Publicly-accessible
For additional information about this text, see the ENTC312 course homepage:
Prepared for the University of Virginia Library Electronic Text Center.
Some keywords in the header are a local Electronic Text Center scheme to aid in establishing analytical groupings.




To My Mother
At about eight o'clock one evening of the early summer a group of men were seated on a grass plot overlooking a broad river. The sun was just setting through the forest fringe directly behind them.
Of this group some reclined in the short grass, others lay flat on the bank's slope, while still others leaned against the carriages of two highly ornamented field-guns, whose embossed muzzles gaped silently at an eastern shore nearly two miles distant.
The men were busy with soft-voiced talk, punctuating their
remarks with low laughter of a singularly infectious character. It was strange
speech, richly embroidered with the musical names of places, with unfamiliar
names of beasts, and with unintelligible names of things. Kenógami, Mamátawan,
Wenebógan, Kapúskasíng, the silver-fox, the sea-otter, the sable, the wolverine,
the muskparka, ox,
There scarcely needed the row of glistening birch-barks
below the men, the warehouse with its picketed lane, the tall flag-staff, the
block-house stockade, the half-bred women chatting over the low fences of the
log-houses, the squaws wandering to and fro in picturesque silence, the Indian
children playing noisily or standing in awe before the veranda of the white
house, to inform the initiated that this little forest-and river-girt settlement
was a post of the Honourable the Hudson's Bay Company. The time of sunset and
the direction of the river's flow would have indicated a high latitude. The
mile-long meadow, with its Indian camp, the oval of forest, the immense breadth
of the river identified the place as Conjuror's House. Thus the blue water in
the distance was James Bay, the river was the Moose; enjoying his Manila cheroot
on the Factory veranda with the other officers of the Company was Galen Albret,
and these men lounging
They were of every age and dressed in a variety of styles. All wore ornamented moccasins, head garters, and red sashes of worsted. As to the rest, each followed his taste. So in the group could be seen bare heads, fillet-bound heads, covered heads; shirt sleeves, woollen jerseys, and long, beautiful blanket coats. Two things, however, proved them akin. They all possessed a lean, wiry hardness of muscle and frame, a hawk-like glance of the eye, an almost emaciated spareness of flesh on the checks. They all smoked pipes of strong plug tobacco.
Whether the bronze of their faces, thrown into relief by
the evening glow, the frowning steadiness of their eyes, or more fancifully the
background of the guns, the flag-staff and the stockade was most responsible,
the militant impression persisted strongly. These were the veterans of an
hundred battles. They were of the stuff forlorn hopes are fashioned from. A
great enemy, a powerful enemy, an enemy to he respected and feared had hardened
them to the unyielding. The adversary could almost he measured, the bitterness
of the struggle
The sun dipped to the horizon, and over the landscape slipped the beautiful north-country haze of crimson. From the distant forest sounded a single mournful wolf-howl. At once the sledge-dogs answered in chorus. The twilight descended. The men gradually fell silent, smoking their pipes, savouring the sharp snow-tang, grateful to their toughened senses, that still lingered in the air.
Suddenly out of the dimness loomed the tall form of an Indian, advancing with long, straight strides. In a moment he was among them responding composedly to their greetings.
"Bo' jou', bo' jou', Me-en-gen," said they.
"Bo' jou', bo' jou'," said he.
He touched two of the men lightly on the shoulder. They
arose, for they knew him as the bowsman
Me-en-gen led the way in silence, across the grass plot, past the flag-staff, to the foot of the steps leading to the Factory veranda. There the Indian left them. They mounted the steps. A voice halted them in the square of light cast through an intervening room from a lighted inner apartment.
The veranda was wide and low; railed in; and, except for the square of light, cast in dimness. A dozen men sat in chairs, smoking. Across the shaft of light the smoke eddied strangely. A woman's voice accompanied softly the tinkle of a piano inside. The sounds, Eke the lamplight, were softened by the distance of the intervening room.
Of the men on the veranda Galen Albret's identity alone was evident. Grim, four-square, inert, his very way of sitting his chair, as though it were a seat of judgment and be the interpreter of some fierce blood-law, betrayed him. From under the bushy white tufts of his eyebrows the woodsmen felt the search of his inspection. Unconsciously they squared their shoulders.
The older had some fifty-five or sixty years,
His companion was hardly more than a boy in years, though
more than a man in physical development. In every respect he seemed to he
especially adapted to the rigours of northern life. The broad arch of his chest,
the plump smoothness of his muscles, above all, the full roundness of his throat
indicated that warmth-giving blood, and plenty of it, would he pumped generously
to every part of his body. His face from any point of view but one revealed a
handsome, jaunty boy, whose heard was still a shade. But when he looked at one
directly, the immaturity fell away. This might have hen hocus of a certain
confidence of experience beyond
In a moment one of the men on the veranda began to talk. It was not Galen Albret, though Galen Albret had summoned them, but MacDonald, his Chief Trader and his right-band man. Galen Albret himself made no sign, but sat, his head sunk forward, watching the men's faces from his cavernous eyes.
"You have hen called for especial duty," began MacDonald,
shortly. "It is volunteer duty, and you need not go unless you want to. We have
Galen Albret stirred. MacDonald shot a glance in his direction and hastened on.
"I am going to tell you what we want. If you don't care to tackle the job, you must know nothing about it. That is distinctly understood?"
He bitched forward nearer the light, scanning the men carefully. They nodded.
"Sure!" added Herron.
"That's all right. Do you men remember Jingoss, the Ojibway, who outfitted here a year ago last summer?"
"Him they calls th' Weasel?" inquired Sam Bolton.
"That's the one. Do you remember him well? how he looks?"
"Yes," nodded Sam and Dick Herron together.
"We've got to have that Indian."
"Where is he?" asked Herron. Sam Bolton remained silent.
"That is for you to find out." MacDonald then went on to explain himself, hitching his chair still nearer, and lowering his voice. "A year ago last summer," said he, "he got his 'debt' at the store of two hundred castors * which he was to pay off in pelts the following spring. He never came back. I don't think he intends to. The example is bad. It has never happened to us before. Too many Indians get credit at this Post. If this man is allowed to go unpunished, we'll be due for all sorts of trouble with our other creditors. Not only he, but all the rest of them, must be made to feel that an embezzler is going to be caught, every time. They all know he's stolen that debt, and they're waiting to see what we're going to do about it. I tell you this so you'll know that it's important."
"You want us to catch him?" said Bolton, more as a comment than an inquiry.
"Catch him, and catch him alive!" corrected MacDonald.
"There must be no shooting. We've got to punish him in a way that will make him
an example. We've got to allow our Indians 'debt' in order to keep them. If we
run too great a risk of
Sam Bolton passed his emaciated, gnarled hand gropingly across his mouth, his usual precursor of speech. But Galen Albret abruptly interposed, speaking directly, with authority, as was his habit.
"Hold on," said he, "I want no doubt. If you accept this, you must not fail. Either you must come back with that Indian, or you need not come back at all. I won't accept any excuses for failure. I won't accept any failure. It does not matter if it takes ten years. I want that man."
Abruptly he fell silent. After a moment MacDonald resumed his speech.
"Think well. Let me know in the morning."
Bolton again passed his hand gropingly before his mouth.
"No need to wait for me," said he; "I'll do it."
Dick Herron suddenly laughed aloud, startling to flight the gravities of the moment.
"If Sam here's got her figured out, I've no need to worry,"
he asserted. "I'm with you."
"Very well," agreed MacDonald. "Remember, this must be kept quiet. Come to me for what you need."
"I will say good-by to you now," said Galen Albret. "I do not wish to be seen talking to you to-morrow."
The woodsmen stepped forward, and solemnly shook Galen Albret's band. He did not arise to greet these men he was sending out into the Silent Places, for he was the Factor, and not to many is it given to rule a country so rich and extended. They nodded in turn to the taciturn smokers, then glided away into the darkness on silent, moccasined feet.
The night had fallen. Here and there through the gloom shone a lamp. Across the north was a dim glow of phosphorescence, precursor of the aurora, from which occasionally trembled for an instant a single shaft of light. The group by the bronze field-cannon were humming softly the sweet and tender cadences of La Violette dandine.
Instinctively the two woodsmen paused on the hither side of
rejoining their companions. Bolton's eyes were already clouded with the trouble
of his speculation. Dick Herron glanced at his comrade
"Oh, Sam!" said he.
"What?" asked the older man, rousing.
"Strikes me that by the time we get through drawin' that double pay on this job, we'll be rich men-and old!"
The men stood looking vaguely upward at the stars.
Dick Herron whipped the grasses with a switch he had broken in passing a willow-bush. His mind was little active. Chiefly he regretted the good time he had promised himself here at the Post after the labour of an early spring march from distant Winnipeg. He appreciated the difficulties of the undertaking, but idly, as something that hardly concerned him. The details, the planning, he dismissed from his mind, confident that his comrade would rise to that. In time Sam Bolton would show him the point at which he was to bend his strength. Then he would stoop his shoulders, shut his eyes, and apply the magnificent brute force and pluck that was in him. So now he puckered his lips to the sibilance of a canoe-song, and waited.
But the other, Sam Bolton, the veteran woodsman, stood in
rapt contemplation, his wide-seeing,
Beyond the black velvet band lay the wilderness. There was
the trackless country, large as the United States itself, with its great
forests, its unmapped bodies of water, its plains, its barren grounds, its
mountains, its water courses wider even than the Hudson River. Moose and hear,
true lords of the forest, he might see any summer day. Herds of caribou,
sometimes thousands strong, roamed its woodlands and barrens. Wolves, lurking or
bold as their prey was strong or weak, clung to the caribou bands in hope of a
victim. Wolverines, -- unchanged in form from another geological period marten,
mink, fisher, otter, ermine, muskrat, lynx, foxes, beaver carried on their
varied affairs of murder or of peaceful industry. Woods Indians, scarcely less
keen of sense or natural of life than the animals, dwelt in their wigwams of
bark or skins, trapped and fished, made their long migrations as the geese turn
following their instinct. Sun, shadow, rain, cold, snow, hunger, plenty, labour,
or the peaceful gliding of rivers, these had watched by the Long Trail in the
years Sam Bolton had followed
Sam Bolton had lived many years in the forest, and many years alone. Therefore he had imagination. It might be of a limited quality, but through it he saw things in their essences.
Now from the safe vantage ground of the camp, from the
breathing space before the struggle, he looked out upon the wilderness, and in
the wilderness he felt the old, inimical Presence as he had felt it for forty
years. The scars of that long combat throbbed through his consciousness. The
twisting of his strong hands, the loosening of the elasticity, the humbling of
the spirit, the caution that had displaced the carelessness of youth, the
keenness of eye, the patience,-all these were at once the marks of blows and the
spoils of victory received from the Enemy. The wilderness, calm, ruthless, just,
terrible, waited in the shadow of the forest, seeking no combat, avoiding none,
conquering with a lofty air of predestination, yielding superbly as though the
moment's victory for which a man had strained the fibres of his soul were, after
all, a little, unimportant thing; never weary, never exultant, dispassionate,
Somewhere out beyond in those woods, at any one of the thirty-two points of the compass, a man was lurking. He might be five or five hundred miles away. He was an expert at taking care of himself in the woods. Abruptly Sam Bolton began to formulate his thoughts aloud.
"We got to keep him or anybody else from knowin' we's after
him, Dick," said he. "Jest as
"Which way 'll we go first?" asked Dick, without, however, much interest in the reply. Whatever Sam decided was sure to be all right.
"It's this way," replied the latter. "He's got to trade somewheres. He can't come into any of the Posts here at the Bay. What's the nearest? Why, Missináibie , down in Lake Superior country. Probably he's down in that country somewheres. We'll start south."
"That's Ojibway country," hazarded Dick at random.
"It's Ojibway country, but Jingoss is a Georgian Bay
Ojibway. Down near Missináibie every Injun has his own hunting district, and
they're different from our Crees,-they stick pretty close to their district. Any
strangers trying to bunt and trap there are going to get shot, sure pop. That
makes me think that if Jingoss has gone south, and
"So we'll go up th' Missináibie River first," surmised Dick.
"That's how we'll make a start," assented Bolton.
As though this decision had terminated an interview, they turned with one accord toward the dim group of their companions. As they approached, they were acclaimed.
"Here he is," "Dick, come here," "Dick, sing us the song.
And Dick, leaning carelessly against the breech of the field-guns, in a rich, husky baritone crooned to the far north the soft syllables of the far south.
In the selection of paddles early next morning Sam insisted that the Indian rule he observed, measuring carefully that the length of each implement should just equal the heights of its wielder. He chose the narrow maple blade, that it might not split when thrust against the bottom to check speed in a rapid. Further the blades were stained a brilliant orange.
Dick Herron had already picked one of a dozen birch-bark canoes laid away under the bridge over the dry coulee. He knew a good canoe as you would know a good horse. Fourteen feet it measured, of the heavy winter-cut of bark, and with a bottom all of one piece, without cracks or large knots.
The canoe and the paddles they laid at the water's edge.
Then they went together to the great warehouse, behind the grill of whose upper
room MacDonald was writing. Ordinarily the trappers were not allowed inside the
grill, but Dick and Sam
In the obscurity of the wide, low room the old woodsman moved to and fro, ducking his head to avoid things hanging, peering into corners, asking an occasional question of MacDonald, who followed him silently about. Two small steel traps, a narrow, small-meshed fish-net, a fish-line and hooks, powder, ball, and caps for the old man's muzzle-loader, a sack of salt were first laid aside. This represented subsistence. Then matches, a flint-and-steel machine, two four-point blankets. These meant warmth. Then ten pounds of plug tobacco and as many of tea. These were necessary luxuries. And finally a small sack of flour and a side of bacon. These were merely a temporary provision; when they should be exhausted, the men would rely wholly on the forest.
Sam Bolton hovered over the pile, after it was completed,
his eyes half shut, naming over its items again and again, assuring himself that
nothing
"Got a copper pail, Sam? a frying-pan? cups? How about the axe? Better have an extra knife between you. Need any clothes? Compass all right?"
To each of these questions Sam nodded an assent. So MacDonald, having named everything -- with the exception of the canvas square to be used as a tarpaulin or a tent, and soap and towel-fell silent, convinced that he could do nothing more.
But Dick, who had hen drumming his fingers idly against the window, turned with a suggestion, of his own. "How're we fixed for shoe pacs? I haven't got any".
At once MacDonald looked blank.
"By George, boys, I ain't got but four or five pairs of moccasins in the place! There's plenty of oil tan; I can fix you all right there. But smoke tans! That Abitibi gang mighty near cleaned me out. You'll have to try the Indians."
Accordingly Bolton and Herron took their way in the dusty
little foot-trodden path-there were
The wigwams were scattered apparently at random. Heifer each a fire burned. Women and girls busied themselves with a variety of camp-work. A tame crow hopped and fluttered here and there just out of reach of the pointed-nosed, shaggy wolf-dogs.
The latter rushed madly forward at the approaching
strangers, yelping in a curious, long-drawn bay, more suggestive of their wolf
ancestors than of the domestic animal., Dick and Sam laid about them vigorously
with short staffs they had brought for the purpose. Immediately the dogs,
recognising their dominance, slunk back. Three men sauntered forward, grinning
broadly in amiable greeting. Two or three women, more bashful than the rest,
scuttled into the depths of wigwams out of sight. A multitude of children
concealed themselves craftily, like a covey of quail, and focussed their bright,
head-like eyes on the newcomers.
"Bo' jou', bo' jou'," greeted Sam Bolton.
"Bo' jou', bo' jou'," replied the three.
These Indians were of the far upper country. They spoke no English nor French, and adhered still to their own tribal customs and religious observances. They had lingered several days beyond their time for the purpose of conjuring. In fact at this very moment the big medicine lodge raised itself in the centre of the encampment like a miniature circus tent. Sam Bolton addressed the two in their own language.
"We wish to buy many moccasins of your old women," said Sam.
Immediately one of the Indians glided away. From time to time during the next few minutes he was intermittently visible as he passed from the dark interior of one wigwam, across the sunlight, and into the dark interior of another.
The older of the two still in company of the white men began to ask questions.
"The Little Father is about to make a long journey?"
"Does one buy so many moccasins for a short F"
"He goes to hunt the fur?"
"Perhaps."
"In what direction does he set the bow of his canoe?"
Suddenly Dick Herron, who had, as usual, hen paying attention to almost anything rather than the matter in band, darted suddenly toward a clump of grass. In a moment he straightened his back to bold at arms length a struggling little boy. At the instant of his seizure the child uttered a sharp cry of fright, then closed his lips in the stoicism of his race.
That one cry was enough, however. Rescue darted from the nearest wigwam. A flying figure covered the little distance in a dozen graceful leaps, snatched the child from the young man's bands and stood, one foot advanced, breast heaving, a palpitating, wild thing, like a symbol of defiance.
The girl belonged distinctly to the more attractive type;
it required but little imagination to endow her with real beauty. Her figure was
straight and slim and well-proportioned, her eyes large, her face oval and quite
devoid of the broad, high-cheeked

Dick looked at her at first with amazement, then with mingled admiration and mischief. He uttered a ferocious growl and lowered his shoulders as though about to charge. Immediately the defiance broke. The girl turned and fled, plunging like a rabbit into the first shelter that offered, pursued by shrieks of delight from the old squaws, a pleased roar from Dick, and the laughter of the Indian men themselves.
"May-may-gwán,"* said the oldest Indian, naming her, "foster sister to the boy you had caught."
"She is Ojibway, then," exclaimed Dick, catching at the Ojibway word.
"Ae," admitted the Cree, indifferently. Such inclusions of another tribe, either by adoption or marriage, are not uncommon.
At this moment the third Indian approached.
"No moccasins," he reported. "Plenty buckskin."
Sam Bolton looked troubled. This meant a delay. However, it could not be avoided.
"Let the old women make some," he decided.
The Cree old-man shook his head.
"That cannot be. There is not time. We turn our canoes to the Missináibie by next sun."
Sam pondered again, turning over in his mind this fresh complication. But Dick, kicking the earth clods in impatience, broke in.
"Well, we're going by the Missináibie , too. Let the women make the moccasins. We will accompany you."
"That might be," replied the Indian.
"It is well," said Bolton.
An old woman was summoned. She measured her customers' feet with a buckskin thong. Then, they departed without further ceremony. An Indian rarely says farewell. When his business is finished he goes.
"Dick," said Sam, "you ought not to have broke in there."
"What do you mean?" asked the other, puzzled.
"Suggesting our travelling with them."
"Why?" cried Dick in astonishment. "Ain't you never travelled with Injuns before?"
"That ain't th' question. Did you notice that third Injun? the one who didn't do any talking?"
"Sure! What of him?"
"Well, he's an Ojibway. Th' rest are Wood Crees. And I miss my guess if he ain't a bad customer. He watched us mighty close, and his eyes are bad. He's sharp. He's one of that wondering kind. He's wondering now who we are, and where we're going, and why we're hitting so long a trail. And what's more, he belongs to this Jingoss's people in a roundabout sort of way. He's worse than fifty Crees. Maybe he knows all about Jingoss, and if he does, he'll get suspicious the minute we angle down into that country."
"Let's let 'em slide, then," suggested Dick, impatiently. "Let's buy some buckskin and make our own moccasins."
"Too late now," negatived Sam. "To back out would be bad."
"Oh, well, you're just borrowing trouble anyway," laughed Dick.
"Maybe, maybe," acknowledged the other "but
"Sam," burst out Dick, whose attention had hen caught by a word in his companion's first speech, and whose mind had hen running on it throughout the ensuing discussion, "did you notice that girl? She's a tearing little beauty!"
By now it was nearly noon. The travellers carried the packs they had made up down to the water-side where the canoe lay. Although the Indians would not get under way until the following morning, it had hen decided to push on at once, thus avoiding the confusion of a crowded start.
In the course of the morning's business the news of their expedition had noised abroad. Especially were they commiserated by the other runners and post-keepers. During all the winter these men had lived under the frown of the North, conducting their affairs confidently yet with caution, sure of themselves, yet never sure of the great power in whose tolerance they existed, in spite of whom they accomplished. Now was the appointed time of rest. In the relaxation of the thought they found pity for those ordered out of season into the Silent Places.
So at the river's bank Sam Bolton and Dick Herron,
"Look heem Bla'k Hevair Lak," advised Louis Placide; "I t'ink dose Ojibway mak' heem lots marten, mink la has."
"Lads," said Kern, the trader at Old Brunswick House, "if you're going up th' Missináibie just cast an eye on my cache at Gull Lake, and see that the carcajaus have let her be."
Young Herbert was curious. "Where are you headed, boys?" he inquired.
But Ki-wa-nee, the trusty, the trader at Flying Post, the
only Indian in the Company's service holding rank as a commissioned officer,
grunted in contempt at the question, while Achard, of New Brunswick House,
motioned warningly toward the groups of Indian trappers in the background.
"Hush, boy," said he to Herbert, "news travels, and in the south are the Free
Traders to snatch at a new country."
By now the voyageurs had turned their canoe over, slid it into the water, and piled the duffle amidships.
But before they had time to step aboard, came Virginia
Albret, then seventeen years old and as slender and graceful as a fawn. The
daughter of the Factor, she had acquired a habit of command that became her
well. While she enunciated her few and simple words of well-wishing, she looked
straight out at them from deep black eyes. The two woodsmen, awed into a vast
respect, fumbled their caps in their hands and noted, in the unconscious manner
of the forest frequenter, the fresh dusk rose of her skin, the sharply defined
red of her lips, the soft wheat colour of her hair. It was a gracious memory to
carry into the Silent Places, and was in itself well worth the bestowal.
However, Virginia, as was her habit, gave presents. On each she bestowed a long
silk handkerchief. Sam Bolton, with a muttered word of thanks, stuffed his
awkwardly into his shirt bosom. Dick, on the other hand, with a gesture half of
gallantry, half of bravado, stripped his own handkerchief from his neck and cast
it far into the current, knotting the girl's
For perhaps a mile their course threaded in and out the channel of a number of islands, then shot them into the broad reach of the Moose itself. There they set themselves to straight-forward paddling, hugging closely the shore that they might escape as much as possible the full strength of the current. In this manner they made rapid progress, for, of course, they paddled in the Indian fashion-without heeding either elbow, and with a strong thrust forward of the shoulders at the end of the stroke and they understood well how to take advantage of each little back eddy.
After an hour and a half they came to the first unimportant
rapids, where they were forced to drop their paddles and to use the long
spruce-poles they had cut and peeled that morning. Dick had the bow. It was
beautiful to see him standing boldly upright, his feet apart, leaning back
against the pressure, making head against the hurrying water. In a moment the
canoe reached the point of hardest suction, where. the river. broke over the
descent.
The canoe, torn from the rapid's grasp, shot into the smooth water above. Calmly Sam and Dick shook the water from their poles and laid them across the thwarts. The Swish click! swish click of the paddles resumed.
Now the river began to hurry in the ten-mile descent below
the Abitibi. Although the smooth rush of water was unbroken by the swirls of
rapids, nevertheless the current proved too strong for paddling. The voyagers
were forced again to the canoe poles, and so toiled in graceful but strenuous
labour the remaining hours of their day's journey. When finally they drew ashore
for the night, they had but just passed the mouth of French River.
To men as skilled as they, the making of camp was a brief affair. Dick, with his axe, cleared the space of underbrush, and sought dry wood for fuel. The older man in the meantime hunted about until he found a dead white-birch sapling. This he easily thrust to the ground with a strong push of his band. The jar burst here and there the hard envelope of the birch bark to expose a quantity of half-powdery, decayed wood, dry as tinder and almost as inflammable as gunpowder. Into a handful of this Sam threw the sparks from his flint and steel. The bark itself fed admirably the first flame. By the time Dick returned, the fire was ready for his fuel.
They cooked tea in the copper pail, and roasted bacon on the ends of switches. This, with bread from the Post, constituted their meal. After supper they smoked, banked the fire with green wood, and rolled themselves in their blankets to sleep. It was summer, so they did not trouble to pitch their shelter.
The night died into silence. Slowly the fire worked from
within through the chinks of the green logs. Forest creatures paused to stare at
it with
By and by a little pack of wolves came and squatted on their haunches just in the shadow. They were well fed and harmless, but they sat there blinking lazily at the flames, their tongues lolling, exactly like so many shaggy and good-humoured dogs. About two o'clock Dick rolled out of his blanket and replenished the fire. He did it somnolently, his eyes vacant, his expression that of a child. Then he took a half-comprehending glance at the heaven's promise of fair weather, and sank again into the warmth of his blanket. The wolves had not stirred.
Now the small sack of flour and the side of bacon and the
loose provisions brought from the Post could last but a little time, and the
journey was like to be long. The travellers were to be forced from now on, just
as are the wolves, the eagles, the hawks, the carcajous, and other predatory
creatures of the woods, to give their first thoughts to the day's sustenance.
All other considerations gave way to this. This was the first, the daily tribute
to be wrested from the stubborn grasp of the North. Winning that, anything was
possible; failing that, nothing could follow but defeat. Therefore, valuable
exceedingly were the two little steel traps and the twelve-foot length of
gill-net, the sharp, thin knives in the headed sheaths, and especially precious,
precious above all things else, the three hundred rounds of ammunition for the
rifles. They must be guarded and cared for and saved.
Therefore an incident of the early afternoon was more than welcome.
All the morning they had toiled against the current,
sometimes poling, sometimes "tracking" by means of a sixty-foot cod-line. Dick
looped this across his chest and pulled like a horse on the towpath, while Sam
Bolton sat in the stem with the steering-paddle. The banks were sometimes
precipitous, sometimes stony, sometimes grown to the water's edge with thick
vegetation. Dick had often to wade, often to climb and scramble, sometimes even
to leap from one foothold to another. Only rarely did he enjoy level footing and
the opportunity for a straight pull. Suddenly in a shallow pool, near the
river's edge, and bordered with waist-high grass, he came upon a flock of black
ducks. They were full grown, but as yet unable to fly. Dick dropped his tow-line
and ran forward with a shout. At once the ducks became confused, scattering in
all directions, squawking madly, spattering the water. The mother flew. The
brood, instead of making for the open river, where it would have hen safe,
scuttled into the tall grasses.
Here was the chance for fresh meat without the expenditure of a shot. Sam Bolton promptly disembarked. To us it would have seemed a simple matter. But the black duck is an expert at concealment, even in the open. He can do wonders at it when assisted by the shadows of long grass. And when too closely approached he can glide away to right and left like a snake, leaving no rustle to betray his passage. Five minutes passed before the first was discovered. Then it was only hocus Dick's keen eye had detected a faintly stirring grass-blade ten feet away, and hocus Dick's quick muscles had brought him like a tiger to the spot. He held up his victim by the neck.
"Good enough," growled Sam.
And although they had seen nine ducks go into the grass plot, which was not more than fifty feet across, they succeeded in finding but three. However, they were satisfied.
In spite of the deliberation of their journeying, the
Indians did not overtake them until nearly dark. It was just above the junction
of the Abitibi. The river was without current, the atmosphere without the
suspicion of a breeze. Down to the very
"Th' squaws goin' ahead to start camp," commented. Sam Bolton, indifferently; "we'll have th' bucks along pretty quick."
They drove their paddles strongly, and drifted to the middle of the river.
Soon became audible shouts, cries, and laughter, the click of canoe poles. The business of the day was over. Until nearly sundown the men's canoes had led, silent, circumspect, seeking game at every bend of the river. Now the squaws had gone on to make camp. No more game was to be expected. The band relaxed, joking, skylarking, glad to be relieved for a little while of the strain of attention.
In a moment the canoes appeared, a long, unbroken string, led by Haukemah. In the bow sat the chief's son, a lad of nine, wielding his little paddle skilfully, already intelligent to twist the prow sharply away from submerged rocks, learning to be a canoe-man so that in the time to come he might go on the Long Trail.
Each canoe contained, besides its two occupants, a variety
of household goods, and a dog or two
Haukemah greeted the two white men cordially, and stopped paddling to light his pipe. One by one the other canoes joined them. A faint haze of tobacco rose from the drifting group.
"My brothers have made a long sun," observed old Haukemah. "We, too, have hastened. Now we have met, and it is well. Down past the white rock it became the fortune of Two-fingers to slay a caribou that stood by the little water.* Also had we whitefish the evening before. Past the Island of the Three Trees were signs of moose." He was telling them the news, as one who passed the time of day.
"We have killed but neenee-sheeb, the duck," replied Dick, holding up one of the victims by the neck, "nor have we seen the trail of game."
"Ah hah," replied Haukemah, politely.
He picked up his paddle. It was the signal to start.
"Drop in astern," said Dick to his companion in
One by one the canoes fell into line. Now, late in the day, the travel was most leisurely. A single strong stroke of the paddle was always succeeded by a pause of contemplation. Nevertheless the light craft skimmed on with almost extraordinary buoyancy, and in silent regularity the wooded points of the river succeeded one another.
Sam busied himself with the trolling-spoon, but as soon as the last canoe was well beyond hearing he burst out:
"Dick, did you notice the Chippewa?"
"No. What?"
"He understands English."
"How do you know?"
"He was right behind us when you told me you were goin' to try the fishing, and he moved out th' way before we'd raised our paddles."
"Might have hen an accident."
"Perhaps, but I don't believe it. He looked too almighty innocent. Another thing, did you notice he was alone in his canoe?"
"What of it?"
"Shows he ain't noways popular with th' rest. Generally they pair off. There's mostly something shady about these renegades." "Well?" "Oh, nothing. Only we got to be careful."
Camp was made among the trees of an elevated bank above a small brook.
Already the Indian women had pitched the shelters, spreading squares of canvas, strips of birch-bark or tanned skins over roughly improvised lean-to poles. A half dozen tiny fires, too, they had built, over which some were at the moment engaged in hanging as many kettles. Several of the younger women were cleaning fish and threading them on switches. Others brought in the small twigs for fuel. Among them could be seen May-may-gwán, the young Ojibway girl, gliding here and there, eyes downcast, inexpressibly graceful in contrast with the Crees.
At once on landing the men took up their share of the work.
Like the birds of the air and the beasts of the wood their first thoughts turned
to the assurance of food. Two young fellows stretched a gillnet across the mouth
of the creek. Others scattered in search of favourable spots in which to set the
Soon the camp took on the air of age, of long establishment, that is so suddenly to be won in the forest. The kettles began to bubble; the impaled fish to turn brown. A delicious odour of open-air cooking permeated the air. Men filled pipes and smoked in contemplation; children warmed themselves as near the tiny fires as they dared. Out of the dense blackness of the forest from time to time staggered what at first looked to be an uncouth and misshapen monster, but which presently resolved itself into an Indian leaning under a burden of spruce-boughs, so smoothly laid along the haft of a long forked stick that the hearer of the burden could sling it across his shoulder like a bale of hay. As he threw it to the ground, a delicate spice-like aroma disengaged itself to mingle with the smell of cooking. Just at the edge of camp sat the wolf-dogs, their yellow eyes gleaming, waiting in patience for their tardy share.
After the meal the women drew apart. Dick's eyes roved in
vain, seeking a glimpse of the Ojibway girl. He was too familiar with Indian
etiquette
The men sat about the larger fire smoking. It was the hour of relaxation. In the blaze their handsome or strong-lined brown faces lighted good-humouredly. They talked and laughed in low tones, the long syllables of their language lisping and hissing in strange analogy to the noises of the fire or the forest or the rapids or some other natural thing. Their speech was of the chances of the woods and the approaching visit to their Ojibway brothers in the south. For this they had brought their grand ceremonial robes of deerskin, now stowed securely in bags. The white men were silent. In a little while the pipes were finished. The camp was asleep. Through the ashes and the embers prowled the wolf-dogs, but half-fed, seeking scraps. Soon they took to the beach in search of cast-up fish. There they wandered all night long under the moon voicing their immemorial wrongs to the silenced forest.
Almost at first streak of dawn the women were abroad.
Shortly after, the men visited their traps and lifted the nets. In this land and
season of
Nevertheless, when the camp had hen struck and the canoes loaded, the order of march was reversed. Now the men took the lead by a good margin, and the women and children followed. For in the wooded country game drinks early.
Heifer setting out, however, old Haukemah blazed a fair
clean place on a fir-tree, and with hard charcoal from the fire marked on it
these characters:

"Yes," replied Sam, "learned her when I was snowed up one winter with Sear-Face down by the Burwash Lake country." He squinted his eyes, reading the syllables slowly.
"'Abichi-kā-menót Moosamík-kā-jă yank. Missowā edookan owāsi sek negi -- -- -' Why, it's Ojibway, not Cree," he exclaimed. "They're just leaving a record. 'Good journey from Moose Factory, Big game has hen seen.' Funny how plumb curious an Injun is. They ain't one could come along here and see th' signs of this camp and rest easy 'till he'd figgered out how many they were, and where they were going, and what they were doing, and all about it. These records are a kind-hearted try to save other Injuns that come along a whole lot of trouble. That's why old Haukemah wrote it in Ojibway 'stead of Cree: this is by rights Ojibway country.
"We'd better pike out, if we don't want to get back with th' squaws," suggested Dick.
About two hours before noon, while the men's squadron was
paddling slowly along a flat bank
"They've seen some game beyant the point," whispered Dick. "Wonder what it is?"
But instead of pausing when out of earshot for the purpose of uncasing the guns or landing a stalking party, the Indians crept gradually from the shore, caught the current, and shot away down stream in the direction from which they had come.
"It's a hear," said Sam, quietly. "They've gone to get their war-paint on."
The men rested the bow of their canoe lightly against the shore, and waited. In a short time the Indian canoes reappeared.
"Say, they've surely got th' dry goods!" commented Dick, amused.
In the short interval that had elapsed, the Indians had
intercepted their women,. unpacked their baggage, and arrayed themselves in
their finest
"It's surely a nifty outfit!" commented Sam, half admiringly.
A half dozen of the younger men were landed. At once they disappeared in the underbrush. Although the two white men strained their keen senses they were unable to distinguish by sight or sound the progress of the party through the bushes.
"I guess they're hunters, all right," conceded Dick.
The other men waited like bronze statues. After a long interval a pine-warbler uttered its lisping note. Immediately the paddles dipped in the silent deer-stalker's stroke, and the cavalcade crept forward around the point.
Dick swept the shore with his eye, but saw nothing.
His eye was introspective, vacant, his mouth was half open, and his tongue lolled out so comically that Dick almost laughed aloud. No one moved by so much as a band's breadth. The hear dropped back to his cooling sand with a sigh of voluptuous pleasure. The canoes drew a little nearer.
Now old Haukemah rose to his heights in the bow of his
canoe, and began to speak rapidly in a low voice. Immediately the animal bobbed
into sight again, his wicked little eyes snapping with intelligence. It took him
some moments to determine what these motionless, bright-coloured objects might
be. Then he turned toward the land, but stopped short as his awakened senses
brought him
"Oh, makwá, our little brother," he said, "we come to you not in anger, nor in disrespect. We come to do you a kindness. Here is hunger and cold and enemies. In the Afterland is only happiness. So if we shoot you, oh makwá, our little brother, be not angry with us."
He raised his trade-gun and pulled the trigger. A scattering volley broke from the other canoes and from the young men concealed in the bushes.
Now a trade-gun is a gun meant to trade. It is a section of
what looks to be gas-pipe, bound by brass bands to a long, clumsy, wooden stick
that extends within an inch of the end of the barrel. It is supposed to shoot
ball or shot. As a matter of fact the marksman's success depends more on his
luck than his skill. Were it not for the Woods-Indian's extraordinary powers of
still-bunting so that he can generally approach very near to his game, his
success would be small indeed.
With the shock of a dozen little bullets the hear went down, snarling and biting and scattering the sand, but was immediately afoot again. A black hear is not a particularly dangerous heist in ordinary circumstances-but occasionally he contributes quite a surprise to the experience of those who encounter him. This hear was badly wounded and cruelly frightened. His keen sense of smell informed him that the bushes contained enemies-how many he did not know, but they were concealed, unknown, and therefore dreadful. In front of him was something definite. Heifer the astonished Indians could back water, he had dashed into the shallows, and planted his paws on the bow of old Haukemah's canoe.
A simultaneous cry of alarm burst from the other Indians.
Some began frantically to recharge their muzzle-loading trade-guns; others
dashed toward the spot as rapidly as paddle or moccasin could bring them.
Haukemah himself roused valiantly to the defence, but was promptly upset and
pounced upon by the enraged animal. A smother of spray enveloped the scene. Dick
Herron rose suddenly to his feet and shot. The hear collapsed into the
"Well, you are a wonder!" ejaculated Sam Bolton at last. "How in thunder did you do that? I couldn't make nothing out of that tangle-at least nothing clear enough to shoot at!"
"Luck," replied Dick, briefly. "I took a snap shot, and happened to make it."
"You ran mighty big chances of winning old Haukemah," objected Sam.
"Sure! But I didn't," answered Dick, conclusively.
The Indians gathered to examine in respectful admiration.
Dick's bullet had passed from ear to ear. To them it was wonderful shooting, as
indeed it would have hen had it indicated anything but the most reckless luck.
Haukemah was somewhat disgusted at the wetting of his finery, but the hear is a
sacred animal, and even ceremonial dress and an explanation of the motives that
demanded his death might not be sufficient to appease his divinity. The women's
squadron appeared about
The beautiful buckskin garments were hastily exchanged for ordinary apparel. By dint of much wading, tugging, and rolling the carcass was teased to the dry beach. There the body was securely anchored by the paws to small trees, and the work of skinning and butchering began.
Not a shred was wasted. Whatever flesh would not be consumed within a few days they cut into very thin strips and hung across poles to dry. Scraps went to the dogs, who were for once well fed. Three of the older squaws went to work with bone scrapers to tan the hide. In this season, while the fur was not as long as it would be later, it was fine and new. The other squaws pitched camp. No right-minded Indian would dream of travelling further with such a feast in prospect.
While these things were preparing, the older men cleaned
and washed the hears skull very carefully. Then they cut a tall pole, on the end
of which they fastened the skull, and finished by planting the whole affair
securely near the running water. When the skull should have remained there
Now abruptly the weather changed. The sky became overcast
with low, gray clouds hurrying from the northwest. It grew cold. After a few
hours of indecision it began to rain, dashing the chill water in savage gusts.
Amidships in each canoe the household goods were protected carefully by means of
the wigwam covers, but the people themselves sat patiently, exposed to the force
of the storm. Water streamed from their hair, over their high checks, to drip
upon their already sodden clothing. The buckskin of their moccasins sucked water
like so many sponges. They stepped indifferently
Nor was there much comfort in the prospect when, weary and cold, they finally drew their canoes ashore for the evening's camp. The forest was dripping, the ground soggy, each separate twig and branch cold and slippery to the hand. The accumulated water of a day showered down at the slightest movement. A damp wind seemed to rise from the earth itself.
Half measures or timid shrinkings would not do. Every one
had to plunge boldly into the woods, had to seize and drag forth, at whatever
cost of shower-bath the wilderness might levy, all the dead wood he could find.
Then the value of the birch-bark envelope
The storm lasted four days. Then the wind shifted to the north, bringing clearing skies.
Up to now the river had hen swift in places, but always by dint of tracking or poling the canoes had hen forced against the quick water. Early one forenoon, however, Haukemah lifted carefully the bow of his canoe and slid it up the bank.
The portage struck promptly to the right through a tall, leafy woods, swam neck-high in the foliage of small growth, mounted a steep hill, and meandered over a bowlder-strewn, moss-grown plateau, to dip again, a quarter of a mile away, to the banks of the river. But you must not imagine one of your easy portages of Maine or lower Canada. This trail was faint and dim, -- here an excoriation on the surface of a fallen and half-rotted tree, there a withered limb banging, again a mere sense in the forest's growth that others had passed that way. Only an expert could have followed it.
The canoe loads were dumped out on the beach. One after
another, even to the little children, the people shouldered their packs. The
long sash was knotted into a loop, which was passed around the pack and the
hearer's forehead. Some of the stronger men carried thus upward of two hundred
pounds.
Unlike a party of white men, the Indians put no system into their work. They rested when they Pleased, chatted, shouted, squatted on their heels conversing. Yet somehow the task was accomplished, and quickly. To one on an elevation dominating the scene it would have hen most picturesque. Especially noticeable were those who for the moment stood idle, generally on heights, where their muscle-loose attitudes and fluttering draperies added a strangely decorative note to the landscape; while below plodded, heeding forward under their enormous loads, an unending procession of patient toilers. In five minutes the portage was alive from one end to the other.
To Dick and Sam Bolton the traverse was a simple matter. Sam, by the aid of his voyager's sash, easily carried the supplies and blankets; Dick fastened the two paddles across the thwarts to form a neck-yoke, and swung off with the canoe. Then they returned to the plateau until their savage friends should have finished the crossing.
Ordinarily white men of this class are welcome enough to
travel with the Indian tribes. Their presence is hardly considered extraordinary
enough
He was not able to place it to his own satisfaction. It might be hocus of Bolton's reputation as a woodsman; it might be hocus of Dick Herron's spectacular service to Haukemah in the instance of the hear; it might be that careful talk had not had its due effect in convincing the Indians that the journey looked merely to the establishment of new winter posts; Sam was not disinclined to attribute it to pernicious activity on the part of the Ojibway. It might spring from any one of these. Nor could he quite decide its quality ; -- whether friendly or inimical. Merely persisted the fact that he and his companion were watched curiously by the men and fearfully by the women; that they brought a certain constraint to the camp fire.
Finally an incident, though it did not decide these points, brought their ambiguity nearer to the surface.
One evening old Haukemah received from the women the bear's
robe fully tanned. Its inner surface
"This is the robe of makwá, our little brother. His flesh we all ate of. But you who killed him should have his coat. Therefore my women have painted it hocus you saved their head man."
He laid the robe at Dick's feet. Dick glanced toward his companion with the strange cast flickering quizzically in his narrow eyes. "Fine thing to carry along on a trip like ours," he said in English. "I don't know what to do with it. They've worked on it mighty near a week. I wish to hell they'd keep their old robe." However, he stooped and touched it in sign of acceptance. "I thank my brother," he said in Cree.
"You'll have to bring it along," Sam answered in English. "We'll have to carry it while we're with them, anyway."
The Indian men were squatted on their heels about the fire,
waiting gravely and courteously for this conference, in an unknown tongue, to
come to an end. The women, naturally interested in the disposal
Suddenly Dick, inspired, darted to this group of women, whence he returned presently half dragging, half-coaxing a young girl. She came reluctantly, hanging back a little, dropping her head, or with an embarrassed giggle glancing shyly over her shoulder at her companions. When near the centre of the men's group, Dick dropped her band.
Promptly she made as though to escape, but stopped at a word from Haukemah. It was May-may-gwán, the Ojibway girl.
Obediently she paused, Her eyes were dancing with the excitement of the adventure, an almost roguish smile curved her mouth and dimpled her cheek, her lower lip was tightly clasped between her teeth as she stood contemplating her heavily headed little moccasin, awaiting the explanation of this, to her,, extraordinary performance.
"What is your name, little sister?" asked Dick in Cree.
She dropped her head lower, but glanced from the corner of her eye at the questioner.
"Answer!" commanded Haukemah.
"May-may-gwán," she replied in a low voice.
"Oh, yes," said Dick, in English. "You're an Ojibway," he went on in Cree.
"Yes."
"That explains why you're such a tearing little beauty," muttered the young man, again in English.
"The old-men," he resumed, in Cree, "have given me this robe. Hocus I hold it very dear I wish to give it to that people whom I hold dearest. That people is the Crees of Rupert's House. And hocus you are the fairest, I give you this robe so that there may be peace between your people and me."
Ill-expressed as this little speech was, from the flowery standpoint of Indian etiquette, nevertheless its subtlety gained applause. The Indians granted deep ejaculations of pleasure. "Good boy!" muttered Sam Bolton, pleased.
Dick lifted the robe. and touched it to the girl's hand. She gasped in surprise, then slowly raised her eyes to his.
"Damn if you ain't pretty enough to kiss!" cried Dick.

He stepped across the robe, which had fallen between them, circled the girl's upturned face with the flat of his hands, and kissed her full on the lips.
The kiss of ceremony is not unknown to the northern Indians, and even the kiss of affection sometimes to be observed among the more demonstrative, but such a caress as Dick bestowed on May-may-gwán filled them with astonishment. The girl herself, though she cried out, and ran to hide among those of her own sex, was not displeased; she rather liked it, and could not mis-read the admiration that had prompted it. Nor did the other Indians really object. It was a strange thing to do, but perhaps it was a white man's custom. The affair might have blown away like a puff of gunpowder.
But at the moment of Dick's salute, Sam Bolton cried out sharply behind him. The young woodsman instantly whirled to confront the Chippewa.
"He reached for his knife," explained Sam.
The ejaculation had also called the attention of every
member of the band to the tableau. There could be absolutely no doubt as to its
meaning, --
He realised the fact, but his quick mind instantly turned the situation to his profit. Without attempting to alter the malice of his expression, he nevertheless dropped his hand from his knife-hilt, and straightened his figure to the grandiose attitude of the Indian orator.
"This man speaks crooked words. I know the language of the saganash. He tells my brothers that he gives this robe to May-may-gwán hocus he holds it the dearest of his possessions, and hocus his heart is good towards my brother's people. But to the other saganash he said these words-'It is a little thing, and I do not wish to carry it. What shall I do with it?"'
He folded his arms theatrically. Dick Herron, his narrow eyes blazing, struck him full on the mouth a shoulder blow that sent him sprawling into the ashes by the fire.
The Chippewa was immediately on his feet, his knife in his
hand. Instinctively the younger Crees drew near to him. The old race antagonism
flashed
Sam Bolton arose quietly to take his place at Dick's elbow. As yet there was no danger of violence, except from the outraged Chippewa. The .Crees were startled, but they had not yet taken sides. All depended on an intrepid front. For a moment they stared at one another, the Indians uncertain, the Anglo-Saxons, as always, fiercely dominant in spirit, no matter what the odds against them, as long as they are opposed to what they consider the inferior race.
Then a flying figure glided to the two. May-may-gwán, palpitating with fear, thrust their rifles into the white men's hands, then took her stand behind them.
But Haukemah interfered with all the weight of his authority.
"Stop!" he commanded, sharply. "There is no need that
friends should hear weapons. What are you doing, my young men? Do you judge
these saganash without hearing what they have to say? Ask of them if what the
Chippewa says is true."
"The robe is fine. I gave it for the reason I said," replied Dick.
The Cree young men, shaken from their instinctive opposition, sank back. It was none of their affair, after all, but a question of veracity between Dick and his enemy. And the Chippewa enjoyed none too good a reputation. The swift crisis had passed.
Dick laughed his boyish, reckless laugh.
"Damn if I didn't pick out the old idiot's best girl!" he cried to his companion; but the latter doubtfully shook his head.
When next day the band resumed the journey, it became evident that May-may-gwán was to be punished for her demonstration of the night before. Her place in the bow of old Moose Cow's canoe was taken by a little girl, and she was left to follow as best she might on foot.
The travel ashore was exceedingly difficult. A dense forest growth of cedar and tamarack pushed to the very edge of the water, and the rare open beaches were composed of smooth rocks too small to afford secure footing, and too large to be trodden under. The girl either slipped and stumbled on insecure and ankle-twisting shale, or forced a way through the awful tangle of a swamp. As the canoeing at this point was not at all difficult, her utmost efforts could not keep her abreast of the travellers.
Truth to tell May-may-gwán herself did not appear to
consider that she was hardly used. Indeed
"Look here, Sam," said he, "this thing ain't right at all. She got into all this trouble on our account, and we're riding canoe here slick as carcajou in a pork cache while she pegs along afoot. Let's take her aboard."'
"Won't do," replied Sam, briefly, "can't interfere. Let those Injuns run themselves. They're more or less down on us as it is."
"Oh, you're too slow!" objected Dick. "What the hell do we care for a lot of copper-skins from Rupert's House! We ain't got anything to ask from them but a few pairs of moccasins, and if they don't want to make them for us, they can use their buckskin to tie up their sore heads!"
He thrust his paddle in close to the bow and twisted the canoe towards shore.
"Come on, Sam," said he, "show your spunk!"
The older man said nothing. His steady blue eyes rested on
his companion's back not unkindly,
"Come here, little sister," cried Dick to the girl.
She picked her way painfully through the scrub to the edge of the bank.
"Get into the canoe," commanded Dick.
She drew back in deprecation.
"Ka'-ka'win!" she objected, in very real terror. "The old-men have commanded that I take the Long Way, and who am I that I should not obey? It cannot be."
"Get in here," ordered Dick, obstinately.
"My brother is good to me, but I cannot, for the head men have ordered. It would go very hard with me, if I should disobey."
"Oh, hell!" exploded petulant Dick in English, slamming his paddle down against the thwarts.
He leaped ashore, picked the girl up bodily, threw her almost with violence into the canoe, thrust the light craft into the stream, and resumed his efforts, scowling savagely.
The girl dropped her face in her hands. When the white
men's craft overtook the main band, she crouched still lower, shuddering under
the grim
Only, when the tribesmen had hen left behind, he leaned forward and began to talk to the girl in low-voiced Ojibway, comforting her with many assurances, as one would comfort a child. After a time she ceased trembling and looked up. But her glance made no account of the steady, old man who had so gently led her from her slough of despond, but rested on the straight, indignant back of the glorious youth who had cast her into it. And Sam Bolton, knowing the ways of a maid, merely sighed, and resumed his methodical paddling.
At the noon stop and on portage it was impossible to gauge
the feeling of the savages in regard to the matter, but at night the sentiment
was strongly enough marked. May-may-gwán herself, much to her surprise, was no
further censured, and was permitted to escape with merely the slights and sneers
the women were able to inflict on her. Perhaps her masters, possessed of an
accurate sense of justice,
The Indian walked very carefully through the mossy woods
until he came upon a caribou trail still comparatively fresh. Nobody but Crooked
Nose could have followed the faint indications, but he did so, at first rapidly,
then more warily, finally at
When the trail became fresh he often paused to scrutinise closely, to smell, even to taste the herbage broken by the animal's hoofs. Once he startled a jay, but froze into immobility before the watch-man of the, woods had sprung his alarm. For full ten minutes the savage poised motionless. Then the bird flitted away, and he resumed his careful stalk.
It was already nearly noon. The caribou had hen feeding slowly forward. Now he would lie down. And Crooked Nose knew very well that the animal would make a little detour to right or left so as to be able to watch his back track.
Crooked Nose redoubled his scrutiny of the broken herbage.
Soon he left the trail, moving like a spirit, noiselessly, steadily, but so
slowly that
But a caribou is a large animal, and only a few spots are fatal. Crooked Nose knew better than to shoot at random. He whistled.
The dark colour dissolved. There were no abrupt movements,
no noises, but suddenly the caribou seemed to develop from the green shadow
mist, to stand, his cars pricked forward, his lustrous eyes wide, his nostrils
quivering toward the unknown something that had uttered the sound. It
Crooked Nose raised the rifle, sighted steadily at the shoulder, low down, and pulled the trigger. A sharp click alone answered his intention. Accustomed only to the old trade-gun, he had neglected to throw down and back the lever which should lift the cartridge from the magazine.
Instantly the caribou snorted aloud and crashed noisily away. A dozen lurking Canada jays jumped to the tops of spruces and began to scream. Red squirrels, in all directions, alternately whirred their rattles and chattered in an ecstasy of rage. The forest was alarmed.
Crooked Nose . glanced at the westering sun, and set out swiftly in a direct line for the camp of his companions. Arrived there he marched theatrically to the white men, cast the borrowed rifle at their feet, and returned to the side of the fire, where he squatted impassively on his heels. The bunt had failed.
All the rest of the afternoon the men talked sullenly
together. There could be no doubt that trouble was afoot. Toward night some of
the
Finally late in the evening old Haukemah came to them. For some time he sat silent and grave, smoking his pipe, and staring solemnly into the coals.
"Little Father," said he at last, "you and I are old men.
Our blood is cool. We do not act quickly. But other men are young. Their blood
is hot and swift, and it is quick to bring them spirit-thoughts. *
They say you have made the wind, kee-way-din, the north wind, to blow so that we
can have no game. They say you conjured Crooked Nose so that he brought back no
caribou, although he came very near it. They say, too, that you seek a red man
to do him a harm, and their hearts are evil toward you on that account. They say
you have made the power of the old-men as nothing, for what they commanded you
denied when you brought our little sister in your canoe. I know nothing of these
things, except the last, which was foolishness in the doing," the old man
glanced sharply at Dick, puffed on his nearly extinguished pipe until it was
"Good," replied Sam, after a moment. "I am glad my brother's heart is good. toward me, and I know what young men are. We will go. Tell your young men."
An expression of relief overspread Haukemah's face. Evidently the crisis had hen more grave than he had acknowledged. He thrust his hand inside his loose capote and brought forth a small bundle.
"Moccasins," said he.
Sam looked them over. They were serviceable, strong
deerskin, with high tops of white linen cloth procured at the Factory, without
decoration save for a slender line of silk about the tongue. Something
approaching a smile flickered over old Haukemah's
"For Eagle-eye," he said, banding them to Dick. The young man had gained the sobriquet, not hocus of any. remarkable clarity of vision, but from the peculiar aquiline effect of his narrow gaze.
The body of the moccasins were made of buckskin as soft as silk, smoked to a rich umber. The tops were of fawnskin, tanned to milky white. Where the two parts joined, the edges had hen allowed to fall half over the foot in an exaggerated welt, lined brilliantly with scarlet silk. The ornamentation was heavy and elaborate. Such moccasins often consume, in the fashioning, the idle hours of months. The Indian girl carries them with her everywhere, as her more civilised sister carries an embroidery frame. On dress occasions in the Far North a man's standing with his women-kind can be accurately gauged by the magnificence of his foot-gear.
"The gift of May-may-gwán," explained Haukemah.
"Well, I'll be damned!" said Dick, in English.
"Will my brother be paid in tea or in tobacco?" inquired Sam Bolton.
Haukemah arose.
"Let these remind you always that my heart is good," said he. "I may tell my young men that you go?"
"Yes. We are grateful for these."
"Old fellow's a pretty decent sort," remarked Dick, after Haukemah had stalked away.
"There couldn't anything have happened better for us!" cried Sam. "Here I was wondering how we could get away. It wouldn't do to travel with them much longer, and it wouldn't do to quit them without a good reason. I'm mighty relieved to get shut of them. The best way over into the Kabinakágam is by way of a little creek the Injuns call the Mattawishguia, and that ought to be a few hours ahead of us now." He might have added that all these annoyances, which he was so carefully discounting, had sprung from Dick's thoughtlessness; but he was silent, sure of the young man's value when the field of his usefulness should be reached.
Dick Herron and Sam Bolton sat on the trunk of a fallen tree. It was dim morning. Through the haze that shrouded the river figures moved. Occasionally a sharp sound eddied the motionless silence-a paddle dropped, the prow of a canoe splashed as it was lifted to the water, the tame crow uttered a squawk. Little by little the groups dwindled. Invisible canoes were setting out, beyond the limits of vision. Soon there remained but a few scattered, cowled figures, the last women hastily loading their craft that they might not be left behind. Now these, too, thrust through the gray curtain of fog. The white men were alone.
With the passing of the multitude once again the North came
close. Spying on the deserted camp an hundred smaller woods creatures fearfully
approached, bright-eyed, alert, ready to retreat, but eager to investigate for
scraps of food that might have hen left. Squirrels poised in spruce-trees,
Now the twisted vapours drained from among the tree-trunks into the river bed, where it lay, not more than five feet deep, accurately marking the course of the stream. The sun struck across the tops of the trees. A chickadee, upside down in bright-eyed contemplation, uttered two flute-notes. Instantly a winter-wren, as though at a signal, went into ecstatic ravings. The North was up and about her daily business.
Sam Bolton and Dick finally got under way. After an hour
they arrived opposite the mouth of a tributary stream. This Sam announced as the
Mattawishguia, Immediately they turned to it.
The Mattawishguia would he variously descried; in California as a river, in New England as a brook, in Superior country as a trout stream. It is an hundred feet wide, full of rapids, almost all fast water, and, except in a few still pools, from a foot to two feet deep. The bottom is of round, stones.
Travel by canoe in such a stream is a farce. The water is
too fast to pole against successfully more than half the time; the banks are too
overgrown for tracking with the tow-line. About the only system is to get there
in the best way possible. Usually this meant that Dick waded at the bow and Sam
at the stern, leaning strongly against the current. Bowlders of all sorts
harassed the free passage, stones rolled under the feet, holes of striking
unexpectedness lay in wait, and the water was icy cold. Once in a while they
were able to paddle a few hundred feet. Then both usually sat astride the ends
of the canoe, their legs banging in the water in order that the drippings might
not fall inside. As this was the early summer, they occasionally kicked against
trees to drive enough of the numbness from their legs so that they could feel
the bottom.
It was hard work and cold work and wearing, for it demanded its exact toll for each mile, and was as insistent for the effort at weary night as at fresh morning.
Dick, in the vigour of his young strength, seemed to like it. The leisure of travel with the Indians had barely stretched his muscles. Here was something against which he could exert his utmost force. He rejoiced in it, taking great lungfuls of air, heeding his shoulders, breaking through these outer defences of the North with wanton exuberance, blind to everything, deaf to everything, oblivious of all other mental and physical sensations except the delight of applying his skill and strength to the subduing of the stream.
But Sam, patient, uncomplaining, enduring, retained still
the broader outlook. He, too, fought the water and the cold, adequately and
strongly, but it was with the unconsciousness of long habit. His mind recognised
the Forest as well as the Stream. The great physical thrill over the poise
between perfect health and the opposing of difficulties he had left behind him
with his youth; as indeed he had, in a lesser sense, gained with his age an
And with the strange sixth sense of the accustomed woodsman Sam felt, as they travelled, that something was wrong. The impression did not come to him through any of the accustomed channels. In fact, it hardly reached his intellect as yet. Through long years his intuitions had adapted themselves to their environment. The subtle influences the forest always disengaged found in the delicately attuned fibres of his Heinz that which vibrated in unison with them. Now this adjustment was in some way disturbed. To Sam Bolton the forest was different, and this made him uneasy without his knowing why. From time to time he stopped suddenly, every nerve quivering, his nostrils wide, like some wild thing alert for danger. And always the other five senses, on which his mind depended, denied the sixth. Nothing stirred but the creatures of the wilderness.
Yet always the impression persisted. It was easily put to
flight, and yet it always returned.
At noon the men drew ashore on a little point of rock. There they boiled tea over a small fire, and ate the last of their pilot's bread, together with bacon and the cold meat of partridges. By now the sun was high and the air warm. Tepid odours breathed from the forest, and the songs of familiar homely birds. Little heated breezes puffed against the travellers' cheeks. In the sun's rays their garments steamed and their muscles limbered.
Yet even here Sam Bolton was unable to share the relaxation
of mind and body his companion so absolutely enjoyed. Twice he paused, food
suspended, his mouth open, to listen intently for a moment, then to finish
carrying his band to his mouth with the groping of vague perplexity. Once he
arose to another of his purposeless circles through
When evening fell the little fish-net was stretched below a chute of water, the traps set, snares laid. As long as these means sufficed for a food supply, the ammunition would be saved. Wet clothes were bung at a respectful distance from the blaze.
Sam was up and down all night, uncomfortable, indefinitely
groping for the influence that unsettled his peace of mind. The ghost shadows in
the pines; the pattering of mysterious feet; the cries, loud and distant, or
faint and near; the whisperings, whistlings, sighings, or crashes; all the
thousand ethereal essences of day-time noises that go to make up the Night and
her silences-these he knew. What he did not know, could not understand, was
within himself. What he sought was that thing in Nature which should correspond.
The next day at noon he returned to Dick after a more than usually long excursion, carrying some object. He laid it before his companion. The object proved to be a flat stone; and on the flat stone was the wet print of a moccasin.
"We're followed," he said, briefly.
Dick seized the stone and examined it closely.
"It's too blurred," he said, at last; "I can't make it out. But th' man who made that track wasn't far of. Couldn't you make trail of him? He must have hen between you an' me when you found this rock."
"No," Sam demurred, "he wasn't. This moccasin was pointed down stream. He heard me, and went right on down with th' current. He's sticking to the water all the way so as to leave no trail."
"No use trying to follow an Injun who knows you're after him," agreed Dick.
"It's that Chippewa, of course," proffered Sam. "I always
was doubtful of him. Now he's followin' us to see what we're up to. Then, he
ain't any too friendly to you, Dick, 'count of that scrap and th' girl. But I
don't think that's what he's up to-not yet, at least. I believe he's some sort
of friend or
"Why don't he just ambush us, then an' be done with it?" asked Dick.
"Two to one "' surmised Bolton, laconically. "He's only got a trade-gun -- one shot. But more likely he thinks it ain't going to do him much good to lay us out. More men would be sent. If th' Company's really after Jingoss, the only safe thing for him is a warning. But his friend don't want to get him out of th' country on a false alarm."
"That's so," said Dick.
They talked over the situation, and what was best to be done.
"He don't know yet that we've discovered him," submitted
Sam. "My scouting around looked like huntin', and he couldn't a seen me pick up
that stone. We better not try to catch him till we can make 8ure. He's got to
camp somewhere. We'll wait till night. Of course he'll get away from th' stream,
and he'll cover his trail. Still, they's a moon. I don't-believe anybody could
do it but you, Dick. If you don't make her, why there ain't nothing lost. Well
just have to camp down here
So it was agreed. Dick, under stress of danger, was now a changed man. What he lacked in experience and the power to synthesise, he more than made up in the perfection of his senses and a certain natural instinct of the woods. He was a better trailer than Sam, his eyesight was keener, his hearing more acute, his sense of smell finer, his every nerve alive and tingling in vibrant unison with the life about him. Where Sam laboriously arrived by the aid of his forty years' knowledge, the younger man leaped by the swift indirection of an Indian -- or a woman. Had he only possessed, as did Bolton, a keen brain as well as keen higher instincts, he would have hen marvellous.
The old man sat near the camp-fire after dark that night
sure that Herron was even then conducting the affair better than he could have
done himself. He had confidence. No faintest indication -- even in the
uncertainty of moonlight through the trees -- that a man had left the river
would escape the young man's minute inspection. And in the search no twig would
snap under those soft-moccasined
Dick had taken his rifle.
"You know," Sam reminded him, significantly, we don't really need that Injun."
"I know," Dick had replied, grimly.
Now Sam Bolton sat near the fire waiting for the sound of a shot. From time to time he spread his gnarled, carved-mahogany hands to the blaze. Under his narrow hat his kindly gray-blue eyes, wrinkled at the corners with speculation and good humour, gazed unblinking into the light. As always he smoked.
Time went on. The moon climbed, then descended again.
Finally it shone almost horizontally through the tree-trunks, growing larger and
larger until its field was crackled across with a frostwork of twigs and leaves.
By and by it reached the edge of a hill-bank, visible through an opening, and
paused. It had become huge, gigantic, big with
The fire died down to coals. Sam piled on fresh wood. It hissed spitefully, smoked voluminously, then leaped into flame. The old woodsman sat as though carved from patience, waiting calmly the issue.
Then through the shadows, dancing ever more gigantic as they became more distant, Sam Bolton caught the solidity of something moving. The object was as yet indefinite, mysterious, flashing momentarily into view and into eclipse as the tree-trunks intervened or the shadows flickered. The woodsman did not stir; only his eyes narrowed with attention. Then a branch snapped, noisy, carelessly broken. Sam's expectancy flagged. Whoever it was did not care to hide his approach.
But in a moment the watcher could make out that the figures
were two; one erect and dominant, the other stooping in surrender. Sam could not
understand. A prisoner would be awkward. But he waited without a motion, without
apparent interest, in the indifferent attitude of the woods-runner.
Now the two neared the outer circle of light; they stepped within it; they stopped at the fire's edge. Sam Bolton looked up straight into the face of Dick's prisoner.
It was May-may-gwán, the Ojibway girl.
Dick pulled the girl roughly to the fireside, where he dropped her arm, leaving her downcast and submissive. He was angry all through with the powerless rage of the man whose attentions a woman has taken more seriously than he had intended. Suddenly he was involved more deeply than he had meant.
"Well, what do you think of that?" he cried.
"What you doing here?" asked Sam in Ojibway, although he knew what the answer would he.
She did not reply, however.
"Hell!" burst out Dick.
"Well, keep your hair on," advised Sam Bolton, with a grin. "You shouldn't be so attractive, Dicky."
The latter growled.
"Now you've got her, what you going to do with her ?"
pursued the older man.
"Do with her?" exploded Dick; "what in bell do you mean? I don't want her; she's none of my funeral. She's got to go back, of course."
"Oh, sure!" agreed Sam. "She's got to go back. Sure thing! It's only two days down stream, and then the Crees would have only four days' start and getting farther every minute. A mere ten days in the woods without an outfit. Too easy; especially for a woman. But of course you'll give her your outfit, Dick."
Be mused, gazing into the flames, his eyes droll over this new complication introduced by his thoughtless comrade.
"Well, we can't have her with us," objected Dick, obstinately. "She'd hinder us, and bother us, and get in our way, and we'd have to feed her -- we may have to starve ourselves; -- and she's no damn use to us. She can't go. I won't have it; I didn't bargain to lug a lot of squaws around on this trip. She came; I didn't ask her to. Let her get out of it the best way she can. She's an Injun. She can make it all right through the woods. And if she has a hard time, she ought to."
"Nice mess, isn't it, Dick?" grinned the other.
"No mess about it. I haven't anything to do with such a fool trick. What did she expect to gain tagging us through the woods that way half a mile to the rear? She was just waiting 'till we got so far away from th' Crees that we couldn't send her back. I'll fool her on that, damn her!" Be kicked a log back into place, sending the sparks eddying.
"I wonder if she's had anything to cat lately?" said Bolton.
"I don't care a damn whether she has or not, said Dick.
"Keep your hair on, my son," advised Sam again. "You're hot because you thought you'd got shut of th' whole affair, and now you find you haven't."
"You make me sick," commented Dick.
"Mebbe," admitted the woodsman. Be fell silent, staring straight before him, emitting short puffs from his pipe. The girl stood where she had been thrust.
"I'll start her back in the morning," proffered Dick after
a few moments. Then, as this elicited no remark, "We can stock her up with
jerky, and there's no reason she shouldn't make it." Sam remained grimly silent.
"Is there?" insisted Dick.
"Now look here, Sam," be broke out, after an interval. "We might as well get at this thing straight. We can't keep her with us, now, can we?"
Sam removed his pipe, blew a cloud straight before him, and replaced it.
Dick reddened slowly, got up with an incidental remark about damn fools, and began to spread his blankets beneath the lean-to shelter. Be muttered to himself, angered at the dead opposition of circumstance which be could not push aside. Suddenly be seized the girl again by the arm.
"Why you come?" be demanded in Ojibway. "Where you get your blankets? Where you get your grub? How you make the Long Trail? What you do when we go far and fast? What we do with you now?" Then meeting nothing but the stolidity with which the Indian always conceals pain, be flung her aside. "Stupid owl!" be growled.
Be sat on the ground and began to take off hi ' a moccasins
with ostentatious deliberation, abruptly
It was by now close to midnight. The big moon had long
since slipped from behind the solitary wolf on the hill. Yet Sam Bolton made no
move toward his blankets, and the girl did not stir from the downcast attitude
into which she had first fallen. The old woodsman looked at the situation with
steady eyes. Be realised to the full what Dick Herron's thoughtlessness had
brought on them. A woman, even a savage woman inured to the wilderness, was a
hindrance. She could not travel as fast nor as far; she could not bear the same
burdens, endure the same hardship; she would consume her share of the
provisions. And before this expedition into the Silent Places should be finished
the journeying might require the speed of a course after quarry, the packing
would come finally to the men's back, the winter would
The girl stood in the same attitude. Sam Bolton spoke to her.
"May-may-gwán."
"Little Father."
"Why have you followed us?"
The girl did not reply.
"Sister," said the woodsman, kindly, "I am an
"I found Jibiwánisi good in my sight," she said, with a simple dignity, "and be looked on me."
"It was a foolish thing to do."
"Ae," replied the girl.
"Be does not wish to take you in his wigwam."
"Eagle-eye is angry now. Anger melts under the sun."
"I do not think his will."
"Then I will make his fire and his buckskin and cook his food."
"We go on a long journey."
"I will follow."
"No," replied the woodsman, abruptly, "we will send you back."
The girl remained silent.
"Well?" insisted Bolton.
"I shall not go."
A little puzzled at this insistence, delivered in so calm a manner, Sam hesitated as to what to say. Suddenly the girl stepped forward to face him.
"Little Father," she said, solemnly, "I cannot go. Those
are not my people. I do not know my
Sam Bolton made no reply to this appeal. Be drew his
sheath-knife, cut in two the doubled three-point blanket, gave one of the halves
to the girl, and indicated to her a place under the shelter. In the firelight
his face hardened as be cast his mind again
At two o'clock, waking in the manner of woodsmen and sailors the world over, be arose to replenish the fire. Be found it already bright with new fuel, and the Indian girl awake. She lay on be r side, the blanket about her shoulders, her great wistful eyes wide open. A flame shot into the air. It threw a momentary illumination into the angles of the shelter, discovering Dick, asleep in heavy exhaustion, his right forearm across his eyes. The girl stole a glance at Sam Bolton. Apparently be was busy with the fire. She reached out to touch the young man's blanket.
Dick was afoot after a few hours' sleep. Be aroused Sam and
went about the preparation of breakfast. May-may-gwán attempted to help, but
both she and her efforts were disregarded. She brought wood, but Dick rustled a
supply just the same, paying no attention to the girl's little pile; she put on
fresh fuel, but Dick, without impatience,-indeed, as though be were merely
rearranging the fire, -- contrived to undo her work; she brought to hand the
utensils, but Dick,, in searching for them, always looked where they had
originally been placed. His object seemed not so much to thwart the girl as to
ignore her. When breakfast was ready be divided it into two portions, one of
which be ate. After the meal be washed the few dishes. Once be took a cup from
the girl's hand as she was drying it, much as be would have taken it from the
top of a stump. Be then proceeded to clean it as though it had just been used.
May-may-gwán made no sign that she noticed these things. After a little she helped Sam roll the blankets, strike the shelter, construct the packs. Here her assistance was accepted, though Sam did not address her. After a few moments the start was made.
The first few hours were spent as before, wading the stream. As she could do nothing in the water, May-may-gwán kept to the woods, walking stolidly onward, her face to the front, expressionless, hiding whatever pain she may have felt. This side of noon, however, the travellers came to a cataract falling over a fifty-foot ledge into a long, cliff-bordered pool.
It became necessary to portage. The hill pinched down steep
and close. There existed no trails. Dick took the little camp axe to find a way.
Be clambered up one after the other three ravines-grown with brush and heavy
ferns, damp with a trickle of water, -- always to be stopped near the summit by
a blank wall impossible to scale. At length be found a passage be thought might
be practicable. Thereupon be cut a canoe trail back to the water-side.
In clearing this trail his attention turned to making room for a canoe on a man's back. Therefore the footing be bothered with not at all. Saplings be clipped down by bending them with the left band, and striking at the strained fibres where they bowed. A single blow would thus fell treelets of some size. When be had finished his work there resulted a winding, cylindrical hole in the forest growth some three feet from the ground. Through this cylinder the canoe would be passed while its bearer picked a practised way among slippery rocks, old stubs, new sapling stumps, and undergrowth below. Men who might, in later years, wish to follow this Indian trail, would look not for footprints but for waist-high indications of the axe.
When the canoe had been carried to the top of the bluff
that marked the water-fall, it was re-launched in a pool. In the meantime
May-may-gwán, who had at last found a use for her willingness, carried the
packs. Dick re-embarked. His companion perceived that be intended to shove off
as soon as the other should have taken his place. Sam frustrated that, however,
by holding fast to
Late that afternoon the travel for a half mile became exceedingly difficult. The stream took on the character of a mountain brook. It hardly paid to float the canoe in the tiny holes among the rocks, miniature cascades, and tortuous passages. The forest grew to the very banks, and arched over to exclude the sun. Every few feet was to be avoided a tree, half clinging to the bank, leaning at a perilous slant out over the creek. Fortunately the spring freshets in this country of the great snows were powerful enough to sweep out the timber actually fallen, so the course of the stream itself was clear of jams. At length the travellers reached a beaver-dam, and so to a little round lake among the bills. They had come to the bead waters of the Mattawishguia.
In the lake stood two moose, old and young. Dick succeeded
in killing the yearling, though it took two shots from his Winchester. It was
decided
A circle of hills surrounded the little body of water. On
them grew maples and birches, among which scattered a few hemlocks and an
occasional pine. At the edge of the water were cedars leaning out to look at
their reflections. A deep and solemn peace seemed to brood over the miniature
lake. Such affairs as bird songs, the slap of a paddle, the shots from Dick's
rifle could not break this strange stillness. They spoke hastily, and relapsed
to silence, like the rare necessary voices in a room where one lies dead. The
hush, calm and primal, with the infinity of the wilderness as its only measure
of time, took no account of the shock of a second's interruption. Two loons swam
like ghosts. Everywhere and nowhere among the trees, in the hills, over the
water, the finer senses were almost uneasily conscious of a vast and awful
presence. It was as yet aloof, unheeding, buddhistic, brooding in nirvanic calm,
still unawakened to put forth the might of its displeasure. Under its dreaming
eyes men might, fearfully and with reverence, carry on their affairs, --
fearfully and with reverence, catching the
At the little camp under the cedars, Dick Herron and Sam Bolton, assisted by the Ojibway girl, May-may-gwán, cut the moose-meat into thin strips, salted, and dried it in the bright sun. And since the presence of loons argued fish, they set their nets and lines. Several days thus passed.
In their relations the three promptly settled back into a species of routine. Men who travel in the Silent Places speedily take on the colour of their surroundings. They become silent also. A band of voyageurs of sufficient strength may chatter and sing; they have by the very force of numbers created an atmosphere of their own. But two are not enough for this. They have little to say, for their souls are laved by the great natural forces.
Dick Herron, even in ordinary circumstances, withdrew
rather grimly into himself. Be looked out at things from beneath knit brows; be
held his elbows close to his sides, his fists clenched, his whole spiritual
being self-contained and apart, watchful for enmity in what be felt but could
not understand. But to this, his normal habit, now was added a sullenness
At the end of three days the provisions were ready. There had resulted perhaps sixty pounds of "jerky." It now became necessary to leave the water-way, and to strike directly through the forest, over the hills, and into the country of the Kabinikágam .
Dick shouldered a thirty-pound pack and the canoe. Sam
Bolton and the girl managed the remainder. Every twenty minutes or so they would
Nothing was said. Dick led the way and set the intervals of the carrying. When be swung the canoe from his shoulders the others slipped their tump-lines. Then all rubbed their faces with the broad caribou-leaf to keep off the early flies, and lay back, arms extended, breathing deep, resting like boxers between the rounds. Once at the top of the ridge Dick climbed a tree. Be did this, not so much in expectation of seeing the water-courses themselves, as to judge by the general lay of the country where they might be found.
In a bare open space under hemlocks Sam indicated a narrow,
high, little pen, perhaps three feet
"Marten deadfall," be pronounced. "Made last winter. Somebody's been trapping through here."
After a time a blaze on a tree was similarly remarked. Then the travellers came to a tiny creek, which, being followed, soon debouched into a larger. This in turn became navigable, after the north-country fashion. That is to say, the canoe with its load could much of the time be floated down by the men wading in the bed of the creek. Finally Sam, who was in the lead, jerked his bead toward the left bank.
"Their winter camp," said be, briefly.
A dim trail led from the water to a sheltered knoll. There
stood the framework of a pointed tepee, the long poles spread like fingers above
their crossing point. A little pile of gnawed white skulls of various sizes
represented at least a portion of the season's catch. Dick turned them over with
his foot, identifying them idly. From the sheltered branches of a near-by spruce
bung four pairs of snow-shoes cached there until the next winter. Sam gave his
first attention to these.
"A man, a woman, and two well-grown children," be pronounced. Be ran his hand over the bulging raquette with the long tail and the slightly up-curved end. "Ojibway pattern," be concluded. "Dick, we're in the first hunting district. Here's where we get down to business."
Be went over the ground twice carefully, examining the state of the offal, the indications of the last fire.
"They've been gone about six weeks," be surmised. "If they ain't gone visiting, they must be down-stream somewheres. These fellows don't get in to trade their fur 'till along about August."
Two days subsequent, late in the afternoon, Dick pointed out what looked to be a dark streak beneath a bowlder that lay some distance from the banks on a shale bar.
"What's that animal?" be asked.
"Can't make her out," said Bolton, after inspection.
"Ninny-moosh," said the Indian girl, indifferently. It was
the first word she had spoken since her talk with the older man,
"It's a dog, all right," conceded Sam. "She has sharp eyes."
The animal rose and began to bark. Two more crashed toward him through the bushes. A thin stream of smoke disengaged itself from the tops of the forest trees. As they swept around the bend, the travellers saw a man contemplating them stolidly through a screen of leaves.
The canoe floated on. About an hundred yards below the Indians Sam ordered a landing. Camp was made as usual. Supper was cooked. The fire replenished. Then, just before the late sunset of the Far North, the bushes crackled.
"Now let me do the talking," warned Sam.
"All right. I'll just keep my eye on this," Dick nodded toward the girl. "She's Ojibway, too, you know. She may give us away."
"She can't only guess," Sam reminded. "But there ain't any danger, anyway."
The leaves parted. The Indian appeared, sauntering with elaborate carelessness, his beady eyes shifting here and there in an attempt to gather what these people might be about.
"Bo'jou', bo' jou'," he greeted them.
The Indian advanced silently to the fireside, where be squatted on his heels. Be filled a pipe, scraping the tobacco from the square plug Sam extended to him. While be did this, and while be stuffed it into the bowl, his keen eyes shifted here and there, gathering the material for conclusions.
Sam, watchful but also silent, could almost follow his mental processes. The canoe meant travel, the meagreness of the outfits either rapid or short travel, the two steel traps travel beyond the sources of supply. Then inspection passed lightly over the girl and from her to the younger man. With a flash of illumination Sam Bolton saw how valuable in allaying suspicion this evidence of a peaceful errand might prove to be. Men did not bring their women on important missions involving speed and danger.
Abruptly the Indian spoke, going directly to the heart of
the matter, after the Indian fashion.
"Where you from?"
"Winnipeg," replied Sam, naming the headquarters of the Company.
The direction of travel was toward Winnipeg. Sam was perfectly aware of the discrepancy, but be knew better than to offer gratuitous explanation. The Indian smoked.
"Where you come from now?" be inquired, finally.
" 'Tschi-gammi."*
This was understandable. Remained only the object of an expedition of this peculiar character. Sam Bolton knew that the Indian would satisfy himself by surmises,-be would never apply the direct question to a man's affairs, -- and surmise might come dangerously near the truth. So be proceeded to impart a little information in his own way.
"You are the hunter of this district?" Sam asked.
"Yes."
"How far do you trap?"
The Indian mentioned creeks and rivers as his boundaries.
"Where do you get your debt?"
"Missináibi."
"That is a long trail."
"Yes.
"Do many take it each year?"
The Indian mentioned rapidly a dozen names of families.
Sam at once took another tack.
"I do not know this country. Are there large lakes?"
"There is Animiki."
"Has it fish? Good wood?"
"Much wood. Ogâ,* kinoj." [dagger]
Sam paused.
"Could a brigade of canoes reach it easily?" be inquired.
Now a brigade is distinctly an institution of
the Honourable the Hudson's Bay Company. It is used for two purposes; to
maintain communication with the outside world, and to establish winter camps in
the autumn or to break them up in the spring. At once the situation became
clear. A gleam of comprehension flashed over the Indian's eyes. With the
The next evening be visited the Indian's camp. It was made under a spreading tree, the tepee poles partly resting against some of the lower branches. The squaw and her woman child kept to the shadows of the wigwam, but the boy, a youth of perhaps fifteen years, joined the men by the fire.
Sam accepted the hospitality of a pipe of tobacco, and attacked the question in band from a ground tacitly assumed since the evening before.
"If Hutson bay company make winterpost on Animiki will you get your debt there instead of Missináibie?" be asked first of all.
Of course the Indian assented.
"How much fur do you get, good year?"
The Indian rapidly ran over a list.
"Lots of fur. Is it going to last? Do you keep district strict here?" inquired Sam.
Under cover of this question Sam was feeling for important
information. As has perhaps been mentioned, in a normal Indian community each
bead of a family is assigned certain hunting districts over
"Good keeping of district," replied the Indian. "I keep
bead-waters of Kabinikágam down to Sand River. When I find man trapping on my
ground, I shoot him. Fur last all right."
This sufficed for the moment. The next morning Sam went over early to the other camp.
"To-day I think we go," be announced. "Now you tell me all the hunters, where I find them, what are their districts, how much fur they kill."
"Ah hah!" assented the Indian. Sam's leisurely and indirect method had convinced him. Easily given information on the other hand would have set him to thinking; and to think, with an Indian, is usually to become suspicious.
The two descended to the shore. There they squatted on
their heels before a little patch of wet sand while the Indian explained. Be
marked roughly, but with almost the accuracy of a survey, the courses of streams
and hills, and told of the routes among them. Sam listened, his gnarled mahogany
hand across his mouth, his shrewd gray eyes bent attentively on the cabalistic
signs and scratches. An Indian will remember, from once traversing it, not only
the greater landmarks, but the little incidents of bowlder, current, eddy, strip
of woods, bend of trail. It remains clear-cut in his mind forever after. The old
woodsman had in his long experience acquired something of this faculty.
With an abrupt movement of the back of his band the Indian smoothed the sand. Squatting back more on his haunches, be refilled his pipe and began to tell of the trappers. In their description be referred always to the map be had drawn on Bolton's imagination as though it had actually lain spread out before them. Sam referred each name to its district, as you or I would write it across the section of a chart, and kept accurately in mind which squares of the invisible map had been thus assigned and which not. It was an extraordinary effort, but one not unusual among practised woods runners. This peculiarly minute and concrete power of recollection is early developed in the wild life.
The Indian finished. Sam remained a moment in
contemplation. The districts were all occupied, and the name of Jingoes did not
appear. That was, however, a small matter. The Ojibway might well have changed
his name, or be might be paying for the privilege of bunting in another man's
territory.
After all, Sam Bolton was well satisfied. Be had, by his simple diplomacy, gained several valuable results. Be had firmly convinced one man of a common body, wherein news travels quickly, of his apparent intentions; be had, furthermore, an exact knowledge of where to find each and every district bead-man of the whole Kabinikágam country. Whether or not the man be sought would prove to be one of these bead-men, or the guest or lessee of one of them, was a question only to be answered by direct search. At least be knew where to search, which was a distinct and valuable advantage.
"Mi-gwetch -- thank you," be said to the Indian when be had
finished. "I understand. I go now to see the Lake. I go to talk to each of your
bead
The Indian nodded. It would have been quite inconceivable to him had Sam suggested accepting anything less than the evidence of his eyes.
The three resumed their journey that afternoon. Sam knew
exactly where be was going. Dick had fallen into a sullen yet rebellious mood,
unaccountable even to himself. In his spirit was the ferment of a resentfulness
absolutely without logical object. With such a man ferment demands action. Here,
in the accustomed labours of this woods travel, was nothing to bite on save
monotony. Dick Herron resented the monotony, resented the deliberation necessary
to so delicate a mission, resented the unvarying tug of his tump-line or the
unchanging yield of the water to his paddle, resented the placidity of the older
man, above all resented the meek and pathetic submissiveness of the girl. His
narrow eyes concentrated their gaze ominously. Be muttered to himself. The
untrained, instinctive strength of the man's spirit fretted against delay. His
enthusiasm, the fire of his hope, urged him to
Sam Bolton gauged perfectly the spirit in his comrade, but
paid it little attention. Be knew it as a chemical reaction of a certain phase
of forest travel. It argued energy, determination, dogged pluck when the need
should arise, and so far it was good. The woods life affects various men in
various ways, but all in a manner peculiar to itself. It is a reagent unlike any
to be found in other modes of life. The moment its influence reaches the spirit,
in that moment does the man change utterly from the person be has been in other
and ordinary surroundings; and the instant be emerges from its control be
reverts to his accustomed bearing. But in the dwelling of the woods be becomes
silent. It may be the silence of a self-contained sufficiency; the silence of an
equable mind; the silence variously of awe, even of fear; it may be the silence
of sullenness. This, as much as the vast stillness of the wilderness, has earned
for the region its designation of the Silent Places.
Nor did the older woodsman fear any direct results from the younger's very real, though baseless, anger. These men were bound together by something stronger than any part of themselves. Over them stood the Company, and to its commands all other things gave way. No matter how rebellious might be Dick Herron's heart, how ruffled the surface of his daily manner, Bolton knew perfectly well be would never for a single instant swerve in his loyalty to the main object of the expedition. Serene in this consciousness, the old woodsman dwelt in a certain sweet and gentle rumination of his own. Among the finer instincts of his being many subtle mysteries of the forest found their correspondences. The feeling of these satisfied him entirely, though of course be was incapable of their intellectualisation.
The days succeeded one another. The camps by the rivers or
in the woods were in essential all alike. The shelter, the shape, and size of
the tiny clearing, the fire, the cooking utensils scattered about, the little
articles of personal belonging were the same. Only certain details of
surrounding differed, and they were not of importance,-birch-trees for pop
And yet all knew by experience, though no one of them could rise to a realisation of the fact, that some day their canoe would round the bend and they would find themselves somewhere. Then they could say to themselves that they had arrived, and could tell themselves that between here and their starting-point lay so many hundred miles. Yet in their secret hearts they would not believe it. They would know that in reality it lay but just around the corner. Only between were dream-days of the shifting forest heavy with toil.
This is the enchantment the North lays on her
In the country of the Kabinikágam they visited thus many hunting districts. The travel neither hastened nor lagged. From time to time it was necessary to kill, and then the meat must be cared for. Berries and wild rice were to be gathered. July drew near its end.
Sam Bolton, knowing now the men with whom be had to deal, found no difficulty in the exercise of his simple diplomacy. The Ojibway defaulter was not to be beard of, but every nook searched without result narrowed the remaining possibilities. Everything went well enough until late one afternoon.
The portage happened to lead above a narrow gorge over a
rapids. To accomplish it the travellers had first to scale a steep little hill,
then to skirt a huge rounded rock that overhung the gorge. The roughness of the
surface and the adhesive power of their moccasins alone held them to the slant.
These were well sufficient. Unfortunately, however, Dick, without noticing it,
had stepped into
May-may-gwán, aghast at what she had done, stood paralyzed,
staring into the gorge. Sam
The Indian girl saw the inert body of the woodsman dashed down through the moil and. water, now showing an arm, now a leg, only once, for a single instant, the bead. Twice it hit obstacles, limp as a sack of flour. Then it disappeared.
Immediately she regained the use of her legs, and scrambled
over the hill after Sam, her breath strangling her. She found below the rapids a
pool, and half in the water at its edge Dick seated, bruised and cut, spitting
water, and talking excitedly to his companion. Instantly she understood. The
young woods runner, with the rare quickness of expedient peculiar to these
people, had allowed himself to be carried through the rapids muscle-loose, as an
inanimate object would be carried, without an attempt to help himself in any
way. It was a desperate chance, but it was the only chance. The slightest
stiffening of the muscles, the least struggle would have thrown him out of the
water's natural channel against the bowlders; and then a rigidly held body would
have offered only too good a resistance to the shock. By a miracle of fortune be
had
"She did it!" be burst out, as soon as be could speak. "She did it a purpose! She reached out and pushed me! By God, there she is now!"
With the instinct of the hunter be had managed to cling to his rifle. Be wrenched at the magazine lever, throwing the muzzle forward for a shot, but it had been jammed, and be was unable to move it.
"She reached out and pushed me! I felt her do it!" be cried. Be attempted to rise, but fell back, groaning with a pain that kept him quiet for several moments.
"Sam!" be muttered, "she's there yet. Kill her. Damn it,
didn't you see! I had my balance again, and she pushed me! She had it in for
me!" His face whitened for an instant as be moved, then flooded with a red
anger. "My God!" be cried, in the anguish of a strong man laid low, "she's
busted me all over!" Be wrenched loose his shoulders from Sam's support,
struggled to his knees, and fell back, a groan of pain seeming fairly to burst
from
"May-may-gwán?" called Sam Bolton, sharply.
She came at once, running eagerly, the paralysis of her distress broken by his voice. Sam directed her by nods of the bead. With some difficulty they carried the unconscious man to the flat and laid him down, his bead on Sam's rolled coat. Then, while May-may-gwán, under his curtly delivered directions, built a fire, heated water, carried down the two remaining packs and opened them, Sam tenderly removed Dick's clothes, and examined him from bead to foot. The cuts on the bead were nothing to a strong man; the bruises less. Manipulation discovered nothing wrong with the collar-bone and ribs. But at last Sam uttered a quick exclamation of discovery.
Dick's right ankle was twisted strongly outward and back.
An inexperienced man would have pronounced it a
dislocation, but Sam knew better. Be knew better because just once, nearly
fifteen years before, be had assisted Dr. Cockburn at Conjuror's House in the
caring for exactly such an accident. Now be
Rapidly by means of twigs and a tracing on the wet sand be explained to May-may-gwán what was the matter and what was to be done. The fibula, or outer bone of the leg, had been snapped at its lower end just above the ankle, the foot had been dislocated to one side, and either the inner ligament of the ankle had given way, or-what would be more serious -- one of the ankle-bones itself had been torn. Sam Bolton realised fully that it was advisable to work with the utmost rapidity, before the young man should regain consciousness, in order that the reduction of the fracture might be made while the muscles were relaxed. Nevertheless, be took time both to settle his own ideas, and to explain them to the girl. It was the luckiest chance of Dick Herron's life that be happened to be travelling with the one man who had assisted in the skilled treatment of such a case. Otherwise be would most certainly have been crippled.
Sam first of all pried from the inner construction of the
canoe two or three of the flat cedar strips I
Then be bent the injured leg at the knee. May-may-gwán held it in that position, while Sam manipulated the foot into what be judged to be the proper position. Especially did be turn the foot strongly inward that the inner ankle-bone might fall to its place. As to the final result be confessed himself almost painfully in doubt, but did the best be knew. Be remembered the post-surgeon's cunning comments, and tried to assure himself that the fractured ends of the bones met each other fairly, without the intervention of tendons or muscle-covering, and that there was no obstruction to the movements of the ankle. When be had finished, his brow was wrinkled with anxiety, but be was satisfied that be had done to the limit of his knowledge.
May-may-gwán now held the cedar board, with its pad,
against the inside of the leg. Sam bound
The two then, with the utmost precaution, carried their patient up the bank to a level space suitable for a camp, where be was laid as flat as possible. The main business was done, although still there remained certain cuts and contusions, especially that on the forehead, which had stunned him.
After the reduction of the fracture, -- which was actually
consummated before Dick regained his consciousness, -- and the carrying of the
young man to the upper flat, Sam curtly instructed May-may-gwán to gather balsam
for the dressing of the various severer bruises. She obtained the gum, a little
at a time, from a number of trees. Here and there, where the bark had cracked or
been abraded, hard-skinned blisters had exuded. These, when
He realised fully that the affair was one of many weeks, if not of months. On the flat tongue overlooking the river be cleared a wide space, and with the back of his axe be knocked the hummocks flat. A score or so of sapling poles be trimmed. Three be tied together tripod-wise, using for the purpose a strip of the inner bark of cedar. The rest be leaned against these three. Be postponed, until later, the stripping of birch-bark to cover this frame, and gave his attention to laying a soft couch for Dick's convalescence. The foundation be made of caribou-moss, gathered dry from the heights; the top of balsam boughs cleverly thatched so that the ends curved down and in, away from the recumbent body. Over all he laid what remained of his own half blanket. Above the bed he made a framework from which a sling would be hung to suspend the injured leg.
All this consumed not over twenty minutes. At the end of
that time he glanced up to meet Dick's eyes.
"Leg broke," he answered the inquiry in them. "That's all."
"That girl-," began Dick.
"Shut up!" said Sam.
He moved here and there, constructing, by means of flat stones, a trough to be used as a cooking-range. At the edge of the clearing he met the Indian girl returning with her little birch-bark saucer.
"Little Sister," said he.
She raised her eyes to him.
'I want the truth."
'What truth, Little Father?"
He looked searchingly into her eyes.
"It does not matter; I have it," he replied.
She did not ask him further., If she had any curiosity, she did not betray it; if she had any suspicion of what he meant, she did not show it.
Sam returned to where Dick lay. "Look here, Sam," said he,
"this comes of-" "Shut up!" said Sam again. "Look here, you, you've made trouble
enough. Now you're laid up, and you're laid up for a good long while. This ain't
any ordinary leg break. It means three months, and it may mean that you'll never
walk
He said it as though he meant it. Nevertheless, it was with the most elaborate tenderness that he, assisted by May-may-gwán, carried Dick to his new quarters. But in spite of the utmost care, the transportation was painful. The young man was left with no strength. The rest of the afternoon he dozed in a species of torpor.
Sam's energy toward permanent establishment did not relax.
He took a long tramp in search of canoe birches, from which at last he brought
back huge rolls of thick bark. These he and the girl sewed together in
overlapping seams, using white spruce-roots for the purpose. The result was a
water-tight covering for the wigwam. A pile of firewood was the fruit of two
hours' toil. In the meantime May-may-gwán had caught some fish with the book and
line and had gathered some berries.
During the days that ensued a certain intimacy sprang up between Sam Bolton and the Indian girl. At first their talk was brief and confined to the necessities. Then matters of opinion, disjointed, fragmentary, began to creep in. Finally the two came to know each other, less by what was actually said, than by the attitude of mind such confidences presupposed. One topic they avoided. Sam, for all his shrewdness, could not determine to what degree had persisted the young man's initial attraction for the girl. Of her devotion there could be no question, but in bow much it depended on the necessity of the moment lay the puzzle. Her demeanor was inscrutable. Yet Sam came gradually to trust to her loyalty.
In the soft, sweet open-air life the days passed stately in
the manner of figures on an ancient tapestry. Certain things were each morning
to be done,-the dressing of Dick's cuts and contusions with
But inside the wigwam Dick Herron lay helpless, his hands
clenched, his eyes glaring red with an impatience he seemed to hold his breath
to repress. Time was to be passed. That was all he knew, all he thought about,
all he cared. He seized the minutes, grimly and flung them behind him. So
absorbed was he in this, that he seemed to give grudgingly and hastily his
attention to anything else. He never spoke except when absolutely necessary; it
almost seemed that he never moved. Of Sam he appeared utterly unconscious, The
older man performed
"It'll be October before we can get started," he growled one evening.
"Yes," said Sam.
"You. wait till I can get out!" he said on another occasion, in vague threat of determination.
At the beginning of the third week Sam took his seat by the moss and balsam pallet and began to fill his pipe in preparation for a serious talk.
"Dick," said he, "I've made up my mind we've wasted enough time here."
Herron made no reply.
"I'm going to leave you here and go to look over the other bunting districts by myself."
Still no reply.
"Well?" demanded Sam.
"What about me?" asked Dick.
"The girl will take care of you."
A long silence ensued. "She'll take everything we've got and get out," said Dick at last.
"She will not! She'd have done it before now."
"She'll quit me the first Injuns that come along."
Sam abandoned the point.
"You needn't take the risk unless you want to. If you say so, I'll wait."
"Oh, damn the risk," cried Dick, promptly. "Go ahead."
The woodsman smoked.
"Sam," said the younger man.
"I know I'm hard to get along with just now. Don't mind me. It's hell to lie on your back and be able to do nothing. I've seemed to hinder the game from the first. Just wait till I'm up again!"
"That's all right, my boy," replied Sam. "I understand. Don't worry. Just take it easy. I'll look over the district, so we won't be losing any time. And, Dick, be decent to the girl."
"To hell with the girl," growled Dick, lapsing abruptly from his expansive mood. "She got me into this."
Not another word would he speak, but lay, staring upward,
chewing the cud of resentment.
Promptly on the heels of his decision Sam Bolton had a long talk with May-may-gwán, then departed carrying a little pack. It was useless to think now of the canoe, and in any case the time of year favoured cross-country travel. The distances, thus measured, were not excessive, and from the Indian's descriptions, Sam's slow-brooding memory had etched into his mind an accurate map of the country.
At noon the girl brought Dick his meal. After he had eaten she removed the few utensils. Then she returned.
"The Little Father commanded that I care for your hurt,," she said, simply.
"My leg's all right now," growled Dick. "I can bandage it myself."
May-may-gwán did not reply, but left the tent. In a moment she reappeared carrying forked switches, a square of white birch-bark, and a piece of charcoal.
"Thus it is," said she rapidly. "These be the leg bones and
this the bone of the ankle. This bone is broken, so. Thus it is held in place by
the skill of the Little Father. Thus it is healing, with stiffness
She spoke simply. Dick, interested in spite of himself, stared at the switches and the hasty charcoal sketch. The dead silence bung for a full minute. Then the young man fell back from his elbow with an enigmatical snort. May-may-gwán assumed consent and set to work on the simple yet delicate manipulations, massages, and flexings, which, persisted in with due care lest the fracture slip, would ultimately restore the limb to its full usefulness.
Once a day she did this, thrice a day she brought food. The
rest of the time she was busy about her own affairs; but never too occupied to
loop up a section of the tepee covering for the purpose of admitting fresh air,
to bring a cup of cold water, to readjust the sling which suspended the injured
leg, or to perform an hundred other little services. She did these things with
inscrutable demeanour. As Dick always accepted them in silence, she offered
At the end of a week Dick raised himself suddenly on his elbow.
"Some one is coming!" he exclaimed, in English.
At the sound of his voice the girl started forward. Her mouth parted, her eyes sparkled, her nostrils quivered. Nothing could have hen more pathetic than this sudden ecstatic delight, as suddenly extinguished when she perceived that the exclamation was involuntary and not addressed to her. In a moment Sam Bolton appeared, striding out of the forest.
He unslung his little pack, leaned his rifle against a tree, consigned to May-may-gwán a dog he was leading, and approached the wigwam. He seemed in high good humour.
"Well, how goes it?" he greeted.
But at the sight of the man striding in his strength Dick's
dull anger had fallen on him again like a blanket. Unreasonably, as he himself
well knew, he was irritated. Something held him back from the utterance of the
hearty words of greeting that had hen on his tongue. A dull, apathetic in
"All right," he answered, grudgingly.
Sam deftly unwound the bandages, examining closely the condition of the foot.
"Bone's in place all right," he commented. "Has the girl rubbed it and moved it every day?"
"Yes."
"Any pain to amount to anything now?"
"No."
"Pretty dull work lying on your back all day with nothing to do."
"Yes."
"Took in the country to southeast. Didn't find anything. Picked up a pretty good dog. Part 'husky.' 'J'
Dick had no comment to make on this. Sam found May-may-gwán
making friends with the dog, feeding him little scraps, patting his head, above
all wrinkling the end of his pointed nose in one hand and batting it softly with
the palm of the other. This caused the dog to sneeze violently, but he exhibited
every symptom of enjoyment. The animal had long, coarse hair, sharp ears set
alertly

"Eagle-eye does well," said the woodsman.
"I have done as the Little Father commanded," she replied, and arose to cook the meal.
The next day Sam constructed a pair of crutches well padded with moss.
"Listen, Little Sister," said he. "Now I go on a long journey, perhaps fifteen suns, perhaps one moon. At the end of six suns more Jibibánisi may rise. His leg must be slung, thus. Never must he touch the foot to the ground, even for an instant. You must see to it. I will tell him, also. Each day he must sit in the sun. He must do something. When snow falls we will again take the long trail. Prepare all things for it. Give Eagle-eye materials to work with."
To Dick he spoke with like directness.
"I'm off again, Dick," said he. "There's no help for it;
you've got to lay up there for a week yet. Then the girl will show you bow to
tie your leg out of the way, and you can move on crutches. If you rest any
weight on that foot before I get back, you'll be stiff for life. I shouldn't
advise you
"Good-by," muttered Dick. He breathed bard, fully occupied with the thought of his helplessness, with blind, unappeasable rage against the chance that had crippled him, with bitter and useless questionings as to why such a moment should have hen selected for the one accident of his young life. Outside he could hear the crackle of the little fire, the unusual sound of the Indian girl's voice as she talked low to the dog, the animal's whine of appreciation and content. Suddenly he felt the need of companionship, the weariness of his own unending, revolving thoughts.
"Hi!" he called aloud.
May-may-gwán almost instantly appeared in the entrance, a scarcely concealed hope shining in her eyes. This was the first time she had hen summoned.
"Ninny-moosh-the dog," commanded Dick, coldly.
She turned to whistle the heist. He came at once, already friends with this human Heinz, who understood him.
"Come here, old fellow," coaxed Dick, holding out his hand.
But the half-wild animal was in doubt. He required assurance of this man's intentions. Dick gave himself to the task of supplying it. For the first time in a month his face cleared of its discontent. The old, winning boyishness returned. May-may-gwán, standing forgotten, in the entrance, watched in silence. Dick coaxed knowingly, leading, by the very force of persuasion, until the dog finally permitted a single pat of his sharp nose. The young man smoothly and cautiously persisted, his face alight with interest. Finally he conquered. The animal allowed his ears to be rubbed, his nose to be batted. At length, well content, he lay down by his new master within reach of the band that rested caressingly on his head. The Indian girl stole softly away. At the fireside she seated herself and gazed in the coals. Presently the marvel of two tears welled in her eyes. She blinked them away and set about supper.
Whether it was that the prospect of getting about, or the
diversion of the dog was responsible for the change, Dick's cheerfulness
markedly increased in the next few days. For hours he would fool with the
animal, whom lie had named Billy, after a hunting companion, teaching him to
shake hands, to speak, to wrinkle his nose in a doggy grin, to lie down at
command, and all the other tricks useful and ornamental that go to make up the
fanciest kind of a dog education. The mistakes and successes of his new friend
seemed to amuse him hugely. Often from the tent burst the sounds of
inextinguishable mirth. May-may-gwán. peeping, saw the young man as she had
first seen him, clear-eyed, laughing, the wrinkles of humour deepening about his
eyes, his white teeth flashing, his brow untroubled. Three days she hovered thus
on the outer edge of the renewed good feeling, then timidly essayed an advance.
Unobtrusive, she slipped inside the teepee's flap. The dog sat on his haunches, his head to one side in expectation.
"The dog is a good dog," she said, her breath choking her.
Apparently the young man had not heard.
"It will be well to name the dog that he may answer to his name," she ventured again.
Dick, abruptly gripped by the incomprehensible obsession, uneasy as at something of which he only waited the passing, resentful hocus of the discomfort this caused him, unable to break through the artificial restraint that enveloped his spirit, lifted his eyes suddenly, dead and lifeless, to hers.
"It is time to lift the net," he said.
The girl made no more advances. She moved almost automatically about her accustomed tasks, preparing the materials for what remained to be done.
Promptly on the seventh day, with much preparation and
precaution, Dick moved. He had now to suffer the girl's assistance. When he
first stood upright, he was at once attacked by a severe dizziness, which would
have caused a fall had not May
The first object to catch his eye was the cardinal red of a moose-maple, like a spot of blood on velvet-green. And thus he knew that September, or the Many-caribou-in-the-woods Moon, was close at hand.
"Hi!" he called.
May-may-gwán came as before, but without the look of expectation in her eyes.
"Bring me wood of mashkigiwáteg, wood of tamarack," he commanded; "bring me mókamon, the knife, and tschì-mókamon, the large knife; bring the hide of ah-ták, the caribou."
"These things are ready, at hand," she replied. With the
couteau croche, the crooked knife of the North, Dick laboured slowly,
fashioning with care the long tamarack strips. He was exceedingly particular as
to the selection of the wood, as to the taper of the pieces. At last one was
finished to his satisfaction. Slowly then he fashioned it, moulding
Thus in the next few days Dick fashioned the frame of six
snow-shoes. He adhered closely to the Ojibway pattern. In these woods it was not
necessary to have recourse to the round, broad shape of the rough bowlder-hills,
nor was it possible to use the long, swift shoe of the open plains. After a
while he heated red the steel end of his rifle cleaning-rod and bored holes for
the webbing. This also he made of caribou rawhide, for caribou shrinks when wet,
thus tightening the lacing where other materials would stretch. Above and hello
the crosspieces he put in a very fine weaving; between them a coarser, that the
loose snow might readily sift through. Each strand he tested again and again;
each knot he made doubly sure.
Nor must it be imagined that he did these things alone. May-may-gwán helped him, not only by fetching for him the tools and materials, of which he stood in need, but also in the heeding, binding, and webbing itself. Under the soft light of the trees, bathed in the aroma of fresh shavings and the hundred natural odours of the forest, it was exceedingly pleasant accurately to accomplish the light skilled labour. But between these human beings, alone in a vast wilderness, was no communication outside the necessities of the moment. Thus in a little the three pairs of snow-shoes, complete even to the buckskin foot-loops, hung from the sheltered branch of a spruce.
I "Bring now to me," said the young man, "poles of the hickory, logs of gijik, the cedar; bring me wigwass, the birch-bark, and the rawhide of mooswa, the moose."
"These things are at hand," repeated May-may-gwán. I
Then ensued days of severe toil. Dick was, of course,
unable to handle the axe, so the girl had to do it under his direction. The
affair was of wedges with which to split along the grain; of repeated at
"Bring me now," said Dick, "rawhide of mooswa, the moose, rawhide of ah-ték, the caribou, wátab, the root for sewing."
Seated opposite each other, heads bent over the task, they made the dog-harness, strong, serviceable, not to be worn out, with the collar, the broad buckskin strap over the back, the heavy traces. Four of them they made, for Sam would undoubtedly complete the team, and these, too, they hung out of reach in the spruce-tree.
Now Sam returned from his longest trip, empty of
information, but light of spirit, for he had succeeded by his simple shrewdness
in avoiding all suspicion. He brought with him another "husky" dog, and a strong
animal like a Newfoundland; also some tea and tobacco, and an axe-blade. This
latter would be especially valuable. In the extreme cold steel becomes like
glass. The work done earned
From the inside of the teepee hung many skins of the northern hare which May-may-gwán had captured and tanned while Dick was still on his back. The woven blanket was finished. Now she lined the woollen blankets with these hare-skins, over an hundred to each. Nothing warmer could be imagined. Of caribou skin, tanned with the hair on, she and Dick fashioned jackets with peaked hoods, which, when not in use, would hang down behind. The opening about the face was sewn with bushy fox's tails, and a puckering-string threaded through so that the wearer could completely protect his features. Mittens they made from pelts of the muskrat. Moccasins were cut extra large and high, and lined with fur of the hare. Heavy raw-hide dog-whips and buckskin gun-cases completed the simple winter outfit.
But still there remained the question of sustenance. Game would be scarce and uncertain in the cold months.
It was now seven weeks since Dick's accident. Cautiously,
with many pauses, he began to rest
Of the meat they made some jerky for present consumption by
the dogs, and, of course, they ate fresh as much as they needed. But most went
into pemmican. The fat was all cut away, the lean sliced thin and dried in the
sun. The result they pounded fine, and mixed with melted fat and the marrow,
which, in turn, was compressed while warm into air-tight little bags. A quantity
of meat went into surprisingly little pemmican. The bags were
The new husky and Billy had promptly come to teeth, but
Billy had held his own, much to Dick Herron's satisfaction. The larger animal
was a bitch, so now all dwelt together in amity. During the still hunt they were
kept tied in camp, but the rest of the time they prowled about. Never, however,
were they permitted to leave the clearing, for that would frighten the game. At
evening they sat in an expectant row, awaiting the orderly distribution of their
evening meal. Somehow they added much to the man-feel of the camp. With their
coming the atmosphere of men as opposed to the atmosphere of the wilderness had
strengthened. On this side was the human habitation, busy at its own affairs,
creating about itself a definite something in the forest, unknown before,
preparing quietly and efficiently its weapons of offence and defence, all
complete in its fires and shelters and industries and domestic animals. On the
other, formidable, mysterious, vast, were slowly crystallising, without
disturbance, without display, the mighty opposing forces. In the clarified air
of the first autumn
Now the leaves ripened and fell, and the frost crisped them. Suddenly the forest was still. The great, brooding silence, composed of a thousand lesser woods voices, flowed away like a vapour to he succeeded by a fragile, deathly suspension of sound. Dead leaves depended motionless from the trees. The air hung inert. A soft sunlight lay enervated across the world.
In the silence had hen a vast, holy mystery of greater purpose and life; in the stillness was a menace. It became the instant of poise before the break of something gigantic.
And always across it were rising strange rustlings that
might mean great things or little, but whose significance was always in doubt.
Suddenly the man watching by the runway would hear a mighty scurrying of dead
leaves, a scampering, a tumult of hurrying noises, the abruptness of whose
inception tightened his nerves and set galloping his
In all the forest thus diverse affairs seemed to be carried on-fearfully, in sudden, noisy dashes, as a man under fire would dodge from one cover to another. Every creature advertised in the leaves his presence. Danger lurked to this, its advantage. Even the man, taking his necessary footsteps, was abashed at the disproportionate and unusual effects of his movements. It was as though a retiring nature were to be accompanied at every step through a crowded drawing-room by the jingling of hells. Always the instinct was to pause in order that the row might die away, that the man might shrink to his accustomed unobtrusiveness. And instantaneously, without the grace of even a little transitional echo, the stillness fell, crowding so closely on the heels of the man's presence that almost he could feel the breath of whatever it represented.
Occasionally two red squirrels would descend from the
spruce-trees to chase each other madly. Then, indeed, did the spirit of autumn
seem to be outraged. The racket came to be an insult. Always the ear expected
its discontinuance, until
Always the forest seemed to be the same; and yet somehow in
a manner not to be defined a subtle change was taking place in the wilderness.
Nothing definite could be instanced. Each morning of that Indian summer the
skies were as soft, the sun as grateful, the leaves as gorgeous in their
blazonment, yet each morning an infinitesimal something that had hen there the
day before was lacking, and for it an infinitesimal something had hen
substituted. The change from hour to hour was not perceptible; from week to week
it was. The stillness grew in portent; the forest creatures moved more
furtively. Like growth, rather than chemical change, the wilderness was turning
to iron. With this hardening it became more formidable and menacing. No longer
aloof in nirvanic: calm, awakened it drew near its enemies, alert, cunning,
circumspect, ready. to strike.
Each morning a thin film of ice was to be seen along the edges of the slack water. Heavy, black frosts whitened the shadows and nipped the unaccustomed fingers early in the day. The sun was swinging to the south, lengthening the night hours. Whitefish were running in the river.
These last the man and the girl caught in great numbers, and smoked and piled on long-legged scaffolds. They were intended as winter food for the dogs, and would constitute a great part of what would be taken along when the journey should commence.
Dick began to walk without his crutches, a very little at a
time, grimly, all his old objectless anger returned when the extent of his
disability was thus brought home to him. But always with persistence came
improvement. Each attempt brought its reward in strengthened muscles, freer
joints, greater confidence. At last it could be no longer doubted that by the
Indian's Whitefish Moon he would be as good as ever. The discovery, by some
queer contrariness of the man's disposition, was avoided as long as possible,
and finally but grudgingly admitted. Yet when at last Dick confessed to him
"Come, Little Sister," said he, "let us lift the nets."
She looked up at him, a warm glow leaping to her face. This was the first time he had addressed her by the customary diminutive of friendship since they had both hen members of the Indian camp on the Missináibie.
They lifted the net together, and half-filled the canoe
with the shining fish. Dick bore himself with the careless good humour of his
earlier manner. The greater part of the time he seemed unconscious of his
companion's presence, but genuinely unconscious,
But Sam Bolton, returning that very day from his own long journey, saw at once the alteration in May-may-gwán, and was troubled over it. He came into camp by the river way where the moss and spruce-needles silenced his footsteps, so he approached unnoticed. The girl bent over the fire. A strong glow from the flames showed the stronger glow illuminating her face from within. She hummed softly a song of the Ojibway language:
Then she looked up and saw him.
"Little Father!" she cried, pleased.
At the same moment Dick caught sight of the new-comer and hobbled out of the wigwam.
"Hello, you old snoozer!" he shouted. "We began to think you weren't going to show up at all. Look at what we've done. I believe you've hen lying out in the woods just to dodge work. Where'd you steal that dog?"
"Hello, Dick," replied Sam, unslinging his pack. "I'm tired. Tell her to rustle grub."
He leaned back against a cedar, half-closing his eyes, but nevertheless keenly alert. The changed atmosphere of the camp disturbed him. Although he had not realised it before, he preferred Dick's old uncompromising sulkiness.
In accordance with the woods custom, little was said until
after the meal was finished and the pipes lit. Then Dick inquired:
"Well, where you hen this time, and what did you find?"
Sam replied briefly as to his journey, making it clear that he had now covered all the hunting districts of this region with the single exception of one beyond the Kenógami. He had discovered nothing; he was absolutely sure that nothing was to he discovered.
"I didn't go entirely by what the Injuns told me," he said, "but I looked at the signs along the trapping routes and the trapping camps to see bow many had hen at it, and I'm sure the number tallies with the regular Injun hunters. I picked up that dog over to Leftfoot Lake. Come here, pup!"
The animal slouched forward, his head hanging, the rims of his eyes blood red as he turned them up to his master. He was a powerful heist, black and tan, with a quaintly wrinkled, anxious countenance and long, pendent ears.
"Strong," commented Dick, "but queer-looking. He'll have trouble keeping warm with that short coat."
"He's wintered here already," replied Sam, indifferently.
"Go lie down!"
The dog slouched slowly back, his heavy head and ears swinging to each step, to where May-may-gwán was keeping his peace with the other animals.
"Now for that Kenógami country," went on Sam; "it's two weeks from here by dogs, and it's our last chance in this country. I ain't dared ask too many questions, of course, so I don't know anything about the men who're hunting there. There's four families, and one other. He's alone; I got that much out of the last place I stopped. We got to wait here for snow. If we don't raise anything there, we'd better get over toward the Nipissing country."
"All right," said Dick.
The older man began to ask minutely concerning the equipment, provisions, and dog food.
"It's all right as long as we can take it easy and bunt,"
advised Sam, gradually approaching the subject that was really troubling him,
"and it's all right if we can surprise this Jingoss or ambush him when we find
him. But suppose he catches wind of us and skips, what then? It'll he a mighty
pretty race, my son, and a hard one. We'll have to fly
The young man's eyes darkened and his nostrils expanded with the excitement of this thought.
"Just let's strike his trail!" he exclaimed.
"That's all right," agreed the woodsman, his eyes narrowing; "but how about the girl, then?"
But Dick exhibited no uneasiness. He merely grinned broadly.
"Well, what about the girl? That's what I've hen telling you. Strikes me that's one of your troubles."
Half-satisfied, the veteran fell silent. Shortly after he made an opportunity to speak to May-may-gwán.
"All is well, Little Sister?" he inquired.
"All is well," she replied; "we have finished the parkas, the sledges, the snow-shoes, the blankets, and we have made much food."
"And Jibiwánisi?"
"His foot is nearly healed. Yesterday he walked to the Big
Pool and back. To-day, even this afternoon, Little Father, the Black Spirit left
him so that he has hen gay."
Convinced that the restored good feeling was the result rather of Dick's volatile nature than of too good an understanding, the old man left the subject.
"Little Sister,," he went on, "soon we are going to take the winter trail. It may be that we will have to travel rapidly. It may be that food will be scarce. I think it best that you do not go with us."
She looked up at him.
"These words I have expected," she replied. "I have heard
the speech you have Made with the Ojibway men you have met. I have seen the
preparations you have made. I am not deceived. You and Jibiwánisi are not
looking for winter posts. I do not know what it is you are after, but it is
something you wish to conceal. Since you have not told me, I know you wish to
conceal it from me. I did not know all this when I left Haukemah and his people.
That was a foolish thing. It was done, and I do not know why. But it was done,
and it cannot be undone. I could not go back to the people of Haukemah now; they
would kill me. Where else can I go? I do not know where the Ojibways, my own
people, live."
"What do you expect to do, if you stay with me?" inquired Sam, curiously.
"You come from Conjuror's House. You tell the Indians you come from Winnipeg, but that is not so. When you have finished your affairs, you will return to Conjuror's House. There I can enter the household of some officer."
"But you cannot take the winter trail," objected Sam.
"I am strong; I can take the winter trail."
"And perhaps we may have to journey bard and fast."
"As when one pursues an enemy," said the girl, calmly. "Good. I am fleet. I too can travel. And if it comes to that, I will leave you without complaint when I can no longer tread your trail."
"But the food," objected Sam, still further.
"Consider, Little Father," said May-may-gwán; "of the food
I have prepared much; of the work, I have done much. I have tended the traps,
raised the nets, fashioned many things, attended Eagle-eye. If I had not hen
here, then you, Little Father, could not have made your journeys. So you have
gained some time."
"That is true," conceded Sam.
"Listen, Little Father, take me with you. I will drive the dogs, make the camp, cook the food. Never will I complain. If the food gets scarce, I will not ask for my share. That I promise."
"Much of what you say is true," assented the woodsman, "but you forget you came to us of your free will and unwelcomed. It would be better that you go to Missináibie ."
"No," replied the girl.
"If you hope to become the squaw of Jibiwánisi ," said Sam, bluntly, "you may as well give it up."
The girl said nothing, but compressed her lips to a straight line. After a moment she merely reiterated her original solution:
"At Conjuror's House I know the people."
"I will think of it," then concluded Sam.
Dick, however, could see no good in such an arrangement. He did not care to discuss the matter at length, but preserved rather the attitude of a man who has shaken himself free of all the responsibility of an affair, and is, mildly amused at the tribulations of another still involved in it.
"You'll have a lot of trouble dragging a squaw
"Well, I don't know-" doubted Sam. "Of course
"Oh, bring her along if you want to," laughed Dick, "only it's your funeral. You'll 'get into trouble, sure. And don't say I didn't tell you."
It might have hen imagined by the respective attitudes of the two men that actually Sam had hen responsible for the affair from the beginning. Finally, laboriously, he decided that the girl should go. She could be of assistance; there was small likelihood of the necessity for protracted hasty travel.
The weather was getting steadily colder. Greasy-looking
clouds drove down from the northwest. Heavy winds swept by. The days turned
gray. Under the shelter of trees the ground froze into hummocks, which did not
thaw out. The crisp leaves which had made the forest so noisy disintegrated into
sodden silence. A wildness was in the
The inmates of the little camp waited. Each morning Dick
was early afoot searching the signs of the weather; examining the ice that crept
stealthily from shore, waiting to pounce upon and imprison the stream;
speculating on the chances of an early season. The frost pinched his bare
fingers severely, but he did not mind that. His leg was by now almost as strong
as ever, and he was impatient to be away, to leave behind him this rapid that
had gained over him even a temporary victory. Always as the time approached, his
spirits rose. It would have hen difficult to identify this laughing boy with the
sullen and terrible man who had sulked through the summer. He had made friends
with all the dogs. Even the fierce "huskies" had become tame, and liked to be
upset and tousled about and
At last the skim ice made it impossible longer to use the
canoe in fishing on the river. The craft was, therefore, suspended bottom up
between two trees. A little snow fell and remained, but was speedily swept into
hollows. The temperature lowered. It became necessary to assume thicker
garments. Once having bridged the river the ice strengthened rapidly. And then
late one afternoon, on the wings of the northwest wind, came the snow. All night
it howled past the trembling wigwam. All the next day it swirled and drifted and
took the shapes of fantastic monsters leaping in the
In the starlit, bitter cold of a north country morning the three packed their sledge and harnessed their dogs. The rawhide was stubborn with the frost, the dogs uneasy. Knots would not tie. Pain nipped the fingers, cruel pain that ate in and in until it had exposed to the shock of little contacts every tightened nerve. Each stiff, clumsy movement was agony. From time to time one of the three thrust hand in mitten to heat the freezing back. Then a new red torture surged to the very finger-tips. They bore it in silence, working hastily, knowing that every morning of the long, winter trip this fearful hour must come. Thus each day the North would greet them, squeezing their fingers in the cruel band-clasp of an antagonist testing their strength.
Over the supplies and blankets was drawn the skin envelope
laced to the sledge. The last reluctant knot was tied. Billy, the leader of the
four dogs, casting an intelligent eye at his masters, knew
"Mush! Mush on!" shouted Sam.
The four dogs leaned into their collars. The sledge creaked free of its frost anchorage and moved.
First it became necessary to drop from the elevation to the river-bed. Dick and May-may-gwán clung desperately. Sam exercised his utmost skill and agility to keep the dogs straight. The toboggan hovered an instant over the edge of the bank, then plunged, coasting down. Men bung back, dogs ran to keep ahead. A smother of light snow settled to show, in the dim starlight, the furrow of descent. And on the broad, white surface of the river were eight spot of black which represented the followers of the Long Trail.
Dick shook himself and stepped ahead of the dogs.
"Mush! Mush on!" commanded Sam again.
Dick ran on steadily in the soft snow, swinging his entire weight now on one foot, now on the other, passing the snow-shoes with the peculiar stiff swing of the ankle, throwing his heel strongly downward at each step in order to take advantage of the long snow-shoe tails' elasticity. At each step he sank deep into the feathery snow. The runner was forced to lift the toe of the shoe sharply, and the snow swirled past his ankles like foam. Behind him, in the trail thus broken and packed for them, trotted the dogs, their noses low, their jaws hanging. Sam drove with two long-lashed whips; and May-may-gwán, clinging to the gee-pole, guided the sledge.
In the absolute and dead stillness of a winter morning
before the dawn the little train went like ghosts in a mist of starlight. The
strange glimmering that seems at such an hour to disengage from the snow itself
served merely to establish the separate bulks of that which moved across it. The
heeding figure of the man breaking trail, his head low, his body moving in its
swing with the regularity of a pendulum; the four wolf-like dogs, also heeding
easily to what was not a great labour, the
Also the sounds of their travelling offered an analogous contrast. The dull crunch, crunch, crunch of the snow-shoes, the breathing of the living beings, the glither and creak of the sledge came to the ear blurred and confused; utterly unlike the cameo stillness of the winter dawn.
Ten minutes of the really violent exertion of breaking
trail warmed Dick through. His fingers ceased their protest. Each breath,
blowing to steam, turned almost immediately to frost. He threw back the hood of
his capote, for he knew that should it become wet from the moisture of his
breath, it would freeze his skin, and with his violent exertions exposure to the
air was nothing. In a short time his eyebrows and eyelashes became heavy with
ice. Then slowly the moisture of his body, working outward through the wool of
his clothing, frosted on
The driving here on the open river was comparatively easy. Except occasionally, the straight line could he adhered to. When it became necessary to avoid an obstruction, Sam gave the command loudly, addressing Billy as the lead dog.
"Hu, Billy!" he would cry.
And promptly Billy would turn to the right. Or:
"Chac, Billy!" he would cry.
And Billy would turn to the left, with always in mind the thought of the long whip to recall his duty to man.
Then the other dogs turned after him. Claire, for her steadiness and sense, had hen made sledge-dog. Always she watched sagaciously to pull the end of the sledge strongly away should the deviation not prove sufficient. Later, in the woods, when the trail should become difficult, much would depend on Claire's good sense.
Now shortly, far to the south, the sun rose. The gray world
at once became brilliant. The low frost
As always on the Long Trail, our travellers' spirits rose with the sun. Dick lengthened his stride, the dogs leaned to their collars, Sam threw back his shoulders, the girl swung the sledge tail with added vim. Now everything was warm and bright and beautiful. It was yet too early in the day for fatigue, and the first discomforts had passed.
But in a few moments Dick stopped. The sledge at once came to a halt. They rested.
At the end of ten minutes Sam stepped to the front, and
Dick took the dog-whip. The young man's muscles, still weak from their long
inaction, ached cruelly. Especially was this true of the ligaments at the
groin-used in lifting high the knee,-and the long muscles along the front of the
shin-bone,
The sun by now had climbed well above the horizon, but did little to mitigate the cold. As long as the violent movement was maintained a warm and grateful glow followed the circulation, but a pause, even of a few moments, brought the shivers. And always the feathery, clogging snow, offering slight resistance, it is true, but opposing that slight resistance continuously, so that at last it amounted to a great deal. A step taken meant no advance toward easier steps. . The treadmill of forest travel, changed only in outward form, again claimed their dogged patience.
At noon they paused in the shelter of the woods. The dogs were anchored by the simple expedient of turning the sledge on its side. A little fire of dried spruce and pine branches speedily melted snow in the kettle, and that as speedily boiled tea. Caribou steak, thawed, then cooked over the blaze, completed the meal. As soon as it was swallowed they were off again before the cold could mount them.
The inspiration and uplift of the morning were
Now the sun did indeed swing to the horizon, so that there remained scant daylight.
"Chac, Billy!" cried Sam, who again wielded the whip.
Slowly, wearily, the little party turned aside. In the grove of spruce the snow clung thick and heavy. A cold blackness enveloped them like a damp blanket. Wind, dying with the sun, shook the snow from the trees and cried mournfully in their tops. Gray settled on the landscape, palpable, real, extinguishing the world. It was the second dreadful hour of the day, the hour when the man, weary, discouraged, the sweat of travel freezing on him, must still address himself to the task of making a home in the wilderness.
Again the sledge was turned on its side. Dick and May-may-gwán removed their snow-shoes, and, using them as shovels, began vigorously to scrape and dig away the snow. Sam unstrained the axe and went for firewood. He cut it with little tentative strokes, for in the intense cold the steel was almost as brittle as glass.
Now a square of ground flanked by high snow walls was laid
bare. The two then stripped boughs
But at this point Sam returned with fuel. At once the three set about laying a fire nearly across the end of the cleared space opposite the sledge. In a moment a tiny flame cast the first wavering shadows against the darkness. Silently the inimical forces of the long day withdrew.
Shortly the camp was completed. Heifer the fire, impaled on
sticks, bung the frozen whitefish thawing out for the dogs. Each animal was to
receive two. The kettle boiled. Meat sizzled over the coals. A piece of ice,
whittled to a point, dripped drinking-water like a faucet. The snow-bank
ramparts were pink in the glow. They reflected appreciably the heat of the fire,
though they were not in the least affected by it, and remained flaky to the
touch. A comfortable sizzling and frying and bubbling and snapping filled the
little dome of firelight, beyond which was the wilderness. Weary with an immense
fatigue the three lay-back waiting for their
Almost immediately after supper the three turned in first
removing and hanging before the
As though they had awaited a signal, the dogs arose and
proceeded to investigate the camp. Nothing was too trivial to escape their
attention. Billy found a tiny bit of cooked meat. Promptly he was called on to
protect his discovery against a vigorous onslaught from the hound and the other
husky. Over and over the fighting dogs rolled, snorting and biting, awakening
the echoes of the forest, even trampling the sleepers, who, nevertheless, did
not stir. In the mean time, Claire, uninvolved, devoured the morsel. The trouble
gradually died down. One after another the animals dug themselves holes in the
snow, where they curled up, their bushy tails over their noses and
Gradually the fire died to coals, then filmed to ashes. Hand in hand the cold and the darkness invaded the camp. As the firelight faded, objects showed dimly, growing ever more distinct through the dying glow-the snow-laden bushes, the pointed trees against a steel sky of stars. The little,, artificial tumult of homely sound by which these men had created for the moment an illusion of life sank down under the unceasing pressure of the verities, so that the wilderness again flowed unobstructed through the forest aisles. With a last pop of coals the faint noise of the fire ceased. Then an even fainter noise slowly became audible, a crackling undertone as of silken banners rustling. And at once, splendid, barbaric, the mighty orgy of the winter-time aurora began.
In a day or two Dick was attacked by the fearful For the space of nearly ten weeks these people travelled
thus in the region of the Kabinikágam . Sometimes they made long marches;
sometimes they camped for the hunting; sometimes the great, fierce storms of the
north drove them to shelter, snowed them under, and passed on shrieking. The
wind opposed them. At first of little account, its very insistence gave it
value. Always the stinging snow whirling into the face; always the eyes watering
and smarting; always the unyielding opposition against which to bend the head;
always the rush of sound in the ears, -- a distraction against which the senses
had to struggle before they could take their needed cognizance of trail and of
game. An uneasiness was abroad with the wind, an uneasiness that infected the
men, the dogs, the forest creatures, the very insentient trees themselves. It
racked the nerves In it the inimical Spirit of the North Ever the days grew shorter. The sun swung above the
horizon, low to the south, and dipped back as though pulled by some invisible
string. Slanting through the trees it gave little cheer and no warmth. Early in
the afternoon it sank, silhouetting the pointed firs, casting across the snow
long, crimson shadows, which faded into gray. It was replaced by a moon, chill
and remote, dead as the white world on which it looked. In the great frost continually the trees were splitting
with loud, sudden reports. The cold had long since squeezed the last drops of
moisture from the atmosphere. It was metallic, clear, bard as ice, brilliant as
the stars, compressed with the freezing. The moon, the stars, the earth, the
very heavens glistened like polished steel. Frost lay on the land thick as a
coverlid. It hid the east like clouds of smoke. Snow remained unmelted two feet
from the camp-fire. And the fire alone saved these people from the enemy. If
Sam stooped for a moment to adjust his It was the land of ghosts. Except for the few hours at
midday these people moved in the gloom and shadow of a nether world. The long
twilight was succeeded by longer night, with its burnished stars, its dead moon,
its unearthly aurora. On the fresh snow were the tracks of creatures, but in the
flesh they glided Almost invisible. The ptarmigan's head eye alone betrayed him,
he had no outline. The ermine's black tip was the only indication of his
presence. Even the larger animals,-the caribou, the moose-had either turned a
dull gray, or were so rimed by the frost as to have lost all appearance of
solidity. It was ever a surprise to find White space, a feeling of littleness and impotence,
twilight gloom, burnished night, bitter cold, unreality, phantasmagoria, ghosts
like those which urged about AElig;neas, and finally clogging, white silence, --
these were the simple but dreadful elements of that journey which lasted,
without event, from the middle of November until the latter part of January.
Never in all that time was an hour of real comfort to he
anticipated. The labours of the day were succeeded by the shiverings of the
night. Exhaustion alone induced sleep; and the racking chill of early morning
alone broke it. The invariable diet was meat, tea, and pemmican. Besides the
resolution required for the day's journey and the Nor could they treat themselves in the weary succession of
days to an occasional visit with human beings. During the course of their
journey they investigated in turn three of the four trapping districts of the
Kabinikágam. But Sam's judgment advised that they should not show themselves to
the trappers. He argued that no sane man would look for winter posts at this
time of year, and it might "We'd be right back where we started. I think it would pay
us to go down to Brunswick House and get a new outfit. It's only about a week up
the Missináibie ." Then, led by inevitable association of ideas, "Wonder if
those Crees had a good, time? And I wonder if they've knocked our friend Ah-tek,
the Chippewa, on the head yet? He was a bad customer." "You better hope they have," replied Sam. "He's got it in
for you." Dick shrugged his shoulders and laughed easily. "That's all right," insisted the older man; "just the same,
an Injun never forgets and never fails to get even. You may think he's
forgotten, but he's layin' for you just the same," and then, hocus they happened
to be resting in the lea of a bank and the sun was at its highest for the day,
Sam went on to detail one example after another from his wide observation of the
tenacity with which an Indian pursues an obligation, whether of gratitude or
enmity. "They'll travel a thousand miles to get even," he concluded. "They'll
drop the most important "All right," agreed Dick, "I'll take care of him. Perhaps
I'd better get organised; he may he laying for me around the next bend." "I don't know what made us talk about it," said Sam, "but
funnier things have happened to me." Dick, with mock solicitude, loosened his knife. But Sam had suddenly become grave. "I believe in those
things," he said, a little fearfully. "They save a man sometimes, and sometimes
they help him to get what he wants. It's a Chippewa we're after; it's a Chippewa
we've hen talkin' about. They's something in it." "I don't know what you're driving at," said Dick. "I don't know," confessed Sam, "but I have a kind of a
bunch we won't have to go back to the Nipissing." He looked gropingly about,
without seeing, in the manner of an old man. "I hope your hunch is a good one,," replied Dick. "Well,
mush on!" The little cavalcade had made barely a dozen steps in
advance when Sam, who was leading, came to a dead halt. "Well, what do you make of that?" he asked. Across the way lay the trunk of a fallen tree. It had hen
entirely covered with snow, whose line ran clear and unbroken its entire length
except at one point, where it dipped to a shallow notch. "Well, what do you make of that?" Sam inquired again. "What?" asked Dick. Sam pointed to the shallow depression in the snow covering
the prostrate tree-trunk. Dick looked at his companion a little bewildered. "Why, you must know as well as I do," he said, "somebody
stepped on top of that log with snowshoes, and it's snowed since." "Yes, but who?" insisted Sam. "The trapper in this district, of course." "Sure; and let me tell you this, -- that trapper is the man
we're after. That's his trail."' "How do you know?" "I'm sure. I've got a hunch." Dick looked sceptical, then impressed. After all, you never
could tell what a man might not learn out in the Silent Places, and the old
woodsman had grown gray among woods secrets. "We'll follow the trail and find his camp," pursued Sam.
"You ain't going to ambush him?" inquired Dick. "What's the use? He's the last man we have to "All right," said Dick. They set themselves to following the trail. As the only
persistences of it through the last storm were to be found where the snow-shoes
had left deep notches on the fallen timber, this was not an easy matter. After a
time the affair was simplified by the dogs. Dick had hen breaking trail, but
paused a moment to tie his shoe. The team floundered ahead. After a moment it
discovered the half-packed snow of the old trail a foot below the newer surface,
and, finding it easier travel, held to it. Between the partial success at this,
and an occasional indication on the tops of fallen trees, the woodsmen managed
to keep the direction of the fore-runner's travel. Suddenly Dick stopped short in his tracks. "Look there!" he exclaimed. Heifer them was a place where a man had camped for the
night. "He's travelling!" cried Sam. This exploded the theory that the trail had hen made by the
Indian to whom the trapping rights of the district belonged. At once the two men
began to spy here and there eagerly, trying to reconstruct from the meagre
vestiges of occupation who the camper had hen and what he had hen doing. The condition of the fire corroborated what the condition
of the trail had indicated. Probably the man had passed about three days ago.
The nature of the fire proclaimed him an Indian, for it was small and round,
where a white man's is long and hot. He had no dogs; therefore his journey was
short, for, necessarily, he was carrying what he needed on his back. Neither on
the route nor here in camp were any indications that he had carried or was
examining traps; so the conclusion was that this trip was not merely one of the
long circles a trapper sometimes makes about the limits of his domain. What,
then, was the errand of a single man, travelling light and fast in the dead of
winter? "It's the man we're after," said Sam, with conviction.
"Look," called the girl from beneath the wide branches of a
spruce. They went. Beneath a lower limb, whose fan had protected it
from the falling snow, was the single clear print of a snow-shoe. "Hah!" cried Sam, in delight, and fell on his knees to
examine it. At the first glance he uttered another exclamation of pleasure, for,
though the shoe had hen of the Ojibway pattern, in certain modifications it
suggested a more northerly origin. The toes had hen craftily upturned, the tails
shortened, the webbing more closely woven. "It's Ojibway induced Sam, over his shoulder, "but the man
who made it has lived among the Crees. That fits Jingoss. Dick, it's the man
we're after! It was by now almost noon. They boiled tea at the old camp
site, and tightened their belts for a stern chase. That afternoon the head wind opposed them, exasperating,
tireless in its resistance, never lulling for a single instant. At the moment it
seemed more Nothing remained but to circle the shores to right and to
left until the place of egress was discovered. This meant long work and careful
work, for the lake was of considerable size. It meant that the afternoon would
go, and perhaps the day following, while the man whose footsteps they were
following would be drawing steadily away. It was agreed that May-may-gwán should remain with the
sledge, that Dick should circle to the right, and Sam to the left, and that all
three should watch each other carefully for a signal of discovery. But now Sam happened to glance at Mack, the wrinkle-nosed
bound. The sledge had hen pulled a short distance out on the ice. Mack,
alternately whining and sniffing, was trying to induce his comrades to turn
slanting to the left. "What's the matter with that dog?" he inquired on a sudden.
"Smells something; what's the difference? Let's get a move
on us," replied Dick, carelessly. "Hold on," ordered Sam. He rapidly changed the dog-harness in order to put Mack in
the lead. "Mush! Mush on!" he commanded. Immediately the hound, his nose low, uttered a deep,
hell-like note and struck on the diagonal across the lake. "Come on," said Sam; "he's got it." Across the white waste of the lake, against the bite of the
unobstructed wind, under the shelter of the bank opposite they ran at slightly
accelerated speed, then without pause into the forest on the other side. "Look," said the older woodsman, pointing ahead to a fallen
trunk. It was the trail. "That was handy," commented Dick, and promptly forgot about
it. But Sam treasured the incident for the future. And then, just before two o'clock, the wind did them a
great service. Down the long, straight lines At once Sam overturned the sledge, thus anchoring the dogs,
and Dick ran ahead to conceal himself. May-may-gwán offered a suggestion. "The dogs may bark too soon," said she. Instantly Sam was at work binding fast their jaws with
buckskin thongs. The girl assisted him. When the task was finished he ran
forward to join Dick, hidden in the bushes. Eight months of toil focussed in the moment. The faint
creaking of the shoes came ever louder down the wind. Once it paused. Dick
caught his breath. Had the traveller discovered anything suspicious? He glanced
behind him. "Where's the girl?" he hissed between his teeth. "Damn her,
she's warned him!" But almost with Sam's reply the creaking began again, and
after an instant of indetermination continued its course. Then suddenly the woodsmen, with a simultaneous movement,
raised their rifles, and with equal Of the three the Indian was the first to recover. "Bo' jou', bo' jou'," said he, calmly. Sam collected himself to a reply. Dick said nothing, but
fell behind, with his rifle across his arm. All marched on in silence to where
lay the dog-sledge, guarded by May-may-gwán. The Chippewa's keen eyes took in
every detail of the scene, the overturning of the sledge, the muzzling of the
dogs, the general nature of the equipment. If he made any deductions, he gave no
sign, nor did he evince any further astonishment at finding these men so far
north at such a time of year. Only, when he thought himself unobserved, he cast
a glance of peculiar intelligence at the girl, who, after a moment's hesitation,
returned it. The occasion was one of elaborate courtesy. Sam ordered tea
boiled, and offered his tobacco. Over the fire he ventured a more direct inquiry
than his customary policy would have advised. "My brother is a long journey from the Missináibie." The Chippewa assented. "Haukemah, then, hunts these districts." The Chippewa replied no. "My brother has left Haukemah." Again the Chippewa denied, but after enjoying for a moment
the baffling of the old man's intentions, he volunteered information. "The trapper of this district is my brother. I have visited
him." "It was a short visit for so long a journey. The trail is
but three days old." Ah-tek assented gravely. Evidently he cared very little
whether or not his explanation was accepted. "How many days to Winnipeg?" asked Sam. "I have never hen there," replied the Indian. "We have summered in the region of the Missináibie,"
proffered Sam. "Now we go to Winnipeg!, The Indian's inscrutable countenance gave no indication as
to whether or not he believed this. After a moment he knocked the ashes from his
pipe "This man," said she to the two, "is of my people. He
returns to them. I go with him." The Chippewa twisted his feet into his snowshoes, nodded to
the white men, and swung away on the back trail in the direction whence our
travellers had come. The girl, without more leave-taking, followed close at his
back. For an instant the crunch of shoes splintered the frosty air. Then they
rounded a bend. Silence fell swift as a hawk. "Well, I'll be damned!" ejaculated Dick at last. "Do you
think he was really up here visiting?" "No, of course not," replied Sam. "Don't you see -- -" "Then he came after the girl?" "Good God, no!" answered Sam. "He -- -- " "Then he was after me," interrupted Dick again with growing
excitement. "Why didn't you let me shoot him, Sam -- -- " "Will you shut up and listen to me?" demanded the old man,
impatiently. "If he'd wanted-you, "But why didn't he warn this Jingoss long ago, then?"
objected Dick. "Hocus we fooled him, just as we fooled all the Injuns. We
might be looking for winter posts, just as we said. And then if he came up here
and told Jingoss we were after him, when really we didn't know beans about
Jingoss and his steals, and then this Jingoss should skip the country and leave
an almighty good fur district all for nothing, that would be a nice healthy
favour to do for a man, wouldn't it! No, he had to be sure before he made any
moves. And he didn't get to be sure until he heard somehow from some one who saw
our trails that three people were travelling in the winter up "I believe you're right!" cried Dick. "Of course I'm right. And another thing; if that's the case
we're pretty close there. How many more trappers are there in this district?
Just one! And since this Chippewa is going back on his back trail within three
days after he made it, he couldn't have gone farther than that one man. And that
one man must be-" "Jingoss himself!" finished Dick. "Within a day and a half of us, anyway; probably much
closer," supplemented Sam. "It's as plain as a sledge-trail." "He's hen warned," Dick reminded him. But Sam, afire with the inspiration of inductive reasoning,
could see no objection there. "This Chippewa knew we were in the country," he argued,
"but he hadn't any idea we were so close. If he had, he wouldn't have hen so
foolish as to follow his own back track when he was going out. I don't know what
his ideas were, of course, but he was almighty surprised to see us here. He's
warned this Jingoss, not more than a day or so ago. But "Sam, you're a wonder," said Dick, admiringly. "I never
could have thought all that out." "If that idea's correct," went on Sam, "and the Chippewa's
just come from Jingoss, why we've got the Chippewa's trail to follow back,
haven't we?" "Sure!" agreed Dick, "all packed and broken." They righted the sledge and unbound the dogs' jaws. "Well, we got rid of the girl," said Dick, casually. "Damn
little fool. I didn't think she'd leave us that easy. She'd hen with us quite a
while." "Neither did I," admitted Sam; "but it's natural, "The Chippewa's a sort of public benefactor all round,"
said Dick. The dogs yawned prodigiously, stretching their jaws after
the severe muzzling. Sam began reflectively to undo the flaps of the sledge.
"Guess we'd better camp here," said he. "It's getting
pretty late and we're due for one hell of a tramp to-morrow." Some time during the night May-may-gwán rejoined them. Sam
was awakened by the demonstration of the dogs, at first hostile, then friendly
with recognition. He leaped to his feet, startled at the apparition of a human
figure. Dick sat up alert at once. The fire had almost died, but between the
glow of its embers and the light of the aurora sifted through the trees they
made her out. "Oh, for God's sake!" snarled Dick, and lay back
again in his blankets, but in a moment resumed his sitting position. "She made
her choice," he proffered vehemently, "make her stick to it! Make her stick to
it. She can't change her mind every other second like this, and we don't
need her!" But Sam, piling dry wood on the fire, looked in her face.
"Shut up, Dick," he commanded sharply. "Something in this."
The young man stared at his companion an enigmatical
instant, hesitating as to his reply. "Oh,, all right," he replied at last with ostentatious
indifference. "I don't give a damn. Don't sit up too late with the young lady.
Good night!" He disappeared beneath his coverings, plainly disgruntled, as, for
a greater or less period of time, he always was when even the least of his plans
or points of view required readjustment. Sam boiled tea, roasted a caribou steak, knelt and removed
the girl's damp foot-gear and replaced it with fresh. Then he held the cup to
her lips, cut the tough meat for her with his hunting-knife, even fed her as
though she were a child. He piled more wood on the fire, he wrapped about her
shoulders one of the blankets with the hare-skin lining. Finally, when nothing
more remained to be done, he lit his pipe and squatted on his heels close to
her, lending her mood the sympathy of human silence. She drank the tea, swallowed the food, permitted the change
of her foot-gear, bent her shoulders to the blanket, all without the appearance
of consciousness. The corners of her lips were bent firmly "My brothers seek the Ojibway, Jingoss. They will take him
to Conjuror's House. But Jingoss knows that my brothers come. He has hen told by
Ah-tek. He leaves the next sun. He is to travel to the west, to Peace River. Now
his camp is five hours to the north. I know where it is. Jingoss has three dogs.
He has much meat. He has no gun but the trade-gun. I have learned this. I come
to tell it to my brothers." "Why, May-may-gwán?" inquired Sam, gently. She turned on him a look of pride. "Have you thought I had left you for him?" she asked. "I
have learned these things." Sam uttered an exclamation of dismay. "What?" she queried with a slow surprise. "But he, the Chippewa," Sam pointed out, "now he knows of
our presence. He will aid Jingoss; he will warn him afresh to-night!" May-may-gwán was again rapt in sad but exalted "But -- -" insisted Sam. "I know," she replied, with conviction. Sam, troubled he knew not why, leaned forward to arrange
the fire. "How do you know, Little Sister?" he inquired, after some
hesitation. She answered by another weary gesture. Again Sam hesitated.
"Little Sister," said he, at last, "I am an old man. I have
seen many years pass. They have left me some wisdom. They have made my heart
good to those who are in trouble. If it was not to return to your own people,
then why did you go with Ah-tek this morning?" "That I might know what my brothers wished to know." "And you think he told you all these things truly?" doubted
Sam. She looked directly at him. "Little Father," said she slowly, "long has this man wanted
me to live in his wigwam. For that he joined ~ Haukemah's band; -- because I was
there. "But are you sure he spoke truth," objected Sam. "You have
never looked kindly on him. You left Haukemah's band to go with us. How could he
trust you?" She looked at him bravely. "Little Father," she replied, "there is a moment when man
and woman trust utterly, and when they say truly what lies in their hearts."
"Good God!" cried Sam, in English. "It was the only way," she answered the spirit of his
interjection. "I had known before only his forked tongue." "Why did you do this, girl? You had no right, no reason.
You should have consulted us." "Little Father," said she, "the people of your race are a
strange people. I do not understand them. An evil is done them, and they pass it
by; a good is done them, and they do not remember. With us it is different.
Always in our hearts dwell the good and the evil." "What good have we done to you?" asked Sam. "Jibiwánisi has looked into my heart," she replied, lapsing
into the Indian rhetoric of deep emotion. "He has looked into my heart, and in
the doorway he blots out the world. At the first I wanted to die when he would
not look on me with favour. Then I wanted to die when I thought I should never
possess him. Now it is enough that I am near him, that I lay his fire, and cook
his tea and caribou, that I follow his trail, that I am ready when he needs me,
that I can raise my eyes and see him breaking the trail. For when I look up at
him the sun breaks out, and the snow shines, and there is a light under the
trees. And 'when I think of-raising my eyes, and be not there, nor anywhere
near, then my heart freezes, Little Father, freezes with loneliness." Abruptly she arose, casting aside the blanket and
stretching her anus rigid above her head. Then with equal abruptness she
stooped, caught up her bedding, spread it out, and lay down stolidly to rest,
turning her back to both the white men. But Sam remained crouched by the fire until the morning
hour of waking, staring with troubled eyes. Later in the morning Dick attempted some remark on the
subject of the girl's presence. At once Sam whirled on him with a gust of
passion utterly unlike his ordinary deliberate and even habit. "Shut your damned mouth!" he fairly shouted. Dick whistled in what he thought was a new enlightenment,
and followed literally the other's vigorous advice. Not a syllable did he utter
for an hour, by which time the sun had risen. Then he stopped and pointed to a
fresh trail converging into that they were following. The prints of two pairs of snow-shoes joined; those of one
returned. Sam gasped. Dick looked ironical. The interpretation was
plain without the need of words. The Chippewa and the girl, although they had
started to the southeast, had made a long detour in order again to reach
Jingoss. These two pairs of snowshoe tracks marked where they had considered it
"Looks as if they'd fooled you, and fooled you good," said
Dick, cheerfully. For a single instant doubt drowned Sam's faith in his own
insight and in human nature. "Dick," said he, quietly, "raise your eyes." Not five rods farther on the trail the two had camped for
the night. Evidently Ah-tek had discovered his detour to have lasted out the
day, and, having satisfied himself that his and his friend's enemies were not
ahead of him, he had called a halt. The snow had hen scraped away, the little
fire built, the ground strewn with boughs. So far the indications were plain and
to be read at a glance. But upright in the snow were two snow-shoes, and tumbled
on the ground was bedding. Instantly the two men leaped forward. May-may-gwán, her
face stolid and expressionless, but her eyes glowing, stood straight and
motionless by The silence of the grave lay over the white world. Deep in
the forest a tree detonated with the frost. There by the cold last night's camp
the four human figures posed, motionless as a wind that has died. Only the dogs,
lolling, stretching, sending the warm steam of their breathing into the dead
air, seemed to stand for the world of life, and the world of sentient creatures.
And yet their very presence, unobtrusive in the forest shadows, by contrast
thrust farther these others into the land of phantoms and of ghosts. Then quietly, as with one consent, the three living ones
turned away. The older woodsman stepped into the trail, leading the way for the
dogs; the younger woodsman swung in behind at the gee-pole; the girl followed.
Once more, slowly, as though reluctant, the forest trees resumed their silent
progress past those three toiling in the treadmill of the days. The camp dropped
back; it con Each of the three seemed wrapped in the splendid isolation
of his own dream. They strode on sightless, like somnambulists. Only
mechanically they kept the trail, and why they did so they could not have told.
No coherent thoughts passed through their brains. But always the trees,
frost-rimed, drifted past like phantoms; always the occult influences of the
North loomed large on their horizon like mirages, dwindled in the actuality, but
threatened again in the bigness of mystery when they had passed. The North was
near, threatening, driving the terror of her tragedy home to the hearts of these
staring mechanical plodders, who now travelled they knew not why, farther and
farther into the depths of dread. . But the dogs stopped, and Billy, the leader, Heifer them was another camp, one that had hen long used. A
conical tepee or wigwam, a wide space cleared of snow, much debris, racks and
scaffolds for the accommodation of supplies, all these attested long occupancy.
Sam jerked the cover from his rifle, and cast a hasty
glance at the nipple to see if it was capped. Dick jumped forward and snatched
aside the 'opening into the wigwam. "Not at home!" said he. "Gone," corrected Sam, pointing to a fresh trail beyond.
At once the two men turned their attention to this. After
some difficulty they established the fact of a three-dog team. Testing the
consistency of the snow they proved a heavy load on the toboggan. "I'm afraid that means he's gone for good," said Sam. A further examination of camp corroborated this. The teepee
had hen made double, with the space between the two walls stuffed with moss, so
evidently it had hen built as permanent winter quarters. The fact of its
desertion at this time of year confirmed the reasoning as to the identity of its
occupant and the fact of his having hen warned by the dead Chippewa. Skulls of
animals indicated a fairly prosperous fur season. But the skulls of animals, a
broken knife, a pile of balsam-boughs, and the deserted wigwam were all that
remained. Jingoss had taken with him his traps, his pelts, his supplies. "That's a good thing," concluded Sam, "a mighty good thing.
It shows he ain't much scared. He don't suspect we're anywhere's near him; only
that it ain't very healthy to spend the winter in this part of the country. If
he'd thought we was close, he wouldn't have lugged along a lot of plunder; he'd
be flying mighty light." "That's right," agreed Dick. "And in that case he isn't travelling very fast. We'll soon
catch up." "He only left this morning," supplemented Without wasting further attention, they set out in pursuit.
The girl followed. Dick turned to her. "I think we shall catch him very soon," said he., in
Ojibway. The girl's face brightened and her eyes filled. The simple
words admitted her. to confidence, implied that she, too, had her share in the
undertaking, her interest in its outcome. She stepped for ward with winged feet
of gladness. Luckily a light wind had sprung up against them. They
proceeded as quietly and as swiftly as they could. In a short time they came to
a spot where Jingoss had boiled tea. This indicated that he must have started
late in the morning to have accomplished only so short a distance before noon.
The trail, too, became fresher. I Billy, the regular lead dog, on this occasion
occupied his official position ahead, although, as has hen pointed out, he was
sometimes alternated with the hound, who now ran just behind him. Third trotted
Wolf, a strong heist, but a stupid; then Claire, at the sledge, sagacious,
alert, ready to turn The long, weird sound struck against the silence with the
impact of a blow. Nothing more undesirable Dick whirled with an exclamation, throwing down and back
the lever of his Winchester, his face suffused, his eye angry. "Damnation!" exclaimed Bolton, anticipating his intention,
and springing forward in time to strike up the muzzle of the rifle, though not
soon enough to prevent the shot. Against the snow, plastered on a distant tree, the bullet
hit, scattering the fine powder; then ricochetted, shrieking with increasing joy
as it mounted the upper air. After it, as though released by its passage from
the spell of the great frost, trooped the voices and echoes of the wilderness.
In the still-air such a racket would carry miles. Sam looked from the man to the dog. "Well, between the two of you!" said he. Dick sprang forward, lashing the team with his whip. "After him!" he shouted. They ran in a swirl of light snow. In a very few moments
they came to a bundle of pelts, a little pile of traps, the unnecessary
impediments discarded by the man they pursued. So near had they hen to a
capture. Sam, out of breath, peremptorily called a halt. "Hold on!" he commanded. "Take it easy. We can't catch him
like this. He's travelling light, and he's one man, and he has a fresh team.
He'll pull away from us too easy, and leave us with worn-out dogs." The old man
sat and deliberately filled his pipe. Dick fumed up and down, chafing at the delay, convinced
that something should be done immediately, but at a loss to tell what it should
be. "What'll we-do, then?" he asked, after a little. "He leaves a trail, don't he?" inquired Sam. "We must
follow it." "But what good-how can we ever catch up?" "We've got to throw away our traps and extra duffle. We've
got to travel as fast as we can without wearing ourselves out. He may try to go
too fast, and so we may wear him down. It's our only show, anyway. If we lose
him now, we'll "How if it snows hard? It's getting toward spring storms."
"If it snows hard-well -- " The old man fell silent,
puffing away at his pipe. "One thing I want you to understand," he continued,
looking up with a sudden sternness, "don't you ever take it on yourself to shoot
that gun again. We're to take that man alive. The noise of the shot to-day was a
serious thing; it gave Jingoss warning, and perhaps spoiled our chance to
surprise him. But he might have heard us anyway. Let that go. But if you'd have
killed that hound as you started out to do, you'd have done more harm than your
fool head could straighten out in a lifetime. That hound -- -why -- -he's the
best thing we've got. I'd-I'd almost rather lose our rifles than him -- -- " he
trailed off again into rumination. Dick, sobered as he always was when his companion took this
tone, inquired why, but received no answer. After a moment Sam began to sort the
contents of the sledge, casting aside all but the necessities. "What's the plan?" Dick ventured. "To follow." "How long do you think it will be before we catch him?"
"God knows." The dogs leaned into their harness, almost falling forward
at the unexpected lightness of the load. Again the little company moved at
measured gait. For ten minutes nothing was said. Then Dick: "Sam," he said, "I think we have just about as much chance
as a snowball in hell." "So do I," agreed the old woodsman, soberly. They took up the trail methodically, as though no hurry
existed. At the usual time of the evening they camped. Dick was for pushing on
an extra hour or so, announcing himself not in the least tired, and the dogs
fresh, but Sam would have none of it. "It's going to be a long, hard pull," he said. "We're not
going to catch up with him to-day, or to-morrow, or next day. It ain't a
question of whether you're tired or the dogs are fresh to-night; it's a question
of how you're going to be a month from now." "We won't be able to follow him a month,," objected Dick.
"Why?" "It'll snow, and then we'll lose th' trail. The spring
snows can't be far off now. They'll cover it a foot deep." "Mebbe," agreed Sam, inconclusively. "Besides," pursued Dick, "he'll be with his own Whereupon Sam looked a little troubled, for this, in his
mind, was the chief menace to their success. If Jingoss turned south to the Lake
Superior country, he could lose himself among the Ojibways of that region; and,
if all remained true to him, the white men would never again be able to get
trace of him. If all remained true to him:-on the chance of that Sam
was staking his faith. The Honourable the Hudson's Bay Company has hen
established a great many years; it has always treated its Indians justly; it
enjoys a tremendous prestige for infallibility. The bonds of race are strong,
but the probabilities were good that in the tribes with whom Jingoss would be
forced to seek sanctuary would be some members whose loyalty to the Company
would out-balance the rather shadowy obligation to a man they had never seen
before. Jingoss might be betrayed. The chances of it were fairly good. Sam
Bolton knew that the Indian must be perfectly aware of this, and doubted if he
would take the risk. A single man with three dogs ought to run away from three
pursuers with only four. Therefore, He did not know where the Indian would be likely to lead
him. The checker-board of the wilderness lay open. As he had before reflected,
it would be only too easy for Jingoss to keep between himself and his pursuers
the width of the game. The Northwest was wide; the plains great; the Rocky
Mountains lofty and full of hiding-places, -- it seemed likely he would turn
west. Or the deep forests of the other coast offered unlimited opportunities of
concealment,-the east might well be his choice. It did not matter particularly.
Into either it would not be difficult to follow; and Sam hoped in either to gain
a sight of his prize before the snow melted. The Indian, however, after the preliminary twists and turns
of indecision, turned due north. For nearly a week Sam thought this must be a
ruse, or a cast by which to gain some route known to Jingoss. But the forests
began to dwindle; the muskegs to open. The Land of Little Sticks could not be
far distant, and beyond them was the Barren Grounds. As soon as Sam discovered this, he called Dick's attention
to it. "We're in for it," said he, "he's going to take us out on
the Barren Grounds and lose us." "if he can," supplemented Dick. "Yes, if he can," agreed Sam. After a moment he went on,
pursuing his train of thought aloud, as was his habit. "He's thinking he has more grub than we have; "That's all right; he's our Injun," replied Dick, voicing
the instinct of race superiority which, after all, does often seem to accomplish
the impossible. "It's too bad we have the girl with us.." he added, after a
moment. "Yes, it is," agreed Sam. Yet it was most significant that
now it occurred to neither of them that she might be abandoned. The daily supply of provisions was immediately cut to a
minimum, and almost at once they felt the effects. The north demands hard work
and the greatest resisting power of the vitality; the vitality calls on the body
for fuel; and the body in turn insists on food. It is astonishing to see what
quantities of nourishment can he absorbed without apparent effect. And when the
food is denied, but the vitality is still called upon, it is equally astonishing
to see how quickly it takes its revenge. Our travellers Sam Bolton saw to it. His was not only the bodily labour,
but the mental anxiety. His attitude was the tenseness of a helmsman in a heavy
wind, quivering to the faintest indication, ready to give her all she will hear,
but equally ready to luff this side of disaster. Only his equable mind could
have resisted an almost overpowering impulse toward sporadic bursts of speed or
lengthening of hours. He had much of this to repress in Dick. But on the other
band he watched zealously against the needless waste of even a single second.
Every expedient his long woods life or his native ingenuity suggested he applied
at once to the problem of the greatest speed, the least expenditure of energy to
a given end., the smallest consumption of food compatible with the preservation
of strength. The legitimate travel of a day might amount to twenty or thirty
miles. Sam added an extra five or ten to them. And that five or ten he drew from
the living tissues of his very life. They were a creation, made from nothing,
given a body by the individual genius of the At first, as may be gathered, the advantages of the game
seemed to be strongly in the Indian's favour. The food supply, the
transportation facilities, and advantage of position in case game should be
encountered were all his. Against him he need count seriously only the offset of
dogged Anglo-Saxon grit. But as the travel defined itself, certain compensations
made themselves evident. Direct warfare was impossible to him. He possessed only a
single-barrelled muzzle-loading gun of no great efficiency. In case of ambush he
might, with luck, be able to kill one of his pursuers, but he would indubitably
be captured by the other. He would be unable to approach them at night hocus of
their dogs. His dog-team was stronger, but with it he had to break trail, which
the others could utilise without further effort. Even should his position in
advance bring him on game, without great luck, he would he unable to kill it,
for he was alone and could not leave his team for long. And his very swiftness
in itself would react against him, for he These considerations the white men at first could not see;
and so, logically, they were more encouraged by them when at last they did
appear. And then in turn, by natural reaction when the glow had died, the great
discouragement of the barren places fell on their spirits. They plodded, seeing
no further than their daily necessity of travel. They plodded, their eyes fixed
to the trail, which led always on toward the pole star, undeviating, as a deer
flies in a straight line hoping to shake off the wolves. The dense forest growth was succeeded in time by the low
spruce and poplar thickets; these in turn by the open reaches planted like a
park with the pointed firs. Then came the Land of Little Sticks, and so on out
into the vast whiteness of the true North, where the trees are liliputian and
the spaces gigantic beyond the measures of the earth; where living things
dwindle to the significance of black specks on a limitless field of white, and
the aurora crackles and shoots and spreads and threatens Eke a great inimical
and magnificent spirit. The tendency seemed toward a mighty simplification, as
though the complexities of the world were reverting toward their original
philosophic unity. The complex summer had become simple autumn; the autumn,
winter; now the very winter itself was apparently losing its differentiations of
bushes and trees, hills and valleys, streams and living things. The growths were
disappearing; the hills were flattening toward the great northern wastes; the
rare creatures inhabiting these barrens took on the colour of their environment.
The ptarmigan matched the snow, -- the fox, -- the ermine. They moved either
invisible or as ghosts. Little by little such dwindling of the materials for
diverse observation, in alliance with the too severe labour and the starving,
brought about a strange concentration of ideas. The inner world seemed to
undergo the same process of simplification as the outer. Extraneous
considerations disappeared. The entire cosmos of experience came to be an
expanse of white, themselves, and the Trail. These three reacted one on the
other, and outside of them there was no reaction. In the expanse of white was no food: their food At night they sank down, felled by the sheer burden of
weariness, and no matter bow exhausted they might be the Trail continued,
springing on with the same apparently tireless energy toward its unknown goal in
the North. Gradually they lost sight of the ultimate object of their quest. It
became obscured by the immediate object, and that was the following of the
Trail. They forgot that a man had made it, or if for a moment it did occur to
them that it was the product of some agency outside of and above itself, that
agent loomed vaguely as a mysterious, extra-human power, like the winds or the
cold or the great Wilderness itself. It did not seem possible that he could feel
the need for food, for rest, that ever his vital forces could wane. In the north
was starvation for them, a starvation to which they drew ever nearer day by day,
but irresistibly the notion obsessed them that this forerunner, the forerunner
of the Trail, proved no such material necessities, that he drew his sustenance
from his environment in some mysterious manner not to he understood. Al Over the land lay silence. The sea has its undertone on the
stillest nights; the woods are quiet with an hundred lesser noises; but here was
absolute, terrifying, smothering silence, -- the suspension of all sound, even
the least, -- looming like a threatening cloud larger and more dreadful above
the cowering imagination. The human soul demanded to shriek aloud in order to
preserve its sanity, and yet a whisper uttered over against the heavy portent of
this universal stillness seemed a profanation that left the spirit crouched
beneath a fear of retribution. And then suddenly the aurora, the only privileged
voice, would crackle like a silken banner. At first the world in the vastness of its spaces seemed to
become bigger and bigger. Again abruptly it resumed its normal proportions, but
Always they ate pemmican. Of this there remained a fairly
plentiful supply, but the dog meat was running low. It was essential that the
team be well fed. Dick or Sam often travelled the entire day a quarter of a mile
one side or the other, hoping thus to encounter game, but without much success.
A fox or so, a few ptarmigan, that was all. These they saved for the dogs. Three
times a day they boiled tea and devoured the little square of pemmican. It did
not supply the bulk their digestive organs needed, and became in time almost
nauseatingly unpalatable, but it nourished. That, after all, was the main thing.
The privation carved the flesh from their muscles, carved the muscles themselves
to leanness. But in spite of the best they could do, the dog The journey extended over a month. The last three weeks of
it were starvation. At first this meant merely discomfort and the hearing of a
certain amount of pain. Later it became acute suffering. Later still it
developed into a necessity for proving what virtue resided in the bottom of
these men's souls. I Perforce now they must make a choice of what ideas they
would keep. Some things must be given up, just as some things had to he
discarded when they had lightened the sledge. All the lesser lumber had long
since gone. Certain bigger things still remained. They held grimly to the idea of catching the Indian. Their
natural love of life held tenaciously to a hope of return. An equally natural
hope clung to the ridiculous idea that the impossible might happen, that the
needle should drop from the haystack, that the caribou might spring into their
view from "Dick," said Bolton, solemnly, "we've mighty little
pemmican left. If we turn around now, it'll just about get us back to the woods.
If we go on farther, we'll have to run into more food, or we'll never get out."
"I knew it," replied Dick. "Well ?" Dick looked at him astonished. "Well, what?" he inquired.
"Shall we give it up?" "Give it up!" cried the young man. "Of course not; what you
thinking of?" "There's the caribou," suggested Sam, doubtfully; "or maybe
Jingoss has more grub than he's going to need. It's a slim chance." They still further reduced the ration of pemmican. The
malnutrition began to play them tricks. It dizzied their brains, swarmed the
vastness with hordes of little, dancing black specks like mosquitoes. In the
morning every muscle of their bodies was stiffened to the consistency of
rawhide, and the movements necessary to loosen the fibres became an They began to stumble over nothing; occasionally to fall.
In this was added effort, but more particularly added annoyance. They had
continually to watch their footsteps. The walking was no longer involuntary, but
they had definitely to think of each movement necessary to the step, and this
gave them a further reason for preoccupation, for concentration. Dick's
sullenness returned, more terrible than in the summer. He went forward with his
head down, refusing to take notice of anything. He walked: that was to him the
whole of existence. Once reverting analogously to his grievance of that time,
he mentioned the girl, saying briefly that soon they must all die, and it was
better that she die now. Perhaps her share of the pemmican would bring them to
their quarry. . The idea of return-not abandoned, but persistently ignored
In Dick's case even the hope of coming to grapples was
fading. He somehow had little faith in his enemy. The man was too intangible,
too difficult to gauge. Dick had not caught a glimpse of the Indian since the
pursuit began. The young man realised perfectly his own exhaustion; but he had
no means of knowing whether or not the Indian was tiring. His faith waned,
though his determination did not. Unconsciously he substituted this monomania of
pursuit. It took the place of the faith he felt slipping from him-the faith that
ever he would see the fata morgana luring him out into the Silent Places. Soon it became necessary to kill another dog. Dick, with a
remnant of his old feeling, pleaded for the life of Billy, his pet. Sam would
not entertain for a moment the destruction of the hound. They heat back the dogs, and took the puppies. These they
killed and dressed. Thus Claire's life was bought for her by the sacrifice of
her progeny. But even that was a temporary respite. She fell in her
turn, and was devoured, to the last scrap of her hide. Dick again intervened to
save Billy, but, failed. Sam issued his orders the more peremptorily as he felt
his strength waning, and realised the necessity of economising every ounce of
it, even to that required in the arguing of expedients. Dick yielded with slight
resistance, as he had yielded in the case of the girl. All matters but the one
were rapidly becoming unimportant to him. That concentration At last there was left but the one dog, Mack, the hound,
with the wrinkled face and the long, hanging ears. He developed unexpected
endurance and an entire willingness, pulling strongly on the sledge, waiting in
patience for his scanty meal, searching the faces of his, masters with his wise
brown eyes, dumbly sympathetic in a trouble whose entirety he could not
understand. The two men took turns in harnessing themselves to the
sledge with Mark. The girl followed at the gee-pole. May-may-gwán showed the endurance of a man. She made no
complaint. Always she followed, and followed with her mind alert. Where Dick
shut obstinately his faculties within the bare necessity of travel, she and her
other companion were continually alive to the possibilities of expedient. This
Starvation gained on them. Perceptibly their strength was
waning. Dick wanted to kill the other dog. His argument was plausible. The
toboggan was now very light. The men could draw it. They would have the dog-meat
to recruit their strength. Sam shook his head. Dick insisted. He even threatened
force. But then the woodsman roused his old-time spirit and fairly heat the
young man into submission by the vehemence of his anger. The effort left him
exhausted. He sank back into himself, and refused, in the apathy of weariness,
to give any explanation. By now it was the first week in March. The weather began to
assume a new aspect. During the winter months it had not snowed, for the
moisture had all hen squeezed from the air, leaving it crisp, brilliant,
sparkling. Now the sun, long hesitant, at last began to swing up the sky. Far
south the warmer airs of spring were awakening the Kansas fields. Here in the
barren country the steel sky melted to a haze. During the day, when the sun was
up, the surface of the snow even softened a little, and a very perceptible
warmth allowed them to rest, their parkas thrown back, without discomfort. The men noticed this, and knew it as the precursor of the
spring snow-fall. Dick grew desperately uneasy, desperately anxious to push on,
to catch up before the complete obliteration of the trail, when his resources
would perforce run out for lack of an object to which to apply them. He knew
perfectly well that this must be what the Indian had The expected happened late one afternoon. All day the haze
had thickened, until at last, without definite transition, it had become a cloud
covering the entire sky. Then it had snowed. The great, clogging flakes sifted
down gently, ziz-zagging through the air like so many pieces of paper. They
impacted softly against the world, standing away from each other and from the
surface on which they alighted by the full stretch of their crystal arms. In an
hour three inches had fallen. The hollows and depressions were filling to the
level; the Trail was growing indistinct. Dick watched from the shelter of a growing despair. Never
had he felt so helpless. This thing was so simple, yet so effective; and nothing
he could do would nullify its results. As sometimes in a crisis a man will give
his whole attention to a trivial thing, so Dick fastened his gaze on a single
snowshoe track on the edge of a covered bowlder. By it The storm lightened and faint streaks of light shot through
the clouds. "Well, let's he moving," said Sam. "Moving where?" demanded Dick, bitterly. But the old man led forward the bound "Remember the lake where we lost the track of that
Chippewa?" he inquired. "Well, a foot of light snow is nothing. Mush on, Mack!"
The hound sniffed deep, filling his nostrils with the
feather snow, which promptly he sneezed out. Then he swung off easily on his
little dog-trot, never at fault, never hesitant, picking up the turns and
twistings of the Indian's newer purpose as surely as a mind-reader the concealed
pin. For Jingoss had hen awaiting eagerly this fall of snow, as
this immediate change of direction showed. He was sure that now they could no
longer At just what moment he discovered that he was still
followed it was impossible to determine. But very shortly a certain indecision
could he read in the signs of his journeying. He turned to the south, changed
his mind, doubled on his tracks like a rabbit, finally, his purpose decided, he
shot away on the direct line again for the frozen reaches of desolation in the
north. The moment's flicker of encouragement lighted by the
success of the dog, fell again to blackness as the three faced further incursion
into the land of starvation. They had allowed themselves for a moment to believe
that the Indian might now have reached the limit of his intention; that now he
might turn toward a chance at least of life. But this showed that his purpose,
or obstinacy or madness remained unchanged, and this newer proof indicated that
it possessed a depth of de From time to time, thereafter, the snow fell. On the mere
fact of their persistence it had little effect; but it clogged their snow-shoes,
it wore them down. A twig tripped them; and the efforts of all three were needed
to aid one to rise. A dozen steps were all they could accomplish without rest; a
dozen short, stumbling steps that were, nevertheless, so many mile-posts in the
progress to their final exhaustion. When one fell, he lay huddled, unable at
once to rally his vital forces to attempt the exertion of regaining his feet.
The day's journey was pitifully short, pitifully inadequate to the imperious
demands of that onward-leading Trail, and yet each day's journey lessened the
always desperate As his strength ebbed Dick Herron's energies concentrated
more and more to his monomania of pursuit. The round, full curves of his body
had shrunken to angles, the fresh tints of his skin had turned to leather, the
flesh of his cheeks had sunken, his teeth showed in the drawing back of his
lips. All these signs spoke of exhaustion and of ultimate collapse. But as the
case grew more desperate, he seemed to discover in some unsuspected quality of
his spirit, or perhaps merely of his youth, a fitful and wonderful power. He
collapsed from weakness, to be sure; but in a moment his iron will, apparently
angered to incandescence, got him to his feet and on his way with an excess of
energy. He helped the others. He urged the dog. And then slowly the fictitious
vigour ran out. The light, the red, terrible glare of madness, faded from his
eye; Gradually in the transition period between the darkness of
winter and the coming of spring the world took on an unearthly aspect. It became
an inferno' of light without corresponding warmth, of blinding, flaring,
intolerable light reflected from the snow. It became luminous, as though the
ghosts of the ancient days of incandescence had revisited the calendar. It was
raw, new, huge, uncouth, embryonic, adapted to the production of tremendous
monsters, unfit for the habitation of tiny men with delicate physical and mental
adjustments. Only to the mind of a Caliban could it be other than terrifying.
Things grew to a size out of all reason. The horizon was infinitely remote, lost
in snow-mists, fearful with the large-blown mirages of little things. Strange
and indeterminate somethings menaced on all sides, menaced in greater and
greater threat, until with actual proximity they mysteriously disappeared,
leaving behind them as a blind to conceal their real identity such small matters
as a stunted shrub, an exposed rock, the shadow of a wind-rift on the snow. And
low in the sky danced The great light, the dazzle, the glitter, the incessant
movement of the mirages, the shining of the mock suns, all these created an
impression of heat, of light, of the pleasantness of a warmed land. Yet still
persisted, only modified by the sun, the cold of the northern winter. And this
denial of appearance sufficed to render unreal all the round globe, so that at
any moment the eye anticipated its crumbling like a dust apple, with its cold,
its vastness, its emptiness, its hunger, its indecently many suns, leaving the
human soul in the abyss of space. The North threw over them the power of her
spell, so that to them the step from life to death seemed a short, an easy, a
natural one to take. Nevertheless their souls made struggle, as did their
bodies. They fought down the feeling of illusion just as they had fought down
the feelings of hunger, of weariness, and of cold. Sam fashioned rough wooden
spectacles with tiny transverse slits through which to look, and these they
assumed Now it came to the point where they could no longer afford
to eat their pemmican. They boiled it, along with strips of the rawhide
dog-harness, and drank the soup. It sufficed not at all to appease the pain of
their hunger, nor appreciably did it give them strength, but somehow it fed the
vital spark. They endured fearful cramps. So far had their faculties lost vigour
that only by a distinct effort of the will could they focus their eyes to the
examination of any object. Their obsessions of mind were now two. They followed the
Trail; they looked for the caribou herds. After a time the improbability became
tenuous. They actually expected the impossible, felt And the Trail! Not the freezing nor the starvation nor the
illusion were so potent in the deeper discouragement of the spirit as that.
Always it led on. They could see it; they could see its direction; that was all.
Tireless it ran on and on and on. For all they knew the Indian, hearty and
confident in his wilderness strength, might be watching them at every moment,
laughing at the feeble thirty feet their pain bought them, gliding on swiftly in
an hour farther than they could travel in a day. This possibility persisted
until, in their minds, it became the fact. They endowed their enemy with all
they themselves lacked; with strength, with swiftness, with the sustenance of
life. Yet never for a moment did it occur to them to abandon the pursuit. Sam was growing uncertain in his movements; Dick was
plainly going mad. The girl followed; that was all one could say, for whatever
suffering And then late one afternoon they came to a bloody spot on
the snow. Here Jingoss had killed. Here he had found what had hen denied them,
what they needed so sorely. The North was on his side. He now had meat in
plenty, and meat meant strength, and strength meant swiftness, and swiftness
meant the safety of this world for him and the certainty of the next for them.
The tenuous hope that had persisted through all the psychological pressure the
North had brought to hear, the hope that they had not even acknowledged to
themselves, the hope based merely on the circumstance that they did not
know, was routed by this one fact. Now they could no longer shelter
behind the flimsy screen of an ignorance of their enemy's condition. They knew.
The most profound discouragement descended on them. But even yet they did not yield to the great antagonist.
The strength of meat lacked them: the strength of despair remained. A rapid dash
might bring them to grapples. And somewhere in the depths of their indomitable
spirits, somewhere in Stars glittered like sparks on polished steel. On the
northwest wind swooped the chill of the winter's end, and in that chill was the
breath of the North. Sam Bolton, crushed by the weight of a great exhaustion,
recognised the familiar menace, and raised his head, gazing long from glazed
eyes out into the Silent Places. "Not yet!" he said aloud. But the next morning he was unable to rise. The last drop
of his vitality had run out. At length the connection between his will and his
body had hen severed, so that the latter was no longer under his command. After
the first moment he knew well enough what this meant, knew that here he must
die, here he must lie crushed finally under the sheer weight of his antagonist.
It was as though she, the great North, had heard his defiant words the night
before, and thus proved to him their emptiness. And yet the last reserves of the old man's purpose were not
yet destroyed. Here he must remain, it is true, but still he possessed next his
hand the human weapon he had carried so far and so painfully by the exercise of
his ingenuity and the genius of his long experience. He had staggered under its
burden as far as he could; now was the moment for launching it. He called the
young man to him. "I cannot go on," said he, in gasps. "Leave the sledge.
Take the dog. Do not lose him. Travel fast. You must get him by to-morrow night.
Sleep some to-night. Travel fast." Dick nodded. He understood. Already the scarlet hate, the
dogged mad glare of a set purpose was glazing his vision. It was the sprint at
the end of the race. He need no longer save himself. He took a single blanket and the little shreds of dog meat
that remained. Some of the pemmican, a mere scrap, he left with Sam. Mack he
held in leash. "I will live five days," went on Sam, "perhaps six. I will
try to live. If you should come back in that time, -- -with meat-the caribou-you
understand." His voice trailed away, unwilling to mock the face of probability
with such a chance. Dick nodded again. He had nothing to say. He wrung the old
man's hand and turned away. Mack thrust his nose forward. They started. Sam, left alone, rolled himself again in his thick
coverings under the snow, which would protect him from the night cold. There he
would lie absolutely motionless, hoarding the drops of his life. From When Dick stepped out on the trail, May-may-gwán followed.
After a moment he took cognisance of the crunch of her snow-shoes behind him. He
turned and curtly ordered her back. She persisted. Again he turned, his face
nervous with all the strength he had summoned for the final effort, shouting at
her hoarsely, laying on her the anger of his command. She seemed not to hear
him. He raised his fist and heat her, hitting her again and again, finally
reaching her face. She went down silently, without even a moan. But when he
stared back again, after the next dozen steps, she had risen and was still
tottering on along the Trail. He threw his hands up with a gesture of abandonment. Then
without a word, grim and terrible, he put his head down and started. He never looked back. Madness held him. Finesse, saving,
the crafty utilising of small advantages The next day Dick was as wonderful. A man strong in meat
could not have travelled so. The light snow whirled behind him in a cloud. The
wind of his going strained the capote from his emaciated face. So, in the nature
of the man, he would go until the end. Then he would give out all at once, would
fall from full life to complete dissolution of forces. Behind him, pitifully
remote, pitifully bent, struggling futilely, obsessed by a mania as strong as
that of these madmen who persisted even beyond the end of all things, was the
figure of the girl. She could not stand upright, she could not breathe, yet she,
too, followed the Trail, that dread All about him the landscape swayed like mist; the suns
danced indecent revel; specks and blotches, the beginning of snow-blindness,
swam grotesquely projected into a world less real than they. Living things moved
everywhere. Ordinarily the man paid no attention to them, knowing them for what
they, were, but once, warned by some deep and subtle instinct, he made the
effort to clear his vision and saw a fox. By another miracle he killed it. The
carcass he divided with his dog. He gave none of it to the girl. I By evening of the second day he had not yet overtaken his
quarry. But the trail was evidently fresher, and the fox's meat gave him another
chance. He slept, as before, with Mack the hound; and, as before, May-may-gwán
crept in hours later to fall exhausted. And over the three figures, lying as dead, the The next morning was the third day. There was no delay in
getting started. All Dick had to do was to roll his blanket. He whirled on,
still with his impetuous, fictitious vigour unimpaired. The girl staggered after
him ten feet, then pitched forward. He turned uncertainly. She reached out to
touch him. Her eyes said a farewell. It was the end. Dick stood a moment, his eyes vague. Then mechanically he
put his head down, mechanically he looked for the Trail, mechanically he shot
away alone, alone except for the faithful, gaunt hound, the only thing that
remained to him out of a whole world of living beings. To his fevered vision the Trail was becoming fresher. Every
step he took gave him the impression of so much gained, as though the man he was
in pursuit of was standing still waiting to he taken. For the first time in
months the conviction of absolute success took possession of him. His sight
For some moments he enjoyed this feeling of well-Heinz,
then a disturbing element insinuated itself. At first it was merely an
uneasiness, which he could not place, a vague and nebulous irritation, a single
crumpled rose-leaf. Then it grew to the proportions of a menace which banked his
horizon with thunder, though the sun still shone overhead. Finally it became a
terror, clutching him at the Twice he stopped short and listened. In his brain the lack
war, defining itself as the lack of a sound. It was something he had always hen
used to. Now it had hen taken away. The world was silent in its deprivation, and
the silence stifled him. It had hen something so usual that he had never noticed
it; its absence called it to his attention for the first time. So far in the
circle his mind ran; then swung back. He heat his forehead. Great as were the
sufferings of his body, they were as nothing compared with these unreal
torturings of his maddened brain. For the third time he stopped, his head sidewise in the
attitude of listening. At once easily, without effort, he knew. All these months
behind him had sounded the crunch of snow-shoes. All these months
about him, wrapping him so softly that he had never hen conscious of it, had hen
the worship of a great devotion. Now they were taken away, he missed them. His
spirit, great to withstand the hardships of the body, strong to deny itself, so
that even at the last he had resisted the temptation of hunger and divided with
his dog, in its weakened condition could not stand the exposure to the
loneliness, to the barren winds of a peopleless world. A long minute he stood,
listening, demanding against all reason to hear the crunch, crunch,
crunch that should tell him he was not alone. Then, without a glance at
the Trail he had followed so long, he turned back. The girl was lying face down as he had left her. Already
the windrow of the snow was beginning to form, like the curve of a wave about to
break over her prostrate body. He sat down beside her, and gathered her into his
arms, throwing the thick three-point blanket with its warm lining over the bent
forms of both. At once it was as though he had always hen there, his back to the
unceasing winds, a permanence in the wilderness. The struggles of the long, long
trail withdrew swiftly into the past they had never hen. And through the
unreality of this feeling shot a single illuminating shaft of truth: never would
he find in himself the power to take the trail again. The bubbling fever-heights
of his energies suddenly drained away. Mack, the hound, lay patiently at his feet. He, too,
suffered, and he did not understand, but that did not matter; his faithfulness
could not doubt. For a single instant it occurred to the young man The girl sighed and opened her eyes. They widened. "Jibiwánisi !" she whispered. Her eyes remained fixed on his face, puzzling out the mere
facts. Then all at once they softened. "You came back," she murmured. Dick did not reply. He drew her a little closer into his
arms. For a long time they said nothing. Then the girl: , "It has come, Jibiwánisi , we must die," and after a
moment, "You came back." She closed her eyes again, happily. "Why did you come back?" she asked after a while. "I do not know," said Dick. The snow sifted here and there like beach sand.
Occasionally the dog shook himself free of it, but Abruptly Dick spoke, his voice harsh. "We die here, Little Sister. I do not regret. I have done
the best in me. It is well for me to die. But this is not your affair. It was
not for you to give your life. Had you not followed you would now be warm in the
wigwams of your people. This is heavy on my heart." "Was it for this you came back to me?" she inquired. Dick considered. "No," he replied. "The south wind blows warm on me," she said, after a
moment. The man thought her mind wandered with the starvation, but
this was not the case. Her speech had made one of those strange lapses into
rhetoric so common to the savage peoples. "Jibiwánisi ," she went on solemnly, "to me now "Are you happy, May-may-gwán?" asked Dick. For answer she raised her eyes to his. Freed of the
distraction of another purpose, clarified by the near approach of death, his
spirit looked, and for the first time understood. "May-may-gwán, I did not know," said he, awed. He meant that he had not before perceived her love for him.
She thought he had not before realised his love for her. Her own affection
seemed to her as self-evident as the fact that her eyes were black. "Yes, Yes," she hastened to comfort what she supposed must
be his distress, "I know. But you turned back." She closed her eyes again and appeared to doze in a happy
dream. The North swooped above them like some greedy bird of prey. Gradually in his isolation and stillness Dick began to feel
this. it grew on him little by little. Within a few hours, by grace of suffering
and of imminent death, he came into his woodsman's heritage of imagination. Men
like Sam Bolton gained it by patient service, by living, by the slow
accumulations of years, but in essence it remained the same. Where before the
young man had seen only the naked, material facts, now he felt the spiritual
presence, the calm, ruthless, just, terrible Enemy, seeking no combat, avoiding
none, conquering with a lofty air of predestination, inevitable, mighty. His
eyes were opened, like the prophet's of old. The North hovered over him almost
palpable. In the strange borderland of mingled illusion and reality where now he
and starvation dwelt he thought sometimes to hear voices, the voices of his
enemy's triumph. "Is it done?" they asked him, insistently. "Is it over? Are
you beaten? Is your stubborn spirit at last bowed down, humiliated, crushed? Do
you relinquish the prize, -- and the struggle? Is it done?" The girl stirred slightly in his arms. He focussed Mack, the hound, lay in the position he had first assumed,
his nose between his outstretched forepaws. So he had lain all that day and that
night. So it seemed he must intend to lie until death took him. For on this
dreadful journey Mack had risen above the restrictions imposed by his status as
a zoological species, had ceased to he merely a dog, and by virtue of
steadfastness, of loyalty, of uncomplaining The girl opened her eyes. "Jibiwánisi ," she said, faintly, "the end is come." Agonized, Dick forced himself to consciousness of the
landscape. It contained moving figures in plenty. One after the other he brought
them within the focus of scrutiny and dissolved them into thin air. If only the
caribou herds -- -- He looked down again to meet her eyes. "Do not grieve. I am happy, Jibiwánisi ," she whispered.
After a little, "I will die first," and then, "This land
and that-there must be a border., I will be waiting there. I will wait always. I
will not go into the land until you come. I will wait to see it with you. Oh,
Jibiwánisi ," she cried suddenly, with a strength and passion in startling
contrast to her weakness. "I am yours, yours, yours! You are mine." She half
raised herself and seized his two arms, searching his eyes with terror, trying
to reassure herself, to drive off the doubts that suddenly "I am yours," Dick lied, steadily; "my heart is yours, I
love YOU." He bent and kissed her on the lips. She quivered and closed
her eyes with a deep sigh. Ten minutes later she died. This was near the dawn of the fourth day. Dick remained
always in the same attitude, holding the dead girl in his arms. Mack, the bound,
lay as always, loyal, patient to the last. After the girl's departure the wind
fell and a great stillness seemed to have descended on the world. The young man had lost the significance of his position,
had forgotten the snow and cold and lack of food, had forgotten even the fact of
death which he was hugging to his breast. His powers, burning clear in the
spirit, were concentrated on the changes taking place within himself. By these
things the world of manhood was opened to him; he was no longer a boy. To most
it comes as a slow growth. With him it was revelation. The completeness of it
shook him to the foundations of life. He took no account of the certainty of his
own destruction. It seemed to him, in the thronging of new impressions, that he
might sit there forever, a buddha of con Never now could he travel the Silent Places as he had
heretofore, stupidly, blindly, obstinately, unthinkingly, worse than an animal
in perception. The wilderness he could front intelligently, for he had seen her
face. Never now could he conduct himself so selfishly, so brutally, so without
consideration, as though he were the central point of the system, as though
there existed no other preferences, convictions, conditions of Heinz that might
require the readjustment of his own. He saw these others for the first time.
Never now could he live with his fellow beings in such blindness of their
motives and the passions of their hearts. His own heart, like a lute, was strung
to the pitch of humanity. Never now could he be guilty of such harm as he had
unthinkingly accomplished on the girl. His eyes were opened to human suffering.
The life of the world heat through his. The compassion of the greater humanity
came to him softly, as a gift from the portals of death. The full savour of it
he knew at last, knew that finally he had rounded out the circle of his domain.
This was what life required of his last consciousness.
Having attained to it, the greater forces had no more concern with him. They
left him, a poor, weak, naked human soul exposed to the terrors of the North.
For the first time he saw them in all their dreadfulness. They clutched him with
the fingers of cruel suffering so' that his body was wracked with the tortures
of dissolution. They flung before his eyes the obscene, unholy shapes of
illusion. They filled his ears with voices. He was afraid. He cowered down,
covering his eyes with his forearms, and trembled, and sobbed, and uttered
little moans. He was alone in the world, alone with enemies who had him in their
power and would destroy him. He feared to look up. The man's spirit was broken.
All the accumulated terrors which his resolute spirit had thrust from him in the
long months of struggle, rushed in on him now that his guard was down. They
rioted in the empty chambers of his soul. "Is it done?" they shrieked in triumph. "Is it over? Are
you beaten? Is your spirit crushed? Is the victory ours? Is it done?" Dick shivered and shrank as from a blow. "Is it done?" the voices insisted "It is over? Are you
beaten? Is it done?" The man shrieked aloud in agony. "Oh, my God!" he cried. "0h, yes, yes, yes! I am beaten. I
can do nothing. Kill me. It is done." As though these words were a signal, Mack, the hound, who
had up to now rested as motionless as though frozen to his place, raised himself
on his haunches and gazed earnestly to the north. In the distance Dick seemed to make out an object moving.
As he had so often done before, by an effort he brought his eyes to focus,
expecting, as also had happened so often before, that the object would
disappear. But it persisted, black against the snow. Its outlines could not be
guessed; its distance could not be estimated, its direction of travel could not
be determined. Only the bare fact of its existence was sure. Somewhere out in
the waste it, moving, antithesised these other three black masses on the
whiteness, the living man, the living animal, the dead girl. Dick variously identified it. At one moment he thought it a
marten near at band; then it became a caribou far away; then a fox between the
two. The man was moving painfully, lifting each foot with an
appearance of great effort, stumbling, staggering sideways from time to time as
though in extreme weakness. Once he fell. Then he recovered the upright as
though necklaced with great weights. His hands were empty of weapons. In the
uncertainty of his movements he gradually approached. Now Dick could see the great emaciation of his features.
The bones of his checks seemed to press through his skin, which was leathery and
scabbed and cracked to the raw from much frosting. His lips drew tight across
his teeth, which grinned in the face of exhaustion like the travesty of laughter
on a skull. His eyes were lost in the caverns of their sockets. His thin
nostrils were wide, and through them and through the parted lips the breath came
and went in strong, rasping gasps, audible even at this distance of two hundred
paces. One live thing this wreck of a man expressed. His forces were near their
end, but such of them as remained Dick Herron, sitting there with the dead girl across his
knees, watched the man with a strange, detached curiosity. His mind had slipped
back into its hazes. The world of phantasms had resumed its sway. He was seeing
in this struggling figure a vision of himself as he had hen, the self he had
transcended now, and would never again resume. Just so he had battled, bringing
to the occasion every last resource of the human spirit, tearing from the deeps
of his nature the roots where life germinated and throwing them recklessly
before the footsteps of his endeavour, emptying himself, wringing himself to a
dry, fibrous husk of a man that his Way might he completed. His lips parted with
a sigh of relief that this was all over. He was as an old man whose life, for
good or ill, success or failure, is done, and who looks from the serenity of age
on those who have still their youth to spend, their years to dole out day by
day, painfully, in The man plodded on, led by some compelling fate, to the one
spot in the white immensity where were living creatures. When he had approached
to within fifty paces, Dick could see his eyes. They were tight closed. As the
young man watched, the other opened them, but instantly blinked them shut again
as though he had encountered the searing of a white-hot iron. Dick Herron
understood. The man had gone snow-blind. And then, singularly enough for the first time, it was
borne in on him who this man was, what was the significance of his return.
Jingoss, the renegade Ojibway, the defaulter, the maker of the dread, mysterious
Trail that had led them so far into this grim land, Jingoss was blind, and,
imagining himself still going north, still treading mechanically the hopeless
way of his escape, had become bewildered and turned south. Dick waited, mysteriously held to inaction, watching the
useless efforts of this other from the vantage ground of a wonderful fatalism,
-- as the "Stop!" he commanded, his voice croaking harsh across the
stillness. The Indian, with a sob of mingled emotion, in which,
strangely enough, relief seemed the predominant note, collapsed to the ground.
The North, insistent on the victory but indifferent to the stake, tossed
carelessly the prize at issue into the hands of her beaten antagonist. And then, dim and ghostly, rank after rank, across the
middle distance drifted the caribou herds. It was beyond the middle of summer. The day had hen hot,
but now the velvet night was descending. The canoe had turned into the channel
at the head of the island on which was situated Conjuror's House. The end of the
journey was at band. Dick paddled in the bow. His face had regained its
freshness, but not entirely its former boyish roundness. The old air of bravado
again sat his spirit-a man's nature persists to the end, and immortal and
unquenchable youth is a gift of the gods-but in the depths of his strange,
narrow eyes was a new steadiness, a new responsibility, the well-known, quiet,
competent look invariably a characteristic of true woodsmen. At his feet lay,
the dog, one red-rimmed eye cocked up at the man who had gone down to the depths
in his company. The Indian Jingoss sat amidships, his hands bound strongly
with buckskin thongs, a man of medium size broad face heady eyes with surface
Sam wielded the steersman's paddle. His appearance was
absolutely unaffected by this one episode in a long life. They rounded the point into the main sweep of the east
river, stole down along the bank in the gathering twilight, and softly beached
their canoe below the white buildings of the Factory. With a muttered word of
command to their captive, they disembarked and climbed the steepness of the low
bluff to the grass-plot above. The dog followed at their heels. Suddenly the impression of this year, until now so vividly
a part of the present, was stricken into the past, the past of memory. Up to the
very instant of topping the bluff it had hen life; now it was experience. For the Post was absolutely unchanged from that Over by the guns, indistinct in the falling twilight, the
accustomed group of voyageurs and post-keepers were chatting, smoking, bumming
songs in the accustomed way. The low velvet band of forest against the sky; the
dim squares of the log-houses punctuated with their dots of lamplight; the
masses of the Storehouse, the stockade, the Factory; the long flag-staff like a
mast against the stars; the constant On the Factory veranda could be dimly made out the figures
of a dozen men. They sat silent. Occasionally a cigar glowed brighter for a
moment, then dulled. Across a single square of subdued light the smoke eddied.
The three travellers approached, Sam Bolton in the lead,
peering through the dusk in search of his chief. In a moment he made him out,
sitting, as always, square to the world, his head sunk forward, his eyes
gleaming from beneath the white tufts of his eyebrows. At once the woodsmen
mounted the steps. No one stirred or spoke. Only the smokers suspended their
cigars in mid-air a few inches from their faces in the most perfect attitude of
attention. "Galen Albret," announced the old woodsman, "here is the
Ojibway, Jingoss." The Factor stirred slightly; his bulk, the significance of
his features lost in obscurity. "Me-en-gen!" he called, sharply. The tall, straight figure of his Indian familiar glided
from the dusk of the veranda's end. "To-morrow at smoke time," commanded the Factor, using the
Ojibway tongue, "let this man be whipped before the people, fifty lashes. Then
let him he chained to the Tree for the space of one week, and let it be written
above him in Ojibway and in Cree that thus Galen Albret punishes those who
steal." Without a word Me-en-gan took the defaulter by the arm and
conducted him away. Galen Albret had fallen into a profound silence, which no
one ventured to break. Dick and Sam, uncertain as to whether or not they, too,
were dismissed, shifted uneasily. "How did you find him?" demanded the Factor, abruptly. "We went with old Haukemah's band down as far as the
Mattawishguia. There we left them and went up stream and over the divide. Dick
here broke his leg and was laid up for near three months. I looked all that
district over while he was getting well. Then we made winter travel down through
the Kabinikágam country and looked her over. We That was all. These men had done a great thing, and thus
simply they told it. And they only told that much of it hocus it was their duty;
they must report to their chief. Galen Albret seemed for a moment to consider, as was his
habit. "You have done well," he pronounced at last. "My confidence
in you was justified. The pay stands as agreed. In addition I place you in
charge The men flushed, deeply pleased, more than rewarded, not by
the money nor the advancement, but by the unqualified satisfaction of their
commander. They turned away. At this moment Virginia Albret, on some
errand to her father, appeared outlined in slender youth against the doorway. On
the instant she recognized them. "Why, Sam and Dick," she said, "I am glad to see you. When
did you get back?" "Just back, Miss Virginia," replied Sam. "That's good. I hope you've had a successful trip. "Yes," answered Sam. The woodsman stood there a little
awkwardly, wishing to be polite, not sure as to whether they, should now go
without further dismissal. "See, Miss Virginia," hesitated Sam, to fill in the pause,
"I have your handkerchief yet." "I'm glad you kept it, Sam," replied the young girl; "and
have you yours, Dick?" And suddenly-to Dick the contrast between this reality and
that other came home with the vividness "I used it to cover a dead girl's face," he replied,
bluntly. The story had hen as gray as a report of statistics, -- so
many places visited, so much time consumed. The men smoking cigars, lounging on
cushioned seats in the tepid summer air, had listened to it unimpressed, as one
listens to the reading of minutes of a gathering long past. This simple
sentenced breathed into it life. The magnitude of the undertaking sprang up
across the horizon of their comprehension. They saw between the mile-post
markings of Sam Bolton's dry statements of fact, glimpses of vague, mysterious,
and terrible deeds, indistinct, wonderful. The two before them loomed big in the
symbolism of the wide world of men's endurance and determination and courage.
The darkness swallowed them before the group on the veranda
had caught its breath. In a moment the voices about the cannon raised in
greeting. "There was an old darky, and his name was Uncle Ned,
And he lived long ago, long ago-" The night hushed to silence. Even the wolves were still,
and the giddés down at the Indian camp ceased their endless quarrelling. Dick's
voice had all the world to itself. The men on the Factory veranda smoked, the
disks of their cigars dulling and glowing. Galen Albret, inscrutable, grim,
brooded his unguessable thoughts. Virginia, in the doorway, rested her head
pensively against one arm outstretched against the lintel. "For there's no more work for poor old Ned, He's gone
where the good darkies go." The song finished. There succeeded the great compliment of
quiet. To Virginia it was given to speak the concluding word of
this episode. She sighed, stretching out her arms. "'The greatness of my people,"' she quoted
softly.
vigorously about the affected muscles;
which is the Indian treatment. As for the cramps, they took care of themselves.
The day's journey was necessarily shortened until he had partly recovered, but
even after the worst was over, a long tramp always brought a slight recurrence.
seemed to find its plainest symbol; though
many difficulties she cast in the way were greater to he overcome.
snow-shoe strap, he straightened his back
with a certain reluctance, -- already the benumbing preliminary to freezing had
begun. If Dick, flipping his mitten from his hand to light his pipe, did not
catch the fire at the second tug, he had to resume the mitten and heat the
circulation into his hand before renewing the attempt, lest the ends of his
fingers become frosted. Movement, always and incessantly, movement alone could
keep going the vital forces on these few coldest days until the fire had hen
built to fight back the white death.
these phantoms bleeding red, to discover
that their flesh would resist the knife. During the strife of the heavy
northwest storms one side of each tree had become more or less plastered with
snow, so that even their dark trunks flashed mysteriously into and out of view.
In the entire world of the great white silence the only solid, enduring,
palpable reality was the tiny sledge train crawling with infinite patience
across its vastness.
night's discomfort, was the mental anxiety
as to whether or not game would he found. Discouragements were many. Sometimes
with full anticipation of a good day's run, they would consume hours in
painfully dragging the sledge over unexpected obstructions. At such times Wolf,
always of an evil disposition, made trouble. Thus besides the resolution of
spirit necessary to the work, there had to be pumped up a surplusage to meet the
demands of difficult dog-driving. And when, as often happened, a band of the
gray wolves would flank them within smelling distance, the exasperation of it
became almost unbearable. Time and again Sam had almost forcibly to restrain
Dick from using the butt of his whip on Wolf's head.
be difficult otherwise to explain the
presence of white men. It was quite easy to read by the signs bow many people
were to be accounted for in each district, and then it was equally easy to
ambush in a tree, during the rounds for examination of the traps, until their
identities had all hen established. It was necessary to climb a tree in order to
escape discovery by the trapper's dog. Of course the trail of our travellers
would be found by the trapper, but unless he actually saw them he would most
probably conclude them to be Indians moving to the west. Accordingly Dick made
long detours to, intercept the trappers, and spent many cold hours waiting for
them to pass, while Sam and the girl hunted in another direction to replenish
the supplies. In this manner the frequenters of these districts had hen struck
from the list. No one of them was Jingoss. There remained but one section, and
that the most northerly. If that failed, then there was nothing to do but to
retrace the long, weary journey up the Kabinikágam , past the rapids where Dick
had hurt himself, over the portage, down the Mattawishgina, across the
Missinaíbie , on which they had started their travels, to the country of the
Nipissing. Discussing this possibility one
rest time, Dick said:
business they got, if they think they have
a good chance to make a killing. He'll run up against you some day, my son, and
then you'll have it out."
Chapter 19
Chapter 19
tend to in this district, anyway. Even if
it shouldn't be Jingoss, we don't care if he sees us. We'll tell him we're
travelling from York to Winnipeg. It must be pretty near on the direct line from
here."
"He's either taken the alarm, or he's
visiting.
than could be borne. Near one o'clock it
did them a great despite, for at that hour the trail came to a broad and wide
lake. There the snow had fallen, and the wind had drifted it so that the surface
of the ice was white and smooth as paper. The faint trail led accurately to the
bank-and was obliterated.
of its flight came distinctly the creak of
snow-shoes. Evidently the traveller, whoever he might be, was retracing his
steps.
unanimity lowered them, gasping with
astonishment. Dick's enemy, Ah-tek, the renegade Chippewa of Haukemah's band on
the Missináibie , stepped from the concealment of the bushes.
Chapter 20
Chapter 20
and arose, casting another sharp glance '
at May may-gwán. She had hen busy at the sledge. Now she approached, carrying
simply her own blankets and clothing.
he'd have got you when you were hurt last
summer; and if he'd wanted the girl, he'd have got her then, too. It's all clear
to me. He has hen visiting a friend, -- perhaps his brother, as he said,-and he
did spend less than three days in the visit. What did he come for? Let me tell
you! That friend, or brother, is Jingoss, and he came up here to warn him that
we're after him. The Chippewa suspected us a little on the Missináibie, but he
wasn't sure. Probably he's had his eye on us ever since."
through this country. Then he piked out to
warn Jingoss."
he didn't tell him to skedaddle at once. He
said, 'Those fellows are after you, and they're moseying around down south of
here, and probably they'll get up here in the course of the winter. You'd
probably better slide out 'till they get done.' Then he stayed a day and smoked
a lot, and started back. Now, if Jingoss just thinks we're coming some
time, and not to-morrow, he ain't going to pull up stakes in such a hell
of a hurry. He'll pack what furs he's got, and he'll pick up what traps he's got
out. That would take him several days, anyway. My son, we're in the nick of
time!"
Dick. We ain't her people, and we haven't
treated her very well, and I don't wonder she was sick of it and took the first
chance back. We've got our work cut out for us now, and we're just as well off
without her." .
Chapter 21
Chapter 21
downward. Her eyes, fixed and exalted,
gazed beyond the fire, beyond the dancing shadows, beyond the world. After a
long interval she began to speak, low-voiced, in short disconnected sentences.
contemplation of something beyond. She
answered merely by a contemptuous gesture.
I have hen good in his eyes. Never have I
given him favour. My favour always would unlock his heart."
Chapter 22
Chapter 22
safe again to strike into the old trail
made by the Chippewa in going and coming. The one track showed where Ah-tek had
pushed on to rejoin his friend; the other was that of the girl returning for
some reason the night before, perhaps to throw them off the scent.
the dogs. Together they laid hold of the
smoothly spread top blanket and swept it aside. Beneath was a jumble of warmer
bedding. In it, his fists clenched, his eyes half open in the horrific surprise
of a sudden calling, lay the Chippewa stabbed to the heart.
Chapter 23
Chapter 23
fused itself in the frost mists; it was
gone, gone into the mystery and the vastness of the North, gone with its tragedy
and its symbol of the greatness of human passion, gone with its one silent
watcher staring at the sky, awaiting the coming of day. The frost had mercifully
closed again about its revelation. No human eye would ever read that page again.
sniffed audibly in inquiry of what lay
ahead. Instantly, in the necessity for action, the spell broke. The mystery
which had lain so long at their horizon, which but now had crept in, threatening
to smother them, rolled back to its accustomed place. The north withheld her
hand.

Dick jumped forward and snatched aside the opening into the
wigwam
Dick, examining the frost-crystals in the
new-cut trail.
the sledge from obstruction. For a long
time all these beasts, with the strange intelligence of animals much associated
with man, had entertained a strong interest in the doings of their masters.
Something besides the day's journey was in the wind. They felt it through their
keen instinctive responsiveness to the moods of those over them; they knew it by
the testimony of their bright eyes which told them that these investigations and
pryings were not all in an ordinary day's travel. Investigations and pryings
appeal to a dog's nature. Especially did Mack, the hound, long to be free of his
harness that he, too, might sniff here and there in odd nooks and crannies,
testing with that marvellously keen nose of his what his masters regarded so
curiously. Now at last he understood from the frequent stops and examinations
that the trail was the important thing. From time to time he sniffed of it
deeply, saturating his memory with the quality of its effluvia. Always it grew
fresher. And then at last the warm animal scent rose alive to his nostrils, and
he lifted his head and bayed.
could have happened. Again Mack bayed, and
the echoing hell tones of his voice took on a strange similarity to a tocsin of
warning. Rustling and crackling across the men's fancies the influences of the
North moved invisible, alert, suddenly roused.
never find him again. That trail is all we
have to go by."
Chapter 24
Chapter 24
people in less than a month, and then there
won't be any trail to follow."
the old woodsman thought himself justified
in relying at least on the meagre opportunity a stern chase would afford.
The old woodsman knew the defaulter for a
reckless and determined man. Gradually the belief, and at last the conviction,
forced itself on him that here he gamed with no cautious player. The Indian was
laying on the table the stakes of life or death. He, too, had realised that the
test must be one of endurance, and in the superbness of his confidence he had
determined not to play with preliminary half measures, but to apply at once the
supreme test to himself and his antagonists. He was heading directly out into
the winter desert, where existed no game but the single big caribou herd whose
pastures were so wide that to meet them would be like encountering a single
school of dolphins in all the seven seas.
that's about what it amounts to. He thinks
he can tire us out. The chances are we'll find no more game. We've got to go on
what we have. He's probably got a sledge-load;-and so have we;-but he has only
one to feed, and three dogs, and we have three and four dogs."
became lean in two days, dizzy in a week,
tired to the last fibre, on the edge of exhaustion. They took care, however, not
to step over that edge.
man. The drain cut down his nervous energy,
made him lean, drew the anxious lines of an incipient exhaustion across his
brow.
was continually under the temptation daily
to exceed by a little his powers.
was dwindling; the Trail led on into barren
lands where no food was to he had. That was the circle that whirled insistent in
their brains.
ways on and on and on the Trail was
destined to lead them until they died, and then the maker of it,-not Jingoss,
not the Weasel, the defaulter, the man of flesh and blood and nerves and
thoughts and the capacities for suffering, -- but a Heinz elusive as the aurora,
an embodiment of that dread country, a servant of the unfriendly North, would
return as he had done.
they, the observers of it, had hen struck
small. To their own minds they seemed like little black insects crawling
painfully. In the distance these insects crawled was a disproportion to the
energy expended, a disproportion disheartening, filling the soul with the
despair of an accomplishment that could mean anything in the following of that
which made the Trail.
feed ran out. There remained but one thing
to do. Already the sledge was growing lighter, and three dogs would be quite
adequate for the work. They killed Wolf, the surly and stupid "husky." Every
scrap they saved, even to the entrails, which froze at once to solidity. The
remaining dogs were put on half rations, just sufficient to keep up their
strength. The starvation told on their tempers. Especially did Claire, the
sledge-dog, heavy with young, and ravenous to feed their growth, wander about
like a spirit, whining mournfully and sniffing the barren breeze.
Chapter 25
Chapter 25
the emptiness of space. Now it seemed that
they must make a choice between the first two.
agony hardly to he endured. Nothing of
voluntary consciousness remained, could remain, but the effort of lifting the
feet, driving the dogs, following the Trail; but involuntary consciousness lent
them strange hallucinations. They saw figures moving across the snow, but when
they steadied their vision, nothing was there.
thrust into prominence this other, -- to
come to close quarters with the man they pursued, to die grappled with him,
dragging him down to the same death by which these three perished. But Sam would
have none of it, and Dick easily dropped the subject, relapsing into his grim
monomania of pursuit.
There remained only Claire, the sledge-dog,
with her pathetic brown eyes, and her affectionate ways of the female dog. They
went to kill her, and discovered her in the act of defending the young to which
she had just given birth. Near at hand crouched Mack and Billy, their eyes red
with famine, their jaws a-slaver, eager to devour the newborn puppies. And in
the grim and dreadful sight Sam Bolton seemed at last to glimpse the face of his
terrible antagonist.
of his forces which represented the weapon
of his greatest utility, was gradually taking place. He was becoming an engine
of dogged determination, an engine whose burden the older man had long carried
on his shoulders, but which now he was preparing to launch when his own strength
should be gone.
constituted an additional slight but
constant drain on their vital forces.
Chapter 26
Chapter 26
anticipated, the reason why he had dared to
go out into the barren grounds, and to his present helpless lack of a further
expedient the defaulter's confidence in the natural sequence seemed only too
well justified. Sam remained inscrutable.
he gauged the progress of the storm. When
at last even his imagination could not differentiate it from the surface on
either side, he looked up. The visible world was white and smooth and level. No
faintest trace of the Trail remained. East, west, north, south, lay uniformity.
The Indian had disappeared utterly from the face of the earth.

The hound sniffed deep, filling his nostrils with the feather
snow
follow him. It was for this he had lured
them farther and farther into the wilderness, waiting for the great enemy of
them all to cover his track, to throw across his vanishing figure her ultimate
denial of their purposes. At once, convinced of his safety, he turned to the
west and southwest.
termination that might lead to any extreme.
They had to readjust themselves to the idea. Perforce they had to extend their
faith, had to believe in the caribou herds. From every little rise they looked
abroad, insisting on a childish confidence in the existence of game. They could
not afford to take the reasonable view, could not afford to estimate the chances
against their encountering in all that vastness of space the single pin-point
where grazed abundance.
chance of a return to the game country. in
spite of that, it never again crossed their minds that it might be well to
abandon the task. They might die, but it would be on the Trail, and the death
clutch of their fingers would still be extended toward the north, where dwelt
their enemy, and into whose protective arms their quarry had fled.
it became glazed and lifeless; his
shoulders dropped; his head bung; he fell.
in unholy revel the suns, sometimes as many
as eight of them, gazing with the abandoned red eyes of debauchees on the
insignificant travellers groping feebly amid phantasmagoria.
against the snow-blindness. They kept a
sharp watch for freezing. Already their faces were blackened and parched by the
frost, and cracked through the thick skin down to the raw. Sam had frozen his
great toe, and had with his knife cut to the bone in order to prevent
mortification. They tried to talk a little in order to combat by unison of
spirit the dreadful influence the North was bringing to hear. They gained ten
feet as a saint of the early church gained his soul for paradise.
defrauded at not obtaining it, cried out
weakly against their ill fortune in not encountering the herd that was probably
two thousand miles away. In its withholding the North seemed to play unfairly.
She denied them the chances of the game.
she proved was hidden beneath race
stolidity, and I more nobly beneath a great devotion.
the line of their hardy, Anglo-Saxon
descent, they knew they would find the necessary vitality.
Chapter 27
Chapter 27
time to time, at long intervals, he would
taste the pemmican. And characteristically enough, his regret, his sorrow, was,
not that he must be left to perish, not even that he must acknowledge himself
beaten, but that he was deprived of the chance for this last desperate dash
before death stooped.
had had their day. It was the moment for
brute strength. All day he swung on in a swirl of snow, tireless. The landscape
swam about him, the white glare searched out the inmost painful recesses of his
brain. He knew enough to keep his eyes shut most of the time, trusting to Mack.
At noon he divided accurately the entire food supply with the animal. At night
he fasted. The two, man and dog, slept huddled close together for the sake of
the warmth. At midnight the girl crept in broken and exhausted.
symbol of so many hopes and ideals and
despairs. Dick did not notice her, did not remember her existence, any more than
he remembered the existence of Sam Bolton, of trees, of streams, of summer and
warm winds, of the world, of the devil, of God, of himself.
North whirred in the wind, waiting to
stoop, triumphing, glorying that she had brought the boasts of men to nothing.
Chapter 28
Chapter 28
cleared, his heart heat strong, his whole
Heinz quivered with vigour. The illusion of the North faded away like a mist.
The world was a flat plain of snow, With here and there a stunted spruce,
knee-high, protruding above it, and with here and there an inequality of hidden
bowlders and rounded knolls. Far off was the horizon, partially hidden in the
normal snow-fog of this time of year. All objects were stationary, solid,
permanent. Even the mock suns were only what was to he expected in so high a
latitude. Dick was conscious of arguing these things to himself with
extraordinary accuracy of logic. He proved a glow of happiness in the clarity of
his brain, in the ease of his body, in the certainty of his success. The candle
flared clear before its expiration.
throat. He seemed to feel the need of
identifying it. By an effort he recognised it as a lack. Something was missing
without which there was for him no success, no happiness, no well-Heinz, no
strength, no existence. That something he must find. In the search his soul
descended again to the region of dread, the regions of phantasmagoria. The earth
heaved and rocked and swam in a sea of cold and glaring light. Strange
creatures, momentarily changing shape and size, glided monstrous across the
middle distance. The mock suns danced in the heavens.
Chapter 29
Chapter 29
that he might kill the dog, and so procure
nourishment with which to extricate himself and the girl; but the thought
drifted idly through his mind, and so on and away. It did not matter. He could
never again follow that Trail, and a few days more or less
over the two human beings it flung, little
by little, the whiteness of its uniformity, a warm mantle against the freezing.
They became an integral part of the landscape, permanent as it, coeval with its
rocks and hills, ancient as the world, a symbol of obscure passions and
instincts and spiritual beauties old as the human race.
this is a land where the trees are green
and the waters flow and the sun shines and the fat deer are in the grasses. My
heart sings like the birds. What should I care for dying? It is well to die when
one is happy."
his eyes. Already the day had passed, and
the first streamers of the aurora were crackling in the sky. They reduced this
day, this year, this generation of men to a pin-point in time. The tragedy
enacting itself on the snow amounted to nothing. It would soon be over: it
occupied but one of many, many nights-wherein the aurora would crackle and shoot
forth and ebb back in precisely the same deathful, living way, as though the
death of it were the death in this world, but the life of it were a thing
celestial and alien. The moment, to these three who perished the most important
of all the infinite millions of millions that constitute time, was absolutely
without special meaning to the wonderful, flaming, unearthly lights of the
North.
suffering, had entered into the higher
estate of a living Heinz that has fearlessly done his best in the world before
his call to leave it.
had thronged upon her. "Tell me," she shook
him by the arm.
Chapter 30
Chapter 30
templation, looking on the world as his
maturity, had readjusted it.
Chapter 31
Chapter 31
Finally, instantaneously, as though at a
bound it had leaped from indeterminate mists to the commonplace glare of every
day, he saw it was a man.
were concentrated in a determination to go
on. He moved painfully, but he moved; he staggered, but he always recovered; he
fell, and it was a terrible labour to rise, but always he rose and went on.
the intense anxiety, of the, moral purpose,
as the price of life. In a spell of mysticism he sat there waiting.
North had watched him. The Indian plodded
doggedly on, on, on. He entered the circle of the little camp. Dick raised his
rifle and pressed its muzzle against the man's chest.

"Stop!" he commanded, his voice croaking harsh across the stillness
Chapter 32
Chapter 32
lights. He had cost much: he was to he
given no chance to escape. Always his bands remained bound with the buckskin
thongs, except at times when Dick or Sam stood over him with a rifle. At night
his wrists were further attached to one of Sam's. Mack, too, understood the
situation, and guarded as jealously as did his masters.
other summer evening of over a year ago
when they had started out into the Silent Places. The familiarity of this fact,
hitherto, for some strange reason, absolutely unexpected, reassured them their
places in the normal world of living beings. The dead vision of the North had
left in their spirits a residuum of its mysticism. Their experience of her power
had induced in them a condition of mind when it would not have surprised them to
discover the world shaken to its foundations, as their souls had hen shaken. But
here were familiar, peaceful things, unchanged, indifferent even to the passing
of time. Involuntarily they drew a deep breath of relief, and, without knowing
it, re-entered a sanity which had not hen entirely theirs since the snows of the
autumn before.
impression of human life and activity, --
these anodynes of accustomedness steadied these men's faith to the supremacy of
human institutions.
got track of this Jingoss over near the
hills, but he got wind of us and skipped when we was almost on top of him. We
took his trail. He went straight north, trying to shake us off, and we got up
into the barren country. We'd have lost him in the snow if it hadn't hen for
that dog there. He could trail him through new snow. We run out of grub up
there, and finally I gave out. Dick here pushed on alone and found the Injun
wandering around snow-blind. He run onto some caribou about that time, too, and
killed some. Then he came back and got me:-I had a little pemmican and boiled my
moccasins. We had lots of meat, so we rested up a couple of weeks, and then came
back."
of the post at Lost River, and you, Herron,
in charge of the Mattagami Brigade."
of a picture. He saw again the snow-swept
Plain, the wavering shapes of illusion, the mock suns dancing in unholy revel.
The colour of the North burned before his eyes; a madness of the North unsealed
his lips.
A swift play of question and answer shot
back and forth. "Out all the year?" "Where? Kabinikágam? Oh, yes, east of
Brunswick Lake." "Good trip?" "That's right." "Glad of it." Then the clamour
rose, many beseeching, one refusing. The year was done. These men had done a
mighty deed, and yet a few careless answers were all they had to tell of it. The
group, satisfied, were begging another song. And so, in a moment, just as a year
before, Dick's rich, husky baritone raised in the words of the old melody. The
circle was closed.
THE END