder. His object was
-to find that out. Well, he did find out.”</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='228' id='Page_228'></span><h1>CHAPTER XX<br/> <span class='sub-head'>BESIEGED</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>A</span> little</span> tent of pale green silk, trim and elegant,
-was pitched for Gault in the meadow
-below, a short distance from the big fire built by the
-Crees. After supper they could see Gault seated in
-the place of honor beside the fire, surrounded by his
-men. Apparently all was peace and good-fellowship
-in that camp. The attitudes of the men suggested
-story-telling, and hearty laughter.</p>
-
-<p>“This is for our benefit,” said Loseis with a scornful
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall watch through the night,” said Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“There will be no open attack.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just the same, I’ll stay up.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will take turns with you.”</p>
-
-<p>However, Gault presently crept under his little
-tent; and the Crees one by one rolled up in their
-blankets, and lay completely covered up in the redskin
-manner like a long row of corpses along the edge of
-the creek bank. The sun went down, and the great
-silence crept like long fingers out of the darkening sky.
-The brief hours of darkness passed, and there was no
-suspicious move nor sound from below. The last of
-the sunset glow stole around the northern horizon towards
-the east. In due course the sun rose again, and
-the camp below lay exactly as before.</p>
-
-<p>Soon afterwards a great bustle began. They built
-up the fire, breakfasted, caught their horses, and
-packed up. Moale and the main body of the Crees
-crossed the creek, and galloped away over the trail to
-the south. Gault and two men rode up the rise,
-crossed the little square without a glance towards the
-Women’s House, and went on up the trail behind the
-store.</p>
-
-<p>“There are four men unaccounted for,” said Loseis
-suddenly. “Only ten went with Moale. I counted
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s go out and take a look about,” said Conacher.
-“Whatever they are plotting, it will take them
-a certain time to organize it. For a few minutes anyhow,
-we will be safe.”</p>
-
-<p>They left Mary-Lou, gray with terror, alone in the
-house. Conacher took his gun. After their night-long
-vigil it was a delight to get out into the open. Running
-down the grassy rise together, they joked at
-danger.</p>
-
-<p>“Funny, here in my own place to be expecting to
-hear a bullet sing past my ears,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“ ’S all right if it sings past,” said Conacher, grinning.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as Loseis looked over the creek bank she
-said: “There was a damaged dug-out lying in the mud
-here. They have repaired it and gone in it. They
-must have gone down river, close under the bank. We
-should have seen them if they had gone up. I don’t
-know why they should go down river.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think I can explain that,” said Conacher.
-“There are three possible ways of escape from this
-place; south by the trail to the lake and beyond; east
-by the trail to Fort Good Hope; and north down the
-river. All three ways are now watched by our enemies.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never should have thought of going down river,”
-said Loseis. “There is nothing there.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have thought of it,” said Conacher. “It would
-be many hundreds of miles to a post, but it’s a possibility.
-But with the river watched it would be the
-most dangerous way of all. All they’d have to do
-would be to smash our boat, or set it adrift in the current.
-It would be all day with us then.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just to keep us from escaping wouldn’t do Gault
-any good,” said Loseis. “We have plenty of grub;
-and help is bound to arrive in the end. That cannot
-be the whole of his plan.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no; not the whole of it,” said Conacher
-grimly. “Time will tell.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis shivered. “Let’s get back under cover,” she
-said.</p>
-
-<p>Before returning to the house they made sure that
-Conacher’s dug-out was still safe where he had left it
-hidden in the willows with the paddle in the bottom.</p>
-
-<p>“Who knows? It may come in handy,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>The hours of that day dragged by with leaden feet.
-Nothing happened, and that was the hardest thing to
-bear. All needed sleep; and all were too highly keyed
-up to obtain it. Clouds had come up with the sun, and
-by breakfast time a soft persistent rain was falling,
-driven in sheets by a cold wind from the northeast.
-Sharp squalls swept across the little square at intervals,
-almost blotting out the buildings opposite.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, at any rate we’re better off than the other
-fellows,” said Conacher with a grim chuckle. “We’ve
-got a roof over our heads.”</p>
-
-<p>After breakfast in spite of Loseis’ protests, he took
-up his position in the open doorway, with his gun
-across his knees. His view out of the window was too
-much narrowed by the thickness of the log walls, he
-explained.</p>
-
-<p>“But you offer such a fair mark where you are!”
-complained Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“Nobody could shoot me here except from behind
-the house opposite,” said Conacher. “In order to do
-that he’s got to show himself; and my eyes are as quick
-as the next man’s.”</p>
-
-<p>The house opposite bothered Conacher. “If they
-gained possession of it, it would render our position
-untenable, as they say in the army communiqués,” he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>It transpired that there were staples in the door,
-and a padlock lying somewhere within to fasten it.
-Conacher announced his intention of going across to
-bar the shutters and lock the door.</p>
-
-<p>And so it was done. Loseis stood at the door with
-her gun to cover his passage to and fro across the
-little square.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis and Conacher, half exasperated, half affectionate,
-disputed endlessly over who should bear the
-heavier part of the burden.</p>
-
-<p>“You <span class='it'>must</span> sleep!” insisted Loseis. “It is to-night
-that the real danger will come.”</p>
-
-<p>“You sleep first,” said Conacher, “and I’ll promise
-to match whatever you do, later.”</p>
-
-<p>Towards the end of the afternoon the sky cleared,
-and the grass of the little square steamed up in the
-warmth of the late sun.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d give something to be able to run down to the
-river and back to stretch my legs,” said Conacher longingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Every foot of the flat is commanded from the
-bench to the north,” said Loseis sharply.</p>
-
-<p>“Very little danger of getting hit if I zigzagged,”
-said Conacher, partly to tease her.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis changed her tactics. “Very well, I’ll come
-too,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Not on your life!” said Conacher; and the subject
-was dropped.</p>
-
-<p>They ate their supper; the sun went down; and the
-great stillness descended. Conacher closed and barred
-the door then; and went back to the kitchen window.
-The window was open; and the slender black barrel
-of his rifle stuck out across the thick log that formed
-its sill. Accustomed as they were to the evening stillness,
-in this tense hour it struck awe into their breasts
-as if it was the first time. They had an indefinable
-feeling that whatever It was, It would come in this
-hushed moment. Loseis was at her window; Mary-Lou
-was crouched on the floor at the back of the room
-with her hands pressed to her mouth.</p>
-
-<p>Presently they heard that sound which is always associated
-with the sunset stillness of the Northwest;
-the long-drawn, intolerably mournful howl of a coyote;
-a sound calculated to shake stretched nerves. It rose
-startlingly close; in fact from the ravine through
-which the creek flowed behind the men’s house opposite.</p>
-
-<p>“That is no coyote,” said Loseis sharply. “They
-never come so close to the Post.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou moaned.</p>
-
-<p>The cry was repeated; and was answered from
-down the river.</p>
-
-<p>“That coyote is afloat in a canoe,” said Conacher
-with a grim chuckle. “The men who went down the
-river to-day have been instructed to come back at evening
-to watch us.”</p>
-
-<p>Another heartrending howl was raised from the hill
-back of the store.</p>
-
-<p>“The outposts are establishing communications,”
-said Conacher, carrying it off lightly in order to
-hearten the girls. “Well, it’s a relief to know what
-and where they are. At this God-awful moment of
-the day you could imagine anything!”</p>
-
-<p>For awhile the quavering cries went back and
-forth; then silence. Darkness drew slowly in. At first
-the sky across the river was like a sea of amber with
-one or two scraps of cloud floating in it like golden
-ships. As the warmth gradually faded out it took on
-the hue of blued steel. The moon was rising later
-now; to-night there would be an hour or so of darkness
-before her coming. Conacher had to strain his
-eyes to make out the details of the house across the
-way.</p>
-
-<p>The slow minutes passed. In the big chimney the
-night-breeze kept up a gentle, uneven murmuring that
-was like somebody speaking to somebody else a little
-way off. Occasionally the man and the girl whispered
-from room to room in the dark just to reassure themselves
-of the other’s warm and breathing presence.</p>
-
-<p>“Paul?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, pardner?”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no need for both of us to be watching.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you take a sleep, old girl.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sleep!”</p>
-
-<p>“My sentiments exactly!”</p>
-
-<p>And later:</p>
-
-<p>“Paul, do not remain at the window. Even though
-they cannot see you, they will guess that you are there.
-It is like a bull’s eye in the side of the house!”</p>
-
-<p>“But I must be looking out!”</p>
-
-<p>“Do as I do. Scrape away the clay, and use a chink
-between the logs for a peep-hole.”</p>
-
-<p>After that Paul lay full length on the floor of the
-kitchen, with his rifle barrel poked out through the
-chink.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly his gun roared outside, blowing the night
-to pieces as it seemed. A dreadful, low cry escaped
-from Mary-Lou.</p>
-
-<p>“What was it?” whispered Loseis sharply.</p>
-
-<p>“Man crawling towards the door of the men’s
-house.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you get him?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Conacher ruefully. “He streaked back
-around the corner. It was the merest shadow. I shot
-too soon.”</p>
-
-<p>There was another long wait, much harder to bear
-for nerves that still recollected the explosion of that
-shot. Then they became aware by a gentle grayness
-pervading the scene outside, that the moon had risen.
-The orb itself was hidden by the buildings opposite.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s gone into the little warehouse beyond the
-store,” said Conacher suddenly. “The door has been
-opened.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Damn it! I should have locked that
-door.”</p>
-
-<p>“You couldn’t have locked it,” said Loseis. “They
-broke the staples.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve a good mind to go over there and get him,”
-muttered Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“Right across the open, I suppose,” said Loseis bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>“I might steal around behind the buildings.”</p>
-
-<p>“There are probably others there.”</p>
-
-<p>“If I sent a shot through the open door it would
-give him a good scare.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing to be gained by scaring him.”</p>
-
-<p>The edge of the moon peeped over the ridge of the
-men’s house. A few minutes later she was shining
-directly into their faces. This had them at a cruel disadvantage,
-for the other side of the square where one
-or more of their enemies were lurking, was hidden in
-the deepest shadow. Conacher swore helplessly under
-his breath.</p>
-
-<p>By and by a cloud crept across the moon dimming
-her silvery glare.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s come out of the warehouse,” said Conacher
-in surprise. “The door is closed now.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I don’t
-understand that. Why should he come out unless he
-had found a better place? What other place is there
-where he could sit in hiding and watch us?”</p>
-
-<p>There was no answer forthcoming. The moon
-came out again, bathing the little square within the
-crouching buildings in her misty radiance. As she rose
-higher their vision was the less obscured. Nothing
-stirred outside. The earth was so still, one fancied
-one could feel its great swing to the east. Time
-passed, and that fear against which the bravest hearts
-are not proof, lay upon them heavier and heavier; the
-fear of the unknown.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher at his loophole muttered and swore under
-his breath. “When I knew where he was it was all
-right.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. This is hellish .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. !”</p>
-
-<p>Finally, when the eastern sky was beginning to get
-ready for dawn, he jumped up. “I can’t stand this,”
-he cried. “I’ve got to find out where they are, and
-what they’re up to!”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis found him in the dark. “Oh, hush!” she
-whispered. “Maybe there’s an ear pressed against the
-back wall! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. What are you going to do?”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher put his lips to her ear. “Make a dummy,
-and show it at the door,” he said. Even at that moment
-a chuckle sounded in his voice.</p>
-
-<p>They closed the shutters, stuffed up their peep-holes
-and lighted a lamp. Conacher tied a broom to the
-back of a chair with the brush uppermost. He then
-tied a piece of firewood athwart the broom handle
-just under the brush. This was for shoulders. They
-dared not use hammer and nails. Upon this frame he
-hung one of Mary-Lou’s dresses, and completed the
-figure by forcing a small cooking pot over the brush
-of the broom, with a piece of white cloth hanging
-down in front to represent a face. In the moonlight
-at a hundred paces distance they judged that it would
-serve. Conacher blew out the light again.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll manipulate the chair,” he said to Loseis.
-“You go back to your peep-hole. You must be watching
-for the flash in case he shoots. Mary-Lou, you
-must open the door. There’s no danger if you keep
-behind it.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher waited until Loseis was at her place.
-“All clear outside?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I can see nothing,” she whispered.</p>
-
-<p>“All right then, Mary.”</p>
-
-<p>They could hear her gasping softly for breath, as
-she drew the door slowly open. The night stole into
-the room. All three hearts were beating furiously.
-Conacher, lying on the floor, grasped the legs of the
-chair, and thrust it forward a little. At first he tipped
-it to represent a face peeping around the doorframe,
-and quickly withdrew it. After repeating this once or
-twice, he allowed the whole figure to show in the doorway,
-swaying a little like a living body.</p>
-
-<p>“Any movement across the way?” he whispered to
-Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing!”</p>
-
-<p>Finally he allowed the figure to tip forward as if to
-peer outside the door. From across the square two
-shots crashed out almost simultaneously. One bullet
-shattered the chair back; the other buried itself deep
-in the log wall across the kitchen. It was a relief
-to hear those shots, waiting for them was so dreadful.
-Conacher jerked the remains of the chair out of sight,
-and Mary-Lou slammed the door. All three of them
-were panting for breath.</p>
-
-<p>“Well?” demanded Conacher excitedly.</p>
-
-<p>“They are inside my father’s house,” said Loseis
-desperately.</p>
-
-<p>“Impossible!” he cried in dismay.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! They are doing the same as us. Shooting
-through chinks between the logs.”</p>
-
-<p>“How could they have got in? There are no windows
-in the back.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who knows? Dug underneath the wall, maybe.”</p>
-
-<p>For the first time Conacher showed discouragement.
-“Oh, God!” he groaned. “By night or day they’ve
-got us covered!”</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='239' id='Page_239'></span><h1>CHAPTER XXI<br/> <span class='sub-head'>A LEAP FOR FREEDOM</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>O</span>n</span> the third morning following, Loseis and Conacher
-were seated at a little table in the kitchen
-of the Women’s House, with a scarcely touched meal
-between them. In the inner room Mary-Lou was lying
-on a mattress with her face turned towards the wall,
-asleep—or despairing. In the kitchen all was in apple
-pie order; a fire burning on the well-swept hearth with
-a small pot of water bubbling upon it; the shutter of
-the little window flung back, and the sunshine streaming
-in; outside all green and peaceful to the eye.
-There was nothing to indicate the horror of the situation
-but the faces of the two at the table. Those gaunt
-and gray young faces, deeply seamed and sunken
-eyed, told a tale of seventy-two hours’ horror.
-Neither had had more than a snatch or two of broken
-sleep. Three endless nights and days and no hope of
-relief. It was the absence of hope which had aged
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher rested his cheek in his palm, and gloomily
-traced imaginary lines on the oilcloth cover with his
-fork. Loseis’ eyes, which looked truly enormous now,
-were fixed on the young man’s face, all tenderness.</p>
-
-<p>“You have brought all this on your head through
-mixing in my miserable affairs,” she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>He looked up quickly. “Oh, don’t say a thing like
-that!” he protested, hurt to the quick. “It seems to
-divide us. How can we be divided now? Your fate
-is my fate and mine yours!”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis looked down, somewhat comforted. But
-she yearned for more explicit comfort still. “I wonder
-you do not hate me,” she whispered.</p>
-
-<p>“Loseis!” he said sharply, “if you say such things
-to me, you will have me blubbering like Mary-Lou.
-That would be a nice thing!” And the tears actually
-stood in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>The sight of those tears was sweet to Loseis; but
-she went on perversely: “Sometimes I think you do
-hate me. You do not like to look at me any more.
-Always you turn your eyes away.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher turned his eyes away then. “The truth
-is, I can’t bear to look at you,” he murmured. “Such
-a child as you are, and so plucky and proud; never a
-word of complaint out of you. It drives me wild to
-think I can’t save you from this!”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis glided swiftly around the table, and caught
-his head against her breast. “Ah, you blessed Paul!”
-she crooned, brooding over him. “I was just trying
-to make you say again that you loved me. You
-mustn’t grieve so over me. Think what it would be
-for me if you weren’t here!”</p>
-
-<p>She dropped to her knees beside his chair. Speech
-would no longer serve to convey their feelings. They
-snatched a moment of poignant happiness out of the
-surrounding horror.</p>
-
-<p>Finally Conacher, partly withdrawing himself from
-her arms, sat up straight. “This can’t go on!” he
-said, striking the table.</p>
-
-<p>“What is in your mind?” she asked anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“We have plenty of food,” he said, “and the water
-is still holding out; but what is the use of it all? To
-be trapped like this would break anybody’s nerve;
-knowing night and day that the guns were covering
-you. If we stay here they’re certain to get us in the
-end. Time is passing. If we give them no opportunity
-to pick us off, they’ll drive us out of our shelter.
-They have only to build a fire against the back wall of
-this house .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Heaven!” murmured Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want to frighten you unnecessarily,” he
-said, stroking back her hair; “but we’ve got to face
-the worst. I’ve been looking for it to happen every
-night. That’s why I couldn’t sleep. How simple
-for Gault to shoot us down as we ran out, and throw
-our bodies back on the fire .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I say we must
-make a break for it, while we are able to choose our
-own time.”</p>
-
-<p>“But where could we go?” faltered Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been thinking about that. God knows, I have
-had plenty of time! The three obvious ways out are
-closed to us, but there is a fourth way .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where?”</p>
-
-<p>“Across the river and over the prairie to the north
-or northwest.”</p>
-
-<p>“But that is the unknown country!” said Loseis with
-widening eyes. “No white man has ever been across
-there!”</p>
-
-<p>“True,” said Conacher; “but after all it’s just a
-country like any other. And I’m accustomed to making
-my own way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nobody knows what is on the other side!”</p>
-
-<p>“I know,” said Conacher. “It’s part of my job to
-map this country; and I carry the existing map in my
-mind. Two or three hundred miles away—I can only
-make a rough guess as to the distance; there is an important
-river called the Mud River. We only have reports
-of it from the Indians. But the name tells you
-what kind of a river it is. It must be a prairie river
-like this one; fairly deep and moderately swift. If
-there are cottonwood trees I could make a rough dug-out;
-or I could always make rafts. The Mud River
-eventually falls into the Sinclair. It is up the Sinclair
-River that my outfit is making its way at present. According
-to their schedule they will make the mouth of
-the Mud River on July fifteenth. That gives us a
-month. If we are too late we could follow them up
-the Sinclair. They travel slow on account of the work
-they have to do. It is the best chance I see. No
-woman has ever made such a journey, but men have;
-and you are as plucky and strong as a boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can do it if you can,” said Loseis quickly.
-“But how could we escape from here with an outfit;
-grub, blankets, ax, gun, ammunition?”</p>
-
-<p>“It would have to be a mighty slim outfit,” said
-Conacher. “I could feed you with my gun if I had
-to.”</p>
-
-<p>“Across the river there are only a few broken
-horses,” said Loseis. “We could not be sure of finding
-them at the moment we needed them.”</p>
-
-<p>“We may have to walk,” said Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“But when Gault missed us, he could swim his
-horses over. What chance would we have then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not much of a one.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But a crazy idea has
-been coming back to me again and again. Maybe the
-very craziness of it is in its favor.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“If we could persuade Gault that we had committed
-suicide in our desperation .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. ?”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis’ eyes widened like a child’s.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you swim?” asked Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>She sadly shook her head.</p>
-
-<p>“Hm! that’s awkward.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. But maybe I could
-manage.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. There is that little air pillow in my
-outfit.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>They heard Mary-Lou approaching out of the next
-room, and drew apart.</p>
-
-<p>“What on earth will we do with her?” whispered
-Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher shook his head in complete perplexity.
-“We’ll talk it over later,” he whispered.</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou had come to clean up the breakfast
-dishes. The past four days had made a shocking
-change in the appearance of the comely Indian girl.
-She was too apathetic to resent being excluded from
-their counsels; and Conacher and Loseis went on with
-their whispering.</p>
-
-<p>All day they alternately whispered together, and
-parted from each other to think over the matter
-afresh. To have this absorbing matter to talk over
-relieved the tension; the hours passed more quickly.
-They surveyed their plan from every angle, continually
-rejecting this expedient, and accepting that.
-Little by little they built up a reasonable-seeming structure.
-Of course the best plan they could make depended
-upon so many chances for its success, that
-there were many moments when they despaired. But
-at such moments Conacher would always say: “Still,
-anything would be better than this!” Whereupon
-they would set their wits to work afresh.</p>
-
-<p>Some hours later Conacher said: “One thing is certain.
-It would have twice as good a chance of success
-if we could prepare Gault’s mind beforehand for such
-a thing to happen. We ought to send him a letter.”</p>
-
-<p>“How could we send him a letter?” asked Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>Recollecting the Indian trophies that hung on the
-walls of Loseis’ room, Conacher went in there.
-Loseis, following, saw him take down a bow, and test
-the string.</p>
-
-<p>“It has hardened some,” he said: “But it will do.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis, getting the idea, smiled. “But would they
-dare to come out and get it?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, curiosity is a strong motive,” said Conacher.
-“And anyway, I have suspected every night that they
-came part way across the square at the darkest time
-before the moon comes up, to make sure that we
-didn’t slip out.”</p>
-
-<p>They sat down to concoct the letter. “You must
-write it,” said Conacher. “It would be more effective.”</p>
-
-<p>After a couple of hours’ work and many drafts,
-they produced the following:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='noindent'>“<span class='sc'>To Gault</span>:</p>
-
-<p>“Why do you torture me so? I have never harmed
-you. Mary-Lou died the first night, and we buried her
-under the floor. Our water is gone. Conacher is acting
-so strangely I am afraid of what he may do. He
-doesn’t know I am writing this. I will shoot it over
-to you while he sleeps. If there is any decency or
-mercy in your heart let me see you ride away from
-this place to-morrow. I cannot stand this any longer.</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:right;margin-right:2em;'>“<span class='sc'>Laurentia Blackburn.</span>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Conacher and Loseis smiled grimly over this effusion.
-But Loseis quickly frowned.</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot bear to have him think I would whine for
-mercy like that,” she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but think of the pleasure of fooling him
-later,” Conacher pointed out.</p>
-
-<p>To send their letter they chose a moment after sunset,
-while there was still light enough to aim it.
-Throwing open the door, they all stood back on the
-chance of receiving a bullet from across the way: but
-their enemies gave no sign. It fell to Loseis’ part to
-dispatch the letter, since she was accustomed to handling
-the bow and arrow. The letter had been fastened
-around the shaft with a thread. After waiting a
-moment or two, Loseis took up her stand far enough
-back from the door so that she could not possibly be
-seen. Drawing the bow-string to her ear, she let it
-twang. The arrow sped across the open space, and
-stuck fast in the wall of the men’s house, a few
-inches from the door. Conacher slammed their door
-shut.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning as soon as it became light, they perceived
-that the arrow still remained fixed in the wall.
-Their hearts sunk, thinking that their ruse had failed.
-But as the light strengthened Loseis’ sharp eyes discovered
-that the white band around the shaft was
-gone.</p>
-
-<p>“They have it!” she cried.</p>
-
-<p>All day long they anxiously watched for any sign
-of activity on the part of their enemies. If any reply
-had been made to their letter it might have seriously
-embarrassed them, but none was made. As the endless,
-endless day finally rounded towards its close,
-Conacher said grimly:</p>
-
-<p>“It must be to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis nodded.</p>
-
-<p>They did not take Mary-Lou into their confidence
-until the latest possible moment. They supped; and
-the dishes were washed. Finally when Conacher began
-to lay out the bundles they were to carry, she had
-to be told. The mind of the overwrought girl was
-distracted by the thought of more danger.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me stay here,” she moaned. “Let me stay
-here and die!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why die?” said Conacher patiently. “We’re
-offering you a chance to live!”</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot do it!”</p>
-
-<p>“You have the easiest part of all,” Loseis pointed
-out.</p>
-
-<p>“We have told them that you are dead and buried,”
-said Conacher laughing. “Whether they believe it or
-not, they’re not going to bother about you until they
-catch Loseis and me. We have only got to run from
-the door to the corner of the house. There’s not one
-chance in a hundred they can get us in that space if
-we run abreast. Once around the corner we are out
-of range until they can get out of the house.”</p>
-
-<p>After long persuasion, Mary-Lou agreed to try it.</p>
-
-<p>“Now listen,” said Conacher, with an appearance
-of great cheerfulness; “here’s the plan. At the
-corner of the house we divide. Loseis and I run down
-to the flat, and strike for my dug-out, while you hit
-directly into the woods behind this house. You are to
-make your way entirely around the Post by the side
-hill, and cross the creek, and make your way as best
-you can to the Slavi village. Take your time to it.
-If you get there by to-morrow night it will do. When
-it is dark to-morrow night take three horses .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“But not my horse,” put in Loseis. “She is too
-well known.”</p>
-
-<p>“Three horses,” resumed Conacher; “and as much
-grub as Tatateecha will let you have.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“They have plenty of smoked meat and smoked
-fish,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“What place can I appoint for a meeting?” asked
-Conacher of Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“The Old Wives’ Slough. It is the furthest point
-that I have been with my father. About ten miles
-west of here, and the same distance north of the Slavi
-village.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you been there?” Conacher asked Mary-Lou.</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know the North Star?”</p>
-
-<p>She nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Good! Then take the horses and the grub when
-it becomes dark to-morrow night, and ride ten miles in
-the direction of the North Star to that slough in the
-prairie.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is a trail from the Slavi village,” put in
-Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“Loseis and I will be waiting for you there,” said
-Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“In the poplar bluff on the south side of the slough,”
-added Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“If we are not there,” added Conacher with a smile
-for Loseis’ benefit, “why, turn around and ride back
-to the Slavi village.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher repeated these instructions over again,
-and made Mary-Lou say it all after him. Both he and
-Loseis feared that in the unnerved red girl they had
-but a broken reed to lean upon. However they had
-no other. Once clear of that den of horror they hoped
-that she might recover herself somewhat.</p>
-
-<p>Then the packs were made. Each was to take a
-blanket with a small package of food rolled up inside
-it. In addition Conacher had his gun and an ammunition
-belt containing a hundred shells, and a small
-cooking-pot packed with matches, tea and tobacco.
-Loseis was to take a smaller belt of shells and a small
-ax. Mary-Lou was given Conacher’s smaller gun
-and ammunition for it. Everything was to be strapped
-on their backs, in order to leave both arms free.</p>
-
-<p>“How shall we know the proper moment to start
-out?” asked Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“The moon does not rise to-night until after midnight,”
-said Conacher. “The darkest time will be
-about two hours after sundown. I will mark a
-candle and light it when the sun goes down. When it
-has burned two inches we will make a break.”</p>
-
-<p>“That will only give us an hour or so before the
-moon comes up.”</p>
-
-<p>“The first few minutes will decide everything,” he
-said, smiling at her.</p>
-
-<p>They were ready, of course, long before it was time
-to set out. Conacher made it his job to keep up the
-spirits of his little party. He suggested having another
-meal, but no one ate but himself. After that
-there was nothing to do but sit down and look at the
-candle. Very hard on the nerves. A half a dozen
-times Loseis sprang up like a haggard little panther,
-crying:</p>
-
-<p>“It’s perfectly dark. Let’s start.”</p>
-
-<p>To which Conacher would always reply in his calm
-and cheerful style: “No! When you settle on a
-thing, you must stick to it.”</p>
-
-<p>As the candle burned down towards the fateful
-mark, the three pairs of eyes were fixed on it in painful
-intensity, and three hearts rose slowly into three
-throats. The last ten minutes were the hardest.</p>
-
-<p>“Now!” said Conacher briskly, at last.</p>
-
-<p>They adjusted their packs. Under her pack Loseis
-wore the deflated air pillow fastened between her
-shoulders by a harness of twine contrived by Conacher.
-Both Loseis and Conacher felt that this might well be
-the moment of farewell, but neither spoke of it. It
-was all expressed in an exchange of looks. Mary-Lou
-was piteously striving to get her breath. Conacher’s
-last act before leaving was to throw a pailful of the
-precious water on the fire, that no reflection of the
-glow might betray them when the door was opened.
-The room was filled with hissing steam.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait a moment,” whispered Conacher in the darkness.
-“They might possibly have heard that sound.
-Give them time to forget it.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Me first, then
-Loseis, then Mary-Lou. Take hands. Run like hell
-around the corner of the house.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I am opening
-the door now.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>They ran out and turned, putting every nerve into it.
-Instantly, the guns across the grass roared out. They
-heard the twin bullets plug deep into the logs behind
-them. The guns crashed again. They gained the
-corner of the house unhurt. Immediately the cry of
-the coyote was raised not a hundred yards away; almost
-in their ears it seemed. It was more human than
-coyote. Their enemies were outside the house. Already
-they could hear the sound of running feet.
-Other cries answered the first one: from the hill behind;
-from the ravine; from the river.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis gave Mary-Lou a gentle push; and the Indian
-girl disappeared noiselessly into the bush back of the
-house. Conacher and Loseis took hands and raced
-down the grassy rise. A voice behind them shouted
-in English:</p>
-
-<p>“There they go!”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher whispered: “Make first for the creek;
-then double back towards the willows!”</p>
-
-<p>The surface of the natural meadow was rough, and
-Conacher went down twice, but was up again like the
-recoil of a spring. Loseis had the mysterious sure-footedness
-of an Indian. Behind them they heard
-their pursuers falling and cursing. Gault’s voice
-shouted a command in Cree.</p>
-
-<p>“He is telling them to make for the creek,” whispered
-Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>When they had almost reached the edge of the
-creek bank, they turned sharply to the right, and
-headed back obliquely across the flat towards the
-point where the dug-out was hidden. They slackened
-their pace that they might not betray their whereabouts
-by further falls. This maneuver was successful
-for the moment. They heard their pursuers halt at
-the creek bank. Gault called to men who were evidently
-approaching down the bed of the creek.</p>
-
-<p>The fugitives gained the river bank, and crawling
-under the thick willows, presently stumbled on the
-dug-out lying in a fissure in the earthen bank. So far
-so good. However, they were not unmindful of the
-dug-out manned by four Crees somewhere out on the
-river; and they waited awhile listening.</p>
-
-<p>They heard them coming up-stream, paddling at a
-furious rate. They passed close to the bank, not half
-a dozen yards from where Loseis and Conacher were
-crouching. Conacher gave them a minute, then started
-to slide the dug-out off the mud.</p>
-
-<p>“They’ll see us!” whispered Loseis in alarm.</p>
-
-<p>“Somebody must see us, or we can’t pull off the
-double suicide,” said Conacher grimly.</p>
-
-<p>They launched the dug-out and climbed in. Since
-the paddlers in the other dug-out had their backs turned
-to them, they could have gained the other shore unseen;
-but Conacher headed diagonally up-stream, laying
-such a course that they must be at least heard by
-those gathered around the mouth of the creek. And
-they were heard. A chorus of cries was raised. Conacher
-then steered straight for the opposite shore. In
-a moment they heard the other dug-out splashing after
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately to the north of the high-cut bank, there
-was a smallish flat covered with grass, through the
-center of which a tiny stream wound its way to the
-river. It was the usual willow-bordered rivulet flowing
-quite deep between overhanging banks, which were
-held from caving in by the roots of the thickly springing
-willows. The branches of the willows interlaced
-overhead. This muskrat-haunted stream was an important
-factor in the plans of the fugitives; but they
-were not ready to use it yet.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher landed alongside its mouth. The instant
-the nose of the dug-out touched, they were out.
-The other dug-out was already half way across the
-river. They raced through the grass alongside the
-willow-bordered stream, slipping out of their packs as
-they ran. A hundred yards or so from the river, Conacher
-took both packs and boring through the outer
-willows, tied the packs to branches overhanging the
-little stream.</p>
-
-<p>Returning to Loseis, they doubled on their tracks,
-and ran for the steep grassy rise which culminated in
-the bold knoll where the two graves were. The Crees,
-having just landed, were stumbling through the grass
-at a loss. Presently the fugitives were seen, as they
-wished to be. With renewed cries to their friends
-across the river, the Crees set after them. Gault’s
-roaring voice was heard from the river.</p>
-
-<p>“They told him that we were running up the hill,”
-whispered Loseis; “and he’s telling them to work
-around back, and head us off on top.”</p>
-
-<p>“We may take our time then,” said Conacher, falling
-to a walk.</p>
-
-<p>On top of the knoll they came to a stand. The little
-enclosure containing the two graves was behind them;
-and behind that again, the grove of pines. On either
-side the ground sloped steeply down, and in front it
-broke off into nothingness.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, here we are,” said Conacher lightly; “that
-was easy!”</p>
-
-<p>“The hardest is before us,” murmured Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>Stepping to the edge of the cut-bank, they looked
-over. The precipitous slide of earth, almost as pale
-as snow at their feet, was gradually swallowed in the
-murk. The fact that they could not see the bottom of
-it, made the leap appear doubly terrible.</p>
-
-<p>“Does your heart fail you, dear?” murmured Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“Not as long as you are beside me,” she whispered.</p>
-
-<p>“Remember to let yourself go limp when you hit the
-dirt,” he said. “Gravity will do the rest. I’ll be there
-before you, because I’m heavier.”</p>
-
-<p>He blew up the little air cushion that was strapped
-to her back.</p>
-
-<p>They could hear the Crees working around the
-north side of the hill. It was evidently expected that
-the fugitives meant to run back along the top of the
-ridge. Below them the river revealed itself merely as
-a grayish band, a shade or two lighter than its shores.
-They could just make out the disturbance created by
-two furiously driven bark canoes about to land below.
-These had headed for the south side of the hill.
-There was some underbrush on that side; and when
-the occupants landed they could be heard smashing
-through it. They were evidently working up that side
-with the object of coming in touch with the other
-party.</p>
-
-<p>“This is better than I could have hoped for,” said
-Conacher cheerfully. “We have got them all on the
-hill.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it time to go now?” asked Loseis nervously.</p>
-
-<p>“No! No! Wait until they are right on top of
-us.”</p>
-
-<p>Somewhere back of them the two parties met on top
-of the ridge. There was a whispered consultation,
-then a silence, very hard for the listeners to bear.
-Conacher held Loseis’ hand tightly squeezed within
-his own. Up there under the wide spreading night
-sky they became queerly aware of their insignificance.
-A long silence; then from half a dozen sounds their
-sharpened senses informed them that their enemies
-were creeping towards them through the pines.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis caught her breath sharply, and moved towards
-the edge.</p>
-
-<p>“Steady, sweetheart,” whispered Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly there was an astonished cry of: “There!”
-and a rush of feet.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis and Conacher cried out wildly, as they had
-rehearsed together: “Good-by! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Good-by, all!”
-And leaped.</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='255' id='Page_255'></span><h1>CHAPTER XXII<br/> <span class='sub-head'>THE SEARCH</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>L</span>oseis</span> could never have described the sensations
-of that mad roll down the cut-bank. As a matter
-of fact all sensation was whirled clean out of her; and
-the first thing she knew was the mighty smack with
-which her body hit the water. Water it seemed could
-be almost as hard as wood. She went under.</p>
-
-<p>As she rose again, gasping and wildly reaching, her
-fingers came in contact with Conacher’s coat. In the
-first second she clutched him in a deathlike grip; in the
-second she remembered he had told her they would
-both drown, if she did so; and she released him. She
-discovered that the air cushion was sufficient to hold
-her up.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher whispered in her ear: “You are all right?”</p>
-
-<p>“I .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I think so,” she stuttered.</p>
-
-<p>“Put your two hands lightly on my shoulders and I’ll
-tow you. Do not splash.”</p>
-
-<p>He swam softly down with the current.</p>
-
-<p>In the first moment there was only silence from
-above. Then they heard Gault’s excited voice:</p>
-
-<p>“Quick! the canoes! Search for them in the river!”</p>
-
-<p>The men came tearing pell-mell down the hill, and
-Conacher swam with all his strength for the mouth of
-the little stream.</p>
-
-<p>They gained it none too soon. Finding firm ground
-underfoot they waded up-stream under the arching willows.
-The water was up to their waists. They had to
-move at a snail’s pace to avoid splashing. As soon as
-the upper part of their bodies was exposed to the air,
-they realized the numbing cold of the water. Loseis
-clenched her teeth to keep them from chattering.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the two dug-outs had been launched.
-The men shouted confusedly at each other. Such a
-search was hopeless in the dark. They could hear
-Gault savagely cursing his men. It was quite clear
-that he was not bent upon rescuing the two, but upon
-making sure that they did not escape. The voices
-softened in the distance, as the current carried the
-dug-outs down. Conacher and Loseis could now permit
-themselves to move faster through the water.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher drew Loseis along with one hand, and
-held the other straight over his head as they proceeded
-through the dark tunnel. An exclamation of satisfaction
-escaped him as his hand came in contact with the
-hanging packs. He took them down. A short distance
-further along there was a break in the willows
-on the right-hand side, and a back-water whence they
-climbed out in the grass. Streaming with water, they
-set off at a jog trot to warm up.</p>
-
-<p>The voices of Gault and the Crees were still receding.
-Simultaneously it occurred to Conacher and
-Loseis that they could now permit themselves to hope.
-Stopping, they flew into each other’s arms. It was a
-moist embrace, but none the less rapturous. After the
-frightful strain of the past days, the reaction was unnerving.
-In their joy and relief, they both partly
-broke down; but neither was ashamed of showing
-emotion.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my Paul!” murmured Loseis. “Perhaps we
-are going to be happy after all!”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps?” cried Conacher. “I should like to see
-anybody stop us now?”</p>
-
-<p>He was not, however, quite so sure as all that.</p>
-
-<p>The river flat gradually narrowed down to the typical
-coulee of the prairies, with the little stream running
-in the bottom. As the ground began to rise, the
-willows ceased, and the way became rough and stony.
-Conacher struck obliquely up the steep side of the
-coulee to find better going over the prairie. The moon
-rose as they gained the upper level, throwing a strange
-misty glamour over that vast, fixed, rolling sea. They
-pressed briskly ahead through the short buffalo grass
-which did not impede the feet, keeping the North Star
-over their right shoulders. Their clothes dried slowly;
-but the exercise of walking kept them warm.</p>
-
-<p>Their hearts were light. The awful bare solitudes,
-rise behind rise in endless succession, and the deathlike
-silence had no power to oppress them now. How
-could they feel lonely walking hand in hand free under
-the sky? Day stole upon them with enchanting beauty.
-The prairie was sprinkled with wild roses and the rose
-madder flower that is called painter’s brush. Prairie
-chickens fluttered from bush to bush companionably;
-and little furry four-footed creatures scurried for the
-shelter of their holes. Loseis sang as she walked; and
-Conacher cracked his jokes.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was rising behind them as they came to the
-edge of a wide, saucer-like depression in the prairie,
-holding in the bottom an oval pond of an astonishing
-blueness. It was dotted with snowy water fowl.
-All the surrounding country dimpled like a vast cheek
-in smooth rounds and hollows, was mantled with a
-tender green, grayish in the shadows. At the left
-hand side of the lake grew a wide patch of poplar
-scrub; that is to say, thousands of little saplings growing
-as thick as hair, and putting forth leaves of so intense
-a green it was like a shout in the morning. The
-whole picture was washed with rose color in the horizontal
-rays of the rising sun.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis drew a long breath. “I never realized
-how beautiful the prairie was!” she murmured. “It
-never was so beautiful,” she amended, putting her
-hand on Conacher’s arm. “How marvelous to one
-who has been a prisoner! Even if they should catch
-us we shall have had this!”</p>
-
-<p>“They’re not going to catch us,” said Conacher.
-“Not while I have a hundred shells in my belt.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis pointed to the poplar scrub. “That’s the
-meeting place with Mary-Lou to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Too bad we have to waste the day waiting for
-her,” said Conacher. “We won’t hang about there,
-it’s too obvious a hiding-place. The high ground on the
-other side would be a good observation post. Tired?”</p>
-
-<p>“Tired!” sang Loseis. “I am just beginning to feel
-that I have legs again!”</p>
-
-<p>They headed obliquely across the depression towards
-a swell of land to the south that enjoyed a slight
-prominence in the gently rolling sea of grass. The
-flat appearance of the prairie was deceptive. Some of
-these insignificant bumps commanded a view for many
-miles.</p>
-
-<p>Tucked down behind the rise they found a cozy
-hollow with another patch of the vivid poplar scrub.
-They sat down at the edge of it to eat part of the
-food they had brought.</p>
-
-<p>While they were thus engaged, silently and with excellent
-appetite, a brown bear came ambling placidly
-out from among the saplings. He looked at them
-with a start of astonishment so comic that Loseis
-burst out laughing; then with a great “Woof!” of indignation
-galloped away up the rise.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher had snatched up his gun. “Fresh meat!”
-he cried. But with a reluctant shake of his head, he
-dropped it again.</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?” asked Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“If we are searched for, the carcass would be
-found.”</p>
-
-<p>When they had finished eating, Conacher said: “I’m
-sorry I cannot let you have a fire; but the smoke would
-betray us for many miles around. Creep in among the
-trees; take off your damp clothes; wrap up in your
-blanket and sleep until I call you.”</p>
-
-<p>“What are you going to do?” demanded Loseis,
-ready to quarrel with him as usual over who should
-bear the brunt of the hardship.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to roll up and sleep at the top of the
-rise behind a rose bush,” said Conacher grinning. “If
-they send out a search party they may be expected to
-appear in about two hours.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are always talking about their searching for
-us,” said Loseis. “If Gault thinks we are dead he will
-not look for us. If he thinks we are not dead, we are
-certain to be caught in these empty spaces. Why
-worry?”</p>
-
-<p>“There is a third alternative,” said Conacher.
-“Gault thinks we are dead, but he cannot afford to
-take any chances. It seems to me he will send out a
-party to scour the prairie just as a precaution. It is
-up to us to keep out of their way until they are satisfied.
-It won’t be as bad as if they <span class='it'>knew</span> we were
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis wished to be allowed to watch from the top
-of the rise, but Conacher carried his point.</p>
-
-<p>From behind the clump of roses that he had marked
-on the way over, Conacher was able to survey an expanse
-of country that faded into gray mist on the horizon.
-He slept for awhile as he had promised. It
-was about nine o’clock by the sun, when he perceived
-the first horseman, no more than a black dot far to the
-eastward; but a significantly shaped dot. Presently
-he made out another, and another at wide intervals.
-The nearest was about four miles distant.</p>
-
-<p>Racing back down the rise, he called to Loseis.
-When she answered, he said: “Dress as quickly as
-possible. We must move on.”</p>
-
-<p>When she appeared from among the trees, he explained
-what he had seen. “Unless I miss my guess,”
-he said, “they will divide and ride around the high
-ground surrounding the slough until they meet again.
-That would bring us right in their line of march. We
-must get over another rise. You can see that they are
-combing the country as they come. What we ought to
-do is to work around behind them.”</p>
-
-<p>Hand in hand like a pair of children they headed
-south, bent almost double as they climbed the rises,
-and racing free down the other side. When they had
-put a couple of heights between them and the slough,
-they began to work around towards the east. The
-prairie is not such a desperate place for fugitives as it
-might seem. It is true that from the high places you
-can see for many miles around: but there are always
-hollows into which you cannot see until you are upon
-them. At a glance it seems as if the bubbles of earth
-had been pushed up in meaningless disorder; but such
-is not the case. Nature sees to it that the country is
-drained. Every hollow opens into another. Conacher
-had the mapmaker’s instinct for the contour of
-land, and he was never in doubt as to their proper
-course. At the same time while they were hidden
-from their enemies their enemies were hidden from
-them. It caused the heart to rise in the throat to
-imagine a horseman suddenly appearing over the grass
-close by.</p>
-
-<p>After an hour’s walking and running, they came
-upon a good-sized patch of rose scrub folded into the
-side of a rise. Conacher stopped to survey it.</p>
-
-<p>“A perfect hiding-place if you lay flat on the
-ground,” he said; “yet no one would suppose it. Come
-on, let’s tackle the thorns.”</p>
-
-<p>Inch by inch they threaded their painful way along
-the ground; careful to rearrange the branches they
-had disturbed upon entering; and cutting with their
-knives a little tunnel ahead. Finally in the thickest
-of the patch they lay companionably on the warm, dry
-ground within whispering distance of each other, and
-lapped in delicious fragrance. Themselves concealed,
-they could see out more or less through interstices between
-the leaves.</p>
-
-<p>“One could fall asleep here, and dream of being in
-Paradise,” said Loseis, sniffing.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Conacher, disengaging a thorn; “and
-roll over and find one’s self in the other place!”</p>
-
-<p>They both dozed, and were awakened simultaneously
-by the sound of thudding hoofs. They waited
-with fast-beating hearts. A dark-skinned horseman
-rode into view along the top of the very rise against
-whose side they lay. He was less than a hundred
-yards away; they could distinguish every detail of
-his somewhat dandified dress.</p>
-
-<p>“Watusk,” whispered Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>At sight of the patch of scrub, the Cree reined up
-his horse, and sat staring directly at them. It caused
-the goose-flesh to rise upon their bodies; their hearts
-seemed to stop beating. With infinite caution Conacher
-drew his gun into position.</p>
-
-<p>“The horse first; then his rider,” he whispered.</p>
-
-<p>But after debating a moment, the Cree clapped heels
-to his horse, and rode on. Presently he disappeared.
-A long breath of thankfulness escaped from the two
-hidden ones.</p>
-
-<p>“He will never know how nearly his wife became a
-widow,” said Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, they’ve checked this place off,” said Loseis.
-“Shall we stay here?”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher shook his head. “This will be his second
-big circle around the slough,” he said. “If he repeats
-the maneuver he will pass to the south of us. I don’t
-like the notion of being hemmed in. We’ve got to
-think of to-night. If they are making the slough their
-headquarters they will camp there. Unless we head
-Mary-Lou off she would ride right into them.”</p>
-
-<p>“We must be close upon the trail between the Slavi
-village and the slough,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“But we’re still too near the slough. We must
-make further south.”</p>
-
-<p>Once more they took to the grass. For several
-hours they saw no more of the searchers. They made
-their last spell in a poplar bluff (as the patches of
-scrub are called) overlooking the trail between the
-lake and the slough, but much nearer the former.</p>
-
-<p>They had not been there long when they were filled
-with disquietude by the sight of another of the Crees
-approaching from the direction of the Slavi village.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s been in to look about,” said Conacher.
-“Natural enough.” As the man drew closer he added
-with a certain relief: “He doesn’t look as if he had
-discovered anything important. I guess Mary-Lou
-has side-stepped him.”</p>
-
-<p>Their thoughts were given a sudden new turn, when
-the Cree turning out of the trail, put his horse directly
-for the bluff, Conacher and Loseis hastily retreated
-within the thickest part of the miniature wood. The
-Cree could not ride in among the little trees. Dismounting,
-he tied his horse.</p>
-
-<p>Then began a grim game of I Spy with death for
-the stakes. Conacher and Loseis enjoyed a certain
-advantage, because they were aware of their danger,
-while the redskin was not. He was merely following
-general instructions to search all likely places of concealment.
-He was taking no particular care to muffle
-the sound of his progress, and they could generally
-follow it. When he went one way they went the other.
-But there were harrowing periods when they could
-hear nothing. The bluff was over an acre in extent,
-and it was impossible to see more than half a dozen
-yards through the thickly springing stems. Once he
-caught them in a corner, and they were almost forced
-out into the open. Another time they actually had a
-glimpse of his passing. They stood frozen in their
-tracks. With what thankful hearts they heard him
-return to his horse at last. They flung themselves
-down to let the hideous strain relax.</p>
-
-<p>They ate again. Satisfied now, that they had done
-their utmost, they rolled up in their blankets, and slept
-for eight hours on end. It was twilight when they
-awoke. They ate the last of the food they had
-brought.</p>
-
-<p>“It will be prairie chicken for breakfast if Mary-Lou
-doesn’t come,” remarked Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“She will come if they have not taken her,” said
-Loseis confidently.</p>
-
-<p>“What I am chiefly afraid of,” said Conacher, “is
-that she will pass right out with fright when we rise
-beside the trail.”</p>
-
-<p>“When we were children we used to signal to each
-other by imitating the cry of the kill-dee,” said Loseis.
-“I will try that.”</p>
-
-<p>When the stars came out they moved down beside
-the faint track worn in the buffalo grass. Conacher,
-pulling his blanket around his shoulders, squatted in
-the grass, smoking, and Loseis leaned her cheek
-against his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“How strange!” she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“What is, sweetheart?”</p>
-
-<p>“Us two little things out here in the middle of the
-bald-headed. I feel about an inch high under these
-stars.”</p>
-
-<p>“Better than last night,” suggested Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“Rather! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Paul, if we ever have any children,
-I wonder if this will mean anything to them?”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher was more moved than he cared to show.
-Loseis, scarcely more than a child herself, dreaming
-of having children of her own! “Surely!” he said
-with assumed lightness. “Think how they’ll be able
-to put it over the other kids! ‘My Ma and my Pa
-were chased by Injuns!’ ”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis chuckled. “If we come through all right
-it will be a wonderful thing to have shared,” she murmured.
-“It will help us over the tiresome parts.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a wise little duck!” he whispered.</p>
-
-<p>“Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Other girls refuse to admit beforehand that there
-could be any tiresome parts.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know?” she asked quickly.</p>
-
-<p>He swallowed his chuckle. “Oh, you learn these
-things from books, and from other men,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“I know that I shall not be marrying an angel,” she
-said, nestling against him; “and I assure you that you
-are not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Angel enough for me!” he said, kissing her.</p>
-
-<p>There was a vibration in the stillness. At first they
-thought it was a trick of the desirous imagination;
-then by degrees they became sure. Horses were approaching
-along the trail at a walk. The slowness of
-the pace was eloquent of the red girl’s terrors, and of
-the loyalty and strength of will that forced her out
-into the night in spite of her terrors. Conacher and
-Loseis rose to their feet.</p>
-
-<p>Finally they made out shadowy forms in the trail.
-Loseis uttered the plaintive cry of the little bird that
-haunts the edges of the prairie sloughs. The shadowy
-horses stopped. There was a moment of painful suspense.
-It was not a natural place, of course, to find
-the kill-dee.</p>
-
-<p>“Risk it!” whispered Conacher. “Speak to her!”</p>
-
-<p>“Mary-Lou,” said Loseis softly; “we are here!”</p>
-
-<p>There was no answer. They apprehended through
-the dark that the solitary rider had slipped out of the
-saddle. Running forward they found her half fainting,
-but clinging to the horses still.</p>
-
-<p>She quickly recovered. Ah! what a joyful reunion
-that was! Sharers in danger!—there is no other
-bond quite the same as this. They all babbled at once.
-Loseis and Mary-Lou clung to each other weeping;
-Conacher embraced them both indiscriminately.</p>
-
-<p>“I so scare’!” Mary-Lou whispered in Loseis’ ear.
-“I know the Crees out here somewhere. I t’ink they
-get you sure. But I got come jus’ the same. When
-I see you in the trail I t’ink it is the Crees. I am near
-die then!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re the bravest of any of us!” whispered
-Loseis. “Because you know what fear is!”</p>
-
-<p>While the girls whispered Conacher turned his attention
-to the horses. Mary-Lou had brought the
-best procurable, and he was well-pleased. She had
-brought a fair store of smoked meat and fish also, but
-not enough to see them through, of course.</p>
-
-<p>“Tatateecha t’ink I lyin’ till he see me start,” she
-explained.</p>
-
-<p>“Let us ride,” said Conacher. “We can talk as we
-go.”</p>
-
-<p>They mounted. The horses were still fresh and
-coquettish with the bit. What a delight it was to feel
-good horseflesh between the knees once more. Their
-breasts swelled with renewed hope.</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?” asked Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“Southwest,” said Conacher; “because that is the
-direction they would least expect us to take. At daylight
-we’ll turn, and lay our proper course northwest.
-Save your horses.”</p>
-
-<p>They set off at an easy trot. When the horses
-settled to their work, they let the reins lie loose on
-their necks. It was safest to let these prairie-bred
-beasts choose their own footing. Now the North Star
-must be kept over the horse’s right flank. Conacher
-chose a bright star in the southwest for a beacon. As
-they rode they exchanged experiences. Mary-Lou
-said:</p>
-
-<p>“Las’ night all the Crees around the post is after
-you, so I have no trouble. I walk around the side
-of the hill, and cross the creek, and climb the ridge.
-I hide in the bush till daylight. I hear you cry:
-‘Good-by! Good-by!’ across the river. That cry it
-hurt my heart though I know it is a fool. I t’ink
-maybe you break a leg on the cut-bank. In the morning
-I see where some Crees is camp beside the trail,
-and I go around them. Then I go back to the trail
-and run to the Slavi village. I am there before the
-sun is half way up the sky. I sleep long.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did you do when the Cree came in?” asked
-Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“Wah! He come down from the prairie when nobody
-is lookin’ that way. All are scare’! I snatch up
-a shawl and put it over my head like the ot’er women.
-I stay with the ot’er women. He not know me. Bam-bye
-he go back again.”</p>
-
-<p>The course they were following led them roughly
-parallel with Blackburn’s Lake. When the moon rose
-they could see it palely gleaming in the distance. It
-was an exhilarating ride; the wind created by their
-own passage blew cool about their faces; the exercise
-of riding kept them tingling. With every additional
-mile that they put between them and their enemies
-their hearts rose. Conacher attempted to sing. But
-though there was no danger in raising the voice here,
-the great brooding silence was too much for him. In
-spite of themselves they talked in undertones.</p>
-
-<p>Just before dawn they spelled alongside a poplar
-bluff to allow the horses to graze. Here the humans
-enjoyed the luxury of a fire again, and the stimulus
-of hot food. Though the meal was only of smoked
-fish without sauce or bread, such a complete sense of
-comfort is not to be had under civilized conditions.
-They groaned at the necessity of breaking camp.</p>
-
-<p>After a two-hour rest they saddled, and turned at
-right angles to their former course. The sun had
-risen in a cloudless sky, and the air was like wine. At
-mid-morning they calculated that they were abreast
-of Old Wives’ Slough again, but now many miles to
-the westward. Coming to another sapphire-colored
-slough lying under a rather prominent rise to the
-eastward, which had a well-grown poplar bluff on its
-slope, Conacher called a halt for the balance of the
-day.</p>
-
-<p>“We need sleep,” he said; “moreover it is just possible
-if they ride west to-day, that they might catch
-sight of us from some height or another. The horses
-will be well hidden alongside the bluff yonder.”</p>
-
-<p>Picketing the horses to keep them from straying,
-they ate again. On this occasion Loseis insisted on being
-allowed to stand the first watch; and Conacher
-dispatched her to the top of the rise, while he rolled
-up in his blanket.</p>
-
-<p>In the afternoon he relieved her. From the top of
-the rise it was evident that this was the highest point
-in many miles around. To Conacher lying in the grass
-smoking, it seemed as if half the world was spread
-before him. In that crystal clearness he could even
-trace the line of the valley of Blackburn’s River. The
-easterly horizon was closed in by the land rising on
-the other side of the river. The pale green sea of the
-prairie between was always the same, and never quite
-the same. Apparently every yard of it was open to
-his vision; but Conacher knew from past experience
-that this was not so. Every swell of the land melted
-so softly into the swell beyond that one could not
-guess the hollow between. Conacher remembered the
-old-time stories of how the Indians could steal up on
-the wagon-trains camped in the open prairie.</p>
-
-<p>As if evoked by that thought he saw Indians riding
-towards him then. It was what he was looking for and
-least desired to see. He glimpsed them as they crossed
-a hollow; a moment later they trotted over a little
-rise. There were three of them, they were less than
-a mile away; they were heading directly for the spot
-where he lay. This time an encounter could not be
-avoided. All his high hopes came tumbling down like
-a house of cards.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher ran down the hill to alarm his camp.
-There was no time to ride away. Best for them to
-keep the shelter they had. A word told Loseis and
-Mary-Lou what was upon them. They led the horses
-close up behind the bluff of trees, and tied them. They
-scattered the remaining embers of the fire, and beat
-them out. Conacher and Loseis took up a position
-within the trees facing the summit of the rise, gun in
-hand. The girl’s face was pale and resolute.</p>
-
-<p>“I can shoot straight, too,” she said quietly.</p>
-
-<p>They waited.</p>
-
-<p>“All three of them are together now,” said Conacher.
-“We must get them all. And their horses too.
-If we get them all it will be some time before Gault
-learns what has happened. We will still have a
-chance.”</p>
-
-<p>The three horsemen appeared at the top of the
-rise, and reined up. They were quite at their ease.
-Each slung a leg over his saddle to rest, and produced
-a pipe. There they stayed, silhouetted against
-the tender blue sky. One had a pair of field-glasses
-which was passed from hand to hand. Conacher and
-Loseis instinctively drew back a little further amongst
-the saplings. Suddenly the horses behind them
-whinnied; and Conacher groaned in bitterness of
-spirit.</p>
-
-<p>However, at that moment a small troop of wild
-horses appeared out of a depression to the north.
-Led by a bay stallion with arched neck and streaming
-tail, they trotted past. In the chorus of neighing and
-whinnying which arose, the sounds made by Conacher’s
-horses escaped the notice of the Crees.</p>
-
-<p>After what seemed like an age-long wait to the
-watchers hidden in the poplars, the three Indians
-slipped out of their saddles, tightened girths and
-mounted again.</p>
-
-<p>“Now for it!” whispered Conacher. “Do not fire
-until they are within a hundred feet. Bring down the
-horses first. You take the piebald and I’ll take the
-other two.”</p>
-
-<p>But to their amazement and delight the riders
-wheeled and disappeared the way they had come. For
-a moment they stared at the empty place with hanging
-mouths. Then Conacher made as if to run out from
-among the trees. Loseis clutched him.</p>
-
-<p>“It may be a trick!” she gasped.</p>
-
-<p>They waited several minutes, not daring to rejoice
-yet.</p>
-
-<p>“I <span class='it'>must</span> go look!” said Conacher. “I must know
-what they are doing.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis made no further effort to restrain him; and
-he ran up to the top of the rise, and flung himself
-down. At first he could see nothing but grass. Then
-the three riders rose mysteriously out of the grass,
-trotting away as they had come; showing their backs
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. their <span class='it'>backs</span>! Conacher nearly choked with joy.
-He waited awhile yet to make doubly sure. They disappeared
-and appeared again, holding steadily to the
-east. They shrank to mere specks in the green sea.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher leaped to his feet, and charged back down
-the hill, yelling and brandishing his gun. Loseis
-snatched up her gun warily. Not until he came close
-did she comprehend that this was a pantomime of joy.
-He swept her clean off her feet in his embrace.</p>
-
-<p>“They’ve gone back!” he shouted. “This was the
-outer edge of their patrol. They’ve given up the
-search! After this we’ve got nothing to contend with
-but nature!”</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='273' id='Page_273'></span><h1>CHAPTER XXIII<br/> <span class='sub-head'>HUNGER</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>N</span>ature! They</span> were to discover during the days
-that followed that she was no mean antagonist.
-At first everything went delightfully; the sun warmed
-and cheered them by day; the stars whispered at night.
-The moon was swallowed up in the dawn now. On
-the shortest night of the year there was scarcely any
-darkness; then the nights began to lengthen imperceptibly.
-They rode and spelled and rode again.
-They built great fires. The character of the country
-never changed. The sea of green grass seemed to be
-limitless.</p>
-
-<p>On the third day the horse that Conacher rode sickened
-mysteriously. On the following morning it was
-incapable of bearing him. Loseis shook her head ominously.</p>
-
-<p>“It is a sort of distemper that attacks them in the
-summer,” she said. “He will be sick for weeks. We
-might as well leave him. The others may catch it
-from him.”</p>
-
-<p>So Conacher was obliged to set out on foot. The
-sick horse screamed piteously upon being left behind;
-and attempted to follow; but fell down in the grass,
-where he lay struggling feebly and watching them with
-raised head until they passed out of sight. They could
-not now hope to make more than thirty or forty miles
-a day, though all took turns in riding. And still there
-was no suggestion of their approach to a great river.
-The prairie rolled on as before. As far as Conacher
-could tell they had not yet even passed the crown of
-the watershed. They all had their sickening moments
-of doubt. Suppose there was no river?</p>
-
-<p>Loseis’ worst prognostications were fulfilled. The
-other two horses sickened. By the sixth day they were
-all on foot. Mary-Lou’s moccasins wore through;
-and they had nothing out of which to make new ones.
-Fortunately both Loseis and Conacher wore boots.
-The prairie which looked so smooth made rough walking
-for humans, and their progress was cut down, Conacher
-figured, to between twenty and twenty-miles [missing or incorrect word] a
-day. The eighth day passed without any sign of the
-river of promise. Conacher estimated that they had
-covered nearly three hundred miles.</p>
-
-<p>They had met with no game on the prairie except
-the ubiquitous chickens. Conacher was averse to
-wasting his precious bullets on such small fowl—it is
-very easy to miss a prairie chicken with a rifle; consequently
-they had depended on the meat and fish
-brought by Mary-Lou. On the seventh day it was exhausted,
-and they ate chicken. On that miserable
-eighth day some bad fairy waved a wand, and the
-chicken disappeared from the prairie. During the
-entire day Conacher did not obtain a shot. Consequently
-they went supperless to bed.</p>
-
-<p>He was up at sunrise, ranging the prairie while the
-girls slept. But with no luck. There was nothing
-living in sight except the gophers who gained the
-shelter of their burrows ere he could come close enough
-to hope to hit them with his clumsy gun. In desperation
-he did shoot at gophers at last, only to plug the
-earth. When he returned to camp, the girls, having
-heard the sound of his gun, awaited him with anticipatory
-smiles, and he had the bitterness of showing them
-his empty hands. There was no breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>On this first morning it was easy to turn it into a
-joke.</p>
-
-<p>“Anyway, I’m sick of meat,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“My people lak go ’ongry for awhile,” said Mary-Lou.
-“Mak’ the big feed taste better bam-bye.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’ll save a lot of time,” said Conacher with
-a sheepish grin. He felt responsible for their plight.</p>
-
-<p>They set forth briskly enough; but were very glad
-to rest when mid-morning came. All of them were
-now feeling very painful gnawings, but they concealed
-it from each other. Conacher prowled over the
-prairie in vain. They listlessly resumed their march.</p>
-
-<p>During the course of the afternoon they came unexpectedly
-to the lip of a deep coulee with a trickle of
-water in the bottom. To Conacher’s dismay it proved
-to be flowing in a southerly direction. This was
-exactly opposite to what he expected. It was against
-all the theories as to the lay of this unexplored land,
-and he was ready to despair. However, there was
-nothing to do but to keep on the way they were going.</p>
-
-<p>An hour later they crossed it again. The water
-was now flowing north, and Conacher’s mind was
-somewhat relieved. Upon this second crossing they
-found more water than before in the streamlet, and a
-fringe of spruce trees, the first grown trees they had
-seen since leaving Blackburn’s River. They also
-found, what was more important to them, berry-bushes,
-and a patch of wild strawberries. Only the
-strawberries were ripe. Before eating any, they carefully
-collected them in their little cooking pot, and
-scrupulously divided them. There was about a cupful
-apiece.</p>
-
-<p>The berries were deliciously refreshing; but they
-seemed to have the effect of still further sharpening
-the pangs of hunger. They searched far up and
-down the coulee for more, but in vain. It was an isolated
-patch of trees and bushes.</p>
-
-<p>“Let us get on,” Conacher kept urging the girls.
-“We must reach a game country before our strength
-fails.”</p>
-
-<p>They wearily climbed the steep side of the coulee to
-the endless rolling prairie again, that they now hated.
-On this day they suffered a keener pain from hunger
-than during the days that followed. All three became
-tight-lipped and silent. Their limbs were leaden; and
-progress was painfully slow. Twice more they crossed
-the coulee. No more trees or berries. It was now
-evident that the general course of the little stream
-was northwest, which was in line with Conacher’s calculations.
-It was undoubtedly a tributary of the big
-river they were seeking: but whether the river were
-ten miles or a hundred miles further, it was impossible
-to tell. It was exasperating in their fatigued condition
-to climb in and out of the steep coulee so many times:
-but even so they made better time than they could
-have done by following it throughout its crazy windings.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing more spruce trees, they descended into it to
-spend the night, but found no berries here. They
-heaped a great fire and made themselves soft beds of
-spruce boughs: but their empty stomachs refused to be
-assuaged by these luxuries. Mary-Lou cut three small
-strips from the top of one of her worn-out moccasins,
-and boiled them, and handed them around.</p>
-
-<p>“Chew,” she said. “It will stop the pains anyhow.”</p>
-
-<p>Afterwards a curious false strength seemed to come
-to them. They felt no desire to sleep, but sat up for
-hours around their fire under the spruces, talking animatedly
-with flushed faces and bright eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“When I was a kid,” said Conacher, “I had a grand-uncle
-in New York, who was a great old high-liver.
-Never thought about anything but eats. He knew all
-the best restaurants in the city, and what was the
-proper thing to order in each place. He took me out
-to dinner a couple of times when I was a boy. Once
-we went to Delmonico’s. I have never forgotten what
-we ate that day. First oysters. I suppose you
-don’t know oysters, Loseis. Well, they are the best
-eating there is. Slip down your throat like velvet.
-Then a thick soup that was called potage Mongole.
-God knows what was in it. It was a combination
-of all the most delicious flavors you ever knew.
-Then there was something that was called Tournedos
-Henri Quatre. It was like beef, but it was the sauce
-that made all the difference. The French are wizards
-for sauces. We ended up with mince pie; good old
-American mince pie; and there’s nothing better! Oh,
-what a feed that was!”</p>
-
-<p>“The best thing I ever tasted,” said Loseis vivaciously,
-“was roast pig. Three years ago Jim Cornwall
-came through from the Crossing with dogs, and
-brought my father a little frozen pig on his sled for
-Christmas. We thawed him out and roasted him until
-his hide crackled. Oh, my dear! the smell alone
-would drive you crazy; and the taste was better than
-anything in the world. I can taste him now! Do you
-member, Mary-Lou?”</p>
-
-<p>“I remember,” said Mary-Lou, closing her eyes. “I
-did taste that pig meat. It was sweeter than young
-porcupine; it was sweeter than moose-nose or the back-fat
-of caribou; it was sweeter than all meat.”</p>
-
-<p>“And do you remember?” asked Loseis, “when they
-stuck the knife into him how a little stream of juicy
-fat ran down?”</p>
-
-<p>“We soaked it up with bread,” said Mary-Lou.</p>
-
-<p>The subject was inexhaustible. They discussed it
-with anxious, drawn, eager faces. It never occurred
-to them to laugh at each other or at themselves.
-When they finally slept they dreamed of feasting.</p>
-
-<p>Another day of misery followed no different from
-the day before, except that the pangs of hunger were
-less sharp and more enervating. It was hard to keep
-walking. It nearly broke Conacher’s heart to see the
-boyish Loseis pressing on with set face, quite unconscious
-of how she was staggering in her tracks. He
-took the second gun from her. She fought like a little
-spitfire to regain it, weeping out of anger and weakness.
-Her anger smoldered all the rest of the day,
-making the way even more bitter. Mary-Lou stood
-starvation better than either of the whites. They
-found another tantalizing patch of berries; and wasted
-hours looking for more. As on the night before,
-their supper consisted of a small strip of boiled hide
-apiece.</p>
-
-<p>On the third day of starvation it seemed a wonder
-that they were able to move at all. Nevertheless they
-staggered on for a few miles. To add to their miseries
-it rained copiously; and their blankets soaked up some
-additional pounds of water. All day a division existed
-between Conacher and Loseis that was harder to bear
-than starvation. It was due to nothing in the world
-but compassion. It made each tender heart rage to
-behold the misery of the other. Especially Conacher’s,
-because he told himself that no woman ought
-to be subjected to such an ordeal. He supposed from
-Loseis’ black looks that she was blaming him for having
-led her into this, and he was ready to blow his
-brains out.</p>
-
-<p>The little stream having received a tributary from
-the south, flowed with increased speed and volume. It
-now held a fairly straight course for the northwest;
-and it became evident that the whole country was
-sloping gently in that direction. The walls of the
-coulee gradually became higher; in the bottom it was
-now continuously wooded; but they felt too weak to
-climb down for a few berries. These changes in the
-country suggested that they were approaching the bottom
-of the watershed, and at midday from a rise in
-the prairie, Conacher at last beheld a blue shadow
-athwart the westerly horizon which indicated the valley
-of a considerable river. It seemed like a mockery
-now. It was a good twenty-five miles distant, and in
-their weakened state that was half a world away.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the day they made a detour from the
-coulee to visit a small slough and a poplar bluff that
-they had marked from a rise. It was a likely place
-to find bear. There was no bear, but the water of the
-slough was sweet, and they determined to spend the
-night in that spot. Will it be our last camp? Conacher
-thought with dread in his heart. The sky was
-still threatening, and he constructed an inclined thatch
-of poplar leaves, with a fire in front for the girls.
-They chewed their strips of boiled hide. This finished
-one moccasin, except for the ragged lower part, that
-Mary-Lou had bound round her foot. Afterwards,
-when Loseis, with a cold face, turned to seek her blanket,
-Conacher felt that he could bear no more.</p>
-
-<p>“Loseis .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. !” he murmured heart-brokenly.</p>
-
-<p>Mary-Lou vanished away amongst the little trees.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?” asked Loseis coldly.</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot bear it .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. !”</p>
-
-<p>“What?”</p>
-
-<p>“Your look! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Forgive me!”</p>
-
-<p>“For what must I forgive you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. Whatever it is that I have done
-that angers you. For getting you into this scrape.”</p>
-
-<p>Her face looked very small and pinched. It worked
-curiously with anger. Her voice came unnaturally
-sharp: “Forgive you! What sort of talk is this?
-Are you trying to make me feel worse than I feel
-already? Aren’t you satisfied with doing most of the
-work, and walking twice as far to hunt, and carrying
-a double load, but you must make me feel what a burden
-I am by asking me to forgive you!”</p>
-
-<p>He only dimly understood the torment of this
-proud nature. “But Loseis .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. !” he protested,
-staring, “this is foolishness .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. !”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course! of course! of course! I am a fool!
-That is well understood!”</p>
-
-<p>“Listen to me,” he said doggedly. “You say I
-carry too heavy a burden. Why add to it with your
-cold and angry looks? The weight of two guns is
-nothing to me. It is your hard eyes that break me
-down.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis’ reply was to burst into tears.</p>
-
-<p>He took her in his arms. “Don’t you love me any
-more?” he whispered.</p>
-
-<p>She crept within his arms, but she abused him still.
-“You fool! it is because I love you so, that I am always
-angry. It drives me wild to think that I should
-spoil the life of a man like you!”</p>
-
-<p>“But that’s nonsense!” said Conacher. “I am nothing
-in particular. A man only has one life. How could
-he spend it better? We shall go together. What else
-matters .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Don’t you feel better now?”</p>
-
-<p>“A little bit,” she admitted. “But to-morrow I shall
-be angry with you again. You are too good and patient.
-If you turned hateful I should feel better. It
-would even things up a little.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a funny one!” he murmured.</p>
-
-<p>However, the air <span class='it'>was</span> cleared; and they rolled up in
-their blankets with a bit of comfort at their hearts.</p>
-
-<p>When Conacher awoke next morning a light rain
-was drifting down. He pulled his blanket closer
-around him. Lying there like that one did not suffer;
-it was warm; the pangs of hunger did not make themselves
-felt; a comfortable numbness filled the frame.
-But the thought of getting up was hideous. For a
-long time he lay struggling with it. Useless for him to
-tell himself that he was the head of the party; the
-girls were dependent on him; it was up to him to find
-them food; he felt that he <span class='it'>could not</span> get up; the effort
-was too great.</p>
-
-<p>In the end he had to get up. The first few moments
-were the worst. He stood in the rain, swaying and
-nauseated, a black mist swimming before his eyes.
-Each morning it was much worse. If he could conquer
-this first weakness, he could go on through the day—but
-to-morrow morning! He shook that thought
-away. He forced himself to walk up and down, supporting
-himself by the little trees. After awhile he
-felt better. Picking up his gun, he started on his hopeless
-circuit of the bluff.</p>
-
-<p>He paused in front of the little shelter he had
-constructed for the girls. They slept. Loseis was
-lying with her head pillowed on Mary-Lou’s shoulder
-like a child. In her weakness she looked entirely
-the child, the sick child. At the sight of those transparent
-cheeks and bluish eyelids, Conacher’s breast
-was wrung with agony. The worst of overcoming
-the physical weakness was, that one then began to
-think again, with horrible clearness. How could he
-ask this exhausted child to go on any further? She
-was dearer to him than his life. Would it not be
-kinder to end her sufferings while she slept? She
-opened her eyes, and smiled at him enchantingly.
-That smile capped his agony. Swallowing the groan
-that was forced up by his breast, he smiled back, and
-staggered on.</p>
-
-<p>Like all the prairie sloughs, this one lay in a dish-like
-depression surrounded by a shallow rim of grass.
-Conacher had made half his round of the bluff, when
-over this rim at a distance of about a hundred yards
-appeared a lumbering black body of an astonishing
-bigness. For an instant he thought his senses were
-failing him; he began to tremble violently; but he
-quickly realized that it was a veritable bear. A bear’s
-eye-sight is not very keen, and the animal had not
-seen him. He drew back amongst the little trees,
-struggling to control his excitement. You <span class='it'>can not</span> miss
-him! he kept telling himself.</p>
-
-<p>The bear was evidently making for the bluff to
-breakfast off poplar bark. Conacher realized with a
-pang that he was directly in the wind of the animal.
-The bear was in no hurry. He turned aside to snuff
-and scratch at the roots of a clump of roses. He
-was the largest black bear that Conacher had ever
-seen. The big head was dwarfed by his mighty rump.
-His black pelt was grayed with moisture. The man’s
-mouth watered ridiculously. The bear turned towards
-him, and his heart began to thump. Then the
-animal changed his mind, and sauntered around the
-rim of the bench. Conacher, stepping with infinite
-care, kept pace with him amongst the little trees.</p>
-
-<p>The bear disappeared over the edge of the rim, and
-Conacher’s heart almost broke. Should I go after
-him? he asked himself. No! he is bound to come to
-the bluff and the slough. The animal reappeared and
-hope flared up anew. He was heading towards the
-bluff again. He was no longer directly in Conacher’s
-wind, consequently the chance of getting him was better.
-But the deliberation of the beast well-nigh maddened
-the man. Bruin stood gazing off to the east as
-if he were debating the choice between this and some
-other feeding ground. He sat up on his haunches, and
-licked his paws. Finally he came lumbering towards
-the trees in a businesslike manner. Conacher raised
-his gun.</p>
-
-<p>Before the bear had made half the distance that
-separated them, though Conacher had not moved, the
-animal’s mysterious instinct warned him of the presence
-of danger. He stopped with a woof! of alarm,
-and turning in his tracks, galloped back for the shelter
-of the rim. Conacher fired. The bear’s broad beam
-offered him a goodly mark, and he knew by the tremor
-that went through the animal that he had hit him:
-but it was not in a vulnerable spot. He galloped on
-without a pause. He disappeared over the encircling
-rim of grass. A voice seemed to cry inside Conacher:
-“You have lost your last chance!”</p>
-
-<p>He found strength to run as if he had not been
-starved for four days. As he topped the rise, he
-saw the bear lying in the grass a hundred feet away;
-and a great, calm thankfulness filled his breast. It
-was all right! The animal was not dead, but disabled
-in his hind quarters. He lay with his head between his
-paws awaiting the end. Conacher dispatched him with
-a bullet through the brain.</p>
-
-<p>Crying out: “A bear! I’ve got him!” Conacher
-dropped to his knees, and started instanter to skin
-his prey. Presently Mary-Lou who was more skillful
-at this job than he, relieved him. Loseis stood looking
-on like a happy little ghost. They could not wait
-to skin the bear entire; but cut off a piece of meat,
-and ran back to the fire with it.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher kept saying over and over like an old
-woman: “Mind! Mind! Only a little piece at first,
-or it will make you sick!”</p>
-
-<p>“If there is meat, why not eat?” grumbled Mary-Lou.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless she obeyed; and at first only three tiny
-pieces were set upon pointed sticks to roast over the
-fire. It may be guessed that they were not <span class='it'>very</span> well
-cooked before they were eaten. Conacher and Loseis
-nibbled them to make them go as far as possible.
-Mary-Lou saw no sense at all in this proceeding, but
-loyally followed their example.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that all?” said Loseis wistfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Mary-Lou could put some small pieces in the pot
-and boil them,” suggested Conacher. “The soup
-would be good for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Soup!” said Loseis, making a face.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, by and by we will roast another little piece.
-To-morrow, if you feel all right, you can eat all you
-want.”</p>
-
-<p>There was no question of moving on that day.
-They ate a little more; slept; and ate again. Conacher
-and Loseis sat happily side by side under the shelter
-of the leaves, watching Mary-Lou cut off thin slabs
-of the meat, and hang them in the smoke of the fire.
-The Indian girl also contrived moccasins for herself
-out of squares of the hide.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning they awoke with bounding pulses
-as if they had never known what it was to starve. At
-breakfast time they feasted without stint. Their
-cheeks seemed to have filled out over night; their eyes
-were bright; their teeth gleaming. There was something
-so comical in the sight of this abrupt transformation,
-that they continually burst out laughing
-with their mouths full at the sight of each other’s
-joy.</p>
-
-<p>They set out again laden with as much meat as they
-could carry.</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='287' id='Page_287'></span><h1>CHAPTER XXIV<br/> <span class='sub-head'>DOWNSTREAM</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>A</span>s</span> they descended by imperceptible degrees towards
-the river, they could no longer make out
-the line of its valley ahead. The bald-headed prairie
-now began to take on a parklike aspect. Groups of
-graceful, full-grown poplars with their greenish yellow
-bark became more and more numerous, gradually
-leading them into a well-grown forest of aspen trees,
-interspersed with spruce. But there were still grassy
-openings of all sizes, from pretty glades to miniature
-prairies. Through the trackless forest it was very
-slow going; giant raspberry bushes, now in blossom,
-barred the way; rotting trunks lay prone in every direction;
-and vivid moss treacherously masked the holes
-where the ancient stems had rotted clean out of the
-ground.</p>
-
-<p>As the afternoon wore on, and there was no end to
-this, no sign of any river, a feeling of discouragement
-attacked them again. Could they have been mistaken?
-And then without warning, they issued out of the trees
-on to a grassy knoll; and there, with a magnificent effect
-of dramatic surprise, lay the long-sought river at
-their very feet.</p>
-
-<p>It was a thrilling moment. That view, so cunningly
-masked by the belt of forest, was one of the finest
-views imaginable. It was a first-class river. It flowed
-in the bottom of a valley at least six hundred feet
-deep, and no more than half a mile across from rim
-to rim. From the opposite rim, the prairie rolled on
-to the horizon. It was not so much a valley as a
-deep, clean gash in the prairie. The side upon which
-they stood was mantled with the deep green of spruce,
-while the other side rolled up in fantastic knobs and
-terraces of buffalo grass.</p>
-
-<p>The river poured a smooth, yellowish green flood
-through the bottom of this mighty trough; just the
-color of poplar bark. It was broken by several high
-islands, covered with spruce trees, which stemmed the
-current like majestic ships. The point upon which
-they stood was on the outside of a great bend, and
-they could look far up-stream, where the river seemed
-to flatten out, and to issue dazzling and molten from
-the afternoon sun itself.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher’s first thought was: “Plenty of water!
-I’ll be able to make a raft. We’ll have some easy
-days now.”</p>
-
-<p>They gazed at the noble prospect with full hearts.
-Conacher in particular was bursting with pride. He
-felt like the creator of that river, because they had
-found it where he had said it would be.</p>
-
-<p>“We happen to have hit it just right,” he said with a
-transparent air of carelessness. “In years to come
-when there is a trail it will strike the river here.
-Above here, you see, it flows east of north, and at this
-point it swings around to the westward. That agrees
-with the Indian reports. It is the only river east of
-the Rockies that has a westward trend.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is too beautiful to be called the Mud River,”
-said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“After this it shall be Laurentia’s River.”</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose there are rapids,” suggested the matter-of-fact
-Mary-Lou.</p>
-
-<p>“It will probably flow smooth for two hundred
-miles,” said Conacher. “Then it will strike the limestone
-outcrop that crosses the whole country. We’ll
-find rapids, maybe cascades, there.”</p>
-
-<p>“And we are the first whites to see it!” murmured
-Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“If I can bring him a good sketch map of it, it will
-put my boss in a good humor,” said Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>They made their way down to the water’s edge;
-and chose a camping spot on a curious tongue of land
-pointing downstream. At the highest stage of water
-it was an island; but it was now connected with the
-shore by a bar of dried mud. On one side of them the
-resistless brown flood swept down silently, its silken
-surface etched with eddies; on the other side there was
-a quiet back-water which Conacher said would be ideal
-for constructing the raft. He spent the remaining
-hours of daylight in searching for the three big, dead
-trees that he required for that purpose.</p>
-
-<p>They slept in great comfort on heaps of spruce
-boughs, with a generous fire between them. Even in
-July the nights were cold. In the silence of the night
-they discovered that the smoothly flowing river had
-a voice. It was neither a roar nor a whisper, but partook
-of the nature of both sounds. Though scarcely
-audible, it was tremendous; like the breathing and
-stirring of a mighty bed-fellow.</p>
-
-<p>The entire following day was devoted to the construction
-of the raft. Conacher cut down his trees;
-lopped off the branches; and chopped the trunks in
-two. He then launched his logs, and floated them
-together. During the earlier stages of his labor, he
-was often obliged to wade thigh deep into the icy
-water. Since he had neither spikes to fasten the logs,
-nor rope to lash them together, he was forced patiently
-to burn holes in them with his ramrod, heated
-in the fire. Twenty-four such holes had to be burned;
-and twelve neatly fitting wooden pegs shaped with the
-ax. Two short lengths were laid across the six logs
-and pegged down. The peg at each corner was
-allowed to stick up a few inches. A flooring of poles
-was then laid on the crosspieces to keep the passengers
-and their slender baggage dry. These poles were not
-fastened down, but were held in place by the pegs at
-each corner. Conacher’s last act was to burn a hole
-in each of the outside logs into which he drove a
-stout forked branch to serve as a rowlock. The oars
-were merely small spruce poles flattened with the ax
-at the broad end.</p>
-
-<p>The builder surveyed his completed effort with a
-pride that was difficult to conceal. “After all this
-work,” he said with his offhand air, “I shall be good
-and sore if we have to abandon it in a few miles.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is beautiful!” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>For a touch of bravura Conacher made a little
-hearth of clay tiled with flat stones on one end of his
-raft; and laid a fire ready to light. “So we can boil
-our meat as we travel,” he explained.</p>
-
-<p>“It is like a steamboat!” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>They turned in early; and were ready to push off
-soon after sunrise the following morning. This was
-the fourteenth morning after their departure from the
-slough where their enemies had turned back. The
-raft proved to possess ample buoyancy; they could
-move about on it with a certain freedom. The floor
-of poles held them safely above danger of a wetting.
-Mary-Lou lighted the fire, and put the breakfast on to
-cook.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis and Conacher sculled out of the back-water.
-At the foot of the island the current seized them as in
-a giant hand and drew them along. They took their
-oars inboard. There was nothing further to do. The
-tendency of the current itself was to draw them into
-the center of the stream, and keep them there. They
-sat down on their blankets to survey the scenery. The
-raft gyrated slowly in the eddies, giving them views
-up and down stream without so much as having to
-turn their heads.</p>
-
-<p>“This is better than walking,” said Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis agreed that it was; nevertheless she looked
-with some trepidation to see what each new bend of
-the unknown river had to show.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher assured her on the word of a geologist
-that as long as it ran between dirt banks there could
-be no serious obstruction to navigation; when rocks
-appeared, then look out! He had note-book and compass
-out to make memoranda of its course. He calculated
-that the current was running about five miles
-an hour.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was hot to-day; basking deliciously in its
-rays, the girl fell into a comfortable doze. The scenery
-was beautiful and monotonous; they looked at it,
-only partly aware of what they were looking at, a half
-smile fixed on their lips. Thus they recuperated from
-the fatigues of the past few days. Since the raft did
-not move through the water, but with the water, it
-came to seem as if it was not moving at all. The raft
-was the fixed point, and the shores were being slowly
-rolled past them like a panorama on great spools.</p>
-
-<p>This pleasant dream was rudely broken into by the
-sound of a hoarse roar downstream.</p>
-
-<p>“Rapid!” said Mary-Lou, moving towards an oar.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis looked reproachfully at Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>They edged the raft close inshore where they could
-land quickly if need be.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s have a look at it before you call me a liar,”
-said Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>Rounding the outside of a bend, they came in view
-of the white horses leaping below. An exclamation of
-fear broke from the girls. Conacher caught hold of a
-fallen tree to stay their progress while he studied the
-white water.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing but a riffle,” he announced. “Its bark is
-worse than its bite. This is a sharper bend than usual,
-and it’s just the water backing up on the outside that
-makes all the fuss. Notice that all the waves are
-regular and unbroken. Deep water. It will be perfectly
-safe to run it if you are willing.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right if you say so,” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>They cast off from their tree. Conacher and Mary-Lou
-each stood up with an oar, and Loseis crouched
-behind them.</p>
-
-<p>“Head for the roughest part near the shore,” said
-Conacher, “and keep her straight; that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p>Their hearts beat fast as the shores began to slip
-by with ever-increasing swiftness. The voice of the
-rapid was like that of a ravening beast. There is no
-other feeling quite like that upon the brink of a
-rapid. The feeling is: No power on earth can save
-me from it now—well, what the hell! They were
-gripped by an exquisite fear. Finally the heavy raft
-wriggled over the first and the biggest of those
-strange, fixed billows and stuck her nose in the trough.
-A sheet of spray flew back over them, whereupon they
-were seized by a mad exhilaration, and all three yelled
-like demons. The raft bucked over the short, steep
-billows like a rogue horse. Conacher and Mary-Lou
-were forced to their knees; and the latter lost her oar.
-A moment later they found themselves in smooth
-water, roaring with laughter.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as they had eaten their supper that night,
-they pushed off again. The girls slept while Conacher
-watched throughout the long twilight. The sunset
-glow alternated with the cold eastern sky as the raft
-waltzed gracefully in the eddies. They grounded
-her on a bar during the few hours of darkness; and
-at dawn they pushed off again; the girls watching now
-while Conacher slept. He awakened in the sunshine
-to find them laughing at the antics of the bears on the
-steep banks.</p>
-
-<p>For three days they traveled in this pleasant fashion.
-Mooseberries and black currants were ripening
-now. The bushes grew thickly along the edges of the
-water and wherever there were berries there were
-bears. Drifting down silently on the raft, Conacher
-could always get a shot in the early mornings. The
-berries made a welcome change from a diet of meat
-exclusively.</p>
-
-<p>As they traveled north the steep high banks gradually
-flattened down, and the current of the river slackened.
-Finally the high banks disappeared altogether;
-they could see nothing over the tops of the poplars and
-pines that lined the water’s edge. The course of the
-stream became very tortuous, and progress was slow.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re evidently coming to something,” Conacher
-remarked. “This country is a vast belt of silt deposited
-by the river as the result of some obstruction
-ahead.”</p>
-
-<p>On the fourth day the obstruction appeared in the
-form of a low wall of limestone through which the
-river had finally succeeded in forcing a passage. The
-rock walls were but three or four feet high, and the
-river slipped between them very swiftly and smoothly
-with a curious growling sound. On the other side the
-whole character of the country was changed. Rock
-appeared everywhere; and the lush vegetation of the
-prairies was gone.</p>
-
-<p>They had not gone far before they came to a rapid,
-a real rapid this one, with great bowlders sticking up
-out of it, that tore the current to white tatters. Landing
-at a safe distance above, they walked down along
-the shore to see if there was a possible channel
-through. Conacher was naturally averse to abandoning
-the raft which had cost him such pains.</p>
-
-<p>After a little study, he pointed out to the girls how
-it might be done. “It would be foolish, though, to
-risk the guns and ammunition and the ax. You girls
-carry the things along the shore, and I’ll take the raft
-down.”</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose you hit a rock?” said Loseis, paling.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I’d get a ducking, that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p>He accomplished the feat without accident. To the
-watching Loseis he made an extraordinarily gallant
-figure, standing on the raft, braced and swaying to
-every movement; his resolute glance fixed ahead, while
-he paddled madly to steer it around obstructions.</p>
-
-<p>In the next rapid, an hour or so later, he was not so
-fortunate. The raft, in spite of his efforts, slid up on
-a submerged shelf of rock, and rearing on end, flung
-the loose poles in every direction. Conacher, jumping
-clear of the wreck, went down with the current. The
-frame of the raft followed him down; and he contrived
-to bring it ashore below; and the paddle too.
-With some new poles the raft was as good as ever.</p>
-
-<p>However, the rapids seemed to grow successively
-worse; and Loseis forbade him to risk his neck in the
-next one. They sent the raft down empty. After a
-mad voyage, battered back and forth on the bowlders,
-it came through minus its poles, somewhat loosened
-up but still practicable. They then camped for the
-night.</p>
-
-<p>On the following day they were nosing along close
-to the shore with the disquieting roar of a rapid in
-their ears, but apparently still at some distance. The
-view down river was cut off by a low, stony hill,
-sparsely covered with trees, around the base of which
-the stream wound its way. Suddenly Conacher perceived
-that the current was sucking ominously along-shore.
-That part of the shore was much cumbered
-with old down trees. He drove the raft into the naked
-branches.</p>
-
-<p>“Grab hold!” he said sharply to the girls.</p>
-
-<p>They missed the first tree. Fine beads of perspiration
-broke out on Conacher’s forehead. He perceived
-that in a dozen yards the raft would be beyond his
-control. He seized the next overhanging branch, and
-wound a leg around his improvised oarlock to hold the
-raft. The girls were now fully alive to the danger.
-Mary-Lou climbed into the tree, and Loseis swiftly
-passed her their precious few belongings. When
-everything was ashore Conacher let the raft go, and it
-lumbered around the point with surprising swiftness.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the last of it,” said Conacher sadly.</p>
-
-<p>They climbed the stony hill. As they rounded the
-top, a hoarse, throaty bellowing buffeted their ears;
-and a moment later a wild welter of white water was
-spread before their eyes. They had seen nothing like
-this. After rounding the hill the stream straightened
-out, and narrowing down to a quarter of its usual
-width tumbled down as steeply as a flight of stairs between
-high wooded banks. The impression of power
-was overwhelming. The water was forced into great,
-regular billows which looked to be fifteen feet high.
-Each billow or ridge of water converged to a point in
-the middle; and the effect as one looked downstream
-was of a series of blunt white arrows pointing up.
-No boat could have lived in that turmoil. The raft—or
-what was left of it—was already out of sight.
-The three looked at each other with scared and thankful
-faces. A close call!</p>
-
-<p>They now had to adjust their minds to traveling on
-foot again—and this would not be anything like the
-rolling prairie! The first thing was to roll up their
-packs, and strap them on their backs. They then descended
-into the gorge; but found it impossible to
-make headway along the steep side, impeded with
-stones and down timber. They were forced to climb
-a hundred feet or so to level ground. This was
-scarcely better. Only those who have tried to make
-their way through a trackless virgin forest can appreciate
-the difficulties that faced them in the shape of
-undergrowth, fallen trees and holes in the earth. The
-débris of ages was heaped in their path. They guided
-themselves by the sound of the cascade upon their
-left.</p>
-
-<p>In a mile or so (which had all the effect of ten) the
-river fell quiet again, and they pushed back to its
-bank. It was an open question which was the more
-difficult going. Along the edge of the stream the dead
-timber brought down by the freshets was left stranded
-in inextricable tangles. Conacher finally chose a
-course parallel with the river bank, and a few yards
-back from the edge. Here they were at least sure of
-a supply of water. All day long it was a case of climbing
-over obstacles or through them or chopping a way.
-Heart-breaking work. They camped while it was still
-early, completely tired out.</p>
-
-<p>For day after day this continued. There was no
-lack of dead timber to make another raft: but the
-rapids followed each other in such close succession
-that it seemed a waste of time. It was exasperating
-to have to undergo such crushing labor with the
-stream running alongside ready to carry them in the
-desired direction. “If I only had a dug-out!” Conacher
-groaned a dozen times a day. But even if they
-could have taken the time to make a dug-out, there
-was no suitable timber in that stony land. The noise
-of their progress through the bush scared away all
-game; and they would soon have gone hungry, had
-it not been for the smoked meat which Mary-Lou
-had thoughtfully provided. Presently this gave out,
-and they had to lay over for a day, while Conacher
-hunted a bear, along the river. Their clothes were in
-rags.</p>
-
-<p>In ten days Conacher figured that they had made
-about fifty miles: but this was pure guesswork. It
-was now within two or three days of the time when
-the surveying outfit was due at the mouth of the Mud
-River.</p>
-
-<p>The three travelers were sitting gloomily on the
-shore of the river in a spot where it flowed as
-smoothly and prettily between poplar and birch-covered
-shores as a river in a civilized land where
-picnics might be held. The view downstream was
-blocked by a graceful island. Suddenly around that
-island came poking the nose of a birch-bark canoe with
-a single paddler.</p>
-
-<p>To those three that sight was like a blow between
-the eyes. They glanced fearfully at each other for
-confirmation. It was a month since they had seen
-others of their kind. They stared at the approaching
-canoe with open mouths. Then Conacher jumped to
-his feet and hailed. The paddler was arrested in mid-motion.
-He was no less startled by the meeting than
-they. After a moment he came paddling gingerly towards
-them. They saw that it was a white man, an
-odd, withered, brownish specimen, whose skin was all
-of a color with his battered hat, and faded khaki
-jacket.</p>
-
-<p>He grounded his canoe gently in the mud, and
-stepped out. An old smoked pioneer with a comically
-injured look which never varied. They shook hands
-gravely all around before a word was spoken.</p>
-
-<p>“Who are you?” demanded Conacher and Loseis
-simultaneously.</p>
-
-<p>“Bill Mitchell,” he replied with the shrug and
-the aggrieved look that were characteristic of him.
-“Who the hell are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am Conacher of the surveying outfit, and this is
-Miss Blackburn.”</p>
-
-<p>“Blackburn’s daughter!” exclaimed the old man
-with widening eyes. “Do you mean to tell me you’ve
-come down from Blackburn’s Post this away!”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher was not anxious to go into lengthy explanations.
-“We’re expecting to join my outfit on the
-Sinclair River,” he said quickly. “How far are we
-from the Sinclair?”</p>
-
-<p>“Matter of ten mile. There’s one rapid between.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, thank God!” cried Conacher fervently.
-“Have you seen the surveying outfit?”</p>
-
-<p>“Spelled with them three days since,” replied the
-old man. “They’re working up-stream slow. Ought
-to be off the mouth of the Mud River some time to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher and Loseis exchanged a beaming look.
-All their troubles rolled away. “Well, we didn’t
-manage that so badly,” said the former, conceitedly.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you doing here?” Conacher asked of
-the old man.</p>
-
-<p>“Me?” he answered with his disgruntled look;
-“what do you think I’m doin’? I’m prospectin’ this
-river. It ain’t never been prospected.”</p>
-
-<p>“But when you get above the rapids it’s a prairie
-river,” said Conacher. “We came through three hundred
-miles of it, and there’s likely three hundred miles
-more above that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’ll work up to the mountains,” said the old
-man undisturbed.</p>
-
-<p>“You fellows ought to study a little geology before
-you break your hearts with a journey like this,” said
-Conacher nettled. “Nobody has ever found any
-amount of gold on the easterly slope of the Rockies.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mebbe this river comes right through the mountains
-like the Spirit and the Sinclair,” said the old
-fellow obstinately.</p>
-
-<p>“Look at it!” said Conacher. “There’s damned
-little snow water in that. It’s pure prairie mud.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well, I’ve come so far I might as well go see,”
-he said calmly. “I got all summer. All I want is to
-get into the mountains before I go into winter quarters.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher gave him up. He described the upper
-reaches of the river for his benefit. “How will you
-get your canoe around the big fall?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Chop a trail through the bush, and then come back
-for it,” said the old man calmly. “It don’t weigh but
-forty pound.”</p>
-
-<p>Looking into his canoe they perceived that his
-entire worldly goods consisted of three bags of flour,
-a box of ammunition, and a slim dunnage bag of odds
-and ends. It appeared that his gun was of the same
-caliber as that carried by Conacher. The old man
-looked at the other’s still partly filled ammunition belt
-desirously.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll be joining your outfit to-morrow,” he said
-suggestively.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell you what I’ll do,” said Conacher. “Cache
-your flour here, and carry us down to the mouth of
-the river and it shall be yours.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t mind ef I do,” said Bill Mitchell.</p>
-
-<p>After the labors of the past days that last ten miles
-was like riding in a taxi. They whisked the light
-canoe around the rapid with no trouble at all. Below,
-the Mud River widened out and found its way into
-the Sinclair through a miniature delta amongst low,
-grassy islands covered with gigantic cottonwood trees
-that created a dim green twilight below. Mitchell
-landed them on a pine-clad point that looked down a
-reach of the greater river, several miles long. The
-old man did not get out.</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t you spell with us?” asked Conacher politely.</p>
-
-<p>The pioneer rubbed his hairy chin, and squinted
-down river as if he had perceived something important
-down there. “I guess not,” he drawled.
-“Got to be gettin’ along.” With a casual good-by, he
-pushed off and resumed his solitary journey up-stream.</p>
-
-<p>“What a strange creature!” murmured Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“It was the presence of a lady which embarrassed
-him,” said Conacher. “He confided to me that he
-had not seen a white girl in seven years.”</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk'/>
-
-<p>Twenty-four hours later it was Conacher who perceived,
-down at the end of the long reach, the flash
-of wet paddles in the sun.</p>
-
-<p>“Here they come!” he cried.</p>
-
-<p>The two girls ran to his side. For a long time they
-could make out nothing but the regular flash of several
-paddles like heliograph signals. Finally four
-little black objects took shape down river. The
-watchers filled with a mounting excitement that became
-painful to bear; their breasts were like dynamos
-humming higher and higher until the pitch became unendurable.
-They had looked forward to this meeting
-through such hardships and perils! there had been
-so many days when they despaired of accomplishing
-it! But here they came at last; men of their own kind;
-friends; rescuers. Conacher and Loseis felt as if
-their hearts would crack with joy.</p>
-
-<p>“My God! how astonished they’ll be!” said Conacher
-shakily.</p>
-
-<p>The impulse to make the most of their friends’ astonishment
-was irresistible; and the three drew back
-under cover of the trees. Soon they were able to distinguish
-that the approaching party consisted of three
-white men and eight Indians traveling in three big
-dug-outs, and a rough, narrow scow that was being
-poled along close to the shore. Finally Conacher recognized
-his especial friend.</p>
-
-<p>“Alec Jordan!” he murmured with a tight, warm
-feeling around the heart. “Good old Alec!”</p>
-
-<p>They saw that the oncoming boats intended to make
-a landing directly at their feet. It was an inevitable
-camping-place. The three dug-outs grounded almost
-simultaneously on the shingle. As the white men rose
-in their places, Conacher stepped out from among the
-trees.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, fellows!” he said in a casual voice.</p>
-
-<p>They stared at him completely awe-struck. “My
-God!” they murmured in hushed tones; and looked at
-each other. The Indians in the scow pushed off in
-a panic and floated away on the current.</p>
-
-<p>Conacher, pale with excitement, but grinning
-widely, stepped down the bank. “I’m no ghost!” he
-cried. He marched up to Langmuir, the head of the
-party. “I want to report for duty,” he said simply.</p>
-
-<p>“Report .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. for duty!” stammered Langmuir
-clownishly.</p>
-
-<p>Jordan was the first to recover from the shock. He
-flung his arms around his friend. “Conacher! Conacher!
-<span class='it'>Conacher!</span>” he yelled, shaking him violently
-as if to make certain that he was flesh and blood.</p>
-
-<p>“How in hell did you get here?” demanded Langmuir
-in a voice of extreme bitterness, which was not
-really bitter.</p>
-
-<p>“Been waitin’ for you since yesterday,” said Conacher
-airily. “I cut across the prairie north of Blackburn’s
-Post, and came down the Mud River to head
-you off. Got a map of the river for you, chief, such
-as it is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m damned!” said Langmuir solemnly. And
-the others echoed him in varying tones: “I’m
-<span class='it'>damned</span>!”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher was not yet done surprising them. As
-they turned to climb the bank, he said somewhat nervously:
-“I’ve got a couple of guests with me.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Loseis stepped into view above. In breeches and
-Stetson, smiling merrily, yet a little apprehensively,
-too, she made an enchanting figure. The rents in her
-clothes, the marks of hardship in her face, only set
-off the bravery of her spirit. To those white men so
-long parted from the women of their race, it was like
-a miracle.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Blackburn, gentlemen,” Conacher sang out.
-“Mr. Langmuir; Mr. Jordan; Mr. Seely.”</p>
-
-<p>They snatched off their hats. “Pleased to meet
-you,” they mumbled sheepishly.</p>
-
-<p>“Merciful Heaven! am I awake or dreaming!”
-Langmuir murmured to himself.</p>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' title='305' id='Page_305'></span><h1>CHAPTER XXV<br/> <span class='sub-head'>CONCLUSION</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><span class='dropcap'>T</span>he</span> meeting at the mouth of the Mud River was
-the beginning of a still longer journey for Loseis.
-But it was never again allowed to become an arduous
-one for her. All hands, white and red, joined together
-to smooth her way. She reigned the undisputed Princess
-of Langmuir’s party, holding them in subjection
-with her smile.</p>
-
-<p>After a laborious month ascending the Sinclair,
-plotting the river and collecting geological data and
-specimens, they came to a lonely trading outpost on
-the Pacific side of the mountains, called Pinnacle
-House. It stood amidst wild and beautiful surroundings
-in a deep green valley between parallel ranges.
-The pointed limestone peaks gave it its name. How
-strange it was to find such homely old friends as cabbages,
-onions and potatoes growing in the trader’s
-garden!</p>
-
-<p>The trader was away on his usual summer journey
-to bring in supplies; and they found his house occupied
-at the moment by the Reverend Patrick Geogehagen,
-a famous character of the country, better known as
-“Patsy.” Patsy was a brawny, bright-eyed wrestler
-for the Lord, with cherry-colored cheeks, and a
-spreading black beard that saved him the trouble of
-wearing a necktie. It was his self-imposed duty to
-visit and minister to those tribes of Indians who were
-too poor, too disreputable or too far away to attract
-the attention of the regular missionaries.</p>
-
-<p>When they hailed him he was cleaning his gun at
-the door of the single log shack that served both for
-store and dwelling at Pinnacle House, and there was
-nothing in his rough dress to indicate his calling.
-When he introduced himself, Conacher looked at
-Loseis with a quick, smiling question and Loseis answered
-it with a quick, smiling assent. Conacher
-whispered shamefacedly to Patsy, who thereupon
-gave him a frightful clap on the back, and roared:</p>
-
-<p>“Delighted, my boy!”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher took Langmuir aside. The chief wagged
-his head in perplexity; and scratched it, and grumbled:</p>
-
-<p>“What the deuce, Conny! Such a thing was never
-heard of in a party engaged on field work! What
-will it look like in my report? Oh, Lord! think of
-the explanations I will be called on to make to all
-the old women in the Department!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why should it appear in the report?” said Conacher.
-“It’s none of the Government’s business.
-Have I been any the worse worker during the past
-month?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no! you’ve worked like two! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Hm!
-that’s so. Why should it appear? .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Go ahead,
-my boy; and God bless you! I bags to give the bride
-away.”</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, it <span class='it'>did not</span> appear. The report
-of Langmuir’s party is filed away with many others
-equally decorous, and nobody in the Government
-ever suspected that they entertained a Princess
-during the summer and celebrated a wedding.</p>
-
-<p>There were no wedding garments in the outfit but a
-great shaving, shearing, washing and brushing-up took
-place. The fellows decorated the single room of the
-cabin with spruce branches and flowers from the
-mountain side. Loseis had to be married in breeches
-and boots because it was all she had. At least her
-clothes were neatly mended by this time. Her smile
-was the smile of a happy bride; and nobody was
-aware of any incongruity. Conacher looked as frightened
-as every well-disposed man is supposed to be at
-his wedding; and large fat tears rolled down the
-bridesmaid’s dark cheeks. Up to the moment of donning
-his vestments Patsy joked outrageously; he then
-became the priest of God. In a free and natural
-state of society these abrupt contrasts are perfectly
-well understood. Nobody thought the less of Patsy
-because he was a man as well as a priest.</p>
-
-<p>Patsy and Mary-Lou conspired together to produce
-the wedding-feast; and the result, considering
-the meager resources of Pinnacle House, astonished
-everybody. They may have been short of the fixings,
-but they had five kinds of game and fish; and
-to polish off with, a gigantic roly-poly pudding stuffed
-with currant jam.</p>
-
-<p>The speeches were no better nor worse than usual.
-Patsy said in part:</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, friends, I shall look back on this as one of
-the happiest days of me life! This morning I was
-not aware that you people as much as existed; this
-afternoon you are established as the friends of me
-heart, and shall never be absent from me heart while
-it beats. Even parsons get discouraged sometimes,
-though none of ’em would ever admit it but a renegade
-like me. This mornin’ I was sittin’ at the door of
-this house trying to make up my mind whether to
-visit the scrofulous Louchoux Indians to the northeast,
-or the flea-bitten Sikannis to the southeast, and feelin’
-ready to consign ’em both to perdition. Sure, in all the
-world there is not such another lousy, thieving, crack-brained,
-worthless congregation as me own, I was telling
-meself, when along you came with this lovely girl
-to remind me of the existence of beauty in the world,
-and this bold lad to refresh me with the sight of
-manliness! Would I marry them? says he, blushing.
-Would I marry them? I was ready to throw my cap
-in the air at such a chance! That is jam in the life
-of a forgotten missionary. I consider that in joining
-these two I have performed the best act of me life.
-The country ought to profit by it. Here’s to the
-newly married pair! May they live long and obey the
-scriptural injunction!”</p>
-
-<p>To which Conacher answered:</p>
-
-<p>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Er .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. you fellows and the Reverend
-Patsy .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I rise to say .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. er .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. that is, to
-thank you .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I’m not much of a speaker .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>“No?” queried a sarcastic voice.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right, Jordan. You can laugh. I’ll
-live to see you married yet.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Where was I?
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I only wanted to say, only you interrupt me all
-the time .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. er .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. to thank you on behalf of
-Miss Blackburn .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Uproarious laughter drowned him out.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter with you all! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Oh, I see.
-I mean the lady beside me, m-m-m-my w-w-w-wife.
-The late Miss Blackburn .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p>Renewed laughter.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, to hell with you!” said Conacher plumping
-down in his seat laughing. “If any man thinks he can
-make a better speech let’s hear it!”</p>
-
-<p>Next morning they resumed their work on the river.
-For two weeks longer they toiled up through or
-around the innumerable rapids, canyons, whirlpools,
-and waterfalls of the upper Sinclair, before they
-finally arrived at the little lake in which it took its
-source.</p>
-
-<p>Here Langmuir gave Conacher leave to press on
-ahead while the party cleaned up its work for the
-season. So Conacher, Loseis and Mary-Lou crossed
-a famous pass and descending the mountain on the
-other side, plunged all at once into the civilization
-which Loseis had never seen. Everything in the
-busy little coast town was strange to her; the close
-ranks of shops and houses; locomotives; automobiles;
-electric light and water from a tap. The Princess was
-too aristocratic in spirit to betray vulgar amazement;
-she merely looked and listened quietly. Not until
-she was alone with her husband did she reveal the
-wonder and astonishment of her childish heart. For
-the man it was a wonderful experience to introduce so
-fresh and ardent a soul to the great world.</p>
-
-<p>There was a short voyage by sea; then the return
-eastward by railroad over the mountains to the city of
-Prince George.</p>
-
-<p>In Prince George they had no difficulty in finding
-John Gruber, who when he was not running Blackburn’s
-outfit into the country, or bringing out his
-furs, ran a stable in town, and bought and sold horses.
-They found him in his little office, a tall, strong man
-with a heavy, honest red face, and a bald red poll
-surrounded by a fringe of red hair. Gruber had not
-visited Blackburn’s Post since Loseis was a child; and
-he did not immediately recognize her.</p>
-
-<p>“I am Laurentia Blackburn,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“What!” cried Gruber, staring. “Why .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. of
-course you are! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Well, I’m damned!”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what everybody says!” said Loseis with a
-rueful smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you come from?” demanded Gruber.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis started to tell her story, but Gruber instantly
-silenced her. “Wait! Wait!” he cried. “We
-must do everything regular and proper!” Snatching
-up his hat, he hustled them through the streets to a
-tall office building. Here after ascending in an elevator
-(a fresh marvel to Loseis) they burst unceremoniously
-into the private office of a little, round,
-white-haired old gentleman, startling him almost out
-of his wits.</p>
-
-<p>“Here is Blackburn’s daughter!” shouted Gruber.</p>
-
-<p>“God bless my soul!” cried the old gentleman,
-agitatedly removing his glasses. “What proof have
-you of that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got the proof of my own eyes!”</p>
-
-<p>“Quietly! Quietly!” pleaded the old soul. “Sit
-down all. Let us proceed in due order if you please.”</p>
-
-<p>It turned out that this was Hector Blackburn’s
-lawyer, David Chichester. In simple graphic sentences,
-Loseis told the two men her story, while they
-glanced at each other in astonishment, and murmured
-in indignation and sympathy.</p>
-
-<p>When she had come to the end, Mr. Chichester said
-gravely: “We all felt that there was something that
-needed to be explained; but we had nothing to go on.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have later news than mine,” said Loseis
-eagerly; “Mr. Gruber has been into the country and
-out again. What has happened?”</p>
-
-<p>The two men looked at each other again. Gruber
-said: “Show her the newspaper, Mr. Chichester.
-That tells the whole story.”</p>
-
-<p>From a drawer of his desk, Mr. Chichester produced
-a copy of the local newspaper now some weeks
-old, folded in such a manner as to bring into prominence
-the story that he desired them to read. They
-were instantly aware of the staring headlines:</p>
-
-<div class='lgc' style='margin-top:1em;margin-bottom:1em;'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line'><span style='font-size:smaller'>ROMANTIC TRAGEDY OF THE NORTH</span></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>Young Couple End All for Love</p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<p>Loseis and Conacher read with their heads close
-together:</p>
-
-<p>“John Gruber, the well-known horse-dealer and
-traveler of Prince George, returned yesterday from his
-annual trip into northern Athabasca bringing news of
-a strange and poignant tragedy at Blackburn’s Post,
-a distant trading station in the unexplored portion of
-the province.</p>
-
-<p>“For many years Mr. Gruber has acted as agent
-for Hector Blackburn, the last of the powerful free
-traders, who maintained an almost baronial state in
-the midst of his vast domain. Each year it has been
-Mr. Gruber’s custom to take in the year’s supplies for
-the Post. At a point about half way he would meet
-the outfit sent out by Hector Blackburn and exchange
-the store goods for the season’s catch of furs. This
-year Mr. Gruber waited in vain at the rendezvous.
-After several weeks had passed, a rumor reached
-him that Hector Blackburn had been killed by an accident
-early in June. He then pushed through the rest
-of the way to Blackburn’s Post.</p>
-
-<p>“He found Mr. Andrew Gault of Fort Good Hope,
-one of the best-known fur traders in the country, in
-charge there. Mr. Gault was well-nigh prostrated
-by a terrible happening which had taken place only
-two or three days before Mr. Gruber’s arrival. Laurentia
-Blackburn, the late trader’s only child, had
-killed herself by leaping from a high cliff into the
-river, in company with her lover, a young man named
-Paul Conacher attached to the Geological Survey.</p>
-
-<p>“It was on June third that Hector Blackburn was
-killed by a fall from his horse. His death left his
-daughter, a young girl, entirely alone and unprotected
-in that savage spot. There were no other white
-persons at Blackburn’s Post. Moreover it was surrounded
-by a tribe of ignorant Indians who began
-to get out of hand as soon as the firm control of
-Hector Blackburn was removed. Mr. Gault, hearing
-of these things, immediately rode to the girl’s assistance
-from his Post one hundred and fifty miles away.</p>
-
-<p>“At first the girl evinced nothing but gratitude at
-his coming. She freely put all her affairs into Mr.
-Gault’s experienced hands, giving him a power of attorney
-to transact the necessary business. Mr. Gault
-sent out for Hector Blackburn’s attorney who is the
-well-known lawyer, Mr. David Chichester, of this
-city; but this letter unluckily was lost somewhere on
-the long journey.</p>
-
-<p>“A few days later the young man, Conacher, turned
-up at Blackburn’s Post. He too had heard of Blackburn’s
-death, and was attracted by the rich prize
-offered in his only child and heiress. A handsome
-young man, of good address, his conquest of the inexperienced
-girl was all too easy. Conacher wished
-to get her business into his own hands, and so worked
-upon her mind with base insinuations that she turned
-against her best friend, Mr. Gault.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Gault meanwhile, as was clearly his duty, was
-preparing to send out the season’s fur to Mr. Gruber.
-By every means in his power, Conacher sought to prevent
-this. He was finally guilty of the murder of an
-Indian named Etzooah, a messenger of Mr. Gault’s,
-under circumstances of peculiar atrocity. The Indian
-was garroted as he rode through the woods, by a
-line stretched across the trail by Conacher. It then
-became Mr. Gault’s duty to apprehend the young man
-and send him out to justice. But the infatuated girl
-sheltered him in her own house; and standing at the
-door with a gun, dared Mr. Gault to come and take
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Gault sent out for the police; and in the
-meantime contented himself with watching the house
-to prevent the murderer’s escape. His messenger,
-taking a different route, passed Mr. Gruber on the
-way in; and as a matter of fact the police arrived two
-days after Gruber. But everything was over then.
-On the third night Conacher and the girl escaped
-from the house, and obtaining possession of a dug-out,
-fled across the river. Closely pursued by Mr. Gault,
-they sought a refuge on top of a high cut-bank opposite
-the Post. When their pursuers closed in on
-them, seeing capture, disgrace and separation ahead,
-they joined hands and with a weird good-by ringing
-through the night, leaped over the edge of the
-gravelly cliff and were drowned in the river below.
-Though Mr. Gault searched for the bodies for many
-days, they were not found.</p>
-
-<p>“The police conducted an investigation into the
-sad circumstances. As a result, Sergeant Ferrie in
-charge of the detail expressed himself as satisfied that
-Mr. Gault had done all that any man could do in such
-an inexpressibly distressing situation. Mr. Gault remains
-in charge of the Post until such time as the
-Courts may issue letters of administration. No heirs
-are known.”</p>
-
-<p>Conacher and Loseis looked at each other in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“By Heaven! what an infernally clever story!”
-cried Conacher. “I am not surprised that even the
-police were taken in.”</p>
-
-<p>“God brought us through all our dangers especially
-so that we could show this man up!” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“We must decide on a course of action,” said Mr.
-Chichester fussily.</p>
-
-<p>“There can be but one course for my husband and
-me,” said Loseis quickly. “We will start back for
-our Post to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Naturally,” said Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>The other two looked a little flabbergasted at this
-instant decision.</p>
-
-<p>“The season is growing late,” objected Gruber.
-“Light snows have already fallen. Ice will be running
-in the rivers by the time you get there.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the trip <span class='it'>can</span> be made!” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, it can be made.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then we’ll make it.”</p>
-
-<p>“One moment,” said Mr. Chichester dryly. “I suppose
-you know that you have other property beside
-the fur business.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have I?” said Loseis.</p>
-
-<p>He handed her a sort of statement from amongst
-his papers. Loseis looked at it, and shook her head.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t understand it,” she said, passing it to Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>As he studied it, Conacher’s face paled. “Good
-God!” he muttered. “According to this you are
-worth over a million dollars.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Oh, after what
-they have said about me, this is terrible!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll have to make the best of it!” said Mr.
-Chichester with a dry twinkle.</p>
-
-<p>Loseis showed a face of quaint distress. “My
-dear Paul,” she murmured, “I’m so sorry! So sorry!
-I didn’t know anything about it. It wasn’t my
-fault, was it!”</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk'/>
-
-<p>Gruber, who headed the party, breathed with relief
-when he led them through a pass in the hills
-down to the edge of the wide meadows surrounding
-Blackburn’s Lake. October had come in; and
-during their long ride across the prairie they had
-met with more than one snow-storm. Fortunately
-for them the snow had melted; had it remained lying
-on the prairie, or had they experienced one of the
-early blizzards that are not unknown at this season,
-their position would have been serious. Now, with
-the shelter of the timber at hand, they were safe.</p>
-
-<p>The party was well outfitted of course; but even
-so, what with the snow, the hard frosts at night and
-the raw, biting winds by day, traveling had been intensely
-disagreeable. They carried a small tent for
-the two women. Gruber had three hot-heads in his
-company who could not brook the slightest delay.
-Besides Loseis and Conacher there was young Sergeant
-Ferrie of the Mounted Police who was no less
-eager than the other two to bring down retribution
-on the head of Andrew Gault. The policeman’s professional
-pride had been wounded. With three
-troopers he had joined the party at the Crossing.
-Mary-Lou was also of the party; and six Cree half-breeds
-from Miwasa Landing. They had upwards
-of twenty horses.</p>
-
-<p>They slept for the last time on the same little point
-of high land running out into the meadows, where
-Conacher had been surprised by Etzooah four months
-before. The days were growing short now. About
-eleven o’clock next morning they were riding past the
-Slavi village on the opposite side of the river. The
-inhabitants lined up to watch them pass, in silent
-consternation. Even at the distance they could not
-have failed to recognize Loseis and the famous yellow
-head of Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“Some of them could jump in a canoe and get to
-the Post with the aid of the current before we
-could,” suggested Conacher.</p>
-
-<p>“They have no love for Gault,” said Loseis.
-“There is no reason why they should warn them.
-The Slavis never look for trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>“Even if he should be warned, he’s got nowhere
-to run except back to his own Post,” Gruber pointed
-out. “And there he’d only run into the arms of the
-other party of police who went down the big river.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just the same,” said Sergeant Ferrie, frowning,
-“I’ve no intention of letting any other party take
-him. He belongs to me!”</p>
-
-<p>They urged their weary horses on a little faster.</p>
-
-<p>Suspecting that Gault might make a dash for freedom
-at the sight of them, Ferrie determined to send
-a party across country to head him off on the other
-trail. Two of the white troopers and two Crees were
-allotted to this duty. They turned off on the same
-ridge a mile from the Post that Gault had used. In
-order to give them time to reach their post, the rest
-of the party halted for their midday meal in the hollow
-beyond.</p>
-
-<p>When they started out again, Ferrie took command.
-He wished Loseis and Mary-Lou to remain
-in that spot with a guard; but Loseis would not hear
-of it. Much to her disgust she was forced to bring
-up the rear of the train. As they came in sight of
-the Post the men’s faces were grim. It had a deserted
-look. Gault had never succeeded in persuading
-the Slavis to return, and the grassy meadow below
-the buildings, yellow now, was empty. When
-they cantered up into the little square within the
-buildings, that was empty too: Women’s House,
-store, warehouses, Blackburn’s House; doors closed
-and chimneys cold. The bars of the corral were
-down.</p>
-
-<p>The men paused to consult. Presently the sound
-of approaching hoofs was heard; and the four men
-sent across country rode into the square, driving before
-them four mounted Indians, who were immediately
-recognizable as belonging to Gault; one of
-them indeed was Watusk, whom Loseis and Conacher
-had good cause to remember. He was brought up
-to Sergeant Ferrie.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is Gault?” demanded the policeman.</p>
-
-<p>“We leave him here, half hour ago,” answered
-Watusk sullenly. “He tell us to go home.”</p>
-
-<p>“Told you to go home!” said Ferrie, astonished.</p>
-
-<p>“He know you are coming,” Watusk went on impassively.
-“This man Hooliam,” pointing to one of
-his companions, “was at the Slavi village to see a girl
-when you ride past. He jomp in a canoe and paddle
-fas’ to tell Gault that Blackburn’s daughter and Yellowhead
-are not dead. They are comin’ back with
-four red-coats.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did Gault say to that?” Ferrie asked with
-a hard smile.</p>
-
-<p>“He jus’ smile,” said Watusk. “He look on the
-groun’ and tap his leg with his little whip. Bam-bye
-he say: ‘All right, boys. Get your horses and ride
-home. I will wait here for them.’ And we go.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then he’s still here!” cried Ferrie.</p>
-
-<p>Watusk pointed to Blackburn’s house.</p>
-
-<p>“Gault! Come out!” cried Ferrie in a strong
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>There was no answer.</p>
-
-<p>Ferrie tried the door of the house, and found it
-barred on the inside. He signified to his men that
-they were to fetch one of the heavy poles from the
-corral. Using it as a battering-ram, after two or
-three blows, the door burst in. Ferrie and Conacher
-entered the house together.</p>
-
-<p>They found Gault sitting upright in the kitchen in
-one of Blackburn’s carved chairs. For one dreadful
-instant they thought that he was laughing at them;
-in the next they perceived that he was dead. His
-wide-open eyes were bereft of all sense; his lower jaw
-was hanging down in a dreadful, idiotic grimace. Yet
-he sat as straight in the high-backed chair as in life.
-It was only upon looking closer that they discovered
-that the man with a strange, last impulse of vanity
-had tied himself into the chair, that he might be discovered
-facing his enemies in an upright position.
-There was a band of canvas around his chest! and another
-around his forehead; the broad-brimmed Stetson
-was jammed rakishly down on his head over the
-band. He had then shot himself through the heart
-with a revolver, which had slipped from his hand to
-the floor.</p>
-
-<p>The young men jerked their hats off; and their
-grim faces softened a little.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he’s paid,” said Conacher. “We can’t feel
-any more hard feelings against him!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s better so,” said Ferrie. “Nobody would
-want this ugly case advertised by a trial.”</p>
-
-<p>Such was Andrew Gault’s requiem.</p>
-
-<p>They returned outside the house, hat in hand, and
-all the others knew at a glance what they had found.</p>
-
-<p>If Gault in his strange preparations for death had
-hoped to leave upon Loseis a last impression of his
-power, his aim was not realized. She betrayed no
-wish to look at him again. Loseis’ verdict was more
-merciful than the young men’s.</p>
-
-<p>“So he is dead!” she murmured, clinging to Conacher’s
-arm. “He <span class='it'>would</span> kill himself, of course.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Poor fellow! He had never known love when he was
-young. When he was old love mocked him, and it
-drove him mad.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Ah! how lucky <span class='it'>we</span> are, my
-dearest dear!”</p>
-
-<p>They returned to the house across the way where
-they had known such dreadful days and nights. But
-the spell of dread was lifted now. Their breasts were
-calm and free.</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:2em;font-size:1.5em;'>THE END</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
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