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diff --git a/old/10404-8.txt b/old/10404-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..1960693 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/10404-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,10231 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook, Man Size, by William MacLeod Raine + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: Man Size + +Author: William MacLeod Raine + +Release Date: December 8, 2003 [eBook #10404] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MAN SIZE*** + + +E-text prepared by Kevin Handy, Dave Maddock, Josephine Paolucci, and the +Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team + + + +MAN-SIZE + +BY + +WILLIAM MACLEOD RAINE + +AUTHOR OF + +THE BIG-TOWN ROUND UP, + +OH, YOU TEX! ETC + +1922 + + + + + + +TO + +CAPTAIN SIR CECIL E. DENNY, BART. + +OF THE FIRST THREE HUNDRED RIDERS OF THE PLAINS + +WHO CARRIED LAW INTO THE LONE LANDS + +AND MADE THE SCARLET AND GOLD + +A SYNONYM FOR + +JUSTICE, INTEGRITY, AND INDOMITABLE PLUCK + + + + +CONTENTS + + + I. IN THE DANGER ZONE + + II. THE AMAZON + + III. ANGUS McRAE DOES HIS DUTY + + IV. THE WOLFERS + + V. MORSE JUMPS UP TROUBLE + + VI. "SOMETHING ABOUT THESE GUYS" + + VII. THE MAN IN THE SCARLET JACKET + + VIII. AT SWEET WATER CREEK + + IX. TOM MAKES A COLLECTION + + X. A CAMP-FIRE TALE + + XI. C.N. MORSE TURNS OVER A LEAF + + XII. TOM DUCKS TROUBLE + + XIII. THE CONSTABLE BORES THROUGH DIFFICULTIES + + XIV. SCARLET-COATS IN ACTION + + XV. KISSING DAY + + XVI. A BUSINESS DEAL + + XVII. A BOARD CREAKS + + XVIII. A GUN ROARS + + XIX. "D' YOU WONDER SHE HATES ME?" + + XX. ONISTAH READS SIGN + + XXI. ON THE FRONTIER OF DESPAIR + + XXII. "MY DAMN PRETTY LI'L' HIGH-STEPPIN' SQUAW" + + XXIII. A FORETASTE OF HELL + + XXIV. WEST MAKES A DECISION + + XXV. FOR THE WEE LAMB LOST + + XXVI. A RESCUE + + XXVII. APACHE STUFF + + XXVIII. "IS A' WELL WI' YOU, LASS?" + + XXIX. NOT GOING ALONE + + XXX. "M" FOR MORSE + + XXXI. THE LONG TRAIL + + XXXII. A PICTURE IN A LOCKET + + XXXIII. INTO THE LONE LAND + + XXXIV. THE MAN-HUNTERS READ SIGN + + XXXV. SNOW-BLIND + + XXXVI. THE WILD BEAST LEAPS + + XXXVII. NEAR THE END OF A LONG CROOKED TRAIL + +XXXVIII. OVER A ROTTING TRAIL + + XXXIX. A CREE RUNNER BRINGS NEWS + + XL. "MALBROUCK S'EN VA-T-EN GUERRE" + + XLI. SENSE AND NONSENSE + + XLII. THE IMPERATIVE URGE + + + + + +CHAPTER I + +IN THE DANGER ZONE + + +She stood on the crown of the hill, silhouetted against a sky-line of +deepest blue. Already the sun was sinking in a crotch of the plains +which rolled to the horizon edge like waves of a great land sea. Its +reflected fires were in her dark, stormy eyes. Its long, slanted rays +were a spotlight for the tall, slim figure, straight as that of a boy. + +The girl's gaze was fastened on a wisp of smoke rising lazily from a +hollow of the crumpled hills. That floating film told of a camp-fire +of buffalo chips. There was a little knitted frown of worry on her +forehead, for imagination could fill in details of what the coulée +held: the white canvas tops of prairie schooners, some spans of oxen +grazing near, a group of blatant, profane whiskey-smugglers from +Montana, and in the wagons a cargo of liquor to debauch the Bloods and +Piegans near Fort Whoop-Up. + +Sleeping Dawn was a child of impulse. She had all youth's capacity for +passionate indignation and none of the wisdom of age which tempers +the eager desire of the hour. These whiskey-traders were ruining her +people. More than threescore Blackfeet braves had been killed within +the year in drunken brawls among themselves. The plains Indians would +sell their souls for fire-water. When the craze was on them, they +would exchange furs, buffalo robes, ponies, even their wives and +daughters for a bottle of the poison. + +In the sunset glow she stood rigid and resentful, one small fist +clenched, the other fast to the barrel of the rifle she carried. The +evils of the trade came close to her. Fergus McRae still carried the +gash from a knife thrust earned in a drunken brawl. It was likely that +to-morrow he would cut the trail of the wagon wheels and again make +a bee-line for liquor and trouble. The swift blaze of revolt found +expression in the stamp of her moccasined foot. + +As dusk fell over the plains, Sleeping Dawn moved forward lightly, +swiftly, toward the camp in the hollow of the hills. She had no +definite purpose except to spy the lay-out, to make sure that her +fears were justified. But through the hinterland of her consciousness +rebellious thoughts were racing. These smugglers were wholly outside +the law. It was her right to frustrate them if she could. + +Noiselessly she skirted the ridge above the coulée, moving through +the bunch grass with the wary care she had learned as a child in the +lodges of the tribe. + +Three men crouched on their heels in the glow of a camp-fire well +up the draw. A fourth sat at a little distance from them riveting a +stirrup leather with two stones. The wagons had been left near the +entrance of the valley pocket some sixty or seventy yards from the +fire. Probably the drivers, after they had unhitched the teams, had +been drawn deeper into the draw to a spot more fully protected from +the wind. + +While darkness gathered, Sleeping Dawn lay in the bunch grass with her +eyes focused on the camp below. Her untaught soul struggled with the +problem that began to shape itself. These men were wolfers, desperate +men engaged in a nefarious business. They paid no duty to the British +Government. She had heard her father say so. Contrary to law, they +brought in their vile stuff and sold it both to breeds and tribesmen. +They had no regard whatever for the terrible injury they did the +natives. Their one intent was to get rich as soon as possible, so they +plied their business openly and defiantly. For the Great Lone Land was +still a wilderness where every man was a law to himself. + +The blood of the girl beat fast with the racing pulse of excitement. +A resolution was forming in her mind. She realized the risks and +estimated chances coolly. These men would fire to kill on any skulker +near the camp. They would take no needless hazard of being surprised +by a band of stray Indians. But the night would befriend her. She +believed she could do what she had in mind and easily get away to the +shelter of the hill creases before they could kill or capture her. + +A shadowy dog on the outskirt of the camp rose and barked. The girl +waited, motionless, tense, but the men paid little heed to the +warning. The man working at the stirrup leather got to his feet, +indeed, carelessly, rifle in hand, and stared into the gloom; but +presently he turned on his heel and sauntered back to his job of +saddlery. Evidently the hound was used to voicing false alarms +whenever a coyote slipped past or a skunk nosed inquisitively near. + +Sleeping Dawn followed the crest of the ridge till it fell away to +the mouth of the coulée. She crept up behind the white-topped wagon +nearest the entrance. + +An axe lay against the tongue. She picked it up, glancing at the same +time toward the camp-fire. So far she had quite escaped notice. The +hound lay blinking into the flames, its nose resting on crossed paws. + +With her hunting-knife the girl ripped the canvas from the side of the +top. She stood poised, one foot on a spoke, the other on the axle. The +axe-head swung in a half-circle. There was a crash of wood, a swift +jet of spouting liquor. Again the axe swung gleaming above her head. A +third and a fourth time it crashed against the staves. + +A man by the camp-fire leaped to his feet with a startled oath. +"What's that?" he demanded sharply. + +From the shadows of the wagons a light figure darted. The man snatched +up a rifle and fired. A second time, aimlessly, he sent a bullet into +the darkness. + +The silent night was suddenly alive with noises. Shots, shouts, the +barking of the dog, the slap of running feet, all came in a confused +medley to Sleeping Dawn. + +She gained a moment's respite from pursuit when the traders stopped +at the wagons to get their bearings. The first of the white-topped +schooners was untouched. The one nearest the entrance to the coulée +held four whiskey-casks with staves crushed in and contents seeping +into the dry ground. + +Against one of the wheels a rifle rested. The girl flying in a panic +had forgotten it till too late. + +The vandalism of the attack amazed the men. They could have understood +readily enough some shots out of the shadows or a swoop down upon the +camp to stampede and run off the saddle horses. Even a serious attempt +to wipe out the party by a stray band of Blackfeet or Crees was an +undertaking that would need no explaining. But why should any one do +such a foolish, wasteful thing as this, one to so little purpose in +its destructiveness? + +They lost no time in speculation, but plunged into the darkness in +pursuit. + + + + +CHAPTER II + +THE AMAZON + + +The dog darted into the bunch grass and turned sharply to the right. +One of the men followed it, the others took different directions. + +Up a gully the hound ran, nosed the ground in a circle of sniffs, and +dipped down into a dry watercourse. Tom Morse was at heel scarcely a +dozen strides behind. + +The yelping of the dog told Morse they were close on their quarry. +Once or twice he thought he made out the vague outline of a flying +figure, but in the night shadows it was lost again almost at once. + +They breasted the long slope of a low hill and took the decline +beyond. The young plainsman had the legs and the wind of a Marathon +runner. His was the perfect physical fitness of one who lives a clean, +hard life in the dry air of the high lands. The swiftness and the +endurance of the fugitive told him that he was in the wake of youth +trained to a fine edge. + +Unexpectedly, in the deeper darkness of a small ravine below the hill +spur, the hunted turned upon the hunter. Morse caught the gleam of a +knife thrust as he plunged. It was too late to check his dive. A flame +of fire scorched through his forearm. The two went down together, +rolling over and over as they struggled. + +Startled, Morse loosened his grip. He had discovered by the feel of +the flesh he was handling so roughly that it was a woman with whom he +was fighting. + +She took advantage of his hesitation to shake free and roll away. + +They faced each other on their feet. The man was amazed at the young +Amazon's fury. Her eyes were like live coals, flashing at him hatred +and defiance. Beneath the skin smock she wore, her breath came +raggedly and deeply. Neither of them spoke, but her gaze did not yield +a thousandth part of an inch to his. + +The girl darted for the knife she had dropped. Morse was upon her +instantly. She tried to trip him, but when they struck the ground she +was underneath. + +He struggled to pin down her arms, but she fought with a barbaric +fury. Her hard little fist beat upon his face a dozen times before he +pegged it down. + +Lithe as a panther, her body twisted beneath his. Too late the flash +of white teeth warned him. She bit into his arm with the abandon of a +savage. + +"You little devil!" he cried between set teeth. + +He flung away any scruples he might have had and pinned fast her +flying arms. The slim, muscular body still writhed in vain contortions +till he clamped it fast between knees from which not even an untamed +cayuse could free itself. + +She gave up struggling. They glared at each other, panting from their +exertions. Her eyes still flamed defiance, but back of it he read +fear, a horrified and paralyzing terror. To the white traders along +the border a half-breed girl was a squaw, and a squaw was property +just as a horse or a dog was. + +For the first time she spoke, and in English. Her voice came +bell-clear and not in the guttural of the tribes. + +"Let me up!" It was an imperative, urgent, threatening. + +He still held her in the vice, his face close to her flaming eyes. +"You little devil," he said again. + +"Let me up!" she repeated wildly. "Let me up, I tell you." + +"Like blazes I will. You're through biting and knifing me for one +night." He had tasted no liquor all day, but there was the note of +drunkenness in his voice. + +The terror in her grew. "If you don't let me up--" + +"You'll do what?" he jeered. + +Her furious upheaval took him by surprise. She had unseated him and +was scrambling to her feet before he had her by the shoulders. + +The girl ducked her head in an effort to wrench free. She could as +easily have escaped from steel cuffs as from the grip of his brown +fingers. + +"You'd better let me go!" she cried. "You don't know who I am." + +"Nor care," he flung back. "You're a nitchie, and you smashed our +kegs. That's enough for me." + +"I'm no such thing a nitchie[1]," she denied indignantly. + +[Footnote 1: In the vernacular of the Northwest Indians were +"nitchies." (W.M.R.)] + +The instinct of self-preservation was moving in her. She had played +into the hands of this man and his companions. The traders made their +own laws and set their own standards. The value of a squaw of the +Blackfeet was no more than that of the liquor she had destroyed. It +would be in character for them to keep her as a chattel captured in +war. + +"The daughter of a squaw-man then," he said, and there was in his +voice the contempt of the white man for the half-breed. + +"I'm Jessie McRae," she said proudly. + +Among the Indians she went by her tribal name of Sleeping Dawn, but +always with the whites she used the one her adopted father had given +her. It increased their respect for her. Just now she was in desperate +need of every ounce that would weigh in the scales. + +"Daughter of Angus McRae?" he asked, astonished. + +"Yes." + +"His woman's a Cree?" + +"His wife is," the girl corrected. + +"What you doin' here?" + +"Father's camp is near. He's hunting hides." + +"Did he send you to smash our whiskey-barrels?" + +"Angus McRae never hides behind a woman," she said, her chin up. + +That was true. Morse knew it, though he had never met McRae. His +reputation had gone all over the Northland as a fearless fighting man +honest as daylight and stern as the Day of Judgment. If this girl was +a daughter of the old Scot, not even a whiskey-trader could safely lay +hands on her. For back of Angus was a group of buffalo-hunters related +to him by blood over whom he held half-patriarchal sway. + +"Why did you do it?" Morse demanded. + +The question struck a spark of spirit from her. "Because you're +ruining my people--destroying them with your fire-water." + +He was taken wholly by surprise. "Do you mean you destroyed our +property for that reason?" + +She nodded, sullenly. + +"But we don't trade with the Crees," he persisted. + +It was on the tip of her tongue to tell him that she was of the +Blackfoot tribe and not of the Crees, but again for reasons of policy +she was less than candid. Till she was safely out of the woods, it was +better this man should not know she was only an adopted daughter of +Angus McRae. She offered another reason, and with a flare of passion +which he was to learn as a characteristic of her. + +"You make trouble for my brother Fergus. He shot Akokotos (Many +Horses) in the leg when the fire-water burned in him. He was stabbed +by a Piegan brave who did not know what he was doing. Fergus is good. +He minds his own business. But you steal away his brains. Then he runs +wild. It was _you_, not Fergus, that shot Akokotos. The Great Spirit +knows you whiskey-traders, and not my poor people who destroy each +other, are the real murderers." + +Her logic was feminine and personal, from his viewpoint wholly unfair. +Moreover, one of her charges did not happen to be literally true. + +"We never sold whiskey to your brother--not our outfit. It was +Jackson's, maybe. Anyhow, nobody made him buy it. He was free to take +it or leave it." + +"A wolf doesn't have to eat the poisoned meat in a trap, but it eats +and dies," she retorted swiftly and bitterly. + +Adroitly she had put him on the defensive. Her words had the sting of +barbed darts. + +"We're not talking of wolves." + +"No, but of Blackfeet and Bloods and Sarcees," she burst out, again +with that flare of feminine ferocity so out of character in an Indian +woman or the daughter of one. "D'you think I don't know how you +Americans talk? A good Indian is a dead Indian. No wonder we hate you +all. No wonder the tribes fight you to the death." + +He had no answer for this. It was true. He had been brought up in a +land of Indian wars and he had accepted without question the common +view that the Sioux, the Crows, and the Cheyennes, with all their +blood brothers, were menaces to civilization. The case for the natives +he had never studied. How great a part broken pledges and callous +injustice had done to drive the tribes to the war-path he did not +know. Few of the actual frontiersmen were aware of the wrongs of the +red men. + +The young man's hands fell from her arms. Hard-eyed and grim, he +looked her over from head to foot. The short skirt and smock of +buckskin, the moccasins of buffalo hide, all dusty and travel-stained, +told of life in a primitive country under the simplest and hardest +conditions. + +Yet the voice was clear and vibrant, the words well enunciated. She +bloomed like a desert rose, had some quality of vital life that struck +a spark from his imagination. + +What manner of girl was she? Not by any possibility would she fit into +the specifications of the cubby-hole his mind had built for Indian +women. The daughters even of the boisbrulés had much of the heaviness +and stolidity of their native mothers. Jessie McRae was graceful as a +fawn. Every turn of the dark head, every lift of the hand, expressed +spirit and verve. She must, he thought, have inherited almost wholly +from her father, though in her lissom youth he could find little of +McRae's heavy solidity of mind and body. + +"Your brother is of the métis[2]. He's not a tribesman. And he's no +child. He can look out for himself," Morse said at last. + +[Footnote 2: The half-breeds were known as "métis." The word means, of +course, mongrel. (W.M.R.)] + +His choice of a word was unfortunate. It applied as much to her as to +Fergus. Often it was used contemptuously. + +"Yes, and the métis doesn't matter," she cried, with the note of +bitterness that sat so strangely on her hot-blooded, vital youth. "You +can ride over him as though you're lords of the barren lands. You can +ruin him for the money you make, even if he's a subject of the Great +Mother and not of your country. He's only a breed--a mongrel." + +He was a man of action. He brushed aside discussion. "We'll be movin' +back to camp." + +Instantly her eyes betrayed the fear she would not put into words. +"No--no! I won't go." + +His lids narrowed. The outthrust of his lean jaw left no room for +argument. "You'll go where I say." + +She knew it would be that way, if he dragged her by the hair of the +head. Because she was in such evil case she tamed her pride to sullen +pleading. + +"Don't take me there! Let me go to father. He'll horsewhip me. I'll +have him do it for you. Isn't that enough? Won't that satisfy you?" + +Red spots smoldered like fire in his brown eyes. If he took her back +to the traders' camp, he would have to fight Bully West for her. That +was certain. All sorts of complications would rise. There would be +trouble with McRae. The trade with the Indians of his uncle's firm, of +which he was soon to be a partner, would be wrecked by the Scotchman. +No, he couldn't take her back to the camp in the coulée. There was too +much at stake. + +"Suits me. I'll take you up on that. He's to horsewhip you for that +fool trick you played on us and to make good our loss. Where's his +camp?" + +From the distance of a stone-throw a heavy, raucous voice called, +"'Lo, Morse!" + +The young man turned to the girl, his lips set in a thin, hard line. +"Bully West. The dog's gone back and is bringin' him here, I reckon. +Like to meet him?" + +She knew the reputation of Bully West, notorious as a brawler and +a libertine. Who in all the North did not know of it? Her heart +fluttered a signal of despair. + +"I--I can get away yet--up the valley," she said in a whisper, eyes +quick with fear. + +He smiled grimly. "You mean _we_ can." + +"Yes." + +"Hit the trail." + +She turned and led the way into the darkness. + + + + +CHAPTER III + +ANGUS McRAE DOES HIS DUTY + + +The harsh shout came to them again, and with it a volley of oaths that +polluted the night. + +Sleeping Dawn quickened her pace. The character of Bully West was +sufficiently advertised in that single outburst. She conceived him +bloated, wolfish, malignant, a man whose mind traveled through filthy +green swamps breeding fever and disease. Hard though this young man +was, in spite of her hatred of him, of her doubt as to what lay behind +those inscrutable, reddish-brown eyes of his, she would a hundred +times rather take chances with him than with Bully West. He was at +least a youth. There was always the possibility that he might not yet +have escaped entirely from the tenderness of boyhood. + +Morse followed her silently with long, tireless, strides. The girl +continued to puzzle him. Even her manner of walking expressed +personality. There was none of the flat-footed Indian shuffle about +her gait. She moved lightly, springily, as one does who finds in it +the joy of calling upon abundant strength. + +She was half Scotch, of course. That helped to explain her. The words +of an old song hummed themselves through his mind. + + "Yestreen I met a winsome lass, a bonny lass was she, + As ever climbed the mountain-side, or tripped aboon the lea; + She wore nae gold, nae jewels bright, nor silk nor satin rare, + But just the plaidie that a queen might well be proud to wear." + +Jessie McRae wore nothing half so picturesque as the tartan. Her +clothes were dingy and dust-stained. But they could not eclipse the +divine, dusky youth of her. She was slender, as a panther is, and her +movements had more than a suggestion of the same sinuous grace. + +Of the absurdity of such thoughts he was quite aware. She was a +good-looking breed. Let it go at that. In story-books there were +Indian princesses, but in real life there were only squaws. + +Not till they were out of the danger zone did he speak. "Where's your +father's camp?" + +She pointed toward the northwest. "You don't need to be afraid. He'll +pay you for the damage I did." + +He looked at her in the steady, appraising way she was to learn as a +peculiarity of his. + +"I'm not afraid," he drawled. "I'll get my pay--and you'll get yours." + +Color flamed into her dusky face. When she spoke there was the throb +of contemptuous anger in her voice. "It's a great thing to be a man." + +"Like to crawfish, would you?" + +She swung on him, eyes blazing. "No. I don't ask any favors of a +wolfer." + +She spat the word at him as though it were a missile. The term was one +of scorn, used only in speaking of the worst of the whiskey-traders. +He took it coolly, his strong white teeth flashing in a derisive +smile. + +"Then this wolfer won't offer any, Miss McRae." + +It was the last word that passed between them till they reached the +buffalo-hunter's camp. If he felt any compunctions, she read nothing +of the kind in his brown face and the steady stride carrying her +straight to punishment. She wondered if he knew how mercilessly +twenty-year-old Fergus had been thrashed after his drunken spree among +the Indians, how sternly Angus dispensed justice in the clan over +which he ruled. Did he think she was an ordinary squaw, one to be +whipped as a matter of discipline by her owner? + +They climbed a hill and looked down on a camp of many fires in the +hollow below. + +"Is it you, lass?" a voice called. + +Out of the shadows thrown by the tents a big bearded man came to meet +them. He stood six feet in his woolen socks. His chest was deep and +his shoulders tremendously broad. Few in the Lone Lands had the +physical strength of Angus McRae. + +His big hand caught the girl by the shoulder with a grip that was +half a caress. He had been a little anxious about her and this found +expression in a reproach. + +"You shouldna go out by your lane for so lang after dark, Jess. Weel +you ken that." + +"I know, Father." + +The blue eyes beneath the grizzled brows of the hunter turned upon +Morse. They asked what he was doing with his daughter at that time and +place. + +The Montana trader answered the unspoken question, an edge of irony in +his voice. "I found Miss McRae wanderin' around, so I brought her home +where she would be safe and well taken care of." + +There was something about this Angus did not understand. At night in +the Lone Lands, among a thousand hill pockets and shoestring draws, +it would be only a millionth chance that would bring a man and woman +together unexpectedly. He pushed home questions, for he was not one to +slough any of the responsibilities that belonged to him as father of +his family. + +A fat and waistless Indian woman appeared in the tent flap as the +three approached the light. She gave a grunt of surprise and pointed +first at Morse and then at the girl. + +The trader's hands were covered with blood, his shirt-sleeve soaked in +it. Stains of it were spattered over the girl's clothes and face. + +The Scotchman looked at them, and his clean-shaven upper lip grew +straight, his whole face stern. "What'll be the meanin' o' this?" he +asked. + +Morse turned to the girl, fastened his eyes on her steadily, and +waited. + +"Nae lees. I'll hae the truth," Angus added harshly. + +"I did it--with my hunting-knife," the daughter said, looking straight +at her father. + +"What's that? Are ye talkin' havers, lass?" + +"It's the truth, Father." + +The Scotchman swung on the trader with a swift question, at the end of +it a threat. "Why would she do that? Why? If you said one word to my +lass--" + +"No, Father. You don't understand. I found a camp of whiskey-traders, +and I stole up and smashed four-five kegs. I meant to slip away, but +this man caught me. When he rushed at me I was afraid--so I slashed at +him with my knife. We fought." + +"You fought," her father repeated. + +"He didn't know I was a girl--not at first." + +The buffalo-hunter passed that point. "You went to this trader's camp +and ruined his goods?" + +"Yes." + +"Why?" + +The slim girl faced her judge steadily with eyes full of apprehension. +"Fergus," she said in a low voice, "and my people." + +"What aboot them?" + +"These traders break the law. They sell liquor to Fergus and to--" + +"Gin that's true, is it your business to ram-stam in an' destroy ither +folks' property? Did I bring you up i' the fear o' the Lord to slash +at men wi' your dirk an' fight wi' them like a wild limmer? I've been +ower-easy wi' you. Weel, I'll do my painfu' duty the nicht, lass." The +Scotchman's eyes were as hard and as inexorable as those of a hanging +judge. + +"Yes," the girl answered in a small voice. "That's why he brought me +home instead of taking me to his own camp. You're to whip me." + +Angus McRae was not used to having the law and the judgment taken out +of his own hands. He frowned at the young man beneath heavy grizzled +eyebrows drawn sternly together. "An' who are you to tell me how to +govern my ain hoose?" he demanded. + +"My name's Morse--Tom Morse, Fort Benton, Montana, when my hat's +hangin' up. I took up your girl's proposition, that if I didn't head +in at our camp, but brought her here, you were to whip her and pay me +damages for what she'd done. Me, I didn't propose it. She did." + +"You gave him your word on that, Jess?" her father asked. + +"Yes." She dragged out, reluctantly, after a moment: "With a +horsewhip." + +"Then that's the way it'll be. The McRaes don't cry back on a +bargain," the dour old buffalo-hunter said. "But first we'll look at +this young man's arm. Get water and clean rags, Jess." + +Morse flushed beneath the dark tan of his cheeks. "My arm's all right. +It'll keep till I get back to camp." + +"No such thing, my lad. We'll tie it up here and now. If my lass cut +your arm, she'll bandage the wound." + +"She'll not. I'm runnin' this arm." + +McRae slammed a heavy fist down into the palm of his hand. "I'll be +showin' you aboot that, mannie." + +"Hell, what's the use o' jawin'? I'm goin' to wait, I tell you." + +"Don't curse in my camp, Mr. Morse, or whatever your name is." The +Scotchman's blue eyes flashed. "It's a thing I do not permeet. Nor do +I let beardless lads tell me what they will or won't do here. Your +wound will be washed and tied up if I have to order you hogtied first. +So mak the best o' that." + +Morse measured eyes with him a moment, then gave way with a sardonic +laugh. McRae had a full share of the obstinacy of his race. + +"All right. I'm to be done good to whether I like it or not. Go to +it." The trader pulled back the sleeve of his shirt and stretched out +a muscular, blood-stained arm. An ugly flesh wound stretched halfway +from elbow to wrist. + +Jessie brought a basin, water, a towel, and clean rags. By the light +of a lantern in the hands of her father, she washed and tied up the +wound. Her lips trembled. Strange little rivers of fire ran through +her veins when her finger-tips touched his flesh. Once, when she +lifted her eyes, they met his. He read in them a concentrated passion +of hatred. + +Not even when she had tied the last knot in the bandage did any of +them speak. She carried away the towel and the basin while McRae hung +the lantern to a nail in the tent pole and brought from inside a +silver-mounted riding-whip. It was one he had bought as a present for +his daughter last time he had been at Fort Benton. + +The girl came back and stood before him. A pulse beat fast in her +brown throat. The eyes betrayed the dread of her soul, but they met +without flinching those of the buffalo-hunter. + +The Indian woman at the tent entrance made no motion to interfere. The +lord of her life had spoken. So it would be. + +With a strained little laugh Morse took a step forward. "I reckon I'll +not stand out for my pound of flesh, Mr. McRae. Settle the damages for +the lost liquor and I'll call it quits." + +The upper lip of the Scotchman was a straight line of resolution. "I'm +not thrashing the lass to please you, but because it's in the bond and +because she's earned it. Stand back, sir." + +The whip swung up and down. The girl gasped and shivered. A flame of +fiery pain ran through her body to the toes. She set her teeth to bite +back a scream. Before the agony had passed, the whip was winding round +her slender body again like a red-hot snake. It fell with implacable +rhythmic regularity. + +Her pride and courage collapsed. She sank to her knees with a wild +burst of wailing and entreaties. At last McRae stopped. + +Except for the irregular sobbing breaths of the girl there was +silence. The Indian woman crouched beside the tortured young thing and +rocked the dark head, held close against her bosom, while she crooned +a lullaby in the native tongue. + +McRae, white to the lips, turned upon his unwelcome guest. "You're nae +doot wearyin' to tak the road, man. Bring your boss the morn an' I'll +mak a settlement." + +Morse knew he was dismissed. He turned and walked into the darkness +beyond the camp-fires. Unnoticed, he waited there in a hollow and +listened. For along time there came to him the soft sound of weeping, +and afterward the murmur of voices. He knew that the fat and shapeless +squaw was pouring mother love from her own heart to the bleeding one +of the girl. + +Somehow that brought him comfort. He had a queer feeling that he had +been a party to some horrible outrage. Yet all that had taken place +was the whipping of an Indian girl. He tried to laugh away the weak +sympathy in his heart. + +But the truth was that inside he was a wild river of woe for her. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +THE WOLFERS + + +When Tom Morse reached camp he found Bully West stamping about in a +heady rage. The fellow was a giant of a man, almost muscle-bound in +his huge solidity. His shoulders were rounded with the heavy pack of +knotted sinews they carried. His legs were bowed from much riding. It +was his boast that he could bend a silver dollar double in the palm of +his hand. Men had seen him twist the tail rod of a wagon into a knot. +Sober, he was a sulky, domineering brute with the instincts of a +bully. In liquor, the least difference of opinion became for him a +cause of quarrel. + +Most men gave him a wide berth, and for the sake of peace accepted +sneers and insults that made the blood boil. + +"Where you been all this time?" he growled. + +"Ploughin' around over the plains." + +"Didn't you hear me callin'?" + +"D'you call? I've been quite a ways from camp. Bumped into Angus +McRae's buffalo-hunting outfit. He wants to see us to-morrow." + +"What for?" + +"Something about to-night's business. Seems he knows who did it. +Offers to settle for what we lost." + +Bully West stopped in his stride, feet straddled, head thrust forward. +"What's that?" + +"Like I say. We're to call on him to-morrow for a settlement, you 'n' +me." + +"Did McRae bust our barrels?" + +"He knows something about it. Didn't have time to talk long with him. +I hustled right back to tell you." + +"He can come here if he wants to see me," West announced. + +This called for no answer and Tom gave it none. He moved across to the +spot where the oxen were picketed and made sure the pins were still +fast. Presently he rolled his blanket round him and looked up into a +sky all stars. Usually he dropped asleep as soon as his head touched +the seat of the saddle he used as a pillow. But to-night he lay awake +for hours. He could not get out of his mind the girl he had met and +taken to punishment. A dozen pictures of her rose before him, all of +them mental snapshots snatched from his experience of the night. Now +he was struggling to hold her down, his knees clamped to her writhing, +muscular torso. Again he held her by the strong, velvet-smooth arms +while her eyes blazed fury and defiance at him. Or her stinging words +pelted him as she breasted the hill slopes with supple ease. Most +vivid of all were the ones at her father's camp, especially those when +she was under the torture of the whip. + +No wonder she hated him for what he had done to her. + +He shook himself into a more comfortable position and began to count +stars.... Ninety-five, ninety-six, ninety-seven.... What was the use +of stressing the affair, anyhow? She was only a half-breed. In +ten years she would be fat, shapeless, dirty, and repellent. Her +conversation would be reduced to grunts. The glance he had had at her +mother was illuminating. + +Where was he?... One hundred eleven, twelve, thirteen.... Women had +not obtruded much into his life. He had lived in the wind and the sun +of the outdoors, much of the time in the saddle. Lawless he was, +but there was a clean strain in his blood. He had always felt an +indifferent contempt for a squaw-man. An American declassed himself +when he went in for that sort of thing, even if he legalized the +union by some form of marriage. In spite of her magnificent physical +inheritance of health and vitality, in spite of the quick and +passionate spirit that informed her, she would be the product of her +environment and ancestry, held close to barbarism all her life. The +man who mated with her would be dragged down to her level. + +Two hundred three, four, five.... How game she had been! She had +played it out like a thoroughbred, even to telling her father that he +was to use the horsewhip in punishing her. He had never before seen a +creature so splendid or so spirited. Squaw or no squaw, he took off +his hat to her. + +The sun had climbed the hilltop when Morse wakened. + +"Come an' get it!" Barney the cook was yelling at him. + +Bully West had changed his mind about not going to the +buffalo-hunter's camp. + +"You 'n' Brad'll stay here, Barney, while me 'n' Tom are gone," he +gave orders. "And you'll keep a sharp lookout for raiders. If any one +shows up that you're dubious of, plug him and ask questions afterward. +Un'erstand?" + +"I hear ye," replied Barney, a small cock-eyed man with a malevolent +grin. "An' we'll do just that, boss." + +Long before the traders reached it, the camp of the buffalo-hunters +advertised its presence by the stench of decaying animal matter. +Hundreds of hides were pegged to the ground. Men and women, squatting +on their heels, scraped bits of fat from the drying skins. Already a +train of fifty Red River carts[3] stood ready for the homeward start, +loaded with robes tied down by means of rawhide strips to stand the +jolting across the plains. Not far away other women were making +pemmican of fried buffalo meat and fat, pounded together and packed +with hot grease in skin bags. This food was a staple winter diet and +had too a market value for trade to the Hudson's Bay Company, which +shipped thousands of sacks yearly to its northern posts on the Peace +and the Mackenzie Rivers. + +[Footnote 3: The Red River cart was a primitive two-wheeled affair, +made entirely of wood, without nails or metal tires. It was usually +drawn by an ox. (W.M.R.)] + +The children and the sound of their laughter gave the camp a domestic +touch. Some of the brown, half-naked youngsters, their skins +glistening in the warm sun, were at work doing odd jobs. Others, too +young to fetch and carry, played with a litter of puppies or with a +wolf cub that had been caught and tamed. + +The whole bustling scene was characteristic of time and place. A score +of such outfits, each with its Red River carts and its oxen, its dogs, +its women and children, traveled to the plains each spring to hunt +the bison. They killed thousands upon thousands of them, for it took +several animals to make a sack of pemmican weighing one hundred fifty +pounds. The waste was enormous, since only the choicest cuts of meat +were used. + +Already the buffalo were diminishing in numbers. Vast hordes still +roamed the plains. They could be killed by scores and hundreds. But +the end was near. It had been several years since Colonel Dodge +reported that he had halted his party of railroad builders two days +to let a herd of over half a million bison pass. Such a sight was no +longer possible. The pressure of the hunters had divided the game into +the northern and the southern herds. Within four or five years the +slaughter was to be so great that only a few groups of buffalo would +be left. + +The significance of this extermination lay largely in its application +to the Indians. The plains tribes were fed and clothed and armed and +housed by means of the buffalo. Even the canoes of the lake Indians +were made from buffalo skins. The failure of the supply reduced the +natives from warriors to beggars. + +McRae came forward to meet the traders, the sleeves of his shirt +rolled to the elbows of his muscular brown arms. He stroked a great +red beard and nodded gruffly. It was not in his dour honest nature to +pretend that he was glad to see them when he was not. + +"Well, I'm here," growled West, interlarding a few oaths as a +necessary corollary of his speech. "What's it all about, McRae? What +do you know about the smashing of our barrels?" + +"I'll settle any reasonable damage," the hunter said. + +Bully West frowned. He spread his legs deliberately, folded his arms, +and spat tobacco juice upon a clean hide drying in the sun. "Hold yore +hawsses a minute. The damage'll be enough. Don't you worry about that. +But first off, I aim to know who raided our camp. Then I reckon I'll +whop him till he's wore to a frazzle." + +Under heavy, grizzled brows McRae looked long at him. Both were +outstanding figures by reason of personality and physique. One was a +constructive force, the other destructive. There was a suggestion of +the gorilla in West's long arms matted with hair, in the muscles of +back and shoulders so gnarled and knotted that they gave him almost +a deformed appearance. Big and broad though he was, the Scot was the +smaller. But power harnessed and controlled expressed itself in every +motion of the body. Moreover, the blue eyes that looked straight and +hard out of the ruddy face told of coordination between mind and +matter. + +Angus McRae was that rare product, an honest, outspoken man. He sought +to do justice to all with whom he had dealings. Part of West's demand +was fair, he reflected. The trader had a right to know all the facts +in the case. But the old Hudson's Bay trapper had a great reluctance +to tell them. His instinct to protect Jessie was strong. + +"I've saved ye the trouble, Mr. West. The guilty yin was o' my ain +family. Your young man will tell ye I've done a' the horsewhippin' +that's necessary." + +The big trail boss looked blackly at his helper. He would settle with +Morse at the proper time. Now he had other business on hand. + +"Come clean, McRae. Who was it? There'll be nothin' doin' till I know +that," he growled. + +"My daughter." + +West glared at him, for once astonished out of profanity. + +"What?" + +"My daughter Jessie." + +"Goddlemighty, d'ja mean to tell me a girl did it?" He threw back his +head in a roar of Homeric laughter. "Ever hear the beat of that? A +damn li'l' Injun squaw playin' her tricks on Bully West! If she was +mine I'd tickle her back for it." + +The eyes in the Scotchman's granite face flashed. "Man, can you never +say twa-three words withoot profanity? This is a God-fearin' camp. +There's nae place here for those who tak His name in vain." + +"Smashed 'em with her own hands--is that what you mean? I'll give it +to her that she's a plucky li'l' devil, even if she is a nitchie." + +McRae reproved him stiffly. "You'll please to remember that you're +talking of my daughter, Mr. West. I'll allow no such language aboot +her. You're here to settle a business matter. What do ye put the +damage at?" + +They agreed on a price, to be paid in hides delivered at Whoop-Up. +West turned and went straddling to the place where he and Morse had +left their horses. On the way he came face to face with a girl, a +lithe, dusky young creature, Indian brown, the tan of a hundred +summer suns and winds painted on the oval of her lifted chin. She was +carrying a package of sacks to the place where the pemmican was being +made. + +West's eyes narrowed. They traveled up and down her slender body. They +gloated on her. + +After one scornful glance which swept over and ignored Morse, the girl +looked angrily at the man barring her way. Slowly the blood burned +into her cheeks. For there was that in the trader's smoldering eyes +that would have insulted any modest maiden. + +"You Jessie McRae?" he demanded, struck of a sudden with an idea. + +"Yes." + +"You smashed my whiskey-barrels?" + +"My father has told you. If he says so, isn't that enough?" + +He slapped an immense hand on his thigh, hugely diverted. "You damn +li'l' high-steppin' filly! Why? What in hell 'd I ever do to you?" + +Angus McRae strode forward, eyes blazing. He had married a Cree woman, +had paid for her to her father seven ponies, a yard of tobacco, and a +bottle of whiskey. His own two-fisted sons were métis. The Indian in +them showed more plainly than the Celt. Their father accepted the fact +without resentment. But there was in his heart a queer feeling about +the little lass he had adopted. Her light, springing step, the lift of +the throat and the fearlessness of the eye, the instinct in her for +cleanliness of mind and body, carried him back forty years to the land +of heather, to a memory of the laird's daughter whom he had worshiped +with the hopeless adoration of a red-headed gillie. It had been the +one romance of his life, and somehow it had reincarnated itself in +his love for the half-breed girl. To him it seemed a contradiction of +nature that Jessie should be related to the flat-footed squaws who +were slaves to their lords. He could not reconcile his heart to the +knowledge that she was of mixed blood. She was too fine, too dainty, +of too free and imperious a spirit. + +"Your horses are up the hill, Mr. West," he said pointedly. + +It is doubtful whether the trader heard. He could not keep his +desirous eyes from the girl. + +"Is she a half or a quarter-breed?" he asked McRae. + +"That'll be her business and mine, sir. Will you please tak the road?" +The hunter spoke quietly, restraining himself from an outbreak. But +his voice carried an edge. + +"By Gad, she's some clipper," West said, aloud to himself, just as +though the girl had not been present. + +"Will you leave my daughter oot o' your talk, man?" warned the +Scotchman. + +"What's ailin' you?" West's sulky, insolent eyes turned on the +buffalo-hunter. "A nitchie's a nitchie. Me, I talk straight. But I aim +to be reasonable too. I don't like a woman less because she's got the +devil in her. Bully West knows how to tame 'em so they'll eat outa his +hand. I've took a fancy to yore girl. Tha's right, McRae." + +"You may go to the tent, Jessie," the girl's father told her. He was +holding his temper in leash with difficulty. + +"Wait a mo." The big trader held out his arm to bar the way. "Don't +push on yore reins, McRae. I'm makin' you a proposition. Me, I'm +lookin' for a wife, an' this here breed girl of yours suits me. Give +her to me an' I'll call the whole thing square. Couldn't say fairer +than that, could I?" + +The rugged hunter looked at the big malformed border ruffian with +repulsion. "Man, you gi'e me a scunner," he said. "Have done wi' this +foolishness an' be gone. The lass is no' for you or the like o' you." + +"Hell's hinges, you ain't standin' there tellin' me that a Cree breed +is too good for Bully West, are you?" roared the big whiskey-runner. + +"A hundred times too good for you. I'd rather see the lass dead in +her coffin than have her life ruined by you," McRae answered in dead +earnest. + +"You don't get me right, Mac," answered the smuggler, swallowing his +rage. "I know yore religious notions. We'll stand up before a sky +pilot and have this done right. I aim to treat this girl handsome." + +Jessie had turned away at her father's command. Now she turned swiftly +upon the trader, eyes flashing. "I'd rather Father would drive a +knife in my heart than let me be married to a wolfer!" she cried +passionately. + +His eyes, untrammeled by decency, narrowed to feast on the brown +immature beauty of her youth. + +"Tha' so?" he jeered. "Well, the time's comin' when you'll go down on +yore pretty knees an' beg me not to leave you. It'll be me 'n' you one +o' these days. Make up yore mind to that." + +"Never! Never! I'd die first!" she exploded. + +Bully West showed his broken, tobacco-stained teeth in a mirthless +grin. "We'll see about that, dearie." + +"March, lass. Your mother'll be needin' you," McRae said sharply. + +The girl looked at West, then at Morse. From the scorn of that glance +she might have been a queen and they the riffraff of the land. She +walked to the tent. Not once did she look back. + +"You've had your answer both from her and me. Let that be an end o' +it," McRae said with finality. + +The trader's anger ripped out in a crackle of obscene oaths. They +garnished the questions that he snarled. "Wha's the matter with me? +Why ain't I good enough for yore half-breed litter?" + +It was a spark to gunpowder. The oaths, the insult, the whole +degrading episode, combined to drive McRae out of the self-restraint +he had imposed on himself. He took one step forward. With a wide sweep +of the clenched fist he buffeted the smuggler on the ear. Taken by +surprise, West went spinning against the wheel of a cart. + +The man's head sank between his shoulders and thrust forward. A sound +that might have come from an infuriated grizzly rumbled from the hairy +throat. His hand reached for a revolver. + +Morse leaped like a crouched cat. Both hands caught at West's arm. The +old hunter was scarcely an instant behind him. His fingers closed on +the wrist just above the weapon. + +"Hands off," he ordered Morse. "This is no' your quarrel." + +The youngster's eyes met the blazing blue ones of the Scot. His +fingers loosened their hold. He stepped back. + +The two big men strained. One fought with every ounce of power in him +to twist the arm from him till the cords and sinews strained; the +other to prevent this and to free the wrist. It was a test of sheer +strength. + +Each labored, breathing deep, his whole energy centered on coördinated +effort of every muscle. They struggled in silence except for the +snarling grunts of the whiskey-runner. + +Slowly, almost imperceptibly at first, the wrist began to turn from +McRae. Sweat beads gathered on West's face. He fought furiously to +hold his own. But the arm turned inexorably. + +The trader groaned. As the cords tightened and shoots of torturing +pain ran up the arm, the huge body of the man writhed. The revolver +fell from his paralyzed fingers. His wobbling knees sagged and +collapsed. + +McRae's fingers loosened as the man slid down and caught the bull-like +throat. His grip tightened. West fought savagely to break it. He could +as soon have freed himself from the clamp of a vice. + +The Scotchman shook him till he was black in the face, then flung him +reeling away. + +"Get oot, ye yellow wolf!" he roared. "Or fegs! I'll break every bone +in your hulkin' body. Oot o' my camp, the pair o' you!" + +West, strangling, gasped for air, as does a catfish on the bank. He +leaned on the cart wheel until he was able to stand. The help of Morse +he brushed aside with a sputtered oath. His eyes never left the man +who had beaten him. He snarled hike a whipped wolf. The hunter's +metaphor had been an apt one. The horrible lust to kill was stamped on +his distorted, grinning face, but for the present the will alone was +not enough. + +McRae's foot was on the revolver. His son Fergus, a swarthy, +good-looking youngster, had come up and was standing quietly behind +his father. Other hunters were converging toward their chief. + +The Indian trader swore a furious oath of vengeance. Morse tried to +lead him away. + +"Some day I'll get yore squaw girl right, McRae, an' then God help +her," he threatened. + +The bully lurched straddling away. + +Morse, a sardonic grin on his lean face, followed him over the hill. + + + + +CHAPTER V + +MORSE JUMPS UP TROUBLE + + +"Threw me down, didn't you?" snarled West out of the corner of his +mouth. "Knew all the time she did it an' never let on to me. A hell of +a way to treat a friend." + +Tom Morse said nothing. He made mental reservations about the word +friend, but did not care to express them. His somber eyes watched the +big man jerk the spade bit cruelly and rowel the bronco when it went +into the air. It was a pleasure to West to torture an animal when no +human was handy, though he preferred women and even men as victims. + +"Whad he mean when he said you could tell me how he'd settled with +her?" he growled. + +"He whipped her last night when I took her back to camp." + +"Took her back to camp, did you? Why didn't you bring her to me? Who's +in charge of this outfit, anyhow, young fellow, me lad?" + +"McRae's too big a man for us to buck. Too influential with the +half-breeds. I figured it was safer to get her right home to him." The +voice of the younger man was mild and conciliatory. + +"_You_ figured!" West's profanity polluted the clear, crisp morning +air. "I got to have a run in with you right soon. I can see that. +Think because you're C.N. Morse's nephew, you can slip yore funny +business over on me. I'll show you." + +The reddish light glinted for a moment in the eyes of Morse, but he +said nothing. Young though he was, he had a capacity for silence. West +was not sensitive to atmospheres, but he felt the force of this young +man. It was not really in his mind to quarrel with him. For one thing +he would soon be a partner in the firm of C.N. Morse & Company, of +Fort Benton, one of the biggest trading outfits in the country. West +could not afford to break with the Morse interests. + +With their diminished cargo the traders pushed north. Their +destination was Whoop-Up, at the junction of the Belly and the St. +Mary's Rivers. This fort had become a rendezvous for all the traders +within hundreds of miles, a point of supply for many small posts +scattered along the rivers of the North. + +Twelve oxen were hitched to each three-wagon load. Four teams had left +Fort Benton together, but two of them had turned east toward Wood +Mountain before the party was out of the Assiniboine country. West had +pushed across Lonesome Prairie to the Sweet Grass Hills and from there +over the line into Canada. + +Under the best of conditions West was no pleasant traveling companion. +Now he was in a state of continual sullen ill-temper. For the first +time in his life he had been publicly worsted. Practically he had +been kicked out of the buffalo camp, just as though he were a drunken +half-breed and not one whose barroom brawls were sagas of the +frontier. + +His vanity was notorious, and it had been flagrantly outraged. He +would never be satisfied until he had found a way to get his revenge. +More than once his simmering anger leaped out at the young fellow who +had been a witness of his defeat. In the main he kept his rage sulkily +repressed. If Tom Morse wanted to tell of the affair with McRae, he +could lessen the big man's prestige. West did not want that. + +The outfit crossed the Milk River, skirted Pakoghkee Lake, and swung +westward in the direction of the Porcupine Hills. Barney had been a +trapper in the country and knew where the best grass was to be found. +In many places the feed was scant. It had been cropped close by the +great herds of buffalo roaming the plains. Most of the lakes were +polluted by the bison, so that whenever possible their guide found +camps by running water. The teams moved along the Belly River through +the sand hills. + +Tom Morse was a crack shot and did the hunting for the party. The +evening before the train reached Whoop-Up, he walked out from camp to +try for an antelope, since they were short of fresh meat. He climbed a +small butte overlooking the stream. His keen eyes swept the panorama +and came to rest on a sight he had never before seen and would never +forget. + +A large herd of buffalo had come down to the river crossing. They were +swimming the stream against a strong current, their bodies low in the +water and so closely packed that he could almost have stepped from one +shaggy head to another. Not fifty yards from him they scrambled ashore +and went lumbering into the hazy dusk. Something had frightened them +and they were on a stampede. Even the river had not stopped their +flight. The earth shook with their tread as they found their stride. + +That wild flight into the gathering darkness was symbolic, Morse +fancied. The vast herds were vanishing never to return. Were they +galloping into the Happy Hunting Ground the Indians prayed for? What +would come of their flight? When the plains knew them no more, how +would the Sioux and the Blackfeet and the Piegans live? Would the +Lonesome Lands become even more desolate than they were now? + +"I wonder," he murmured aloud. + +It is certain that he could have had no vision of the empire soon to +be built out of the desert by himself and men of his stamp. Not even +dimly could he have conceived a picture of the endless wheat-fields +that would stretch across the plains, of the farmers who would pour +into the North by hundreds of thousands, of the cities which would +rise in the sand hills as a monument to man's restless push of +progress and his indomitable hope. No living man's imagination had yet +dreamed of the transformation of this _terra incognita_ into one of +the world's great granaries. + +The smoke of the traders' camp-fire was curling up and drifting away +into thin veils of film before the sun showed over the horizon hills. +The bull-teams had taken up their steady forward push while the quails +were still flying to and from their morning water-holes. + +"Whoop-Up by noon," Barney predicted. + +"Yes, by noon," Tom Morse agreed. "In time for a real sure-enough +dinner with potatoes and beans and green stuff." + +"Y' bet yore boots, an' honest to gosh gravy," added Brad Stearns, +a thin and wrinkled little man whose leathery face and bright eyes +defied the encroachment of time. He was bald, except for a fringe of +grayish hair above the temples and a few long locks carefully disposed +over his shiny crown. But nobody could have looked at him and called +him old. + +They were to be disappointed. + +The teams struck the dusty road that terminated at the fort and +were plodding along it to the crackling accompaniment of the long +bull-whips. + +"Soon now," Morse shouted to Stearns. + +The little man nodded. "Mebbe they'll have green corn on the cob. +Betcha the price of the dinner they do." + +"You've made a bet, dad." + +Stearns halted the leaders. "What's that? Listen." + +The sound of shots drifted to them punctuated by faint, far yells. The +shots did not come in a fusillade. They were intermittent, died down, +popped out again, yielded to whoops in distant crescendo. + +"Injuns," said Stearns. "On the peck, looks like. Crees and Blackfeet, +maybe, but you never can tell. Better throw off the trail and dig in." + +West had ridden up. He nodded. "Till we know where we're at. Get busy, +boys." + +They drew up the wagons in a semicircle, end to end, the oxen bunched +inside, partially protected by a small cottonwood grove in the rear. + +This done, West gave further orders. "We gotta find out what's doin'. +Chances are it's nothin' but a coupla bunches of braves with a cargo +of redeye aboard, Tom, you an' Brad scout out an' take a look-see. +Don't be too venturesome. Soon's you find out what the rumpus is, +hot-foot it back and report, y' understand." The big wolfer snapped +out directions curtly. There was no more competent wagon boss in the +border-land than he. + +Stearns and Morse rode toward the fort. They deflected from the road +and followed the river-bank to take advantage of such shrubbery as +grew there. They moved slowly and cautiously, for in the Indian +country one took no unnecessary chances. From the top of a small rise, +shielded by a clump of willows, the two looked down on a field of +battle already decided. Bullets and arrows were still flying, but the +defiant, triumphant war-whoops of a band of painted warriors slowly +moving toward them showed that the day was won and lost. A smaller +group of Indians was retreating toward the swamp on the left-hand side +of the road. Two or three dead braves lay in the grassy swale between +the foes. + +"I done guessed it, first crack," Brad said. "Crees and Blackfeet. +They sure enough do mix it whenever they get together. The Crees +ce'tainly got the jump on 'em this time." + +It was an old story. From the northern woods the Crees had come +down to trade at the fort. They had met a band of Blackfeet who had +traveled up from the plains for the same purpose. Filled with bad +liquor, the hereditary enemies had as usual adjourned to the ground +outside for a settlement while the traders at the fort had locked the +gates and watched the battle from the loopholes of the stockade. + +"Reckon we better blow back to camp," suggested the old plainsman. +"Mr. Cree may be feelin' his oats heap much. White man look all same +Blackfeet to him like as not." + +"Look." Morse pointed to a dip in the swale. + +An Indian was limping through the brush, taking advantage of such +cover as he could find. He was wounded. His leg dragged and he moved +with difficulty. + +"He'll be a good Injun mighty soon," Stearns said, rubbing his bald +head as it shone in the sun. "Not a chance in the world for him. +They'll git him soon as they reach the coulée. See. They're stoppin' +to collect that other fellow's scalp." + +At a glance Morse had seen the situation. This was none of his affair. +It was tacitly understood that the traders should not interfere in +the intertribal quarrels of the natives. But old Brad's words, "good +Injun," had carried him back to a picture of a brown, slim girl +flashing indignation because Americans treated her race as though only +dead Indians were good ones. He could never tell afterward what was +the rational spring of his impulse. + +At the touch of the rein laid flat against its neck, the cow-pony he +rode laid back its ears, turned like a streak of light, and leaped to +a hand gallop. It swept down the slope and along the draw, gathering +speed with every jump. + +The rider let out a "Hi-yi-yi" to attract the attention of the wounded +brave. Simultaneously the limping fugitive and the Crees caught sight +of the flying horseman who had obtruded himself into the fire zone. + +An arrow whistled past Morse. He saw a bullet throw up a spurt of dirt +beneath the belly of his horse. The Crees were close to their quarry. +They closed in with a run. Tom knew it would be a near thing. He +slackened speed slightly and freed a foot from the stirrup, stiffening +it to carry weight. + +The wounded Indian crouched, began to run parallel with the horse, and +leaped at exactly the right instant. His hand caught the sleeve of his +rescuer at the same time that the flat of his foot dropped upon the +white man's boot. A moment, and his leg had swung across the rump of +the pony and he had settled to the animal's back. + +So close was it that a running Cree snatched at the bronco's tail and +was jerked from his feet before he could release his hold. + +As the cow-pony went plunging up the slope, Morse saw Brad Stearns +silhouetted against the sky-line at the summit. His hat was gone and +his bald head was shining in the sun. He was pumping bullets from his +rifle at the Crees surging up the hill after his companion. + +Stearns swung his horse and jumped it to a lope. Side by side with +Morse he went over the brow in a shower of arrows and slugs. + +"Holy mackerel, boy! What's eatin' you?" he yelled. "Ain't you got any +sense a-tall? Don't you know better 'n to jump up trouble thataway?" + +"We're all right now," the younger man said. "They can't catch us." + +The Crees were on foot and would be out of range by the time they +reached the hilltop. + +"Hmp! They'll come to our camp an' raise Cain. Why not? What business +we got monkeyin' with their scalping sociables? It ain't neighborly." + +"West won't like it," admitted Morse. + +"He'll throw a cat fit. What do you aim to do with yore friend +Mighty-Nigh-Lose-His-Scalp? If I know Bully--and you can bet a silver +fox fur ag'in' a yard o' tobacco that I do--he won't give no glad hand +to him. Not none." + +Morse did not know what he meant to do with him. He had let an impulse +carry him to quixotic action. Already he was half-sorry for it, but he +was obstinate enough to go through now he had started. + +When he realized the situation, Bully West exploded in language +sulphurous. He announced his determination to turn the wounded man +over to the Crees as soon as they arrived. + +"No," said Morse quietly. + +"No what?" + +"I won't stand for that. They'd murder him." + +"That any o' my business--or yours?" + +"I'm makin' it mine." + +The eyes of the two men crossed, as rapiers do, feeling out the +strength back of them. The wounded Indian, tall and slender, stood +straight as an arrow, his gaze now on one, now on the other. His face +was immobile and expressionless. It betrayed no sign of the emotions +within. + +"Show yore cards, Morse," said West. "What's yore play? I'm goin' to +tell the Crees to take him if they want him. You'll go it alone if you +go to foggin' with a six-shooter." + +The young man turned to the Indian he had rescued. He waved a hand +toward the horse from which they had just dismounted. "Up!" he +ordered. + +The Indian youth caught the point instantly. Without using the +stirrups he vaulted to the saddle, light as a mountain lion. His bare +heels dug into the sides of the animal, which was off as though shot +out of a gun. + +Horse and rider skirted the cottonwoods and disappeared in a +depression beyond. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +"SOMETHING ABOUT THESE GUYS" + + +West glared at Morse, his heavy chin outthrust, his bowed legs wide +apart. "You've done run on the rope long enough with me, young feller. +Here's where you take a fall hard." + +The younger man said nothing. He watched, warily. Was it to be a +gun-play? Or did the big bully mean to manhandle him? Probably the +latter. West was vain of his reputation as a two-fisted fighter. + +"I'm gonna beat you up, then turn you over to the Crees," the +infuriated man announced. + +"You can't do that, West. He's a white man same as you," protested +Stearns. + +"This yore put-in, Brad?" West, beside himself with rage, swung on the +little man and straddled forward a step or two threateningly. + +"You done said it," answered the old-timer, falling back. "An' don't +you come closter. I'm liable to get scared, an' you'd ought not to +forget I'm as big as you behind a six-shooter." + +"Here they come--like a swarm o' bees!" yelled Barney. + +The traders forgot, for the moment, their quarrel in the need of +common action. West snatched up a rifle and dropped a bullet in front +of the nearest Indian. The warning brought the Crees up short. They +held a long consultation and one of them came forward making the peace +sign. + +In pigeon English he expressed their demands. + +"He's gone--lit right out--stole one of our broncs. You can search the +camp if you've a mind to," West replied. + +The envoy reported. There was another long pow-wow. + +Brad, chewing tobacco complacently behind a wagon wheel, commented +aloud. "Can't make up their minds whether to come on an' massacree us +or not. They got a right healthy fear of our guns. Don't blame 'em a +bit." + +Some of the Crees were armed with bows and arrows, others with rifles. +But the trade guns sold the Indians of the Northern tribes were of the +poorest quality.[4] + +[Footnote 4: These flintlock muskets were inaccurate. They would not +carry far. Their owners were in constant danger of having fingers or a +hand blown off in explosions. The price paid for these cheap firearms +was based on the length of them. The butt was put on the floor and +the gun held upright. Skins laid flat were piled beside it till they +reached the muzzle. The trader exchanged the rifle for the furs. +(W.M.R.)] + +The whites, to the contrary, were armed with the latest repeating +Winchesters. In a fight with them the natives were at a terrible +disadvantage. + +The Crees realized this. A delegation of two came forward to search +the camp. West pointed out the tracks of the horse upon which their +tribal enemy had ridden away. + +They grunted, "Ugh! Ugh! Ugh!" + +Overbearing though he was, West was an embryonic diplomat. He filled +a water-bucket with whiskey and handed it, with a tin cup, to the +wrinkled old brave nearest him. + +"For our friends the Crees," he said. "Tell your chief my young +man didn't understand. He thought he was rescuing a Cree from the +Blackfeet." + +"Ugh! Ugh!" The Indians shuffled away with their booty. + +There was more talk, but the guttural protests died away before the +temptation of the liquor. The braves drank, flung a few shots in +bravado toward the wagons, and presently took themselves off. + +The traders did not renew their quarrel. West's reasons for not +antagonizing the Morse family were still powerful as ever. He subdued +his desire to punish the young man and sullenly gave orders to hitch +up the teams. + +It was mid-afternoon when the oxen jogged into Whoop-Up. The post was +a stockade fort, built in a square about two hundred yards long, of +cottonwood logs dovetailed together. The buildings on each side of +the plaza faced inward. Loopholes had been cut in the bastions as a +protection against Indians. + +In the big stores was a large supply of blankets, beads, provisions, +rifles, and clothing. The adjacent rooms were half-empty now, but in +the spring they would be packed to the eaves with thousands of buffalo +robes and furs brought in from outlying settlements by hunters. Later +these would be hauled to Fort Benton and from there sent down the +Missouri to St. Louis and other points. + +Morse, looking round, missed a familiar feature. + +"Where's the liquor?" he asked. + +"S-sh!" warned the clerk with whom he was talking. "Haven't you heard? +There's a bunch of police come into the country from Winnipeg. The +lid's on tight." His far eye drooped to the cheek in a wise wink. "If +you've brought in whiskey, you'd better get it out of the fort and +bury it." + +"That's up to West. I wouldn't advise any police to monkey with a +cargo of his." + +"You don't say." The clerk's voice was heavy with sarcasm. "Well, I'll +just make a li'l' bet with you. If the North-West Mounted start to +arrest Bully West or to empty his liquor-kegs, they'll go right +through with the job. They're go-getters, these red-coats are." + +"Red-coats? Not soldiers, are they?" + +"Well, they are and they ain't. They're drilled an' in companies. But +they can arrest any one they've a mind to, and their officers can try +and sentence folks. They don't play no favorites either. Soon as they +hear of this mix-up between the Crees and the Blackfeet they'll be +right over askin' whyfors, and if they find who gave 'em the booze +some one will be up to the neck in trouble and squawkin' for help." + +West had been talking in whispers with Reddy Madden, the owner of the +place. He stepped to the door. + +"Don't onhook, Brad. We're travelin' some more first," he called to +Stearns. + +The oxen plodded out of the stockade and swung to the left. A guide +rode beside West and Morse. He was Harvey Gosse, a whiskey-runner +known to both of them. The man was a long, loose-limbed fellow with a +shrewd eye and the full, drooping lower lip of irresolution. It had +been a year since either of the Fort Benton men had been in the +country. Gosse told them of the change that was taking place in it. + +"Business ain't what it was, an' that ain't but half of it," the lank +rider complained regretfully. "It ain't ever gonna be any more. These +here red-coats are plumb ruinin' trade. Squint at a buck cross-eyed, +whisper rum to him, an' one o' these guys jumps a-straddle o' yore +neck right away." + +"How many of these--what is it you call 'em, Mounted Police?--well, +how many of 'em are there in the country?" asked West. + +"Not so many. I reckon a hundred or so, far as I've heard tell." + +West snorted scornfully. "And you're lettin' this handful of +tenderfeet buffalo you! Hell's hinges! Ain't none of you got any +guts?" + +Gosse dragged slowly a brown hand across an unshaven chin. "I reckon +you wouldn't call 'em tenderfeet if you met up with 'em, Bully. +There's something about these guys--I dunno what it is exactly--but +there's sure something that tells a fellow not to prod 'em overly +much." + +"Quick on the shoot?" the big trader wanted to know. + +"No, it ain't that. They don't hardly ever draw a gun. They jest walk +in kinda quiet an' easy, an' tell you it'll be thisaway. And tha's the +way it is every crack outa the box." + +"Hmp!" West exuded boastful incredulity. "I reckon they haven't bumped +into any one man-size yet." + +The lank whiskey-runner guided the train, by winding draws, into the +hills back of the post. Above a small gulch, at the head of it, the +teams were stopped and unloaded. The barrels were rolled downhill into +the underbrush where they lay cached out of sight. From here they +would be distributed as needed. + +"You boys'll take turn an' turn about watching till I've sold the +cargo," West announced. "Arrange that among yoreselves. Tom, I'll let +you fix up how you'll spell each other. Only thing is, one of you has +to be here all the time, y' understand." + +Morse took the first watch and was followed by Stearns, who in turn +gave place to Barney. The days grew to a week. Sometimes West appeared +with a buyer in a cart or leading a pack-horse. Then the cached +fire-water would be diminished by a keg or two. + +It was a lazy, sleepy life. There was no need for a close guard. +Nobody knew where the whiskey was except themselves and a few +tight-mouthed traders. Morse discovered in himself an inordinate +capacity for sleep. He would throw himself down on the warm, sundried +grass and fall into a doze almost instantly. When the rays of the sun +grew too hot, it was easy to roll over into the shade of the draw. +He could lie for hours on his back after he wakened and watch +cloud-skeins elongate and float away, thinking of nothing or letting +thoughts happen in sheer idle content. + +He had never had a girl, to use the word current among his fellows. +His scheme of life would, he supposed, include women by and by, but +hitherto he had dwelt in a man's world, in a universe of space and +sunshine and blowing wind, under primitive conditions that made for +tough muscles and a clean mind trained to meet frontier emergencies. +But now, to his disgust, he found slipping into his reveries pictures +of a slim, dark girl, arrow-straight, with eyes that held for him only +scorn and loathing. The odd thing about it was that when his brain was +busy with her a strange exultant excitement tingled through his veins. + +One day a queer thing happened. He had never heard of psychic +phenomena or telepathy, but he opened his eyes from a day-dream of her +to see Jessie McRae looking down at him. + +She was on an Indian cayuse, round-bellied and rough. Very erect she +sat, and on her face was the exact expression of scornful hatred he +had seen in his vision of her. + +He jumped to his feet. "You--here!" + +A hot color flooded her face with anger to the roots of the hair. +Without a word, without another glance at him, she laid the bridle +rein to the pony's neck and swung away. + +Unprotesting, he let her go. The situation had jumped at him too +unexpectedly for him to know how to meet it. He stood, motionless, the +red light in his eyes burning like distant camp-fires in the night. +For the first time in his life he had been given the cut direct by a +woman. + +Yet she wasn't a woman after all. She was a maid, with that passionate +sense of tragedy which comes only to the very young. + +It was in his mind to slap a saddle on his bronco and ride after her. +But why? Could he by sheer dominance of will change her opinion of +him? She had grounded it on good and sufficient reasons. He was +associated in her mind with the greatest humiliation of her life, with +the stinging lash that had cut into her young pride and her buoyant +courage as cruelly as it had into her smooth, satiny flesh. Was it +likely she would listen to any regrets, any explanations? Her hatred +of him was not a matter for argument. It was burnt into her soul as +with a red-hot brand. He could not talk away what he had done or the +thing that he was. + +She had come upon him by chance while he was asleep. He guessed that +Angus McRae's party had reached Whoop-Up and had stopped to buy +supplies and perhaps to sell hides and pemmican. The girl had probably +ridden out from the stockade to the open prairie because she loved to +ride. The rest needed no conjecture. In that lone land of vast spaces +travelers always exchanged greetings. She had discovered him lying +in the grass. He might be sick or wounded or dead. The custom of the +country would bring her straight across the swales toward him to find +out whether he needed help. + +Then she had seen who he was--and had ridden away. + +A sardonic smile of self-mockery stamped for a moment on his brown +boyish face the weariness of the years. + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +THE MAN IN THE SCARLET JACKET + + +Morse ambled out at a road gait to take his turn at guard duty. He was +following the principle that the longest way round is the shortest +road to a given place. The reason for this was to ward off any +suspicion that might have arisen if the watchers had always come and +gone by the same trail. Therefore they started for any point of the +compass, swung round in a wide détour, and in course of time arrived +at the cache. + +There wasn't any hurry anyhow. Each day had twenty-four hours, and a +fellow lived just as long if he didn't break his neck galloping along +with his tail up like a hill steer on a stampede. + +To-day Morse dropped in toward the cache from due west. His eyes +were open, even if the warmth of the midday sun did make him sleepy. +Something he saw made him slip from the saddle, lead his horse into a +draw, and move forward very carefully through the bunch grass. + +What he had seen was a man crouched behind some brush, looking down +into the little gorge where the whiskey cache was--a man in leather +boots, tight riding-breeches, scarlet jacket, and jaunty forage cap. +It needed no second glance to tell Tom Morse that the police had run +down the place where they had hidden their cargo. + +From out of the little cañon a man appeared. He was carrying a keg of +whiskey. The man was Barney. West had no doubt sent word to him that +he would shortly bring a buyer with him to the rendezvous. + +The man in the scarlet jacket rose and stepped out into the open. He +was a few feet from Barney. In his belt there was a revolver, but he +did not draw it. + +Barney stopped and stared at him, his mouth open, eyes bulging. "Where +in Heligoland you come from?" he asked. + +"From Sarnia, Ontario," the red-coat answered. "Glad to meet you, +friend. I've been looking for you several days." + +"For me!" said Barney blankly. + +"For you--and for that keg of forty-rod you're carrying. No, don't +drop it. We can talk more comfortably while both your hands are busy." +The constable stepped forward and picked from the ground a rifle. +"I've been lying in the brush two hours waiting for you to get +separated from this. Didn't want you making any mistakes in your +excitement." + +"Mistakes!" repeated Barney. + +"Yes. You're under arrest, you know, for whiskey-smuggling." + +"You're one of these here border police." Barney used the rising +inflection in making his statement. + +"Constable Winthrop Beresford, North-West Mounted, at your service," +replied the officer jauntily. He was a trim, well-set-up youth, quick +of step and crisp of speech. + +"What you gonna do with me?" + +"Take you to Fort Macleod." + +It was perhaps because his eyes were set at not quite the right angles +and because they were so small and wolfish that Barney usually aroused +distrust. He suggested now, with an ingratiating whine in his voice, +that he would like to see a man at Whoop-Up first. + +"Jes' a li'l' matter of business," he added by way of explanation. + +The constable guessed at his business. The man wanted to let his boss +know what had taken place and to give him a chance to rescue him if he +would. Beresford's duty was to find out who was back of this liquor +running. It would be worth while knowing what man Barney wanted to +talk with. He could afford to take a chance on the rescue. + +"Righto," he agreed. "You may put that barrel down now." + +Barney laid it down, end up. With one sharp drive of the rifle butt +the officer broke in the top of the keg, He kicked the barrel over +with his foot. + +This was the moment Morse chose for putting in an appearance. + +"Hello! What's doin'?" he asked casually. + +Beresford, cool and quiet, looked straight at him. "I'll ask _you_ +that." + +"Kinda expensive to irrigate the prairie that way, ain't it?" + +"Doesn't cost me anything. How about you?" + +Morse laughed at the question fired back at him so promptly. This +young man was very much on the job. "Not a bean," the Montanan said. + +"Good. Then you'll enjoy the little show I'm putting on--five thousand +dollars' worth of liquor spilt all at one time." + +"Holy Moses! Where is this blind tiger you're raidin'?" + +"Down in the gully. Lucky you happened along just by chance. You'll be +able to carry the good news to Whoop-Up and adjacent points." + +"You're not really aimin' to spill all that whiskey." + +"That's my intention. Any objections?" The scarlet-coated officer +spoke softly, without any edge to his voice. But Tom began to +understand why the clerk at the trading-post had called the Mounted +Police go-getters. This smooth-shaven lad, so easy and carefree +of manner, had a gleam in his eye that meant business. His very +gentleness was ominous. + +Tom Morse reflected swiftly. His uncle's firm had taken a chance of +this very finale when it had sent a convoy of liquor into forbidden +territory. Better to lose the stock than to be barred by the Canadian +Government from trading with the Indians at all. This officer was not +one to be bribed or bullied. He would go through with the thing he had +started. + +"Why, no! How could I have any objections?" Morse said. + +He shot a swift, slant look at Barney, a look that told the Irishman +to say nothing and know nothing, and that he would be protected +against the law. + +"Glad you haven't," Constable Beresford replied cheerfully--so very +cheerfully in fact that Morse suspected he would not have been much +daunted if objections had been mentioned. "Perhaps you'll help me with +my little job, then." + +The trader grinned. He might as well go the limit with the bluff he +was playing. "Sure. I'll help you make a fourth o' July outa the kegs. +Lead me to 'em." + +"You don't know where they are, of course?" + +"In the gully, you said," Morse replied innocently + +"So I did. Righto. Down you go, then." The constable turned to Barney. +"You next, friend." + +A well-defined trail led down the steep side of the gulch. It ended in +a thick growth of willow saplings. Underneath the roof of this foliage +were more than a score of whiskey-casks. + +After ten minutes with the rifle butt there was nothing to show for +the cache but broken barrels and a trough of wet sand where the liquor +had run down the bed of the dry gully. + +It was time, Morse thought, to play his own small part in the +entertainment. + +"After you, gentlemen," Beresford said, stepping aside to let them +take the trail up. + +Morse too moved back to let Barney pass. The eyes of the two men met +for a fraction of a second. Tom's lips framed silently one word. In +that time a message was given and received. + +The young man followed Barney, the constable at his heels. Morse +stumbled, slipped to all fours, and slid back. He flung out his arms +to steady himself and careened back against the constable. His flying +hands caught at the scarlet coat. His bent head and shoulders thrust +Beresford back and down. + +Barney started to run. + +The officer struggled to hold his footing against the awkward incubus, +to throw the man off so that he could pursue Barney. His efforts were +vain. Morse, evidently trying to regain his equilibrium, plunged +wildly at him and sent him ploughing into the willows. The Montanan +landed heavily on top, pinned him down, and smothered him. + +The scarlet coat was a center of barrel hoops, bushes, staves, and +wildly jerking arms and legs. + +Morse made heroic efforts to untangle himself from the clutter. Once +or twice he extricated himself almost, only to lose his balance on the +slippery bushes and come skating down again on the officer just as he +was trying to rise. + +It was a scene for a moving-picture comedy, if the screen had been a +feature of that day. + +When at last the two men emerged from the gulch, Barney was nowhere to +be seen. With him had vanished the mount of Beresford. + +The constable laughed nonchalantly. He had just lost a prisoner, which +was against the unwritten law of the Force, but he had gained another +in his place. It would not be long till he had Barney too. + +"Pretty work," he said appreciatively. "You couldn't have done it +better if you'd done it on purpose, could you?" + +"Done what?" asked Morse, with bland naïveté. + +"Made a pillow and a bed of me, skated on me, bowled me over like a +tenpin." + +"I ce'tainly was awkward. Couldn't get my footin' at all, seemed like. +Why, where's Barney?" Apparently the trader had just made a discovery. + +"Ask of the winds, 'Oh, where?'" Beresford dusted off his coat, his +trousers, and his cap. When he had removed the evidence of the battle +of the gulch, he set his cap at the proper angle and cocked an +inquiring eye at the other. "I suppose you know you're under arrest." + +"Why, no! Am I? What for? Which of the statues, laws, and ordinances +of Queen Vic have I been bustin' without knowin' of them?" + +"For aiding and abetting the escape of a prisoner." + +"Did I do all that? And when did I do it?" + +"While you were doing that war-dance on what was left of my manhandled +geography." + +"Can you arrest a fellow for slippin'?" + +"Depends on how badly he slips. I'm going to take a chance on +arresting you, anyhow." + +"Gonna take away my six-shooter and handcuff me?" + +"I'll take your revolver. If necessary, I'll put on the cuffs." + +Morse looked at him, not without admiration. The man in the scarlet +jacket wasted nothing. There was about him no superfluity of build, +of gesture, of voice. Beneath the close-fitting uniform the muscles +rippled and played when he moved. His shoulders and arms were those +of a college oarsman. Lean-flanked and clean-limbed, he was in the +hey-day of a splendid youth. It showed in the steady eyes set wide in +the tanned face, in the carriage of the close-cropped, curly head, in +the spring of the step. The Montanan recognized in him a kinship of +dynamic force. + +"Just what would I be doing?" the whiskey-runner asked, smiling. + +Beresford met his smile. "I fancy I'll find that out pretty soon. Your +revolver, please." He held out his hand, palm up. + +"Let's get this straight. We're man to man. What'll you do if I find +I've got no time to go to Fort Macleod with you?" + +"Take you with me." + +"Dead or alive?" + +"No, alive." + +"And if I won't go?" asked Morse. + +"Oh, you'll go." The officer's bearing radiated a quiet, imperturbable +confidence. His hand was still extended, "_If_ you please." + +"No hurry. Do you know what you're up against? When I draw this gun I +can put a bullet through your head and ride away?" + +"Yes." + +"Unless, of course, you plug me first." + +"Can't do that. Against the regulations." + +"Much obliged for that information. You've got only a dead man's +chance then--if I show fight." + +"Better not. Game hardly worth the candle. My pals would run you +down," the constable advised coolly. + +"You still intend to arrest me?" + +"Oh, yes." + +As Morse looked at him, patient as an animal of prey, steady, +fearless, an undramatic Anglo-Saxon who meant to go through with the +day's work, he began to understand the power that was to make the +North-West Mounted Police such a force in the land. The only way he +could prevent this man from arresting him was to kill the constable; +and if he killed him, other jaunty red-coated youths would come to +kill or be killed. It came to him that he was up against a new order +which would wipe Bully West and his kind from the land. + +He handed his revolver to Beresford. "I'll ride with you." + +"Good. Have to borrow your horse till we reach Whoop-Up. You won't +mind walking?" + +"Not at all. Some folks think that's what legs were made for," +answered Morse, grinning. + +As he strode across the prairie beside the horse, Morse was still +puzzling over the situation. He perceived that the strength of the +officer's position was wholly a moral one. A lawbreaker was confronted +with an ugly alternative. The only way to escape arrest was to commit +murder. Most men would not go that far, and of those who would the +great majority would be deterred because eventually punishment was +sure. The slightest hesitation, the least apparent doubt, a flicker of +fear on the officer's face, would be fatal to success. He won because +he serenely expected to win, and because there was back of him a +silent, impalpable force as irresistible as the movement of a glacier. + +Beresford must have known that the men who lived at Whoop-Up were +unfriendly to the North-West Mounted. Some of them had been put out of +business. Their property had been destroyed and confiscated. Fines +had been imposed on them. The current whisper was that the +whiskey-smugglers would retaliate against the constables in person +whenever there was a chance to do so with impunity. Some day a +debonair wearer of the scarlet coat would ride out gayly from one +of the forts and a riderless horse would return at dusk. There were +outlaws who would ask nothing better than a chance to dry-gulch one of +these inquisitive riders of the plains. + +But Beresford rode into the stockade and swung from the saddle with +smiling confidence. He nodded here and there casually to dark, sullen +men who watched his movements with implacably hostile eyes. + +His words were addressed to Reddy Madden. "Can you let me have a horse +for a few days and charge it to the Force? I've lost mine." + +Some one sniggered offensively. Barney had evidently reached Whoop-Up +and was in hiding. + +"Your horse came in a while ago, constable," Madden said civilly. +"It's in the corral back of the store." + +"Did it come in without a rider?" Beresford asked. + +The question was unnecessary. The horse would have gone to Fort +Macleod and not have come to Whoop-Up unless a rider had guided it +here. But sometimes one found out things from unwilling witnesses if +one asked questions. + +"Didn't notice. I was in the store myself." + +"Thought perhaps you hadn't noticed," the officer said. "None of you +other gentlemen noticed either, did you?" + +The "other gentlemen" held a dogged, sulky silence. A girl cantered +through the gate of the stockade and up to the store. At sight of +Morse her eyes passed swiftly to Beresford. His answered smilingly +what she had asked. It was all over in a flash, but it told the man +from Montana who the informer was that had betrayed to the police the +place of the whiskey cache. + +To the best of her limited chance, Jessie McRae was paying an +installment on the debt she owed Bully West and Tom Morse. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +AT SWEET WATER CREEK + + +Before a fire of buffalo chips Constable Beresford and his prisoner +smoked the pipe of peace. Morse sat on his heels, legs crossed, after +the manner of the camper. The officer lounged at full length, an elbow +dug into the sand as a support for his head. The Montanan was +on parole, so that for the moment at least their relations were +forgotten. + +"After the buffalo--what?" asked the American. "The end of the +Indian--is that what it means? And desolation on the plains. Nobody +left but the Hudson's Bay Company trappers, d'you reckon?" + +The Canadian answered in one word. "Cattle." + +"Some, maybe," Morse assented. "But, holy Moses, think of the millions +it would take to stock this country." + +"Bet you the country's stocked inside of five years of the time the +buffalo are cleared out. Look at what the big Texas drives are doing +in Colorado and Wyoming and Montana. Get over the idea that this land +up here is a desert. That's a fool notion our school geographies are +responsible for. Great American Desert? Great American fiddlesticks! +It's a man's country, if you like; but I've yet to see the beat of +it." + +Morse had ceased to pay attention. His head was tilted, and he was +listening. + +"Some one ridin' this way," he said presently. "Hear the hoofs click +on the shale. Who is it? I wonder. An' what do they want? When folks' +intentions hasn't been declared it's a good notion to hold a hand you +can raise on." + +Without haste and without delay Beresford got to his feet. "We'll step +back into the shadow," he announced. + +"Looks reasonable to me," agreed the smuggler. + +They waited in the semi-darkness back of the camp-fire. + +Some one shouted. "Hello, the camp!" At the sound of that clear, +bell-like voice Morse lifted his head to listen better. + +The constable answered the call. + +Two riders came into the light. One was a girl, the other a slim, +straight young Indian in deerskin shirt and trousers. The girl swung +from the saddle and came forward to the camp-fire. The companion of +her ride shadowed her. + +Beresford and his prisoner advanced from the darkness. + +"Bully West's after you. He's sworn to kill you," the girl called to +the constable. + +"How do you know?" + +"Onistah heard him." She indicated with a wave of her hand the +lithe-limbed youth beside her. "Onistah was passing the stable--behind +it, back of the corral. This West was gathering a mob to follow +you--said he was going to hang you for destroying his whiskey." + +"He is, eh?" Beresford's salient jaw set. His light blue eyes gleamed +hard and chill. He would see about that. + +"They'll be here soon. This West was sure you'd camp here at Sweet +Water Creek, close to the ford." A note of excitement pulsed in the +girl's voice. "We heard 'em once behind us on the road. You'd better +hurry." + +The constable swung toward the Montanan. His eyes bored into those of +the prisoner. Would this man keep his parole or not? He would find out +pretty soon. + +"Saddle up, Morse. I'll pack my kit. We'll hit the trail." + +"Listen." Jessie stood a moment, head lifted. "What's that?" + +Onistah moved a step forward, so that for a moment the firelight +flickered over the copper-colored face. Tom Morse made a discovery. +This man was the Blackfoot he had rescued from the Crees. + +"Horses," the Indian said, and held up the fingers of both hands to +indicate the numbers. "Coming up creek. Here soon." + +"We'll move back to the big rocks and I'll make a stand there," +the officer told the whiskey-runner. "Slap the saddles on without +cinching. We've got no time to lose." His voice lost its curtness as +he turned to the girl. "Miss McRae, I'll not forget this. Very likely +you've saved my life. Now you and Onistah had better slip away +quietly. You mustn't be seen here." + +"Why mustn't I?" she asked quickly. "I don't care who sees me." + +She looked at Morse as she spoke, head up, with that little touch of +scornful defiance in the quivering nostrils that seemed to express a +spirit free and unafraid. The sense of superiority is generally not a +lovely manifestation in any human being, but there are moments when it +tells of something fine, a disdain of actions low and mean. + +Morse strode away to the place where the horses were picketed. He +could hear voices farther down the creek, caught once a snatch of +words. + +"... must be somewheres near, I tell you." + +Noiselessly he slipped on the saddles, pulled the picket-pins, and +moved toward the big rocks. + +The place was a landmark. The erosion of the ages had played strange +tricks with the sandstone. The rocks rose like huge red toadstools or +like prehistoric animals of vast size. One of them was known as the +Three Bears, another as the Elephant. + +Among these boulders Morse found the party he had just left. The +officer was still trying to persuade Jessie McRae to attempt escape. +She refused, stubbornly. + +"There are three of us here. Onistah is a good shot. So am I. For that +matter, if anybody is going to escape, it had better be you," she +said. + +"Too late now," Morse said. "See, they've found the camp-fire." + +Nine or ten riders had come out of the darkness and were approaching +the camping-ground. West was in the lead. Morse recognized Barney +and Brad Stearns. Two of the others were half-breeds, one an Indian +trailer of the Piegan tribe. + +"He must 'a' heard us comin' and pulled out," Barney said. + +"Then he's back in the red rocks," boomed West triumphantly. + +"Soon find out." Brad Stearns turned the head of his horse toward the +rocks and shouted. "Hello, Tom! You there?" + +No answer came from the rocks. + +"Don't prove a thing," West broke out impatiently. "This fellow's got +Tom buffaloed. Didn't he make him smash the barrels? Didn't he take +away his six-gun from him and bring him along like he hadn't any mind +of his own? Tom's yellow. Got a streak a foot wide." + +"Nothin' of the kind," denied Stearns, indignation in his voice. "I +done brought up that boy by hand--learned him all he knows about +ridin' and ropin'. He'll do to take along." + +"Hmp! He always fooled you, Brad. Different here. I'm aimin' to give +him the wallopin' of his life when I meet up with him. And that'll be +soon, if he's up there in the rocks. I'm goin' a-shootin'." Bully West +drew his revolver and rode forward. + +The constable had disposed of his forces so that behind the cover of +the sandstone boulders they commanded the approach. He had tried to +persuade Jessie that this was not her fight, but a question from her +had silenced him. + +"If that Bully West finds me here, after he's killed you, d' you think +I can get him to let me go because it wasn't my fight?" + +She had asked it with flashing eyes, in which for an instant he had +seen the savagery of fear leap out. Beresford was troubled. The girl +was right enough. If West went the length of murder, he would be an +outlaw. Sleeping Dawn would not be safe with him after she had ridden +out to warn his enemy that he was coming. The fellow was a primeval +brute. His reputation had run over the whole border country of +Rupert's Land. + +Now he appealed to Morse. "If they get me, will you try to save Miss +McRae? This fellow West is a devil, I hear." + +The officer caught a gleam of hot red eyes. "I'll 'tend to that. We'll +mix first, him 'n' me. Question now is, do I get a gun?" + +"What for?" + +"Didn't you hear him make his brags about what he was gonna do to me? +If there's shootin' I'm in on it, ain't I?" + +"No. You're a prisoner. I can't arm you unless your life is in +danger." + +West pulled up his horse about sixty yards from the rocks. He shouted +a profane order. The purport of it was that Beresford had better come +out with his hands up if he didn't want to be dragged out by a rope +around his neck. The man's speech crackled with oaths and obscenity. + +The constable stepped into the open a few yards. "What do you want?" +he asked. + +"You." The whiskey-runner screamed it in a sudden gust of passion. +"Think you can make a fool of Bully West? Think you can bust up our +cargo an' get away with it? I'll show you where you head in at." + +"Don't make any mistake, West," advised the officer, his voice cold as +the splash of ice-water. "Three of us are here, all with rifles, all +dead shots. If you attack us, some of you are going to get killed." + +"Tha's a lie. You're alone--except for Tom Morse, an' he ain't fool +enough to fight to go to jail. I've got you where I want you." West +swung from the saddle and came straddling forward. In the uncertain +light he looked more like some misbegotten ogre than a human being. + +"That's far enough," warned Beresford, not a trace of excitement in +manner or speech. His hands hung by his sides. He gave no sign of +knowing that he had a revolver strapped to his hip ready for action. + +The liquor smuggler stopped to pour out abuse. He was working himself +up to a passion that would justify murder. The weapon in his hand +swept wildly back and forth. Presently it would focus down to a deadly +concentration in which all motion would cease. + +The torrent of vilification died on the man's lips. He stared past the +constable with bulging eyes. From the rocks three figures had come. +Two of them carried rifles. All three of them he recognized. His +astonishment paralyzed the scurrilous tongue. What was McRae's girl +doing at the camp of the officer? + +It was characteristic of him that he suspected the worst of her. +Either Tom Morse or this red-coat had beaten him to his prey. Jealousy +and outraged vanity flared up in him so that discretion vanished. + +The barrel of his revolver came down and began to spit flame. + +Beresford gave orders. "Back to the rocks." He retreated, backward, +firing as he moved. + +The companions of West surged forward. Shots, shouts, the shifting +blur of moving figures, filled the night. Under cover of the darkness +the defenders reached again the big rocks. + +The constable counted noses. "Everybody all right?" he asked. Then, +abruptly, he snapped out: "Who was responsible for that crazy business +of you coming out into the open?" + +"Me," said the girl. "I wanted that West to know you weren't alone." + +"Didn't you know better than to let her do it?" the officer demanded +of Morse. + +"He couldn't help it. He tried to keep me back. What right has he to +interfere with me?" she wanted to know, stiffening. + +"You'll do as I say now," the constable said crisply. "Get back of +that rock there, Miss McRae, and stay there. Don't move from cover +unless I tell you to." + +Her dark, stormy eyes challenged his, but she moved sullenly to obey. +Rebel though she was, the code of the frontier claimed and held her +respect. She had learned of life that there were times when her will +must be subordinated for the general good. + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +TOM MAKES A COLLECTION + + +The attackers drew back and gathered together for consultation. West's +anger had stirred their own smoldering resentment at the police, had +dominated them, and had brought them on a journey of vengeance. But +they had not come out with any intention of storming a defended +fortress. The enthusiasm of the small mob ebbed. + +"I reckon we done bit off more'n we can chaw," Harvey Gosse murmured, +rubbing his bristly chin. "I ain't what you might call noways anxious +to have them fellows spill lead into me." + +"Ten of us here. One man, an Injun, an' a breed girl over there. You +lookin' for better odds, Harv?" jeered the leader of the party. + +"I never heard that a feller was any less dead because an Injun or a +girl shot him," the lank smuggler retorted. + +"Be reasonable, Bully," urged Barney with his ingratiating whine. "We +come out to fix the red-coat. We figured he was alone except for Tom, +an' o' course Tom's with us. But this here's a different proposition. +Too many witnesses ag'in' us. I reckon you ain't tellin' us it's safe +to shoot up Angus McRae's daughter even if she is a métis." + +"Forget her," the big whiskey-runner snarled. "She won't be a witness +against us." + +"Why won't she?" + +"Hell's hinges! Do I have to tell you all my plans? I'm sayin' she +won't. That goes." He flung out a gesture of scarcely restrained rage. +He was not one who could reason away opposition with any patience. It +was his temperament to override it. + +Brad Stearns rubbed his bald head. He always did when he was working +out a mental problem. West's declaration could mean only one of two +things. Either the girl would not be alive to give witness or she +would be silent because she had thrown in her lot with the big trader. + +The old-timer knew West's vanity and his weakness for women. From Tom +Morse he had heard of his offer to McRae for the girl. Now he had no +doubt what the man intended. + +But what of her? What of the girl he had seen at her father's camp, +the heart's desire of the rugged old Scotchman? In the lightness +of her step, in the lift of her head, in speech and gesture and +expression of face, she was of the white race, an inheritor of its +civilization and of its traditions. Only her dusky color and a certain +wild shyness seemed born of the native blood in her. She was proud, +passionate, high-spirited. Would she tamely accept Bully West for her +master and go to his tent as his squaw? Brad didn't believe it. She +would fight--fight desperately, with barbaric savagery. + +Her fight would avail her nothing. If driven to it, West would take +her with him into the fastnesses of the Lone Lands. They would +disappear from the sight of men for months. He would travel swiftly +with her to the great river. Every sweep of his canoe paddle would +carry them deeper into that virgin North where they could live on what +his rifle and rod won for the pot. A little salt, pemmican, and flour +would be all the supplies he needed to take with them. + +Brad had no intention of being a cat's-paw for him. The older man had +come along to save Tom Morse from prison and for no other reason. He +did not intend to be swept into indiscriminate crime. + +"Don't go with me, Bully," Stearns said. "Count me out. Right here's +where I head for Whoop-Up." + +He turned his horse's head and rode into the darkness. + +West looked after him, cursing. "We're better off without the +white-livered coyote," he said at last. + +"Brad ain't so fur off at that. I'd like blame well to be moseyin' to +Whoop-Up my own self," Gosse said uneasily. + +"You'll stay right here an' go through with this job, Harv," West +told him flatly. "All you boys'll do just that. If any of you's got +a different notion we'll settle that here an' now. How about it?" He +straddled up and down in front of his men, menacing them with knotted +fists and sulky eyes. + +Nobody cared to argue the matter with him. He showed his broken teeth +in a sour grin. + +"Tha's settled, then," he went on. "It's my say-so. My orders go--if +there's no objections." + +His outthrust head, set low on the hunched shoulders, moved from right +to left threateningly as his gaze passed from one to another. If there +were any objections they were not mentioned aloud. + +"Now we know where we're at," he continued. "It'll be thisaway. Most +of us will scatter out an' fire at the rocks from the front here; the +others'll sneak round an' come up from behind--get right into the +rocks before this bully-puss fellow knows it. If you get a chance, +plug him in the back, but don't hurt the Injun girl. Y' understand? I +want her alive an' not wounded. If she gets shot up, some one's liable +to get his head knocked off." + +But it did not, after all, turn out quite the way West had planned it. +He left out of account one factor--a man among the rocks who had been +denied a weapon and any part in the fighting. + +The feint from the front was animated enough. The attackers scattered +and from behind clumps of brush grass and bushes poured in a fire that +kept the defenders busy. Barney, with the half-breeds and the Indian +at heel, made a wide circle and crept up to the red sandstone +outcroppings. He did not relish the job any more than those behind +him did, but he was a creature of West and usually did as he was told +after a bit of grumbling. It was not safe for him to refuse. + +To Tom Morse, used to Bully West and his ways, the frontal attack did +not seem quite genuine. It was desultory and ineffective. Why? What +trick did Bully have up his sleeve? Tom put himself in his place to +see what he would do. + +And instantly he knew. The real attack would come from the rear. With +the firing of the first shot back there, Bully West would charge. +Taken on both sides the garrison would fall easy victims. + +The constable and Onistah were busy answering the fire of the +smugglers. Sleeping Dawn was crouched down behind two rocks, the +barrel of her rifle gleaming through a slit of open space between +them. She was compromising between the orders given her and the +anxiety in her to fight back Bully West. As much as she could she kept +under cover, while at the same time firing into the darkness whenever +she thought she saw a movement. + +Morse slipped rearward on a tour of investigation. The ground here +fell away rather sharply, so that one coming from behind would have to +climb over a boulder field rising to the big rocks. It took Tom only a +casual examination to see that a surprise would have to be launched by +way of a sort of rough natural stairway. + +A flat shoulder of sandstone dominated the stairway from above. Upon +this Morse crouched, every sense alert to detect the presence of any +one stealing up the pass. He waited, eager and yet patient. What he +was going to attempt had its risk, but the danger whipped the blood in +his veins to a still excitement. + +Occasionally, at intervals, the rifles cracked. Except for that no +other sound came to him. He could keep no count of time. It seemed to +him that hours slipped away. In reality it could have been only a few +minutes. + +Below, from the foot of the winding stairway, there was a sound, such +a one as might come from the grinding of loose rubble beneath the sole +of a boot. Presently the man on the ledge heard it again, this time +more distinctly. Some one was crawling up the rocks. + +Tom peered into the darkness intently. He could see nothing except the +flat rocks disappearing vaguely in the gloom. Nor could he hear again +the crunch of a footstep on disintegrated sandstone. His nerves grew +taut. Could he have made a mistake? Was there another way up from +behind? + +Then, at the turn of the stairway, a few feet below him, a figure rose +in silhouette. It appeared with extraordinary caution, first a head, +then the barrel of a rifle, finally a crouched body followed by bowed +legs. On hands and knees it crept forward, hitching the weapon along +beside it. Exactly opposite Morse, under the very shadow of the +sloping ledge on which he lay, the figure rose and straightened. + +The man stood there for a second, making up his mind to move on. He +was one of the half-breeds West had brought with him. Almost into his +ear came a stern whisper. + +"Hands up! I've got you covered. Don't move. Don't say a word." + +Two arms shot skyward. In the fingers of one hand a rifle was +clenched. + +Morse leaned forward and caught hold of it. "I'll take this," he said. +The brown fingers relaxed. "Skirt round the edge of the rock there. +Lie face down in that hollow. Got a six-shooter." + +He had. Morse took it from him. + +"If you move or speak one word, I'll pump lead into you," the Montanan +cautioned. + +The half-breed looked into his chill eyes and decided to take no +chances. He lay down on his face with hands stretched out exactly as +ordered. + +His captor returned to the shoulder of rock above the trail. Presently +another head projected itself out of the darkness. A man crept up, and +like the first stopped to take stock of his surroundings. + +Against the back of his neck something cold pressed. + +"Stick up your hands, Barney," a voice ordered. + +The little man let out a yelp. "Mother o' Moses, don't shoot." + +"How many more of you?" asked Morse sharply. + +"One more." + +The man behind the rifle collected his weapons and put Barney +alongside his companion. Within five minutes he had added a third man +to the collection. + +With a sardonic grin he drove them before him to Beresford. + +"I'm a prisoner an' not in this show, you was careful to explain to +me, Mr. Constable, but I busted the rules an' regulations to collect a +few specimens of my own," he drawled by way of explanation. + +Beresford's eyes gleamed. The debonair impudence of the procedure +appealed mightily to him. He did not know how this young fellow had +done it, but he must have acted with cool nerve and superb daring. + +"Where were they? And how did you get 'em without a six-shooter?" + +"They was driftin' up the pass to say 'How-d'you-do?' from the back +stairway. I borrowed a gun from one o' them. I asked 'em to come along +with me and they reckoned they would." + +The booming of a rifle echoed in the rocks to the left. From out of +them Jessie McRae came flying, something akin to terror in her face. + +"I've shot that West. He tried to run in on me and--and--I shot him." +Her voice broke into an hysterical sob. + +"Thought I told you to keep out of this," the constable said. "I seem +to have a lot of valuable volunteer help. What with you and friend +Morse here--" He broke off, touched at her distress. "Never mind about +that, Miss McRae. He had it coming to him. I'll go out and size up the +damage to him, if his friends have had enough--and chances are they +have." + +They had. Gosse advanced waving a red bandanna handkerchief as a flag +of truce. + +"We got a plenty," he said frankly. "West's down, an' another of the +boys got winged. No use us goin' on with this darned foolishness. +We're ready to call it off if you'll turn Morse loose." + +Beresford had walked out to meet him. He answered, curtly. "No." + +The long, lank whiskey-runner rubbed his chin bristles awkwardly. "We +'lowed maybe--" + +"I keep my prisoners, both Morse and Barney." + +"Barney!" repeated Gosse, surprised. + +"Yes, we've got him and two others. I don't want them. I'll turn 'em +over to you. But not Morse and Barney. They're going to the post with +me for whiskey-running." + +Gosse went back to the camp-fire, where the Whoop-Up men had carried +their wounded leader. Except West, they were all glad to drop the +battle. The big smuggler, lying on the ground with a bullet in his +thigh, cursed them for a group of chicken-hearted quitters. His anger +could not shake their decision. They knew when they had had enough. + +The armistice concluded, Beresford and Morse walked over to the +camp-fire to find out how badly West was hurt. + +"Sorry I had to hit you, but you would have it, you know," the +constable told him grimly. + +The man snapped his teeth at him like a wolf in a trap. "You didn't +hit me, you liar. It was that li'l' hell-cat of McRae. You tell her +for me I'll get her right for this, sure as my name's Bully West." + +There was something horribly menacing in his rage. In the jumping +light of the flames the face was that of a demon, a countenance +twisted and tortured by the impotent lust to destroy. + +Morse spoke, looking steadily at him in his quiet way. "I'm servin' +notice, West, that you're to let that girl alone." + +There was a sound in the big whiskey-runner's throat like that of +an infuriated wild animal. He glared at Morse, a torrent of abuse +struggling for utterance. All that he could say was, "You damned +traitor." + +The eyes of the younger man did not waver. "It goes. I'll see you're +shot like a wolf if you harm her." + +The wounded smuggler's fury outleaped prudence. In a surge of +momentary insanity he saw red. The barrel of his revolver rose +swiftly. A bullet sang past Morse's ear. Before he could fire again, +Harvey Gosse had flung himself on the man and wrested the weapon from +his hand. + +Hard-eyed and motionless, Morse looked down at the madman without +saying a word. It was Beresford who said ironically, "Talking about +those who keep faith." + +"You hadn't oughta of done that, Bully," Gosse expostulated. "We'd +done agreed this feud was off for to-night." + +"Get your horses and clear out of here," the constable ordered. "If +this man's able to fight he's able to travel. You can make camp +farther down the creek." + +A few minutes later the clatter of horse-hoofs died away. Beresford +was alone with his prisoners and his guests. + +Those who were still among the big rocks came forward to the +camp-fire. Jessie arrived before the others. She had crept to the camp +on the heels of Beresford and Morse, driven by her great anxiety to +find out how badly West was hurt. + +From the shadows of a buffalo wallow she had seen and heard what had +taken place. + +One glance of troubled curiosity she flashed at Morse. What sort of +man was this quiet, brown-faced American who smuggled whiskey in to +ruin the tribes, who could ruthlessly hold a girl to a bargain that +included horsewhipping for her, who for some reason of his own fought +beside the man taking him to imprisonment, and who had flung defiance +at the terrible Bully West on her behalf? She hated him. She always +would. But with her dislike of him ran another feeling now, born of +the knowledge of new angles in him. + +He was hard as nails, but he would do to ride the river with. + + + + +CHAPTER X + +A CAMP-FIRE TALE + + +Another surprise was waiting for Jessie. As soon as Onistah came into +the circle of light, he walked straight to the whiskey-smuggler. + +"You save my life from Crees. Thanks," he said in English. + +Onistah offered his hand. + +The white man took it. He was embarrassed. "Oh, well, I kinda took a +hand." + +The Indian was not through. "Onistah never forget. He pay some day." + +Tom waved this aside. "How's the leg? Seems to be all right now." + +Swiftly Jessie turned to the Indian and asked him a question in the +native tongue. He answered. They exchanged another sentence or two. + +The girl spoke to Morse. "Onistah is my brother. I too thank you," she +said stiffly. + +"Your brother! He's not Angus McRae's son, is he?" + +"No. And I'm not his daughter--really. I'll tell you about that," she +said with a touch of the defensive defiance that always came into her +manner when the subject of her birth was referred to. + +She did, later, over the camp-fire. + +It is fortunate that desire and opportunity do not always march +together. The constable and Morse had both been dead men if Bully West +could have killed with a wish. Sleeping Dawn would have been on the +road to an existence worse than death. Instead, they sat in front of +the coals of buffalo chips while the big smuggler and his companions +rode away from an ignominious field of battle. + +When the constable and his prisoner had first struck camp, there had +been two of them. Now there were six. For in addition to Jessie McRae, +the Blackfoot, and Barney, another had come out of the night and +hailed them with a "Hello, the camp!" This last self-invited guest was +Brad Stearns, who had not ridden to Whoop-Up as he had announced, but +had watched events from a distance on the chance that he might be of +help to Tom Morse. + +Jessie agreed with Beresford that she must stay in camp till morning. +There was nothing else for her to do. She could not very well ride the +night out with Onistah on the road back to the fort. But she stayed +with great reluctance. + +Her modesty was in arms. Never before had she, a girl alone, been +forced to make camp with five men as companions, all but one of them +almost strangers to her. The experience was one that shocked her sense +of fitness. + +She was troubled and distressed, and she showed it. Her impulsiveness +had swept her into an adventure that might have been tragic, that +still held potentialities of disaster. For she could not forget the +look on West's face when he had sworn to get even with her. This man +was a terrible enemy, because of his boldness, his evil mind, and his +lack of restraining conscience. + +Yet even now she could not blame herself for what she had done. The +constable's life was at stake. It had been necessary to move swiftly +and decisively. + +Sitting before the fire, Sleeping Dawn began to tell her story. She +told it to Beresford as an apology for having ridden forty miles with +Onistah to save his life. It was, if he chose so to accept it, an +explanation of how she came to do so unwomanly a thing. + +"Onistah's mother is my mother," she said. "When I was a baby my own +mother died. Stokimatis is her sister. I do not know who my father +was, but I have heard he was an American. Stokimatis took me to her +tepee and I lived there with her and Onistah till I was five or six. +Then Angus McRae saw me one day. He liked me, so he bought me for +three yards of tobacco, a looking-glass, and five wolf pelts." + +It may perhaps have been by chance that the girl's eyes met those of +Morse. The blood burned beneath the tan of her dusky cheeks, but her +proud eyes did not flinch while she told the damning facts about her +parentage and life. She was of the métis, the child of an unknown +father. So far as she knew her mother had never been married. She had +been bought and sold like a negro slave in the South. Let any one that +wanted to despise her make the most of all this. + +So far as any expression went Tom Morse looked hard as pig iron. He +did not want to blunder, so he said nothing. But the girl would have +been amazed if she could have read his thoughts. She seemed to him a +rare flower that has blossomed in a foul swamp. + +"If Angus McRae took you for his daughter, it was because he loved +you," Beresford said gently. + +"Yes." The mobile face was suddenly tender with emotion. "What can any +father do more than he has done for me? I learned to read and write at +his knee. He taught me the old songs of Scotland that he's so fond of. +He tried to make me good and true. Afterward he sent me to Winnipeg to +school for two years." + +"Good for Angus McRae," the young soldier said. + +She smiled, a little wistfully. "He wants me to be Scotch, but of +course I can't be that even though I sing 'Should auld acquaintance' +to him. I'm what I am." + +Ever since she had learned to think for herself, she had struggled +against the sense of racial inferiority. Even in the Lone Lands men +of education had crossed her path. There was Father Giguère, tall and +austere and filled with the wisdom of years, a scholar who had left +his dear France to serve on the outposts of civilization. And there +was the old priest's devoted friend Philip Muir, of whom the story ran +that he was heir to a vast estate across the seas. Others she had seen +at Winnipeg. And now this scarlet-coated soldier Beresford. + +Instinctively she recognized the difference between them and the +trappers and traders who frequented the North woods. In her bed at +night she had more than once wept herself to sleep because life had +built an impassable barrier between what she was and what she wanted +to be. + +"To the Scot nobody is quite like a Scot," Beresford admitted with +a smile. "When he wants to make you one, Mr. McRae pays you a great +compliment" + +The girl flashed a look of gratitude at him and went on with her +story. "Whenever we are near Stokimatis, I go to see her. She has +always been very fond of me. It wasn't really for money she sold me, +but because she knew Angus McRae could bring me up better than she +could. I was with her to-day when Onistah came in and told us what +this West was going to do. There wasn't time for me to reach Father. I +couldn't trust anybody at Whoop-Up, and I was afraid if Onistah came +alone, you wouldn't believe him. You know how people are about--about +Indians. So I saddled a horse and rode with him." + +"That was fine of you. I'll never forget it, Miss McRae," the young +soldier said quietly, his eyes for an instant full on hers. "I don't +think I've ever met another girl who would have had the good sense and +the courage to do it." + +Her eyes fell from his. She felt a queer delightful thrill run through +her blood. He still respected her, was even grateful to her for what +she had done. No experience in the ways of men and maids warned her +that there was another cause for the quickened pulse. Youth had looked +into the eyes of youth and made the world-old call of sex to sex. + +In a little pocket opening from the draw Morse arranged blankets for +the girl's bed. He left Beresford to explain to her that she could +sleep there alone without fear, since a guard would keep watch against +any possible surprise attack. + +When the soldier did tell her this, Jessie smiled back her +reassurance. "I'm not afraid--not the least littlest bit," she said +buoyantly. "I'll sleep right away." + +But she did not. Jessie was awake to the finger-tips, her veins apulse +with the flow of rushing rivers of life. Her chaotic thoughts centered +about two men. One had followed crooked trails for his own profit. +There was something in him hard and unyielding as flint. He would +go to his chosen end, whatever that might be, over and through any +obstacles that might rise. But to-night, on her behalf, he had thrown +down the gauntlet to Bully West, the most dreaded desperado on the +border. Why had he done it? Was he sorry because he had forced her +father to horsewhip her? Or was his warning merely the snarl of one +wolf at another? + +The other man was of a different stamp. He had brought with him from +the world whence he had come a debonair friendliness, an ease of +manner, a smile very boyish and charming. In his jaunty forage cap and +scarlet jacket he was one to catch and hold the eye by reason of his +engaging personality. He too had fought her battle. She had heard him, +in that casually careless way of his, try to take the blame of having +wounded West. Her happy thoughts went running out to him gratefully. + +Not the least cause of her gratitude was that there had not been the +remotest hint in his manner that there was any difference between her +and any white girl he might meet. + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +C.N. MORSE TURNS OVER A LEAF + + +The North-West Mounted Police had authority not only to arrest, but +to try and to sentence prisoners. The soldierly inspector who sat in +judgment on Morse at Fort Macleod heard the evidence and stroked an +iron-gray mustache reflectively. As he understood it, his business was +to stop whiskey-running rather than to send men to jail. Beresford's +report on this young man was in his favor. The inspector adventured +into psychology. + +"Studied the Indians any--the effect of alcohol on them?" he asked +Morse. + +"Some," the prisoner answered. + +"Don't you think it bad for them?" + +"Yes, sir." + +"Perhaps you've been here longer than I. Isn't this whiskey-smuggling +bad business all round?" + +"Not for the smuggler. Speakin' as an outsider, I reckon he does it +because he makes money," Morse answered impersonally. + +"For the country, I mean. For the trapper, for the breeds, for the +Indians." + +"No doubt about that." + +"You're a nephew of C.N. Morse, aren't you?" + +"Yes, sir." + +"Wish you'd take him a message from me. Tell him that it's bad +business for a big trading firm like his to be smuggling whiskey." The +officer raised a hand to stop the young man's protest. "Yes, I know +you're going to tell me that we haven't proved he's been smuggling. +We'll pass that point. Carry him my message. Just say it's bad +business. You can tell him if you want to that we're here to put an +end to it and we're going to do it. But stress the fact that it isn't +good business. Understand?" + +"Yes." + +"Very well, sir." A glint of a smile showed in the inspector's eyes. +"I'll give you a Scotch verdict, young man. Not guilty, but don't do +it again. You're discharged." + +"Barney, too?" + +"Hmp! He's a horse of another color. Think we'll send him over the +plains." + +"Why make two bites of a cherry, sir? He can't be guilty if I'm not," +the released prisoner said. + +"Did I say you weren't?" Inspector MacLean countered. + +"Not worth the powder, is he, sir?" Tom insinuated nonchalantly. +"Rather a fathead, Barney is. If he's guilty, it's not as a principal. +You'd much better send me up." + +The officer laughed behind the hand that stroked the mustache. "Do you +want to be judge and jury as well as prisoner, my lad?" + +"Thought perhaps my uncle would understand the spirit of your message +better if Barney went along with me, Inspector." The brown eyes were +open and guileless. + +MacLean studied the Montanan deliberately. He began to recognize +unusual qualities in this youth. + +"Can't say I care for your friend Barney. He's a bad egg, or I miss my +guess." + +"Not much taken with him myself. Thought if I'd get him to travel +south with me it might save you some trouble." + +"It might," the Inspector agreed. "It's his first offense so far as +I know." Under bristling eyebrows he shot a swift look at this +self-assured youngster. He had noticed that men matured at an early +age on the frontier. The school of emergency developed them fast. +But Morse struck him as more competent even than the other boyish +plainsmen he had met. "Will you be responsible for him?" + +The Montanan came to scratch reluctantly. He had no desire to be bear +leader for such a doubtful specimen as Barney. + +"Yes," he said, after a pause. + +"Keep him in the States, will you?" + +"Yes." + +"Take him along, then. Wish you luck of him." + +As soon as he reached Fort Benton, Tom reported to his uncle. He told +the story of the whiskey cargo and its fate, together with his own +adventures subsequent to that time. + +The head of the trading firm was a long, loose-jointed Yankee who had +drifted West in his youth. Since then he had acquired gray hairs and +large business interests. At Inspector MacLean's message he grinned. + +"Thinks it's bad business, does he?" + +"Told me to tell you so," Tom answered. + +"Didn't say why, I guess." + +"No." + +The old New Englander fished from a hip pocket a plug of tobacco, cut +off a liberal chew, and stowed this in his cheek. Then, lounging back +in the chair, he cocked a shrewd eye at his nephew. + +"Wonder what he meant." + +Tom volunteered no opinion. He recognized his uncle's canny habit of +fishing in other people's minds for confirmation of what was in his +own. + +"Got any idee what he was drivin' at?" the old pioneer went on. + +"Sorta." + +C.N. Morse chuckled. "Got a notion myself. Let's hear yours." + +"The trade with the North-West Mounted is gonna be big for a while. +The Force needs all kinds of supplies. It'll have to deal through some +firm in Benton as a clearin' house. He's servin' notice that unless +C.N. Morse & Company mends its ways, it can't do business with the +N.W.M.P." + +"That all?" asked the head of the firm. + +"That's only half of it. The other half is that no firm of +whiskey-runners will be allowed to trade across the line." + +C.N. gave another little chirrup of mirth. "Keep your brains whittled +up, don't you? Any advice you'd like to give?" + +Tom was not to be drawn. "None, sir." + +"No comments, son? Passin' it up to Uncle Newt, eh?" + +"You're the head of the firm. I'm hired to do as I'm told." + +"You figure on obeyin' orders and lettin' it go at that?" + +"Not quite." The young fellow's square chin jutted out. "For instance, +I'm not gonna smuggle liquor through any more. I had my eyes opened +this trip. You haven't been on the ground like I have. If you want a +plain word for it, Uncle Newt--" + +"Speak right out in meetin', Tom. Shouldn't wonder but what I can +stand it." The transplanted Yankee slanted at his nephew a quizzical +smile. "I been hearin' more or less plain language for quite a spell, +son." + +Tom gave it to him straight from the shoulder, quietly but without +apology. "Sellin' whiskey to the tribes results in wholesale murder, +sir." + +"Strong talk, boy," his uncle drawled. + +"Not too strong. You know I don't mean anything personal, Uncle Newt. +To understand this thing you've got to go up there an' see it. The +plains tribes up there go crazy over fire-water an' start killin' each +other. It's a crime to let 'em have it." + +Young Morse began to tell stories of instances that had come under his +own observation, of others that he had heard from reliable sources. +Presently he found himself embarked on the tale of his adventures with +Sleeping Dawn. + +The fur-trader heard him patiently. The dusty wrinkled boots of the +merchant rested on the desk. His chair was tilted back in such a way +that the weight of his body was distributed between the back of his +neck, the lower end of the spine, and his heels. He looked a picture +of sleepy, indolent ease, but Tom knew he was not missing the least +detail. + +A shadow darkened the doorway of the office. Behind it straddled a +huge, ungainly figure. + +"'Lo, West! How're tricks?" C.N. Morse asked in his lazy way. He did +not rise from the chair or offer to shake hands, but that might be +because it was not his custom to exert himself. + +West stopped in his stride, choking with wrath. He had caught sight of +Tom and was glaring at him. "You're here, eh? Sneaked home to try to +square yourself with the old man, did ya?" The trail foreman turned to +the uncle. "I wanta tell you he double-crossed you for fair, C.N. He's +got a heluva nerve to come back here after playin' in with the police +the way he done up there." + +"I've heard something about that," the fur-trader admitted cautiously. +"You told me Tom an' you didn't exactly gee." + +"He'll never drive another bull-team for me again." West tacked to his +pronouncement a curdling oath. + +"We'll call that settled, then. You're through bull-whackin', Tom." +There was a little twitch of whimsical mirth at the corners of the old +man's mouth. + +"Now you're shoutin, C.N. Threw me down from start to finish, he did. +First off, when the breed girl busted the casks, he took her home +'stead of bringin' her to me. Then at old McRae's camp when I was +defendin' myself, he jumped me too. My notion is from the way he acted +that he let on to the red-coat where the cache was. Finally when I +rode out to rescue him, he sided in with the other fellow. Hadn't been +for him I'd never 'a' had this slug in my leg." The big smuggler +spoke with extraordinary vehemence, spicing his speech liberally with +sulphurous language. + +The grizzled Yankee accepted the foreman's attitude with a wave of the +hand that dismissed any counterargument. But there was an ironic gleam +in his eye. + +"'Nough said, West. If you're that sot on it, the boy quits the +company pay-roll as an employee right now. I won't have him annoyin' +you another hour. He becomes a member of the firm to-day." + +The big bully's jaw sagged. He stared at his lean employer as though a +small bomb had exploded at his feet and numbed his brains. But he was +no more surprised than Tom, whose wooden face was expressionless. + +"Goddlemighty! Ain't I jus' been tellin' you how he wrecked the whole +show--how he sold out to that bunch of spies the Canadian Gov'ment has +done sent up there?" exploded West. + +"Oh, I don't guess he did that," Morse, Senior, said lightly. "We +got to remember that times are changin', West. Law's comin' into the +country an' we old-timers oughta meet it halfway with the glad hand. +You can't buck the Union Jack any more than you could Uncle Sam. I +figure I've sent my last shipment of liquor across the line." + +"Scared, are you?" sneered the trail boss. + +"Maybe I am. Reckon I'm too old to play the smuggler's game. And I've +got a hankerin' for respectability--want the firm to stand well with +the new settlers. Legitimate business from now on. That's our motto, +boys." + +"What church you been j'inin', C.N.?" + +"Well, maybe it'll come to that too. Think I'd make a good deacon?" +the merchant asked amiably, untwining his legs and rising to stretch. + +West slammed a big fist on the table so that the inkwell and the pens +jumped. "All I got to say is that this new Sunday-school outfit you +aim to run won't have no use for a he-man. I'm quittin' you right +now." + +The foreman made the threat as a bluff. He was the most surprised man +in Montana when his employer called it quietly, speaking still in the +slow, nasal voice of perfect good-nature. + +"Maybe you're right, West. That's for you to say, of course. You know +your own business best. Figure out your time an' I'll have Benson +write you a check. Hope you find a good job." + +The sense of baffled anger in West foamed up. His head dropped down +and forward threateningly. + +"You do, eh? Lemme tell you this, C.N. I don't ask no odds of you or +any other guy. Jes' because you're the head of a big outfit you can't +run on me. I won't stand for it a minute." + +"Of course not. I'd know better'n to try that with you. No hard +feelings even if you quit us." It was a characteristic of the New +Englander that while he was a forceful figure in this man's country, +he rarely quarreled with any one. + +"That so? Well, you listen here. I been layin' off that new pardner of +yours because he's yore kin. Not anymore. Different now. He's liable +to have a heluva time an' don't you forget it for a minute." + +The fur-trader chewed his cud imperturbably. When he spoke it Was +still without a trace of acrimony. + +"Guess you'll think better of that maybe, West. Guess you're a little +hot under the collar, ain't you? Don't hardly pay to hold grudges, +does it? There was Rhinegoldt now. Kept nursin' his wrongs an' finally +landed in the pen. Bad medicine, looks like to me." + +West was no imbecile. He understood the threat underneath the suave +words of the storekeeper. Rhinegoldt had gone to the penitentiary +because C.N. Morse had willed it so. The inference was that another +lawbreaker might go for the same reason. The trail boss knew that this +was no idle threat. Morse could put him behind the bars any time he +chose. The evidence was in his hands. + +The bully glared at him. "You try that, C.N. Jus' try it once. +There'll be a sudden death in the Morse family if you do. Mebbe two. +Me, I'd gun you both for a copper cent. Don't fool yourself a minute." + +"Kinda foolish talk, West. Don't buy you anything. Guess you better +go home an' cool off, hadn't you? I'll have your time made up to-day, +unless you want your check right now." + +The broken teeth of the desperado clicked as his jaw clamped. He +looked from the smiling, steady-eyed trader to the brown-faced youth +who watched the scene with such cool, alert attention. He fought with +a wild, furious impulse in himself to go through with his threat, +to clean up and head out into the wilds. But some saving sense of +prudence held his hand. C.N. Morse was too big game for him. + +"To hell with the check," he snarled, and swinging on his heel jingled +out of the office. + +The nephew spoke first. "You got rid of him on purpose." + +"Looked that way to you, did it?" the uncle asked in his usual +indirect way. + +"Why?" + +"Guess you'd say it was because he won't fit into the new policy of +the firm. Guess you'd say he'd always be gettin' us into trouble with +his overbearin' and crooked ways." + +"That's true. He would." + +"Maybe it would be a good idee to watch him mighty close. They say +he's a bad hombre. Might be unlucky for any one he got the drop on." + +Tom knew he was being warned. "I'll look out for him," he promised. + +The older man changed the subject smilingly. "Here's where C.N. Morse +& Company turns over a leaf, son. No more business gambles. Legitimate +trade only. That the idee you're figurin' on makin' me live up to?" + +"Suits me if it does you," Tom answered cheerfully, "But where do +I come in? What's my job in the firm? You'll notice I haven't said +'Thanks' yet." + +"You?" C.N. gave him a sly, dry smile. "Oh, all you have to do is to +handle our business north of the line--buy, sell, trade, build up +friendly relations with the Indians and trappers, keep friendly with +the police, and a few little things like that." + +Tom grinned. + +"Won't have a thing to do, will I?" + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +TOM DUCKS TROUBLE + + +To Tom Morse, sitting within the railed space that served for an +office in the company store at Faraway, came a light-stepping youth in +trim boots, scarlet jacket, and forage cap set at a jaunty angle. + +"'Lo, Uncle Sam," he said, saluting gayly. + +"'Lo, Johnnie Canuck. Where you been for a year and heaven knows how +many months?" + +"Up Peace River, after Pierre Poulette, fellow who killed Buckskin +Jerry." + +Tom took in Beresford's lean body, a gauntness of the boyish face, +hollows under the eyes that had not been there when first they had +met. There had come to him whispers of the long trek into the frozen +Lone Lands made by the officer and his Indian guide. He could guess +the dark and dismal winter spent by the two alone, without books, +without the comforts of life, far from any other human being. It must +have been an experience to try the soul. But it had not shaken the +Canadian's blithe joy in living. + +"Get him?" the Montanan asked. + +The answer he could guess. The North-West Mounted always brought +back those they were sent for. Already the Force was building up the +tradition that made them for a generation rulers of half a continent. + +"Got him." Thus briefly the red-coat dismissed an experience that +had taken toll of his vitality greater than five years of civilized +existence. "Been back a week. Inspector Crouch sent me here to have a +look-see." + +"At what? He ain't suspectin' any one at Faraway of stretchin', +bendin', or bustin' the laws." + +Tom cocked a merry eye at his visitor. Rumor had it that Faraway was +a cesspool of iniquity. It was far from the border. When sheriffs of +Montana became too active, there was usually an influx of population +at the post, of rough, hard-eyed men who crossed the line and pushed +north to safety. + +"Seems to be. You're not by any chance lookin' for trouble?" + +"Duckin' it," answered Tom promptly. + +The officer smiled genially. "It's knocking at your door." His +knuckles rapped on the desk. + +"If I ever bumped into a Santa Claus of joy--" + +"Oh, thanks!" Beresford murmured. + +"--you certainly ain't him. Onload your grief." + +"The theme of my discourse is aborigines, their dispositions, +animadversions, and propensities," explained the constable. "According +to the latest scientific hypotheses, the metempsychosis--" + +Tom threw up his hands. "Help! Help! I never studied geology none. +Don't know this hypotenuse you're pow-wowin' about any more'n my paint +hawss does. Come again in one syllables." + +"Noticed any trouble among the Crees lately--that is, any more than +usual?" + +The junior partner of C.N. Morse & Company considered. "Why, yes, +seems to me I have--heap much swagger and noise, plenty rag-chewin' +and tomahawk swingin'." + +"Why?" + +"Whiskey, likely." + +"Where do they get it?" + +Tom looked at the soldier quizzically. "Your guess is good as mine," +he drawled. + +"I'm guessing West and Whaley." + +Morse made no comment. Bully West had thrown in his fortune with Dug +Whaley, a gambler who had drifted from one mining camp to another and +been washed by the tide of circumstance into the Northwest. Ostensibly +they supplied blankets, guns, food, and other necessities to the +tribes, but there was a strong suspicion that they made their profit +in whiskey smuggled across the plains. + +"But to guess it and to prove it are different propositions. How am +I going to hang it on them? I can't make a bally fool of myself +by prodding around in their bales and boxes. If I didn't find +anything--and it'd be a long shot against me--West and his gang would +stick their tongues in their cheeks and N.W.M.P. stock would shoot +down. No, I've got to make sure, jump 'em, and tie 'em up by finding +the goods on the wagons." + +"Fat chance," speculated Tom. + +"That's where you come in." + +"Oh, I come in there, do I? I begin to hear Old Man Trouble knockin' +at my door like you promised. Break it kinda easy. Am I to go up an' +ask Bully West where he keeps his fire-water cached? Or what?" + +"Yes. Only don't mention to him that you're asking. Your firm and his +trade back and forth, don't they?" + +"Forth, but not back. When they've got to have some goods--if it's +neck or nothing with them--they buy from us. We don't buy from them. +You couldn't exactly call us neighborly." + +Beresford explained. "West's just freighted in a cargo of goods. I can +guarantee that if he brought any liquor with him--and I've good reason +to think he did--it hasn't been unloaded yet. To-morrow the wagons +will scatter. I can't follow all of 'em. If I cinch Mr. West, it's got +to be to-night." + +"I see. You want me to give you my blessin'. I'll come through with a +fine big large one. Go to it, constable. Hogtie West with proof. +Soak him good. Send him up for 'steen years. You got my sympathy an' +approval, one for the grief you're liable to bump into, the other for +your good intentions." + +The officer's grin had a touch of the proverbial Cheshire cat's +malice. "Glad you approve. But you keep that sympathy for yourself. +I'm asking you to pull the chestnut out of the fire for me. You'd +better look out or you'll burn your paw." + +"Just remember I ain't promisin' a thing. I'm a respectable business +man now, and, as I said, duckin' trouble." + +"Find out for me in which wagon the liquor is. That's all I ask." + +"How can I find out? I'm no mind reader." + +"Drift over casually and offer to buy goods. Poke around a bit. Keep +cases on 'em. Notice the wagons they steer you away from." + +Tom thought it over and shook his head. "No, I don't reckon I will." + +"Any particular reason?" + +"Don't look to me hardly like playin' the game. I'm ferninst West +every turn of the road. He's crooked as a dog's hind laig. But it +wouldn't be right square for me to spy on him. Different with you. +That's what you're paid for. You're out to run him down any way you +can. He knows that. It's a game of hide an' go seek between you an' +him. Best man wins." + +The red-coat assented at once. "Right you are, I'll get some one +else." He rose to go. "See you later maybe." + +Tom nodded. "Sorry I can't oblige, but you see how it is." + +"Quite. I oughtn't to have asked you." + +Beresford strode briskly out of the store. + +Through the window Morse saw him a moment later in whispered +conversation with Onistah. They were standing back of an outlying +shed, in such a position that they could not be seen from the road. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII + +THE CONSTABLE BORES THROUGH DIFFICULTIES + + +The early Northern dusk was falling when Beresford dropped into the +store again. Except for two half-breeds and the clerk dickering at the +far end of the building over half a dozen silver fox furs Morse had +the place to himself. + +Yet the officer took the precaution to lower his voice. "I want an +auger and a wooden plug the same size. Get 'em to me without anybody +knowing it." + +The manager of the C.N. Morse & Company Northern Stores presently +shoved across the counter to him a gunny-sack with a feed of oats. +"Want it charged to the Force, I reckon?" + +"Yes." + +"Say, constable, I wancha to look at these moccasins I'm orderin' for +the Inspector. Is this what he wants? Or isn't it?" + +Tom led the way into his office. He handed the shoe to Beresford. +"What's doin'?" he asked swiftly, between sentences. + +The soldier inspected the footwear. "About right, I'd say. Thought +you'd find what you were looking for. A fellow usually does when he +goes at it real earnest." + +The eyes in the brown face were twinkling merrily. + +"Findin' the goods is one thing. Gettin' 'em's quite another," Tom +suggested. + +The voice of one of the trappers rose in protest. "By gar, it iss what +you call dirt cheap. I make you a present. V'la!" + +"Got to bore through difficulties," Beresford said. "Then you're +liable to bump into disappointment. But you can't ever tell till you +try." + +His friend began to catch the drift of the officer's purpose. He was +looking for a liquor shipment, _and he had bought an auger to bore +through difficulties_. + +Tom's eyes glowed. "Come over to the storeroom an' take a look at my +stock. Want you to see I'm gonna have these moccasins made from good +material." + +They kept step across the corral, gay, light-hearted sons of the +frontier, both hard as nails, packed muscles rippling like those of +forest panthers. Their years added would not total more than twoscore +and five, but life had taken hold of them young and trained them to +its purposes, had shot them through and through with hardihood and +endurance and the cool prevision that forestalls disaster. + +"I'm in on this," the Montanan said. + +"Meaning?" + +"That I buy chips, take a hand, sit in, deal cards." + +The level gaze of the police officer studied him speculatively. "Now +why this change of heart?" + +"You get me wrong. I'm with you to a finish in puttin' West and Whaley +out of business. They're a hell-raisin' outfit, an' this country'll be +well rid of 'em. Only thing is I wanta play my cards above the table. +I couldn't spy on these men. Leastways, it didn't look quite square to +me. But this is a bronc of another color. Lead me to that trouble you +was promisin' a while ago." + +Beresford led him to it, by way of a rain-washed gully, up which they +trod their devious path slowly and without noise. From the gully they +snaked through the dry grass to a small ditch that had been built to +drain the camping-ground during spring freshets. This wound into the +midst of the wagon train encampment. + +The plainsmen crept along the dry ditch with laborious care. They +advanced no single inch without first taking care to move aside any +twig the snapping of which might betray them. + +From the beginning of the adventure until its climax no word was +spoken. Beresford led, the trader followed at his heels. + +The voices of men drifted to them from a camp-fire in the shelter of +the wagons. There were, Tom guessed, about four of them. Their words +came clear through the velvet night. They talked the casual elemental +topics common to their kind. + +There was a moonlit open space to be crossed. The constable took it +swiftly with long strides, reached a wagon, and dodged under it. His +companion held to the cover of the ditch. He was not needed closer. + +The officer lay flat on his back, set the point of the auger to the +woodwork of the bed, and began to turn. Circles and half-circles of +shavings flaked out and fell upon him. He worked steadily. Presently +the resistance of the wood ceased. The bit had eaten its way through. + +Beresford withdrew the tool and tried again, this time a few inches +from the hole he had made. The pressure lessened as before, but in a +second or two the steel took a fresh hold. The handle moved slowly and +steadily. + +A few drops of moisture dripped down, then a small stream. The +constable held his hand under this and tasted the flow. It was rum. + +Swiftly he withdrew the bit, fitted the plug into the hole, and pushed +it home. + +He crawled from under the wagon, skirted along the far side of it, ran +to the next white-topped vehicle, and plumped out upon the campers +with a short, sharp word of command. + +"Up with your hands! Quick!" + +For a moment the surprised quartette were too amazed to obey. + +"What in Halifax--?" + +"Shove 'em up!" came the crisp, peremptory order. + +Eight hands wavered skyward. + +"Is this a hold-up--or what?" one of the teamsters wanted to know +sulkily. + +"Call it whatever you like. You with the fur cap hitch up the mules to +the second wagon. Don't make a mistake and try for a getaway. You'll +be a dead smuggler." + +The man hesitated. Was this red-coat alone? + +Tom strolled out of the ditch, a sawed-off shotgun under his arm. +"I judge you bored through your difficulties, constable," he said +cheerfully. + +"Through the bed of the wagon and the end of a rum keg. Stir your +stumps, gentlemen of the whiskey-running brigade. We're on the way to +Fort Edmonton if it suits you." + +If it did not suit them, they made no audible protest of disagreement. +Growls were their only comment when, under direction of Beresford, +the Montanan stripped them of their weapons and kept guard on the +fur-capped man--his name appeared to be Lemoine--while the latter +brought the mules to the wagon pointed out by the officer. + +"Hook 'em," ordered Morse curtly. + +The French-Indian trapper hitched the team to the wagon. Presently +it moved beyond the circle of firelight into the darkness. Morse sat +beside the driver, the short-barreled weapon across his knees. +Three men walked behind the wagon. A fourth, in the uniform of the +North-West Mounted, brought up the rear on horseback. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV + +SCARLET-COATS IN ACTION + + +When Bully West discovered that such part of the cargo of wet goods +as was in wagon number two had disappeared and along with it the four +mule-skinners, his mind jumped to an instant conclusion. That it +happened to be the wrong one was natural enough to his sulky, +suspicious mind. + +"Goddlemighty, they've double-crossed us," he swore to his partner, +with an explosion of accompanying profanity. "Figure on cleanin' up on +the goods an' cuttin' back to the States. Tha's what they aim to do. +Before I can head 'em off. Me, I'll show 'em they can't play monkey +tricks on Bully West." + +This explanation did not satisfy Whaley. The straight black line of +the brows above the cold eyes met in frowning thought. + +"I've got a hunch you're barkin' up the wrong tree," he lisped with a +shrug of shoulders. + +Voice and gesture were surprising in that they were expressions of +this personality totally unexpected. Both were almost womanlike in +their delicacy. They suggested the purr and soft padding of a cat, an +odd contradiction to the white, bloodless face with the inky brows. +The eyes of "Poker" Whaley could throw fear into the most reckless +bull-whacker on the border. They held fascinating and sinister +possibilities of evil. + +"Soon see. We'll hit the trail right away after them," Bully replied. + +Whaley's thin lip curled. He looked at West as though he read to +the bottom of that shallow mind and meant to make the most of his +knowledge. + +"Yes," he murmured, as though to himself. "Some one ought to stay with +the rest of the outfit, but I reckon I'd better go along. Likely you +couldn't handle all of 'em if they showed fight." + +West's answer was a roar of outraged vanity. "Me! Not round up them +tame sheep. I'll drive 'em back with their tongues hangin' out. +Understand?" + +At break of day he was in the saddle. An experienced trailer, West +found no difficulty in following the wagon tracks. No attempt had been +made to cover the flight. The whiskey-runner could trace at a road +gait the narrow tracks along the winding road. + +The country through which he traveled was the border-land between the +plains and the great forests that rolled in unbroken stretch to the +frozen North. Sometimes he rode over undulating prairie. Again he +moved through strips of woodland or skirted beautiful lakes from the +reedy edges of which ducks or geese rose whirring at his approach. A +pair of coyotes took one long look at him and skulked into a ravine. +Once a great moose started from a thicket of willows and galloped over +a hill. + +West heeded none of this. No joy touched him as he breasted summits +and looked down on wide sweeps of forest and rippling water. The +tracks of the wheel rims engaged entirely his sulky, lowering gaze. If +the brutish face reflected his thoughts, they must have been far from +pleasant ones. + +The sun flooded the landscape, climbed the sky vault, slid toward the +horizon. Dusk found him at the edge of a wooded lake. + +He looked across and gave a subdued whoop of triumph. From the timber +on the opposite shore came a tenuous smoke skein. A man came to the +water with a bucket, filled it, and disappeared in the woods. Bully +West knew he had caught up with those he was tracking. + +The smuggler circled the lower end of the lake and rode through the +timber toward the smoke. At a safe distance he dismounted, tied +the horse to a young pine, and carefully examined his rifle. Very +cautiously he stalked the camp, moving toward it with the skill and +the stealth of a Sarcee scout. + +Camp had been pitched in a small open space surrounded by bushes. +Through the thicket, on the south side, he picked a way, pushing away +each sapling and weed noiselessly to make room for the passage of his +huge body. For such a bulk of a figure he moved lightly. Twice he +stopped by reason of the crackle of a snapping twig, but no sign of +alarm came from his prey. + +They sat hunched--the four of them--before a blazing log fire, +squatting on their heels in the comfortable fashion of the outdoors +man the world over. Their talk was fragmentary. None gave any sign of +alertness toward any possible approaching danger. + +No longer wary, West broke through the last of the bushes and +straddled into the open. + +"Well, boys, hope you got some grub left for yore boss," he jeered, +triumph riding voice and manner heavily. + +He waited for the startled dismay he expected. None came. The drama of +the moment did not meet his expectation. The teamsters looked at him, +sullenly, without visible fear or amazement. None of them rose or +spoke. + +Sultry anger began to burn in West's eyes. "Thought you'd slip one +over on the old man, eh? Thought you could put over a raw steal an' +get away with it. Well, lemme tell you where you get off at. I'm gonna +whale every last one of you to a frazzle. With a big club. An' +I'm gonna drive you back to Faraway like a bunch of whipped curs. +Understand?" + +Still they said nothing. It began to penetrate the thick skull of +the trader that there was something unnatural about their crouched +silence. Why didn't they try to explain? Or make a break for a +getaway? + +He could think of nothing better to say, after a volley of curses, +than to repeat his threat. "A thunderin' good wallopin', first off. +Then we hit the trail together, you-all an' me." + +From out of the bushes behind him a voice came. "That last's a good +prophecy, Mr. West. It'll be just as you say." + +The big fellow wheeled, the rifle jumping to his shoulder. Instantly +he knew he had been tricked, led into a trap. They must have heard him +coming, whoever they were, and left his own men for bait. + +From the other side two streaks of scarlet launched themselves at him. +West turned to meet them. A third flash of red dived for his knees. He +went down as though hit by a battering-ram. + +But not to stay down. The huge gorilla-shaped figure struggled to +its feet, fighting desperately to throw off the three red-coats long +enough to drag out a revolver. He was like a bear surrounded by +leaping dogs. No sooner had he buffeted one away than the others +were dragging him down. Try as he would, he could not get set. The +attackers always staggered him before he could quite free himself for +action. They swarmed all over him, fought close to avoid his sweeping +lunges, hauled him to his knees by sheer weight of the pack. + +Lemoine flung one swift look around and saw that his captors were very +busy. Now if ever was the time to take a hand in the mêlée. Swiftly he +rose. He spoke a hurried word in French. + +"One moment, s'il vous plaît." From the bushes another man had +emerged, one not in uniform. Lemoine had forgotten him. "Not your +fight. Better keep out," he advised, and pointed the suggestion with a +short-barreled shotgun. + +The trapper looked at him. "Is it that this iss your fight, Mistair +Morse?" he demanded. + +"Fair enough. I'll keep out too." + +The soldiers had West down by this time. They were struggling to +handcuff him. He fought furiously, his great arms and legs threshing +about like flails. Not till he had worn himself out could they pinion +him. + +Beresford rose at last, the job done. His coat was ripped almost from +one shoulder. "My word, he's a whale of an animal," he panted. "If I +hadn't chanced to meet you boys he'd have eaten me alive." + +The big smuggler struggled for breath. When at last he found words, it +was for furious and horrible curses. + +Not till hours later did he get as far as a plain question. "What does +this mean? Where are you taking me, you damned spies?" he roared. + +Beresford politely gave him information. "To the penitentiary, I hope, +Mr. West, for breaking Her Majesty's revenue laws." + + + + +CHAPTER XV + +KISSING DAY + + +All week Jessie and her foster-mother Matapi-Koma had been busy +cooking and baking for the great occasion. Fergus had brought in a +sack full of cottontails and two skunks. To these his father had added +the smoked hindquarters of a young buffalo, half a barrel of dried +fish, and fifty pounds of pemmican. For Angus liked to dispense +hospitality in feudal fashion. + +Ever since Jessie had opened her eyes at the sound of Matapi-Koma's +"Koos koos kwa" (Wake up!), in the pre-dawn darkness of the wintry +Northern morn, she had heard the crunch of snow beneath the webs of +the footmen and the runners of the sleds. For both full-blood Crees +and half-breeds were pouring into Faraway to take part in the +festivities of Ooche-me-gou-kesigow (Kissing Day). + +The traders at the post and their families would join in the revels. +With the exception of Morse, they had all taken Indian wives, in +the loose marriage of the country, and for both business and family +reasons they maintained a close relationship with the natives. Most of +their children used the mother tongue, though they could make shift +to express themselves in English. In this respect as in others the +younger McRaes were superior. They talked English well. They could +read and write. Their father had instilled in them a reverence for the +Scriptures and some knowledge of both the Old and New Testaments. It +was his habit to hold family prayers every evening. Usually half +a dozen guests were present at these services in addition to his +immediate household. + +With the Indians came their dogs, wolfish creatures, prick-eared and +sharp-muzzled, with straight, bristling hair. It was twenty below +zero, but the gaunt animals neither sought nor were given shelter. +They roamed about in front of the fort stockade, snapping at each +other or galloping off on rabbit hunts through the timber. + +The custom was that on this day the braves of the tribe kissed every +woman they met in token of friendship and good-will. To fail of +saluting one, young or old, was a breach of good manners. Since +daybreak they had been marching in to Angus McRae's house and gravely +kissing his wife and daughter. + +Jessie did not like it. She was a fastidious young person. But she +could not escape without mortally offending the solemn-eyed warriors +who offered this evidence of their esteem. As much as possible she +contrived to be busy upstairs, but at least a dozen times she was +fairly cornered and made the best of it. + +At dinner she and the other women of the fort waited on their guests +and watched prodigious quantities of food disappear rapidly. When the +meal was ended, the dancing began. The Crees shuffled around in a +circle, hopping from one foot to the other in time to the beating of +a skin drum. The half-breeds and whites danced the jigs and reels the +former had brought with them from the Red River country. They took the +floor in couples. The men did double-shuffles and cut pigeon wings, +moving faster and faster as the fiddler quickened the tune till they +gave up at last exhausted. Their partners performed as vigorously, the +moccasined feet twinkling in and out so fast that the beads flashed. + +Because it was the largest building in the place, the dance was held +in the C.N. Morse & Company store. From behind the counter Jessie +applauded the performers. She did not care to take part herself. The +years she had spent at school had given her a certain dignity. + +A flash of scarlet caught her eye. Two troopers of the Mounted +Police had come into the room and one of them was taking off his fur +overcoat. The trim, lean-flanked figure and close-cropped, curly head +she recognized at once with quickened pulse. When Winthrop Beresford +came into her neighborhood, Jessie McRae's cheek always flew a flag of +greeting. + +A squaw came up to the young soldier and offered innocently her face +for a kiss. + +Beresford knew the tribal custom. It was his business to help +establish friendly relations between the Mounted and the natives. He +kissed the wrinkled cheek gallantly. A second dusky lady shuffled +forward, and after her a third. The constable did his duty. + +His roving eye caught Jessie's, and found an imp of mischief dancing +there. She was enjoying the predicament in which he found himself. Out +of the tail of that same eye he discovered that two more flat-footed +squaws were headed in his direction. + +He moved briskly across the floor to the counter, vaulted it, and +stood beside Jessie. She was still laughing at him. + +"You're afraid," she challenged. "You ran away." + +A little devil of adventurous mirth was blown to flame in him. "I saw +another lady, lonely and unkissed. The Force answers every call of +distress." + +Her chin tilted ever so little as she answered swiftly. + + "He who will not when he may, + When he will he shall have nay." + +Before she had more than time to guess that he would really dare, the +officer leaned forward and kissed the girl's dusky cheek. + +The color flamed into it. Jessie flung a quick, startled look at him. + +"Kissing Day, Sleeping Dawn," he said, smiling. + +Instantly she followed his lead. "Sleeping Dawn hopes that the Great +Spirit will give to the soldier of the Great Mother across the seas +many happy kissing days in his life." + +"And to you. Will you dance with me?" + +"Not to-day, thank you. I don't jig in public." + +"I was speaking to Miss McRae and not to Sleeping Dawn, and I was +asking her to waltz with me." + +She accepted him as a partner and they took the floor. The other +dancers by tacit consent stepped back to watch this new step, so +rhythmic, light, and graceful. It shocked a little their sense of +fitness that the man's arm should enfold the maiden, but they were +full of lively curiosity to see how the dance was done. + +A novel excitement pulsed through the girl's veins. It was not the +kiss alone, though that had something to do with the exhilaration that +flooded her. Formally his kiss had meant only a recognition of +the day. Actually it had held for both of them a more personal +significance, the swift outreach of youth to youth. But the dance was +an escape. She had learned at Winnipeg the waltz of the white race. +No other girl at Faraway knew the step. She chose to think that the +constable had asked her because this stressed the predominance of her +father's blood in her. It was a symbol to all present that the ways of +the Anglo-Saxon were her ways. + +She had the light, straight figure, the sense of rhythm, the +instinctively instant response of the born waltzer. As she glided over +the floor in the arms of Beresford, the girl knew pure happiness. Not +till he was leading her back to the counter did she wake from the +spell the music and motion had woven over her. + +A pair of cold eyes in a white, bloodless face watched her beneath +thin black brows. A shock ran through her, as though she had been +drenched with icy water. She shivered. There was a sinister menace in +that steady, level gaze. More than once she had felt it. Deep in her +heart she knew, from the world-old experience of her sex, that the man +desired her, that he was biding his time with the patience and the +ruthlessness of a panther. "Poker" Whaley had in him a power of +dangerous evil notable in a country where bad men were not scarce. + +The officer whispered news to Jessie. "Bully West broke jail two weeks +ago. He killed a guard. We're here looking for him." + +"He hasn't been here. At least I haven't heard it," she answered +hurriedly. + +For Whaley, in his slow, feline fashion, was moving toward them. + +Bluntly the gambler claimed his right. "Ooche-me-gou-kesigow," he +said. + +The girl shook her head. "Are you a Cree, Mr. Whaley?" + +For that he had an answer. "Is Beresford?" + +"Mr. Beresford is a stranger. He didn't know the custom--that it +doesn't apply to me except with Indians. I was taken by surprise." + +Whaley was a man of parts. He had been educated for a priest, but had +kicked over the traces. There was in him too much of the Lucifer for +the narrow trail the father of a parish must follow. + +He bowed. "Then I must content myself with a dance." + +Jessie hesitated. It was known that he was a libertine. The devotion +of his young Cree wife was repaid with sneers and the whiplash. But he +was an ill man to make an enemy of. For her family's sake rather than +her own she yielded reluctantly. + +Though a heavy-set man, he was an excellent waltzer. He moved evenly +and powerfully. But in the girl's heart resentment flamed. She knew he +was holding her too close to him, taking advantage of her modesty in a +way she could not escape without public protest. + +"I'm faint," she told him after they had danced a few minutes. + +"Oh, you'll be all right," he said, still swinging her to the music. + +She stopped. "No, I've had enough." Jessie had caught sight of her +brother Fergus at the other end of the room. She joined him. Tom Morse +was standing by his side. + +Whaley nodded indifferently toward the men and smiled at Jessie, but +that cold lip smile showed neither warmth nor friendliness. "We'll +dance again--many times," he said. + +The girl's eyes flashed. "We'll have to ask Mrs. Whaley about that. I +don't see her here to-night. I hope she's quite well." + +It was impossible to tell from the chill, expressionless face of the +squaw-man whether her barb had stung or not. "She's where she belongs, +at home in the kitchen. It's her business to be well. I reckon she is. +I don't ask her." + +"You're not a demonstrative husband, then?" + +"Husband!" He shrugged his shoulders insolently. "Oh, well! What's in +a name?" + +She knew the convenient code of his kind. They took to themselves +Indian wives, with or without some form of marriage ceremony, and +flung them aside when they grew tired of the tie or found it galling. +There was another kind of squaw-man, the type represented by her +father. He had joined his life to that of Matapi-Koma for better or +worse until such time as death should separate them. + +In Jessie's bosom a generous indignation burned. There was a reason +why just now Whaley should give his wife much care and affection. +She turned her shoulder and began to talk with Fergus and Tom Morse, +definitely excluding the gambler from the conversation. + +He was not one to be embarrassed by a snub. He held his ground, +narrowed eyes watching her with the vigilant patience of the panther +he sometimes made her think of. Presently he forced a reëntry. + +"What's this I hear about Bully West escaping from jail?" + +Fergus answered. "Two-three weeks ago. Killed a guard, they say. He +was headin' west an' north last word they had of him." + +All of them were thinking the same thing, that the man would reach +Faraway if he could, lie hidden till he had rustled an outfit, then +strike out with a dog team deeper into the Lone Lands. + +"Here's wishin' him luck," his partner said coolly. + +"All the luck he deserves," amended Morse quietly. + +"You can't keep a good man down," Whaley boasted, looking straight at +the other Indian trader. "I wouldn't wonder but what he'll pay a few +debts when he gets here." + +Tom smiled and offered another suggestion. "If he gets here and has +time. He'll have to hurry." + +His gaze shifted across the room to Beresford, alert, gay, +indomitable, and as implacable as fate. + + + + +CHAPTER XVI + +A BUSINESS DEAL + + +It was thirty below zero. The packed snow crunched under the feet of +Morse as he moved down what served Faraway for a main street. The +clock in the store registered mid-afternoon, but within a few minutes +the sub-Arctic sun would set, night would fall, and aurora lights +would glow in the west. + +Four false suns were visible around the true one, the whole forming a +cross of five orbs. Each of these swam in perpendicular segments of a +circle of prismatic colors. Even as the young man looked, the lowest +of the cluster lights plunged out of sight. By the time he had reached +the McRae house, darkness hung over the white and frozen land. + +Jessie opened the door to his knock and led him into the living-room +of the family, where also the trapper's household ate and Fergus +slept. It was a rough enough place, with its mud-chinked log walls and +its floor of whipsawed lumber. But directly opposite the door was a +log-piled hearth that radiated comfort and cheerfulness. Buffalo robes +served as rugs and upon the walls had been hung furs of silver fox, +timber wolves, mink, and beaver. On a shelf was a small library of not +more than twenty-five books, but they were ones that only a lover of +good reading would have chosen. Shakespeare and Burns held honored +places there. Scott's poems and three or four of his novels were in +the collection. In worn leather bindings were "Tristram Shandy," +and Smollett's "Complete History of England." Bunyan's "Pilgrim's +Progress" shouldered Butler's "Hudibras" and Baxter's "The Saint's +Everlasting Rest." Into this choice company one frivolous modern novel +had stolen its way. "Nicholas Nickleby" had been brought from Winnipeg +by Jessie when she returned from school. The girl had read them all +from cover to cover, most of them many times. Angus too knew them all, +with the exception of the upstart "storybook" written by a London +newspaper man of whom he had never before heard. + +"I'm alone," Jessie explained. "Father and Fergus have gone out to the +traps. They'll not be back till to-morrow. Mother's with Mrs. Whaley." + +Tom knew that the trader's wife was not well. She was expecting to be +confined in a few weeks. + +He was embarrassed at being alone with the girl inside the walls of +a house. His relations with Angus McRae reached civility, but not +cordiality. The stern old Scotchman had never invited him to drop in +and call. He resented the fact that through the instrumentality of +Morse he had been forced to horsewhip the lass he loved, and the +trader knew he was not forgiven his share in the episode and probably +never would be. Now Tom had come only because a matter of business had +to be settled one way or the other at once. + +"Blandoine is leavin' for Whoop-Up in the mornin'. I came to see your +father about those robes. If we buy, it'll have to be now. I can send +'em down with Blandoine," he explained. + +She nodded, briskly. "Father said you could have them at your price if +you'll pay what he asked for those not split. They're good hides--cows +and young bulls."[5] + +[Footnote 5: A split robe was one cut down the middle and sewn +together with sinews. The ones skinned from the animal in a single +piece were much more valuable, but the native women usually prepared +the hides the other way because of the weight in handling. One of the +reasons the Indians gave the missionaries in favor of polygamy was +that one wife could not dress a buffalo robe without assistance. The +braves themselves did not condescend to menial labor of this kind. +(W.M.R.)] + +"It's a deal," the fur-trader said promptly. "Glad to get 'em, though +I'm payin' all I can afford for the split ones." + +"I'll get the key to the storehouse," Jessie said. + +She walked out of the room with the springy, feather-footed step that +distinguished her among all the women that he knew. In a few moments +she was back. Instead of giving him the key, she put it down on the +table near his hand. + +Beneath the tan the dark blood beat into his face. He knew she had +done this in order not to run the risk of touching him. + +For a long moment his gaze gripped and held her. Between them passed +speech without words. His eyes asked if he were outside the pale +completely, if he could never wipe out the memory of that first cruel +meeting. Hers answered proudly that, half-breed though she was, he was +to her only a wolfer, of less interest than Black, the leader of her +father's dog train. + +He picked up the key and left, wild thoughts whirling through his +mind. He loved her. Of what use was it trying longer to disguise it +from himself. Of the inferior blood she might be, yet his whole being +went out to her in deep desire. He wanted her for his mate. He craved +her in every fiber of his clean, passionate manhood, as he had never +before longed for a woman in his life. And she hated him--hated him +with all the blazing scorn of a young proud soul whose fine body had +endured degradation on his account. He was a leper, to be classed with +Bully West. + +Nor did he blame her. How could she feel otherwise and hold her +self-respect. The irony of it brought a bitter smile to his lips. If +she only knew it, the years would avenge her a hundredfold. For he had +cut himself off from even the chance of the joy that might have been +his. + +In the sky an aurora flashed with scintillating splendor. The heavens +were aglow with ever-changing bars and columns of colored fire. + +Morse did not know it. Not till he had passed a dozen steps beyond a +man in heavy furs did his mind register recognition of him as Whaley. +He did not even wonder what business was taking the gambler toward +Angus McRae's house. + +Business obtruded its claims. He arranged with Blandoine to take +the robes out with him and walked back to the McRae storehouse. It +adjoined the large log cabin where the Scotchman and his family lived. + +Blandoine and he went over the robes carefully in order that there +should be no mistake as to which ones the trainmaster took. This done, +Morse locked the door and handed the key to his companion. + +To him there was borne the sound of voices--one low and deep, the +other swift and high. He caught no words, but he became aware that a +queer excitement tingled through his veins. At the roots of his hair +there was an odd, prickling sensation. He could give himself no +reason, but some instinct of danger rang in him like a bell. The low +bass and the light high treble--they reached him alternately, cutting +into each other, overriding each other, clashing in agitated dissent. + +Then--a shrill scream for help! + +Morse could never afterward remember opening the door of the log +house. It seemed to him that he burst through it like a battering-ram, +took the kitchen in two strides, and hurled himself against the sturdy +home-made door which led into the living-room. + +This checked him, for some one had slid into its socket the bar used +as a bolt. He looked around the kitchen and found in one swift glance +what he wanted. It was a large back log for the fireplace. + +With this held at full length under his arm he crashed forward. The +wood splintered. He charged again, incited by a second call for +succor. This time his attack dashed the bolt and socket from their +place. Morse stumbled into the room like a drunken man. + + + + +CHAPTER XVII + +A BOARD CREAKS + + +After Morse had closed the door, Jessie listened until the crisp +crunch of his footsteps had died away. She subdued an impulse to call +him back and put into words her quarrel against him. + +From the table she picked up a gun-cover of moose leather she was +making and moved to the fireplace. Automatically her fingers fitted +into place a fringe of red cloth. (This had been cut from an old +petticoat, but the source of the decoration would remain a secret, not +on any account to be made known to him who was to receive the gift.) +Usually her hands were busy ones, but now they fell away from the work +listlessly. + +The pine logs crackled, lighting one end of the room and filling the +air with aromatic pungency. As she gazed into the red coals her mind +was active. + +She knew that her scorn of the fur-trader was a fraud. Into her hatred +of him she threw an energy always primitive and sometimes savage. But +he held her entire respect. It was not pleasant to admit this. Her +mind clung to the shadowy excuse that he had been a wolfer, although +the Indians looked on him now as a good friend and a trader who would +not take advantage of them. Angus McRae himself had said there was no +better citizen in the Northland. + +No, she could not hold Tom Morse in contempt as she would have liked. +But she could cherish her animosity and feed it on memories that +scorched her as the whiplash had her smooth and tender flesh. She +would never forgive him--never. Not if he humbled himself in the dust. + +Toward Angus McRae she held no grudge whatever. He had done only his +duty as he saw it. The circumstances had forced his hand, for her word +had pledged him to punishment. But this man who had walked into her +life so roughly, mastered her by physical force, dragged her to +the ignominy of the whip, and afterward had dared to do her a +service--when she woke at night and thought of him she still burned +with shame and anger. He had been both author and witness of her +humiliation. + +The girl's reverie stirred reflection of other men, for already she +had suitors in plenty. Upon one of them her musing lingered. He had +brought to her gifts of the friendly smile, of comradeship, of youth's +debonair give-and-take. She did not try to analyze her feeling for +Winthrop Beresford. It was enough to know that he had brought into her +existence the sparkle of joy. + +For life had stalked before her with an altogether too tragic mien. +In this somber land men did not laugh much. Their smiles held a +background of gravity. Icy winter reigned two thirds of the year and +summer was a brief hot blaze following no spring. Nature demanded of +those who lived here that they struggle to find subsistence. In that +conflict human beings forgot that they had been brought into the world +to enjoy it with careless rapture. + +Somewhere in the house a board, creaked. Jessie heard it +inattentively, for in the bitter cold woodwork was always snapping and +cracking. + +Beresford had offered her a new philosophy of life. She did not quite +accept it, yet it fascinated. He believed that the duty of happiness +was laid on people as certainly as the duty of honesty. She remembered +that once he had said.... + +There had come to her no sound, but Jessie knew that some one had +opened the door and was standing on the threshold watching her. She +turned her head. Her self-invited guest was Whaley. + +Jessie rose. "What do you want?" + +She was startled at the man's silent entry, ready to be alarmed if +necessary, but not yet afraid. It was as though her thoughts waited +for the cue he would presently give. Some instinct for safety made her +cautious. She did not tell the free trader that her father and Fergus +were from home. + +He looked at her, appraisingly, from head to foot, in such a way that +she felt his gaze had stripped her. + +"You know what I want. You know what I'm going to get ... some day," +he purred in his slow, feline way. + +She pushed from her mind a growing apprehension. + +"Father and Fergus--if you want them--" + +"Have I said I wanted them?" he asked. "They're out in the woods +trappin'. I'm not lookin' for them. The two of us'll be company for +each other." + +"Go," she said, anger flaring at his insolence. "Go. You've no +business here." + +"I'm not here for business, but for pleasure, my dear." + +The cold, fishy eyes in his white face gloated. Suddenly she wanted to +scream and pushed back the desire scornfully. If she did, nobody would +hear her. This had to be fought out one to one. + +"Why didn't you knock?" she demanded. + +"We'll say I did and that you didn't hear me," he answered suavely. +"What's it matter among friends anyhow?" + +"What do you want?" By sheer will power she kept her voice low. + +"Your mother's over at the house. I dropped in to say she'll probably +stay all night." + +"Is your wife worse?" + +He lifted the black brows that contrasted so sharply with the pallor +of the face. "Really you get ahead of me, my dear. I don't recall ever +getting married." + +"That's a hateful thing to say," she flamed, and bit her lower lip +with small white teeth to keep from telling the squaw-man what she +thought of him. The Cree girl he had taken to wife was going down +into the Valley of the Shadow to bear him a child while he callously +repudiated her. + +He opened his fur coat and came to the fireplace. "I can say nicer +things--to the right girl," he said, and looked meaningly at her. + +"I'll have to go get Susie Lemoine to stay with me," Jessie said +hurriedly. "I didn't know Mother wasn't coming home." + +She made a move toward a fur lying across the back of a chair. + +He laid a hand upon her arm. "What's your rush? What are you dodgin' +for, girl? I'm good as Susie to keep the goblins from gettin you." + +"Don't touch me." Her eyes sparked fire. + +"You're mighty high-heeled for a nitchie. I reckon you forget you're +Sleeping Dawn, daughter of a Blackfoot squaw." + +"I'm Jessie McRae, daughter of Angus, and if you insult me, you'll +have to settle with him." + +He gave a short snort of laughter. "Wake up, girl. What's the use of +foolin' yourself? You're a breed. McRae's tried to forget it and so +have you. But all the time you know damn well you're half Injun." + +Jessie looked at him with angry contempt, then wheeled for the door. + +Whaley had anticipated that and was there before her. His narrowed, +covetous eyes held her while one hand behind his back slid the bolt +into place. + +"Let me out!" she cried. + +"Be reasonable. I'm not aimin' to hurt you." + +"Stand aside and let me through." + +He managed another insinuating laugh. "Have some sense. Quit ridin' +that high horse and listen while I talk to you." + +But she was frightened by this time as much as she was incensed. A +drum of dread was beating in her panicky heart. She saw in his eyes +what she had never before seen on a face that looked into hers--though +she was to note it often in the dreadful days that followed--the +ruthless appetite of a wild beast crouching for its kill." + +"Let me go! Let me go!" Her voice was shrilly out of control. "Unbar +the door, I tell you!" + +"I'm a big man in this country. Before I'm through. I'll be head chief +among the trappers for hundreds of miles. I'm offerin' you the chance +of a lifetime. Throw in with me and you'll ride in your coach at +Winnipeg some day." Voice and words were soft and smooth, but back of +them Jessie felt the panther couched for its spring. + +She could only repeat her demand, in a cry that reached its ictus in a +sob. + +"If you're dreamin' about that red-coat spy--hopin' he'll marry +you after he's played fast and loose with you--why, forget such +foolishness. I know his kind. When he's had his fling, he'll go back +to his own people and settle down. He's lookin' for a woman, not a +wife." + +"That's a lie!" she flung out, rage for the moment in ascendent. "Open +that door or I'll--" + +Swiftly his hand shot forward and caught her wrist. "What'll you do?" +he asked, and triumph rode in his eyes. + +She screamed. One of his hands clamped down over her mouth, the other +went round her waist and drew the slim body to him. She fought, +straining from him, throwing back her head in another lifted shriek +for help. + +As well she might have matched her strength with a buffalo bull. He +was still under forty, heavy-set, bones packed with heavy muscles. It +seemed to her that all the power of her vital youth vanished and left +only limp and flaccid weakness. He snatched her close and kissed the +dusky eyes, the soft cheeks, the colorful lips.... + +She became aware that he was holding her from him, listening. There +was a crash of wood. + +Again her call for help rang out. + +Whaley flung her from him. He crouched, every nerve and muscle tense, +lips drawn back in a snarl. She saw that in his hand there was a +revolver. + +Against the door a heavy weight was hurled. The wood burst into +splinters as the bolt shot from the socket. Drunkenly a man plunged +across the threshold, staggering from the impact of the shock. + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII + +A GUN ROARS + + +The two men glared at each other, silently, their faces distorted to +gargoyles in the leaping and uncertain light. Wary, vigilant, tense, +they faced each other as might jungle tigers waiting for the best +moment to attack. + +There was a chance for the situation to adjust itself without +bloodshed. Whaley could not afford to kill and Morse had no desire to +force his hand. + +Jessie's fear outran her judgment. She saw the menace of the revolver +trained on her rescuer and thought the gambler was about to fire. She +leaped for the weapon, and so precipitated what she dreaded. + +The gun roared. A bullet flew past Morse and buried itself in a log. +Next instant, clinging with both hands to Whaley's wrist, Jessie found +herself being tossed to and fro as the man struggled to free his arm. +Flung at a tangent against the wall, she fell at the foot of the couch +where Fergus slept. + +Again the blaze and roar of the revolver filled the room. Morse +plunged head down at his enemy, still carrying the log he had used as +a battering-ram. It caught the gambler at that point of the stomach +known as the solar plexus. Whaley went down and out of consciousness +like an ox that has been pole-axed. + +Tom picked up the revolver and dropped it into the pocket of his fur +coat. He stooped to make sure that his foe was beyond the power of +doing damage. Then he lifted Jessie from the corner where she lay +huddled. + +"Hurt?" he asked. + +The girl shuddered. "No. Is he--is he killed?" + +"Wind knocked out of him. Nothing more." + +"He didn't hit you?" + +There was the ghost of a smile in his eyes. "No, I hit him." + +"He was horrid. I--I--" Again a little shiver ran through her body. +She felt very weak at the knees and caught for a moment at the lapel +of his coat to steady herself. Neither of them was conscious of the +fact that she was in his arms, clinging to him while she won back +self-control. + +"It's all right now. Don't worry. Lucky I came back to show Blandoine +which furs to take." + +"If you hadn't--" She drew a ragged breath that was half a sob. + +Morse loved her the more for the strain of feminine hysteria that made +her for the moment a soft and tender child to be comforted. He had +known her competent, savage, disdainful, one in whom vital and +passionate life flowed quick. He had never before seen the weakness in +her reaching out to strength. That by sheer luck it was _his_ power to +which she clung filled him with deep delight. + +He began to discount his joy lest she do it instead. His arm fell away +from her waist. + +"I 'most wrecked the house," he said with a humorous glance at the +door. "I don't always bring one o' the walls with me when I come into +a room." + +"He bolted the door," she explained rather needlessly. "He wouldn't +let me out." + +"I heard you call," he answered, without much more point. + +She glanced at the man lying on the floor. "You don't think he might +be--" She stopped, unwilling to use the word. + +Tom knelt beside him and felt his heart. + +"It's beating," he said. And added quickly, "His eyes are open." + +It was true. The cold, fishy eyes had flickered open and were taking +stock of the situation. The gambler instantly chose his line of +defense. He spoke, presently. + +"What in the devil was bitin' you, Morse? Just because I was jokin' +the girl, you come rampagin' in and knock me galley west with a big +club. I'll not stand for that. Soon as I'm fit to handle myself, you +and I'll have a settlement." + +"Get up and get out," ordered the younger man. + +"When I get good and ready. Don't try to run on me, young fellow. Some +other fools have found that dangerous." + +Whaley sat up, groaned, and pressed his hands upon the abdomen at the +point where he had been struck. + +The reddish-brown glint in the eyes of Morse advertised the cold rage +of the Montanan. He caught the gambler by the collar and pulled him to +his feet. + +"Get out, you yellow wolf!" he repeated in a low, savage voice. + +The white-faced trader was still wobbly on his feet. He felt both +sore and sick at the pit of his stomach, in no mood for any further +altercation with this hard-hitting athlete. But he would not go +without saving his face. + +"I don't know what business you've got to order me out--unless--" His +gaze included the girl for a moment, and the insult of his leer was +unmistakable. + +Morse caught him by the scruff of the neck, ran him out of the room, +and flung him down the steps into the road. The gambler tripped on the +long buffalo coat he was wearing and rolled over in the snow. Slowly +he got to his feet and locked eyes with the other. + +Rage almost choked his words. "You'll be sorry for this one o' these +days, Morse. I'll get you right. Nobody has ever put one over on Poker +Whaley and nobody ever will. Don't forget that." + +Tom Morse wasted no words. He stood silently on the steps, a splendid, +supple figure of menacing power, and watched his foe pass down the +road. There was in him a cruel and passionate desire to take the +gambler and break him with his hands, to beat him till he crawled away +a weak and wounded creature fit for a hospital. He clamped his teeth +hard and fought down the impulse. + +Presently he turned and walked slowly back into the house. His face +was still set and his hands clenched. He knew that if Whaley had hurt +Jessie, he would have killed him with his naked fingers. + +"You can't stay here. Where do you want me to take you?" he asked, and +his cold hardness reminded her of the Tom Morse who had led her to the +whip one other night. + +She did not know that inside he was a caldron of emotion and that it +was only by freezing himself he could keep down the volcanic eruption. + +"I'll go to Susie Lemoine's," she said in a small, obedient voice. + +With his hands in his pockets he stood and let he find a fur coat and +slip into it. He had a sense of frustration. He wanted to let go of +himself and tell all that was in his torrid heart. Instead, he encased +himself in ice and drove her farther from him. + +They walked down the road side by side, neither of them speaking. She +too was a victim of chaotic feeling. It would be long before she could +forget how he had broken through the door and saved her. + +But she could not find the words to tell him so. They parted at the +door of Lemoine's cabin with a chill "Good-night" that left them both +unhappy and dissatisfied. + + + + +CHAPTER XIX + +"D'YOU WONDER SHE HATES ME?" + + +To Morse came Angus McRae with the right hand of friendship the day +after the battle in the log house. + +Eyes blue as Highland lochs fastened to those of the fur-trader. "Lad, +I canna tell ye what's in my heart. 'The Lord bless thee, and keep +thee. The Lord make his face shine upon thee, and be gracious unto +thee. The Lord lift up his countenance upon thee, and give thee +peace.'" + +Tom, embarrassed, made light of the affair. "Lucky I was +Johnnie-on-the-Spot." + +The old Scot shook his head. "No luck sent ye back to hear the +skreigh o' the lass, but the whisper of the guid Father withoot whose +permission not even a sparrow falls to the ground. He chose you as the +instrument. I'll never be forgettin' what you did for my dawtie, Tom +Morse. Jess will have thankit you, but I add mine to hers." + +In point of fact Jessie had not thanked him in set words. She had been +in too great an agitation of spirit to think of it. But Morse did not +say so. + +"Oh, that's all right. Any one would have done it. Mighty glad I was +near enough. Hope she doesn't feel any worse for the shock." + +"Not a bit. I'm here to ask ye to let bygones be bygones. I've nursed +a grudge, but, man, it's clean, washed oot o' my heart. Here's my +hand, if you'll tak it." + +Tom did, gladly. He discovered at the same moment that the sun was +striking sparks of light from a thousand snow crystals. It was a good +world, if one only looked for the evidence of it. + +"The latchstring is always oot for you at the hame of Angus McRae. +Will you no' drap in for a crack the nicht?" asked the trapper. + +"Not to-night. Sometime. I'll see." Tom found himself in the position +of one who finds open to him a long-desired pleasure and is too shy to +avail himself of it immediately. "Have you seen Whaley yet to-day?" he +asked, to turn the subject. + +The hunter's lip grew straight and grim. "I have not. He's no' at the +store. The clerk says a messenger called for him early this mornin' +and he left the clachan at once. Will he be hidin' oot, do you think?" + +Tom shook his head. "Not Whaley. He'll bluff it through. The fellow's +not yellow. Probably he'll laugh it off and say he was only stealin' a +kiss an' that Miss Jessie was silly to make a fuss about it." + +"We'll let it go at that--after I've told him publicly what I think o' +him." + +Where Whaley had been nobody in Faraway knew. When he returned at +sunset, he went direct to the store and took off his snowshoes. He was +knocking the packed and frozen slush from them at the moment Angus +McRae confronted him. + +The trader laughed, from the lips, just as Tom had prophesied he would +do. "I reckon I owe you an apology, McRae," he said. "That li'l' +wild-cat of yours lost her head when I jollied her and Morse broke the +door down like the jackass he is." + +The dressing-down that Angus McRae gave Whaley is still remembered +by one or two old-timers in the Northwest. In crisp, biting words he +freed his mind without once lapsing into profanity. He finished with a +warning. "Tak tent you never speak to the lass again, or you an' me'll +come to grips." + +The storekeeper heard him out, a sneering smile on his white face. +Inside, he raged with furious anger, but he did not let his feelings +come to the surface. He was a man who had the patience to wait for +his vengeance. The longer it was delayed, the heavier would it be. A +characteristic of his cold, callous temperament was that he took fire +slowly, but, once lit, his hate endured like peat coals in a grate. A +vain man, his dignity was precious to him. He writhed at the defeat +Morse had put upon him, at his failure with Jessie, at the scornful +public rebuke of her father. Upon all three of these some day he would +work a sweet revenge. Like all gamblers, he followed hunches. Soon, +one of these told him, his chance would come. When it did he would +make all three of them sweat blood. + +Beresford met Tom Morse later in the day. He cocked a whimsical eye at +the fur-trader. + +"I hear McRae's going to sue you for damages to his house," he said. + +"Where did you hear all that?" asked his friend, apparently busy +inspecting a half-dozen beaver furs. + +"And Whaley, for damages to his internal machinery. Don't you know you +can't catapult through a man's tummy with a young pine tree and not +injure his physical geography?" the constable reproached. + +"When you're through spoofin' me, as you subjects of the Queen call +it," suggested Tom. + +"Why, then, I'll tell you to keep an eye on Whaley. He doesn't love +you a whole lot for what you did, and he's liable to do you up first +chance he gets." + +"I'm not lookin' for trouble, but if Whaley wants a fight--" + +"He doesn't--not your kind of a fight. His idea will be to have you +foul before he strikes. Walk with an eye in the back of your head. +Sleep with it open, Don't sit at windows after lamps are lit--not +without curtains all down. Play all your cards close." The red-coat +spoke casually, slapping his boot with a small riding-switch. He was +smiling. None the less Tom knew he was in dead earnest. + +"Sounds like good advice. I'll take it," the trader said easily. +"Anything more on your chest?" + +"Why, yes. Where did Whaley go to-day? What called him out of town on +a hurry-up trip of a few hours?" + +"Don't know. Do you?" + +"No, but I'm a good guesser." + +"Meanin'?" + +"Bully West. Holed up somewhere out in the woods. A fellow came in +this morning and got Whaley, who snowshoed back with him at once." + +Tom nodded agreement. "Maybeso. Whaley was away five or six hours. +That means he probably traveled from eight to ten miles out." + +"Question is, in what direction? Nobody saw him go or come--at least, +so as to know that he didn't circle round the town and come in from +the other side." + +"He'll go again, with supplies for West. Watch him." + +"I'll do just that." + +"He might send some one with them." + +"Yes, he might do that," admitted Beresford. "I'll keep an eye on +the store and see what goes out. We want West. He's a cowardly +murderer--killed the man who trusted him--shot him in the back. This +country will be well rid of him when he's hanged for what he did to +poor Tim Kelly." + +"He's a rotten bad lot, but he's dangerous. Never forget that," warned +the fur-buyer. "If he ever gets the drop on you for a moment, you're +gone." + +"Of course we may be barking up the wrong tree," the officer reflected +aloud. "Maybe West isn't within five hundred miles of here. Maybe he +headed off another way. But I don't think it. He had to get back to +where he was known so as to get an outfit. That meant either this +country or Montana. And the word is that he was seen coming this way +both at Slide Out and crossing Old Man's River after he made his +getaway." + +"He's likely figurin' on losin' himself in the North woods." + +"My notion, too. Say, Tom, I have an invitation from a young lady for +you and me. I'm to bring you to supper, Jessie McRae says. To-night. +Venison and sheep pemmican--and real plum pudding, son. You're to +smoke the pipe of peace with Angus and warm yourself in the smiles of +Miss Jessie and Matapi-Koma. How's the programme suit you?" + +Tom flushed. "I don't reckon I'll go," he said after a moment's +deliberation. + +His friend clapped an affectionate hand on his shoulder. "Cards down, +old fellow. Spill the story of this deadly feud between you and Jessie +and I'll give you an outside opinion on it." + +The Montanan looked at him bleakly. "Haven't you heard? If you +haven't, you're the only man in this country that hasn't." + +"You mean--about the whipping?" Beresford asked gently. + +"That's all," Morse answered bitterly. "Nothing a-tall. I merely had +her horsewhipped. You wouldn't think any girl would object to that, +would you?" + +"I'd like to hear the right of it. How did it happen?" + +"The devil was in me, I reckon. We were runnin' across the line that +consignment of whiskey you found and destroyed near Whoop-Up. She came +on our camp one night, crept up, and smashed some barrels. I caught +her. She fought like a wild-cat." Morse pulled up the sleeve of his +coat and showed a long, ragged scar on the arm. "Gave me that as a +lil' souvenir to remember her by. You see, she was afraid I'd take her +back to camp. So she fought. You know West. I wouldn't have taken her +to him." + +"What did you do?" + +"After I got her down, we came to terms. I was to take her to McRae's +camp and she was to be horsewhipped by him. My arm was hurtin' like +sin, and I was thinkin' her only a wild young Injun." + +"So you took her home?" + +"And McRae flogged her. You know him. He's Scotch--and thorough. It +was a sickening business. When he got through, he was white as snow. I +felt like a murderer. D'you wonder she hates me?" + +Beresford's smile was winning. "Is it because she hates you that she +wants you to come to supper to-night?" + +"It's because she's in debt to me--or thinks she is, for of course she +isn't--and wants to pay it and get rid of it as soon as she can. I +tell you, Win, she couldn't bear to touch my hand when she gave me the +key to the storehouse the other night--laid it down on the table for +me to pick up. It has actually become physical with her. She'd shudder +if I touched her. I'm not going to supper there. Why should I take +advantage of a hold I have on her generosity? No, I'll not go." + +And from that position Beresford could not move him. + +After supper the constable found a chance to see Jessie alone. She was +working over the last touches of the gun-case. + +"When it's finished who gets it?" he asked, sitting down gracefully on +the arm of a big chair. + +She flashed a teasing glance at him. "Who do you think deserves it?" + +"I deserve it," he assured her at once. "But it isn't the deserving +always who get the rewards in this world. Very likely you'll give it +to some chap like Tom Morse." + +"Who wouldn't come to supper when we asked him." She lifted steady, +inquiring eyes. "What was the real reason he didn't come?" + +"Said he couldn't get away from the store because--" + +"Yes, I heard that. I'm asking for the real reason, Win." + +He gave it. "Tom thinks you hate him and he won't force himself on +your generosity." + +"Oh!" She seemed to be considering that. + +"Do you?" + +"Do I what?" + +"Hate him." + +She felt a flush burning beneath the dusky brown of her cheeks. "If +you knew what he'd done to me--" + +"Perhaps I do," he said, very gently. + +Her dark eyes studied him intently. "He told you?" + +"No, one hears gossip. He hates himself because of it. Tom's white, +Jessie." + +"And I'm Indian. Of course that does make a difference. If he'd had a +white girl whipped, you couldn't defend him," she flamed. + +"You know I didn't mean that, little pal." His sunny smile was +disarming. "What I mean is that he's sorry for what he did. Why not +give him a chance to be friends?" + +"Well, we gave him a chance to-night, didn't we? And he chose not to +take it. What do you want me to do--go and thank him kindly for having +me whipped?" + +Beresford gave up with a shrug. He knew when he had said enough. Some +day the seed he had dropped might germinate. + +"Wouldn't it be a good idea to work a W.B. on that case?" he asked +with friendly impudence. "Then if I lost it, whoever found it could +return it." + +"I don't give presents to people who lose them," she parried. + +Her dancing eyes were very bright as they met his. She loved the trim +lines of his clean beautiful youth and the soul expressed by them. + +Matapi-Koma waddled into the room and the Mounted Policeman +transferred his attention to her. She weighed two hundred twelve +pounds, but was not sensitive on the subject. Beresford claimed +anxiously that she was growing thin. + +The Indian woman merely smiled on him benignantly. She liked him, as +all women did. And she hoped that he would stay in the country and +marry Sleeping Dawn. + + + + +CHAPTER XX + +ONISTAH READS SIGN + + +McRae fitted Jessie's snowshoes. + +"You'll be hame before the dark, lass," he said, a little anxiously. + +"Yes, Father." + +The hunter turned to Onistah. "She's in your care, lad. Gin the +weather changes, or threatens to, let the traps go and strike for the +toon. You're no' to tak chances." + +"Back assam weputch (very early)," promised the Blackfoot. + +He was proud of the trust confided to him. To him McRae was a great +man. Among many of the trappers and the free traders the old Scot's +word was law. They came to him with their disputes for settlement and +abided by his decisions. For Angus was not only the patriarch of the +clan, if such a loose confederation of followers could be called a +clan; he was esteemed for his goodness and practical common sense. + +Onistah's heart swelled with an emotion that was more than vanity. His +heart filled with gladness that Jessie should choose him as guide and +companion to snowshoe with her out into the white forests where her +traps were set. For the young Indian loved her dumbly, without any +hope of reward, in much the same way that some of her rough soldiers +must have loved Joan of Arc. Jessie was a mistress whose least whim he +felt it a duty to obey. He had worshiped her ever since he had seen +her, a little eager warm-hearted child, playing in his mother's +wigwam. She was as much beyond his reach as the North Star. Yet her +swift tender smile was for him just as it was for Fergus. + +They shuffled out of the village into the forest that crept up to the +settlement on all sides. Soon they were deep in its shadows, pushing +along the edge of a muskeg which they skirted carefully in order not +to be hampered by its treacherous boggy footing. + +Jessie wore a caribou-skin capote with the fur on as a protection +against the cold wind. Her moccasins were of smoked moose-skin +decorated with the flower-pattern bead embroidery so much in use among +the French half-breeds of the North. The socks inside them were of +duffle and the leggings of strouds, both materials manufactured for +the Hudson's Bay Company for its trappers. + +The day was comparatively warm, but the snow was not slushy nor very +deep. None the less she was glad when they reached the trapping ground +and Onistah called a halt for dinner. She was tired, from the weight +of the snow on her shoes, and her feet were blistered by reason of the +lacings which cut into the duffle and the tender flesh inside. + +Onistah built a fire of poplar, which presently crackled like a battle +front and shot red-hot coals at them in an irregular fusillade. Upon +this they made tea, heated pemmican and bannocks, and thawed a jar of +preserves Jessie had made the previous summer of service berries and +wild raspberries. Before it they dried their moccasins, socks, and +leggings. + +Afterward they separated to make a round of the traps, agreeing to +meet an hour and a half later at the place of their dinner camp. + +The Blackfoot found one of the small traps torn to pieces, probably by +a bear, for he saw its tracks in the snow. He rebuilt the snare +and baited it with parts of a rabbit he had shot. In one trap he +discovered a skunk and in another a timber wolf. When he came in sight +of the rendezvous, he was late. + +Jessie was not there. He waited half an hour in growing anxiety before +he went to meet her. Night would fall soon. He must find her while it +was still light enough to follow her tracks. The disasters that might +have fallen upon her crowded his mind. A bear might have attacked her. +She might be lost or tangled in the swampy muskeg. Perhaps she had +accidentally shot herself. + +As swiftly as he could he snowshoed through the forest, following the +plain trail she had left. It carried him to a trap from which she had +taken prey, for it was newly baited and the snow was sprinkled with +blood. Before he reached the second gin, the excitement in him +quickened. Some one in snowshoes had cut her path and had deflected +to pursue. Onistah knew that the one following was a white man. The +points of the shoes toed out. Crees toed in, just the same on webs as +in moccasins. + +His imagination was active. What white man had any business in these +woods? Why should he leave that business to overtake Jessie McRae? +Onistah did not quite know why he was worried, but involuntarily he +quickened his pace. + +Less than a quarter of a mile farther on, he read another chapter of +the story written in the trampled snow. There had been a struggle. His +mistress had been overpowered. He could see where she had been flung +into a white bank and dragged out of it. She had tried to run and had +got hardly a dozen yards before recapture. From that point the tracks +moved forward in a straight line, those of the smaller webs blotted +out by the ones made by the larger. The man was driving the girl +before him. + +Who was he? Where was he taking her? For what purpose? Onistah could +not guess. He knew that McRae had made enemies, as any forceful +character on the frontier must. The Scotchman had kicked out lazy +ne'er-do-wells from his camp. As a free trader he had matched himself +against the Hudson's Bay Company. But of those at war with him few +would stoop to revenge themselves on his daughter. The Blackfoot had +not heard of the recent trouble between Whaley and the McRaes, nor had +the word reached him that Bully West was free again. Wherefore he was +puzzled at what the signs on the snow told him. + +Yet he knew he had read them correctly. The final proof of it to him +was that Jessie broke trail and not the man. If he were a friend he +would lead the way. He was at her heels because he wanted to make sure +that she did not try to escape or to attack him. + +The tracks led down into the muskeg. It was spitting snow, but he had +no difficulty in seeing where the trail led from hummock to hummock in +the miry earth. The going here was difficult, for the thick moss was +full of short, stiff brush that caught the webbed shoes and tripped +the traveler. It was hard to find level footing. The mounds were +uneven, and more than once Onistah plunged knee-deep from one into the +swamp. + +He crossed the muskeg and climbed an ascent into the woods, swinging +sharply to the right. There was no uncertainty as to the direction of +the tracks in the snow. If they veered for a few yards, it was only to +miss a tree or to circle down timber. Whoever he might be, the man who +had taken Jessie prisoner knew exactly where he was going. + +The Blackfoot knew by the impressions of the webs that he was a large, +heavy man. Once or twice he saw stains of tobacco juice on the snow. +The broken bits of a whiskey-bottle flung against a tree did not tend +to reassure him. + +He saw smoke. It came from a tangle of undergrowth in a depression of +the forest. Very cautiously, with the patience of his race, he circled +round the cabin through the timber and crept up to it on hands and +knees. Every foot of the way he took advantage of such cover as was to +be had. + +The window was a small, single-paned affair built in the end opposite +the door. Onistah edged close to it and listened. He heard the drone +of voices, one heavy and snarling, another low and persuasive. + +His heart jumped at the sound of a third voice, a high-pitched treble. +He would have known it among a thousand. It had called to him in +the swirl of many a wind-swept storm. He had heard it on the long +traverse, in the stillness of the lone night, at lakeside camps built +far from any other human being. His imagination had heard it on +the summer breeze as he paddled across a sun-drenched lake in his +birch-bark canoe. + +The Blackfoot raised his head till he could look through the window. + +Jessie McRae sat on a stool facing him. Two men were in the room. One +strode heavily up and down while the other watched him warily. + + + + +CHAPTER XXI + +ON THE FRONTIER OF DESPAIR + + +The compulsion of life had denied Jessie the niceness given girls by +the complexities of modern civilization. She had been brought up close +to raw stark nature. The habits of animals were familiar to her and +the vices of the biped man. + +A traveler in the sub-Arctic is forced by the deadly cold of the North +into a near intimacy of living with his fellows. Jessie had more than +once taken a long sled journey with her father. On one occasion she +had slept in a filthy Indian wigwam with a dozen natives all breathing +the same foul, unventilated air. Again she had huddled up against the +dogs, with her father and two French half-breeds, to keep in her the +spark of life a blizzard's breath was trying to blow out. + +On such a trip some of the common decencies of existence are dropped. +The extreme low temperature makes it impossible for one to wash either +face or hands without the skin chapping and breaking. Food at which +one would revolt under other circumstances is devoured eagerly. + +Jessie was the kind of girl such a life had made her, with +modifications in the direction of fineness induced by McRae's sturdy +character, her schooling at Winnipeg, and the higher plane of the +family standard. As might have been expected, she had courage, energy, +and that quality of decisive action bred by primitive conditions. + +But she had retained, too, a cleanness of spirit hardly to be looked +for in such a primeval daughter of Eve. Her imagination and her +reading had saved the girl's sweet modesty. A certain detachment made +it possible for her to ignore the squalor of the actual and see it +only as a surface triviality, to let her mind dwell in inner concepts +of goodness and beauty while bestiality crossed the path she trod. + +So when she found in one of the gins a lynx savage with the pain of +bruised flesh and broken bone snapped by the jaws of the trap, +the girl did what needed to be done swiftly and with a minimum of +reluctance. + +She was close to the second trap when the sound of webs slithering +along the snow brought her up short. Her first thought was that +Onistah had changed his mind and followed her, but as soon as the +snowshoer came out of the thick timber, she saw that he was not an +Indian. + +He was a huge man, and he bulked larger by reason of the heavy furs +that enveloped him. His rate of travel was rapid enough, but there was +about the gait an awkward slouch that reminded her of a grizzly. Some +sullenness of temperament seemed to find expression in the fellow's +movements. + +The hood of his fur was drawn well forward over the face. He wore blue +glasses, as a protection against snow-blindness apparently. Jessie +smiled, judging him a tenderfoot; for except in March and April there +is small danger of the sun glare which destroys sight. Yet he hardly +looked like a newcomer to the North. For one thing he used the web +shoes as an expert does. Before he stopped beside her, she was +prepared to revise a too hasty opinion. + +Jessie recoiled at the last moment, even before she recognized him. It +was too late to take precautions now. He caught her by the wrist and +tore off his glasses, at the same time shaking back the hood. + +"Glad to death to meet up with you, missie," he grinned evilly through +broken, tobacco-stained teeth. + +The blood drenched out of her heart. She looked at the man, silent +and despairing. His presence here could mean to her nothing less than +disaster. The girl's white lips tried to frame words they could not +utter. + +"Took by surprise, ain't you?" he jeered. "But plumb pleased to see +old Bully West again, eh? It's a damn long lane that ain't got a crook +in it somewheres. An' here we are at the turn together, jus' you'n' +me, comfy, like I done promised it would be when I last seen you." + +She writhed in a swift, abortive attempt to break his hold. + +He threw back his head in a roar of laughter, then with a twist of his +fingers brought his captive to the knees. + +Sharp teeth flashed in a gleam of white. He gave a roar of pain and +tore away his hand. She had bit him savagely in the wrist, as she had +once done with another man on a memorable occasion. + +"Goddlemighty!" he bellowed. "You damn li'l' hell-cat!" + +She was on her feet and away instantly. But one of the snowshoes had +come off in the struggle. At each step she took the left foot plunged +through the white crust and impeded progress. + +In a dozen strides he had reached her. A great arm swung round and +buffeted the runner on the side of the head. The blow lifted the girl +from her feet and flung her into a drift two yards away. + +She looked up, dazed from the shock. The man was standing over her, a +huge, threatening, ill-shaped Colossus. + +"Get up!" he ordered harshly, and seized her by the shoulder. + +She found herself on her feet, either because she had risen or because +he had jerked her up. A ringing in the head and a nausea made for +dizziness. + +"I'll learn you!" he exploded with curses. "Try that again an' I'll +beat yore head off. You're Bully West's woman, un'erstand? When I say +'Come!' step lively. When I say 'Go!' get a move on you." + +"I'll not." Despite her fear she faced him with spirit. "My friends +are near. They'll come and settle, with you for this." + +He put a check on his temper. Very likely what she said was true. It +was not reasonable to suppose that she was alone in the forest many +miles from Faraway. She had come, of course, to look at the traps, but +some one must have accompanied her. Who? And how many? The skulking +caution of his wild-beast nature asserted itself. He had better play +safe. Time enough to tame the girl when he had her deep in the Lone +Lands far from any other human being except himself. Just now the +first need was to put many miles between them and the inevitable +pursuit. + +"Come," he said. "We'll go." + +She started back for the snowshoe that had been torn off. Beside it +lay her rifle. If she could get hold of it again-- + +The great hulk moved beside her, his thumb and fingers round the back +of her neck. Before they reached the weapon, he twisted her aside so +cruelly that a flame of pain ran down her spine. She cried out. + +He laughed as he stooped for the gun and the web. "Don' play none o' +yore monkey tricks on Bully West. He knew it all 'fore you was born." + +The pressure of his grip swung Jessie to the left. He gave her a push +that sent her reeling and flung at her the snowshoe. + +"Hump yoreself now." + +She knelt and adjusted the web. She would have fought if there had +been the least chance of success. But there was none. Nor could she +run away. The fellow was a callous, black-hearted ruffian. He would +shoot her down rather than see her escape. If she became stubborn and +refused to move, he would cheerfully torture her until she screamed +with agony. There was nothing he would like better. No, for the +present she must take orders. + +"Hit the trail, missie. Down past that big tree," he snapped. + +"Where are you taking me?" + +"Don't ask me questions. Do like I tell you." + +The girl took one look at his heavy, brutal face and did as she +was told. Onistah would find her. When she did not show up at the +rendezvous, he would follow her trail and discover that something was +amiss. Good old Onistah never had failed her. He was true as tried +steel and in all the North woods there was no better tracker. + +There would be a fight. If West saw him first, he would shoot the +Blackfoot at sight. She did not need to guess that. He would do it for +two reasons. The first was the general one that he did not want any of +her friends to know where he was. The more specific one was that he +already had a grudge against the young Indian that he would be glad to +pay once for all. + +Jessie's one hope was that Onistah would hasten to the rescue. Yet she +dreaded the moment of his coming. He was a gentle soul, one of Father +Giguère's converts. It was altogether likely that he would walk into +the camp of the escaped convict openly and become a victim of the +murderer's guile. Onistah did not lack courage. He would fight if he +had to do so. Indeed, she knew that he would go through fire to save +her. But bravery was not enough. She could almost have wished that her +foster-brother was as full of devilish treachery as the huge ape-man +slouching at her heels. Then the chances of the battle would be more +even. + +The desperado drove her down into the muskeg, directing the girl's +course with a flow of obscene and ribald profanity. + +It is doubtful if she heard him. As her lithe, supple limbs carried +her from one moss hump to another, she was busy with the problem of +escape. She must get away soon. Every hour increased the danger. The +sun would sink shortly. If she were still this ruffian's prisoner +when the long Arctic night fell, she would suffer the tortures of the +damned. She faced the fact squarely, though her cheeks blanched at the +prospect and the heart inside her withered. + +From the sloping side of a hummock her foot slipped and she slid into +the icy bog to her knees. Within a few minutes duffles and leggings +were frozen and she was suffering at each step. + +Out of the muskeg they came into the woods. A flake of snow fell on +Jessie's cheek and chilled her blood. For she knew that if it came on +to snow before Onistah took the trail or even before he reached the +place to which West was taking her, the chances of a rescue would be +very much diminished. A storm would wipe out the tracks they had made. + +"Swing back o' the rock and into the brush," West growled. Then, as +she took the narrow trail through the brush that had grown up among +half a dozen small down trees, he barked a question: "Whadjasay yore +Injun name was?" + +"My name is Jessie McRae," she answered with a flash of angry pride. +"You know who I am--the daughter of Angus McRae. And if you do me any +harm, he'll hunt you down and kill you like a wolf." + +He caught her by the arm and whirled the girl round. His big yellow +canines snapped like tusks and he snarled at her through clenched +jaws. "Did you hear yore master's voice? I said, what was yore squaw +name?" + +She almost shrieked from the pain of his fingers' savage clutch into +her flesh. The courage died out of her arteries. + +"Sleeping Dawn they called me." + +"Too long," he pronounced. "I'll call you Dawn." The sight of her +terror of him, the foretaste of the triumph he was to enjoy, restored +him for a moment to a brutal good-humor. "An' when I yell 'Dawn' at +you o' mornin's, it'll be for you to hump yoreself an' git up to build +the fires and rustle breakfast. I'll treat you fine if you behave, but +if you git sulky, you'll taste the dog-whip. I'm boss. You'll have +a heluva time if you don't come runnin' when I snap my fingers. +Un'erstand?" + +She broke down in a wailing appeal to whatever good there was in him. +"Let me go back to Father! I know you've broke prison. If you're good +to me, he'll help you escape. You know he has friends everywhere. +They'll hide you from the red-coats. He'll give you an outfit to get +away--money--anything you want. Oh, let me go, and--and--" + +He grinned, and the sight of his evil mirth told her she had failed. + +"Didn't I tell you I'd git you right some day? Didn't I promise Angus +McRae I'd pay him back aplenty for kickin' me outa his hide camp? +Ain't you the lil' hell-cat that busted my whiskey-kegs, that ran to +the red-coat spy an' told him where the cache was, that shot me up +when I set out to dry-gulch him, as you might say? Where do you figure +you got a license to expect Bully West to listen to Sunday-school pap +about being good to you? You're my squaw, an' lucky at that you got a +real two-fisted man. Hell's hinges! What's eatin' you?" + +"Never!" she cried. "It's true what I told you once. I'd rather die. +Oh, if you've got a spark of manhood in you, don't make me kill +myself. I'm just a girl. If I ever did you wrong, I'm sorry. I'll make +it right. My father--" + +"Listen." His raucous voice cut through her entreaties. "I've heard +more'n plenty about McRae. All I want o' him is to get a bead on +him once with a rifle. Get me? Now this other talk--about killin' +yoreself--nothin' to it a-tall. Go to it if tha's how you feel. Yore +huntin'-knife's right there in yore belt." He reached forward and +plucked it from its sheath, then handed it to her blade first, +stepping back a pace at once to make sure she did not use it on him. +"You got yore chance now. Kill away. I'll stand right here an' see +nobody interferes with you." + +She shifted the knife and gripped the handle. A tumult seethed in +her brain. She saw nothing but that evil, grinning face, hideous and +menacing. For a moment murder boiled up in her, red-hot and sinister. +If she could kill him now as he stood jeering at her--drive the blade +into that thick bull neck.... + +The madness passed. She could not do it even if it were within +her power. The urge to kill was not strong enough. It was not +overwhelming. And in the next thought she knew, too, that she could +not kill herself either. The blind need to live, the animal impulse of +self-preservation, at whatever cost, whatever shame, was as yet more +powerful than the horror of the fate impending. + +She flung the knife down into the snow in a fury of disgust and +self-contempt. + +His head went back in a characteristic roar of revolting mirth. He had +won. Bully West knew how to conquer 'em, no matter how wild they were. + +With feet dragging, head drooped, and spirits at the zero hour, Jessie +moved down a ravine into sight of a cabin. Smoke rose from the chimney +languidly. + +"Home," announced West. + +To the girl, at the edge of desperation, that log house appeared as +the grave of her youth. All the pride and glory and joy that had made +life so vital a thing were to be buried here. When next she came out +into the sunlight she would be a broken creature--the property of this +horrible caricature of a man. + +Her captor opened the door and pushed the girl inside. + +She stood on the threshold, eyes dilating, heart suddenly athrob with +hope. + +A man sitting on a stool before the open fire turned his head to see +who had come in. + + + + +CHAPTER XXII + +"MY DAMN PRETTY LI'L' HIGH-STEPPIN' SQUAW" + + +The man on the stool was Whaley. + +One glance at the girl and one at West's triumphant gargoyle grin was +enough. He understood the situation better than words could tell it. + +To Jessie, at this critical moment of her life, even Whaley seemed a +God-send. She pushed across the room awkwardly, not waiting to free +herself of the webs packed with snow. In the dusky eyes there was a +cry for help. + +"Save me from him!" she cried simply, as a child might have done. "You +will, won't you?" + +The black eyebrows in the cold, white face drew to a line. The +gambler's gaze, expressionless as a blank wall, met hers steadily. + +"Why don't you send for your friend Morse?" he asked. "He's in that +business. I ain't." + +It was as though he had struck her in the face. The eyes that clung to +his we're horror-filled. Did there really live men so heartless that +they would not lift a hand to snatch a child from a ferocious wolf? + +West's laughter barked out, rapacious and savage. "She's mine, jus' +like I said she'd be. My damn pretty li'l' high-steppin' squaw." + +His partner looked at him bleakly. "Oh, she's yours, is she?" + +"You bet yore boots. I'll show her--make her eat outa my hand," +boasted the convict. + +"Will you show McRae too--and all his friends, as well as the +North-West Mounted? Will you make 'em all eat out of your hands?" + +"Whadjamean?" + +"Why, I had a notion you were loaded up with trouble and didn't need +to hunt more," sneered the gambler. "I had a notion the red-coats were +on your heels to take you across the plains to hang you." + +"I'll learn 'em about that," the huge fugitive bragged. "They say +I'm a killer. Let it ride. I'll sure enough let 'em see they're good +guessers." + +Whaley shrugged his shoulders and looked at him with cold contempt. +"You've got a bare chance for a getaway if you travel light and fast. +I'd want long odds to back it," he said coolly. + +"Tha's a heluva thing to tell a friend," West snarled. + +"It's the truth. Take it or leave it. But if you try to bull this +through your own way and don't let me run it, you're done for." + +"How done for?" + +The gambler did not answer. He turned to Jessie. "Unless you want your +feet to freeze, you'd better get those duffles off." + +The girl took off her mits and tried to unfasten the leggings after +she had kicked the snowshoes from her feet. But her stiff fingers +could not loosen the knots. + +The free trader stooped and did it for her while West watched him +sulkily. Jessie unwound the cloth and removed moccasins and duffles. +She sat barefooted before the fire, but not too close. + +"If they're frozen I'll get snow," Whaley offered. + +"They're not frozen, thank you," she answered. + +"Whadjamean done for?" repeated West. + +His partner's derisive, scornful eye rested on him. "Use your brains, +man. The Mounted are after you hot and heavy. You know their record. +They get the man they go after. Take this fellow Beresford, the one +that jugged you." + +The big ruffian shook a furious fist in the air. "Curse him!" he +shouted, and added a dozen crackling oaths. + +"Curse him and welcome," Whaley replied. "But don't fool yourself +about him. He's a go-getter. Didn't he go up Peace River after Pierre +Poulette? Didn't he drag him back with cuffs on 'most a year later? +That's what you've got against you, three hundred red-coats like him." + +"You tryin' to scare me?" demanded West sullenly. + +"I'm trying to hammer some common sense into your head. Your chance +for a safe getaway rests on one thing. You've got to have friends in +the Lone Lands who'll hide you till you can slip out of the country. +Can you do that if the trappers--friends of McRae, nearly all of +'em--carry the word of what you did to this girl?" + +"I'm gonna take her with me." West stuck doggedly to his idea. He knew +what he wanted. His life was forfeit, anyhow. He might as well go +through to a finish. + +From where she sat before the great fire Jessie's whisper reached +Whaley. "Don't let him, please." It was an ineffective little wail +straight from the heart. + +Whaley went on, as though he had not heard. "It's your deal, not mine. +I'm just telling you. Take this girl along, and your life's not worth +a plugged nickel." + +"Hell's hinges! In two days she'll be crazy about me. Tha's how I am +with women." + +"In two days she'll hate the ground you walk on, if she hasn't killed +herself or you by that time." + +Waves of acute pain were pricking into Jessie's legs from the pink +toes to the calves. She was massaging them to restore circulation and +had to set her teeth to keep from crying. + +But her subconscious mind was wholly on what passed between the men. +She knew that Whaley was trying to reëstablish over the other the +mental dominance he had always held. It was a frail enough tenure, no +doubt, likely to be upset at any moment by vanity, suspicion, or heady +gusts of passion. In it, such as it was, lay a hope. Watching the +gambler's cold, impassive face, the stony look in the poker eyes, she +judged him tenacious and strong-willed. For reasons of his own he was +fighting her battle. He had no intention of letting West take her with +him. + +Why? What was the motive in the back of his mind? She acquitted the +man of benevolence. If his wishes chanced to march with hers, it was +because of no altruism. He held a bitter grudge against Angus McRae +and incidentally against her for the humiliation of his defeat at the +hands of Morse. To satisfy this he had only to walk out of the house +and leave her to an ugly fate. Why did he not do this? Was he playing +a deep game of his own in which she was merely a pawn? + +She turned the steaming duffles over on the mud hearth to dry the +other side. She drew back the moccasins and the leggings that the heat +might not scorch them. The sharp pain waves still beat into her feet +and up her limbs. To change her position she drew up a stool and sat +on it. This she had pushed back to a corner of the fireplace. + +For Bully West was straddling up and down the room, a pent volcano +ready to explode. He knew Whaley's advice was good. It would be +suicide to encumber himself with this girl in his flight. But he had +never disciplined his desires. He wanted her. He meant to take her. +Passion, the lust for revenge, the bully streak in him that gloated at +the sight of some one young and fine trembling before him: all these +were factors contributing to the same end. By gar, he would have what +he had set his mind on, no matter what Whaley said. + +Jessie knew the fellow was dangerous as a wounded buffalo bull in a +corral. He would have his way if he had to smash and trample down +any one that opposed him. Her eyes moved to Whaley's black-browed, +bloodless face. How far would the gambler go in opposition to the +other? + +As her glance shifted back to West, it was arrested at the window. +The girl's heart lost a beat, then sang a paean of joy. For the +copper-colored face of Onistah was framed in the pane. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII + +A FORETASTE OF HELL + + +Jessie's eyes flew to West and to Whaley. As yet neither of them had +seen the Blackfoot. She raised a hand and pretended to brush back a +lock of hair. + +The Indian recognized it as a signal that she had seen him. His head +disappeared. + +Thoughts in the girl's mind raced. If Winthrop Beresford or Tom Morse +had been outside instead of Onistah, she would not have attempted to +give directions. Either of them would have been more competent than +she to work out the problem. But the Blackfoot lacked initiative. He +would do faithfully whatever he was told to do, but any independent +action attempted by him was likely to be indecisive. She could not +conceive of Onistah holding his own against two such men as these +except by slaughtering them from the window before they knew he was +there. He had not in him sufficient dominating ego. + +Whaley was an unknown quantity. It was impossible to foresee how he +would accept the intrusion of Onistah. Since he was playing his own +game, the chances are that he would resent it. In West's case there +could be no doubt. If it was necessary to his plans, he would not +hesitate an instant to kill the Indian. + +Reluctantly, she made up her mind to send him back to Faraway for +help. He would travel fast. Within five hours at the outside he ought +to be back with her father or Beresford. Surely, with Whaley on her +side, she ought to be safe till then. + +She caught sight of Onistah again, his eyes level with the +window-sill. He was waiting for instructions. + +Jessie gave them to him straight and plain. She spoke to Whaley, but +for the Blackfoot's ear. + +"Bring my father here. At once. I want him. Won't you, please?" + +Whaley's blank poker stare focused on her. "The last word I had from +Angus McRae was to keep out of your affairs. I can take a hint without +waiting for a church to fall on me. Get some one else to take your +messages." + +"If you're going back to town I thought--perhaps--you'd tell him how +much I need him," she pleaded. "Then he'd come--right away." + +Onistah's head vanished. He knew what he had to do and no doubt was +already on the trail. Outside it was dark. She could hear the swirling +of the wind and the beat of sleet against the window-pane. A storm was +rising. She prayed it might not be a blizzard. Weather permitting, her +father should be here by eight or nine o'clock. + +West, straddling past, snarled at her. "Get Angus McRae outa yore +head. Him an' you's come to the partin' o' the ways. You're travelin' +with me now. Un'erstand?" + +His partner, sneering coldly, offered a suggestion. "If you expect +to travel far you'd better get your webs to hitting snow. This girl +wasn't out looking at the traps all by herself. Her trail leads +straight here. Her friends are probably headed this way right now." + +"Tha's right." West stopped in his stride. His slow brain stalled. +"What d' you reckon I better do? If there's only one or two we +might--" + +"No," vetoed Whaley. "Nothing like that. Your play is to get out. And +keep getting out when they crowd you. No killing." + +"Goddlemighty, I'm a wolf, not a rabbit. If they crowd me, I'll sure +pump lead," the desperado growled. Then, "D' you mean light out +to-night?" + +"To-night." + +"Where'll I go?" + +"Porcupine Creek, I'd say. There's an old cabin there Jacques Perritot +used to live in. The snow'll blot out our tracks." + +"You goin' too?" + +"I'll see you that far," Whaley answered briefly. + +"Better bring down the dogs from the coulée, then." + +The gambler looked at him with the cool insolence that characterized +him. "When did I hire out as your flunkey, West?" + +The outlaw's head was thrust forward and down. He glared at his +partner, who met this manifestation of anger with hard eyes into which +no expression crept. West was not insane enough to alienate his last +ally. He drew back sullenly. + +"All right. I'll go, since you're so particular." As his heavy body +swung round awkwardly, the man's eyes fell on Jessie. She had +lifted one small foot and was starting to pull on one of the duffle +stockings. He stood a moment, gloating over the beautifully shaped +ankle and lower limb, then slouched forward and snatched her up from +the stool into his arms. + +His savage, desirous eyes had given her an instant's warning. She was +half up before his arms, massive as young trees, dragged her into his +embrace. + +"But before I go I'll have a kiss from my squaw," he roared. "Just to +show her that Bully West has branded her and claims ownership." + +She fought, fiercely, desperately, pushing against his rough bearded +face and big barrel chest with all the force in her lithe young body. +She was as a child to him. His triumphant laughter pealed as he +crushed her warm soft trunk against his own and buried her in his +opened coat. With an ungentle hand he forced round the averted head +till the fear-filled eyes met his. + +"Kiss yore man," he ordered. + +The girl said nothing. She still struggled to escape, using every +ounce of strength she possessed. + +The fury of her resistance amused him. He laughed again, throwing back +the heavy bristling jaw in a roar of mirth. + +"Yore man--yore master," he amended. + +He smothered her with his foul kisses, ravished her lips, her eyes, +the soft hot cheeks, the oval of the chin, and the lovely curve of +the throat. She was physically nauseated when he flung her from him +against the wall and strode from the room with another horrible whoop +of exultation. + +She clung to the wall, panting, eyes closed. A shocking sense of +degradation flooded her soul. She felt as though she were drowning in +it, fathoms deep. Her lids fluttered open and she saw the gambler. He +was still sitting on the stool. A mocking, cynical smile was in the +eyes that met Jessie's. + +"And Tom Morse--where, oh, where is he?" the man jeered. + +A chill shook her. Dry sobs welled up in her throat. She was lost. +For the first time she knew the cold clutch of despair at her heart. +Whaley did not intend to lift a hand for her. He had sat there and let +West work his will. + +"Angus McRae gave me instructions aplenty," he explained maliciously. +"I was to keep my hands off you. I was to mind my own business. When +you see him again--if you ever do--will you tell him I did exactly as +he said?" + +She did not answer. What was there to say? In the cabin was no sound +except that of her dry, sobbing breath. + +Whaley rose and came across the room. He had thrown aside the +gambler's mask of impassivity. His eyes were shining strangely. + +"I'm going--now--out into the storm. What about you? If you're here +when West comes back, you know what it means. Make your choice. Will +you go with me or stay with him?" + +"You're going home?" + +"Yes." His smile was enigmatic. It carried neither warmth nor +conviction. + +The man had played his cards well. He had let West give her a +foretaste of the hell in store for her. Anything rather than that, she +thought. And surely Whaley would take her home. He was no outlaw, but +a responsible citizen who must go back to Faraway to live. He had to +face her father and Winthrop Beresford of the Mounted--and Tom Morse. +He would not harm her. He dared not. + +But she took one vain precaution. "You promise to take me to my +father. You'll not--be like him." A lift of the head indicated the man +who had just gone out. + +"He's a fool. I'm not. That's the difference." He shrugged his +shoulders. "Make your own choice. If you'd rather stay here--" + +But she had made it. She was getting hurriedly into her furs and was +putting on her mittens. Already she had adjusted the snowshoes. + +"We'd better hurry," she urged. "He might come back." + +"It'll be bad luck for him if he does," the gambler said coolly. "You +ready?" + +She nodded that she was. + +In another moment they were out of the warm room and into the storm. +The wind was coming in whistling gusts, carrying with it a fine sleet +that whipped the face and stung the eyeballs. Before she had been out +in the storm five minutes, Jessie had lost all sense of direction. + +Whaley was an expert woodsman. He plunged into the forest, without +hesitation, so surely that she felt he must know where he was going. +The girl followed at his heels, head down against the blast. + +Before this day she had not for months taken a long trip on webs. Leg +muscles, called into use without training, were sore and stiff. In the +darkness the soft snow piled up on the shoes. Each step became a drag. +The lacings and straps lacerated her tender flesh till she knew her +duffles were soaked with blood. More than once she dropped back so far +that she lost sight of Whaley. Each time he came back with words of +encouragement and good cheer. + +"Not far now," he would promise. "Across a little bog and then camp. +Keep coming." + +Once he found her sitting on the snow, her back to a tree. + +"You'd better go on alone. I'm done," she told him drearily. + +He was not angry at her. Nor did he bully or browbeat. + +"Tough sledding," he said gently. "But we're 'most there. Got to keep +going. Can't quit now." + +He helped Jessie to her feet and led the way down into a spongy +morass. The brush slapped her face. It caught in the meshes of her +shoes and flung her down. The miry earth, oozing over the edges of the +frames, clogged her feet and clung to them like pitch. + +Whaley did his best to help, but when at last she crept up to the +higher ground beyond the bog every muscle ached with fatigue. + +They were almost upon it before she saw a log cabin looming out of the +darkness. + +She sank on the floor exhausted. Whaley disappeared into the storm +again. Sleepily she wondered where he was going. She must have dozed, +for when her eyes next reported to the brain, there was a brisk fire +of birch bark burning and her companion was dragging broken bits of +dead and down timber into the house. + +"Looks like she's getting her back up for a blizzard. Better have +plenty of fuel in," he explained. + +"Where are we?" she asked drowsily. + +"Cabin on Bull Creek," he answered. "Better get off your footwear." + +While she did this her mind woke to activity. Why had he brought her +here? They had no food. How would they live if a blizzard blew up and +snowed them in? And even if they had supplies, how could she live +alone for days with this man in a cabin eight by ten? + +As though he guessed what was in her mind, he answered plausibly +enough one of the questions. + +"No chance to reach Faraway. Too stormy. It was neck or nothing. Had +to take what we could get." + +"What'll we do if--if there's a blizzard?" she asked timidly. + +"Sit tight." + +"Without food?" + +"If it lasts too long, I'll have to wait for a lull and make a try for +Faraway. No use worrying. We can't help what's coming. Got to face the +music." + +Her eyes swept the empty cabin. No bed. No table. One home-made +three-legged stool. A battered kettle. It was an uninviting prospect, +even if she had not had to face possible starvation while she was +caged with a stranger who might any minute develop wolfish hunger for +her as he had done only forty-eight hours before. + +He did not look at her steadily. His gaze was in the red glow of the +fire a good deal. She talked, and he answered in monosyllables. When +he looked at her, his eyes glowed with the hot red light reflected +from the fire, Live coals seemed to burn in them. + +In spite of the heat a little shiver ran down her spine. + +Silence became too significant. She was afraid of it. So she talked, +persistently, at times a little hysterically. Her memory was good. If +she liked a piece of poetry, she could learn it by reading it over +a few times. So, in her desperation, she "spoke pieces" to this man +whose face was a gray mask, just as the girls had done at her school +in Winnipeg. + +Often, at night camps, she had recited for her father. If she had no +dramatic talent, at least she had a sweet, clear voice, an earnestness +that never ranted, and some native or acquired skill in handling +inflections. + +"Do you like Shakespeare?" she asked. "My father's very fond of him. +I know parts of several of the plays. 'Henry V' now. That's good. +There's a bit where he's talking to his soldiers before they fight the +French. Would you like that?" + +"Go on," he said gruffly, sultry eyes on the fire. + +With a good deal of spirit she flung out the gallant lines. He began +to watch her, vivid, eager, so pathetically anxious to entertain him +with her small stock of wares. + + "But, if it be a sin to covet honor, + I am the most offending soul alive." + +There was about her a quality very fine and taking. He caught it first +in those two lines, and again when her full young voice swelled to +English Harry's prophecy. + + "And Crispin Crispian shall ne'er go by, + From this day to the ending of the world, + But we in it shall be remembered. + We few, we happy few, we band of brothers: + For he to-day that sheds his blood with me + Shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile, + This day shall gentle his condition: + And gentlemen in England now abed + Shall think themselves accurs'd they were not here, + And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks + That fought with us upon Saint Crispin's day." + +As he watched her, old memories stirred in him. He had come from a +good family in the Western Reserve, where he had rough-and-tumbled up +through the grades into High School. After a year here he had gone +to a Catholic School, Sacred Heart College, and had studied for the +priesthood. He recalled his mother, a gentle, white-haired old lady, +with fond pride in him; his father, who had been the soul of honor. By +some queer chance she had lit on the very lines that he had learned +from the old school reader and recited before an audience the last day +prior to vacation. + +He woke from his reveries to discover that she was giving him +Tennyson, that fragment from "Guinevere" when Arthur tells her of the +dream her guilt has tarnished. And as she spoke there stirred in him +the long-forgotten aspirations of his youth. + + "... for indeed I knew + Of no more subtle master under heaven + Than is the maiden passion for a maid, + Not only to keep down the base in man, + But teach high thought and amiable words + And courtliness, and the desire of fame, + And love of truth, and all that makes a man." + +His eyes were no longer impassive. There was in them, for the moment +at least, a hunted, haggard look. He saw himself as he was, in a blaze +of light that burned down to his very soul. + +And he saw her too transformed--not a half-breed, the fair prey of any +man's passion, but a clean, proud, high-spirited white girl who lived +in the spirit as well as the flesh. + +"You're tired. Better lie down and sleep," he told her, very gently. + +Jessie looked at him, and she knew she was safe. She might sleep +without fear. This man would not harm her any more than Beresford +or Morse would have done. Some chemical change had occurred in his +thoughts that protected her. She did not know what it was, but her +paean of prayer went up to heaven in a little rush of thanksgiving. + +She did not voice her gratitude to him. But the look she gave him was +more expressive than words. + +Out of the storm a voice raucous and profane came to them faintly. + +"Ah, crapaud Wulf, pren' garde. Yeu-oh! (To the right!) Git down to +it, Fox. Sacre demon! Cha! Cha! (To the left!)" + +Then the crack of a whip and a volley of oaths. + +The two in the cabin looked at each other. One was white to the lips. +The other smiled grimly. It was the gambler that spoke their common +thought. + +"Bully West, by all that's holy!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV + +WEST MAKES A DECISION + + +Came to those in the cabin a string of oaths, the crack of a whip +lashing out savagely, and the yelps of dogs from a crouching, cowering +team. + +Whaley slipped a revolver from his belt to the right-hand pocket of +his fur coat. + +The door burst open. A man stood on the threshold, a huge figure +crusted with snow, beard and eyebrows ice-matted. He looked like the +storm king who had ridden the gale out of the north. This on the +outside, at a first glance only. For the black scowl he flung at his +partner was so deadly that it seemed to come red-hot from a furnace of +hate and evil passion. + +"Run to earth!" he roared. "Thought you'd hole up, you damned fox, +where I wouldn't find you. Thought you'd give Bully West the slip, +you'n' that li'l' hell-cat. Talk about Porcupine Creek, eh? Tried to +send me mushin' over there while you'n' her--" + +What the fellow said sent a hot wave creeping over the girl's face to +the roots of her hair. The gambler did not speak, but his eyes, filmed +and wary, never lifted from the other's bloated face. + +"Figured I'd forget the ol' whiskey cache, eh? Figured you could gimme +the double-cross an' git away with it? Hell's hinges, Bully West's no +fool! He's forgot more'n you ever knew." + +The man swaggered forward, the lash of the whip trailing across the +puncheon floor. Triumph rode in his voice and straddled in his gait. +He stood with his back to the fireplace absorbing heat, hands behind +him and feet set wide. His eyes gloated over the victims he had +trapped. Presently he would settle with both of them. + +"Not a word to say for yoreselves, either one o' you," he jeered. +"Good enough. I'll do what talkin' 's needed, then I'll strip the hide +off'n both o' you." With a flirt of the arm he sent the lash of the +dog-whip snaking out toward Jessie. + +She shrank back against the wall, needlessly. It was a threat, not an +attack; a promise of what was to come. + +"Let her alone." They were the first words Whaley had spoken. In his +soft, purring voice they carried out the suggestion of his crouched +tenseness. If West was the grizzly bear, the other was the forest +panther, more feline, but just as dangerous. + +The convict looked at him, eyes narrowed, head thrust forward and +down. "What's that?" + +"I said to let her alone." + +West's face heliographed amazement. "Meanin'--?" + +"Meaning exactly what I say. You'll not touch her." + +It was a moment before this flat defiance reached the brain of the big +man through the penumbra of his mental fog. When it did, he strode +across the room with the roar of a wild animal and snatched the girl +to him. He would show whether any one could come between him and his +woman. + +In three long steps Whaley padded across the floor. Something cold and +round pressed against the back of the outlaw's tough red neck. + +"Drop that whip." + +The order came in a low-voiced imperative. West hesitated. This +man--his partner--would surely never shoot him about such a trifle. +Still-- + +"What's eatin' you?" he growled. "Put up that gun. You ain't fool +enough to shoot." + +"Think that hard enough and you'll never live to know better. Hands +off the girl." + +The slow brain of West functioned. He had been taken wholly by +surprise, but as his cunning mind Worked the situation out, he saw how +much it would be to Whaley's profit to get rid of him. The gambler +would get the girl and the reward for West's destruction. He would +inherit his share of their joint business and would reinstate himself +as a good citizen with the Mounted and with McRae's friends. + +Surlily the desperado yielded. "All right, if you're so set on it." + +"Drop the whip." + +The fingers of West opened and the handle fell to the floor. Deftly +the other removed a revolver from its place under the outlaw's left +armpit. + +West glared at him. That moment the fugitive made up his mind that he +would kill Whaley at the first good opportunity. A tide of poisonous +hatred raced through his veins. Its expression but not its virulence +was temporarily checked by wholesome fear. He must be careful that the +gambler did not get him first. + +His voice took on a whine intended for good-fellowship. "I reckon +I was too pre-emtory. O' course I was sore the way you two left me +holdin' the sack. Any one would 'a' been now, wouldn't they? But no +use friends fallin' out. We got to make the best of things." + +Whaley's chill face did not warm. He knew the man with whom he was +dealing. When he began to butter his phrases, it was time to look out +for him. He would forget that his partner had brought him from Faraway +a dog-team with which to escape, that he was supplying him with funds +to carry him through the winter. He would remember only that he had +balked and humiliated him. + +"Better get into the house the stuff from the sled," the gambler said. +"And we'll rustle wood. No telling how long this storm'll last." + +"Tha's right," agreed West. "When I saw them sun dogs to-day I figured +we was in for a blizzard. Too bad you didn't outfit me for a longer +trip." + +A gale was blowing from the north, carrying on its whistling breath +a fine hard sleet that cut the eyeballs like powdered glass. The men +fought their way to the sled and wrestled with the knots of the frozen +ropes that bound the load. The lumps of ice that had gathered round +these had to be knocked off with hammers before they could be freed. +When they staggered into the house with their packs, both men +were half-frozen. Their hands were so stiff that the fingers were +jointless. + +They stopped only long enough to limber up the muscles. Whaley handed +to Jessie the revolver he had taken from West. + +"Keep this," he said. His look was significant. It told her that in +the hunt for wood he might be blinded by the blizzard and lost. If he +failed to return and West came back alone, she would know what to do +with it. + +Into the storm the two plunged a second time. They carried ropes and +an axe. Since West had arrived, the gale had greatly increased. The +wind now was booming in deep, sullen roars and the temperature had +fallen twenty degrees already. The sled dogs were nowhere to be seen +or heard. They had burrowed down into the snow where the house would +shelter them from the hurricane as much as possible. + +The men reached the edge of the creek. They struggled in the frozen +drifts with such small dead trees as they could find. In the darkness +Whaley used the axe as best he could at imminent risk to his legs. +Though they worked only a few feet apart, they had to shout to make +their voices carry. + +"We better be movin' back," West called through his open palms. "We +got all we can haul." + +They roped the wood and dragged it over the snow in the direction +they knew the house to be. Presently they found the sled and from it +deflected toward the house. + +Jessie had hot tea waiting for them. They kicked off their webs and +piled the salvaged wood into the other end of the cabin, after which +they hunkered down before the fire to drink tea and eat pemmican and +bannocks. + +They had with them about fifty pounds of frozen fish for the dogs and +provisions enough to last the three of them four or five meals. Whaley +had brought West supplies enough to carry him only to Lookout, where +he was to stock for a long traverse into the wilds. + +As the hours passed there grew up between the gambler and the girl a +tacit partnership of mutual defense. No word was spoken of it, but +each knew that the sulky brute in the chimney corner was dangerous. He +would be held by no scruples of conscience, no laws of friendship or +decency. If the chance came he would strike. + +The storm raged and howled. It flung itself at the cabin with what +seemed a ravenous and implacable fury. The shriek of it was now +like the skirling of a thousand bagpipes, again like the wailing of +numberless lost souls. + +Inside, West snored heavily, his ill-shaped head drooping on the big +barrel chest of the man. Jessie slept while Whaley kept guard. Later +she would watch in her turn. + +There were moments when the gale died down, but only to roar again +with a frenzy of increased violence. + +The gray day broke and found the blizzard at its height. + + + + +CHAPTER XXV + +FOR THE WEE LAMB LOST + + +Beresford, in front of the C.N. Morse & Company trading-post, watched +his horse paw at the snow in search of grass underneath. It was a sign +that the animal was prairie-bred. On the plains near the border grass +cures as it stands, retaining its nutriment as hay. The native pony +pushes the snow aside with its forefoot and finds its feed. But in the +timber country of the North grass grows long and coarse. When its sap +dries out, it rots. + +The officer was thinking that he had better put both horse and cariole +up for the winter. It was time now for dogs and sled. Even in summer +this was not a country for horses. There were so many lakes that a +birch-bark canoe covered the miles faster. + +Darkness was sweeping down over the land, and with it the first flakes +of a coming storm. Beresford had expected this, for earlier in the day +he had seen two bright mock suns in the sky. The Indians had told +him that these sun dogs were warnings of severe cold and probably a +blizzard. + +Out of the edge of the forest a man on snowshoes came. He was moving +fast. Beresford, watching him idly, noticed that he toed in. Therefore +he was probably a Cree trapper. But the Crees were usually indolent +travelers. They did not cover ground as this man was doing. + +The man was an Indian. The soldier presently certified his first guess +as to that. But not until the native was almost at the store did he +recognize him as Onistah. + +The Blackfoot wasted no time in leading up to what he had to say. +"Sleeping Dawn she prisoner of Bully West and Whaley. She say bring +her father. She tell me bring him quick" + +Beresford's body lost its easy grace instantly and became rigid. His +voice rang with sharp authority. + +"Where is she?" + +"She at Jasper's cabin on Cache Creek. She frightened." + +As though the mention of Sleeping Dawn's name had reached him by some +process of telepathy, Tom Morse had come out and stood in the door of +the store. The trooper wheeled to him. + +"Get me a dog-team, Tom. That fellow West has got Jessie McRae with +him on Cache Creek. We've got to move quick." + +The storekeeper felt as though the bottom had dropped out of his +heart. He glanced up at the lowering night. "Storm brewing. We'll get +started right away." Without a moment's delay he disappeared inside +the store to make his preparations. + +Onistah carried the news to McRae. + +The blood washed out of the ruddy-whiskered face of the Scot, but his +sole comment was a Scriptural phrase of faith. "I have been young, and +now am old; yet have I not seen the righteous forsaken..." + +It was less than half an hour later that four men and a dog-train +moved up the main street of Faraway and disappeared in the forest. +Morse broke trail and McRae drove the tandem. Onistah, who had already +traveled many miles, brought up the rear. The trooper exchanged places +with Morse after an hour's travel. + +They were taking a short-cut and it led them through dead and down +timber that delayed the party. Tom was a good axeman, and more than +once he had to chop away obstructing logs. At other times by main +strength the men lifted or dragged the sled over bad places. + +The swirling storm made it difficult to know where they were going or +to choose the best way. They floundered through deep snow and heavy +underbrush, faces bleeding from the whip of willow switches suddenly +released and feet so torn by the straps of the snowshoes that the +trail showed stains of blood which had soaked from the moccasins. + +Onistah, already weary, began to lag. They dared not wait for him. +There was, they felt, not a moment to be lost. McRae's clean-shaven +upper lip was a straight, grim surface. He voiced no fears, no doubts, +but the others knew from their own anxiety how much he must be +suffering. + +The gale increased. It drove in bitter blasts of fine stinging sleet. +When for a few hundred yards they drew out of the thick forest into an +open grove, it lashed them so furiously they could scarcely move in +the teeth of it. + +The dogs were whimpering at their task. More than once they stopped, +exhausted by the wind against which they were battling. Their eyes +turned dumbly to McRae for instructions. He could only drive them back +to the trail Morse was breaking. + +The train was one of the best in the North. The leader was a large +St. Bernard, weighing about one hundred sixty pounds, intelligent, +faithful, and full of courage. He stood thirty-four inches high at his +fore shoulder. Not once did Cuffy falter. Even when the others quit, +he was ready to put his weight to the load. + +Through the howling of the wind Beresford shouted into the ear of +Morse. "Can't be far now. Question is can we find Jasper's in this +blizzard." + +Morse shook his head. It did not seem likely. Far and near were words +which had no meaning. A white, shrieking monster seemed to be hemming +them in. Their world diminished to the space their outstretched arms +could reach. The only guide they had was Cache Creek, along the bank +of which they were traveling. Jasper's deserted cabin lay back from +it a few hundred yards, but Tom had not any data to tell him when he +ought to leave the creek. + +Cuffy solved the problem for him. The St. Bernard stopped, refused +the trail Beresford and Morse were beating down in the deep snow. He +raised his head, seemed to scent a haven, whined, and tried to plunge +to the left. + +McRae came forward and shouted to his friends. "We'll gi'e Cuffy his +head. He'll maybe ken mair than we do the nicht." + +The trail-breakers turned from the creek, occasionally stopping to +make sure Cuffy was satisfied. Through heavy brush they forced a way +into a coulée. The St. Bernard led them plump against the wall of a +cabin. + +There was a light inside, the fitful, leaping glow of fire flames. +The men stumbled through drifts to the door, McRae in the lead. The +Scotchman found the latch and flung open the door. The other two +followed him inside. + +The room was empty. + +At first they could not believe their eyes. It was not reasonable to +suppose that any sane human beings would have left a comfortable house +to face such a storm. But this was just what they must have done. The +state of the fire, which was dying down to hot coals, told them it had +not been replenished for hours. West and Whaley clearly had decided +they were not safe here and had set out for another hiding-place. + +The men looked at each other in blank silence. The same thought was +in the mind of all. For the present they must give up the pursuit. +It would not be possible to try to carry on any farther in such +a blizzard. Yet the younger men waited for McRae to come to his +decision. If he called on them to do more, they would make a try with +him. + +"We'll stay here," Angus said quietly. "Build up the fire, lads, and +we'll cast back for Onistah." + +Neither of the others spoke. They knew it must have cost the Scotchman +a pang to give up even for the night. He had done it only because he +recognized that he had no right to sacrifice all their lives in vain. + +The dogs took the back trail reluctantly. The sled had been unloaded +and was lighter. Moreover, they followed a trail already broken except +where the sweep of the wind had filled it up. McRae cheered them to +their work. + +"Up wi' ye, Koona! Guid dog. Cha, cha! You'll be doin' gran' work, +Cuffy. Marché!" + +Morse stumbled over Onistah where he lay in the trail. The Blackfoot +was still conscious, though he was drowsing into that sleep which is +fatal to Arctic travelers caught in a blizzard. He had crawled on +hands and feet through the snow after his knees failed him. It must +have been only a few minutes after he completely collapsed that they +found him. + +He was given a gulp or two of whiskey and put on the sled. Again the +dogs buckled to the pull. A quarter of an hour later the party reached +the cabin. + +Onistah was given first aid. Feet and face were rubbed with snow to +restore circulation and to prevent frost-bite. He had been rescued in +time to save him from any permanent ill effects. + +In the back of all their minds lay a haunting fear. What had become +of Jessie? There was a chance that the blizzard had caught the party +before it reached its destination. Neither West nor Whaley was an +inexperienced musher. They knew the difficulties of sub-Arctic travel +and how to cope with them. But the storm had blown up with unusual +swiftness. + +Even if the party had reached safety, the girl's troubles were not +ended. With the coming of darkness her peril would increase. As long +as Whaley was with West there was hope. The gambler was cold-blooded +as a fish, but he had the saving sense of sanity. If he meant to +return to Faraway--and there was no reason why he should not--he dared +not let any harm befall the girl. But West was a ruffian unmitigated. +His ruthless passion might drive him to any evil. + +In front of the fire they discussed probabilities. Where had the two +free traders taken the girl? Not far, in the face of such a storm. +They canvassed places likely to serve as retreats for West. + +Once McRae, speaking out of his tortured heart, made an indirect +reference to what all of them were thinking. He was looking somberly +into the fire as he spoke. + +"Yea, the darkness hideth not from Thee, but the night shineth as the +day: the darkness and the light are both alike to Thee." + +He found in his religion a stay and comfort. If he knew that under +cover of darkness evil men do evil deeds, he could reassure himself +with the promise that the hairs of his daughter's head were numbered +and that she was under divine protection. + +From a pocket next his shirt he drew a small package in oilskin. It +was a Bible he had carried many years. By the light of the leaping +flames he read a chapter from the New Testament and the twenty-third +Psalm, after which the storm-bound men knelt while he prayed that God +would guard and keep safe "the wee lamb lost in the tempest far frae +the fold." + +Morse and Beresford were tough as hickory withes. None in the North +woods had more iron in the blood than they. Emergencies had tested +them time and again. But neither of them was ashamed to kneel with the +big rugged Scotchman while he poured his heart out in a petition for +his lass. The security of the girl whom all four loved each in his own +way was out of the hands of her friends. To know that McRae had found +a sure rock upon which to lean brought the younger men too some +measure of peace. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVI + +A RESCUE + + +The gray day wore itself away into the deeper darkness of early dusk. +Like a wild beast attacking its prey, the hurricane still leaped with +deep and sullen roars at the little cabin on Bull Creek. It beat upon +it in wild, swirling gusts. It flung blasts of wind, laden with snow +and sleet, against the log walls and piled drifts round them almost to +the eaves. + +Long since Whaley had been forced to take the dogs into the cabin to +save them from freezing to death. It was impossible for any of the +three human beings to venture out for more than a few minutes at a +time. Even then they had to keep close to the walls in order not to +lose contact with the house. + +When feeding-time came the dogs made pandemonium. They were +half-famished, as teams in the Lone Lands usually are, and the smell +of the frozen fish thawing before the fire set them frantic. West and +Whaley protected Jessie while she turned the fish. This was not easy. +The plunging animals almost rushed the men off their feet. They had +to be beaten back cruelly with the whip-stocks, for they were wild as +wolves and only the sharpest pain would restrain them. + +The half-thawed fish were flung to them in turn. There was a snarl, a +snap of the jaws, a gulp, and the fish was gone. Over one or two that +fell in the pack the train worried and fought, with sharp yelps +and growls, until the last fragment had been torn to pieces and +disappeared. + +Afterward the storm-bound trio drank tea and ate pemmican, still +fighting back the pack. West laid open the nose of one in an ugly cut +with the iron-bound end of his whip-butt. Perhaps he was not wholly to +blame. Many of the dog-trains of the North are taught to understand +nothing but the sting of the whip and will respond only to brutal +treatment. + +The second night was a repetition of the first. The three were divided +into two camps. Whaley or Jessie McRae watched West every minute. +There was a look in his eye they distrusted, a sulky malice back of +which seemed to smoke banked fires of murderous desire. He lay on the +floor and slept a good deal in short cat-naps. Apparently his dreams +were not pleasant. He would growl incoherently through set teeth and +clench great hairy fists in spasms of rage. Out of these he wakened +with a start to glare around suspiciously at the others. It was clear +the thought was in the back of his mind that they might destroy him +while he was asleep. + +Throughout the third day the storm continued unabated. Whaley and +West discussed the situation. Except for a few pounds of fish, their +provisions were gone. If the blizzard did not moderate, they would +soon face starvation. + +During the night the wind died down. Day broke clear, a faint and +wintry sun in the sky. + +To West the other man made a proposal. "Have to get out and hunt food. +We'll find caribou in some of the coulées along the creek. What say?" + +The convict looked at him with sly cunning. "How about this girl? +Think I'm gonna leave her to mush out an' put the police on my trail? +No, sir. I'll take her snowshoes with me." + +Whaley shrugged his shoulders. "She couldn't find her way home if she +had shoes. But please yourself about that." + +West's shifty gaze slid over him. The proposal of a hunt suited him. +He must have a supply of food to carry him to Lookout. Whaley was a +good shot and an expert trailer. If there were caribou or moose in the +vicinity, he was likely to make a kill. In any event there would be +hundreds of white rabbits scurrying through the woods. He decided +craftily to make use of the gambler, and after he was through with +him-- + +The men took with them part of the tea and enough fish to feed the +dogs once. They expected to find game sufficient to supply themselves +and stock up for a few days. Whaley insisted on leaving Jessie her +rifle, in order that she might shoot a rabbit or two if any ventured +near the cabin. She had three frozen fish and a handful of tea. + +Before they started Whaley drew Jessie aside. "Can't say how long +we'll be gone. Maybe two days--or three. You'll have to make out with +what you've got till we get back." He hesitated a moment, then his +cold, hard eyes held fast to hers. "Maybe only one of us will come +back. Keep your eyes open. If there's only one of us--and it's +West--don't let him get into the house. Shoot him down. Take his +snowshoes and the team. Follow the creek down about five miles, then +strike southwest till you come to Clear Lake. You know your way home +from there." + +Her dark eyes dilated. "Do you think he means to--to--?" + +The man nodded. "He's afraid of me--thinks I mean to set the police on +his trail. If he can he'll get rid of me. But not yet--not till we've +got a couple of caribou. I'll be watching him all the time." + +"How can you watch him while you're hunting?" + +He lifted his shoulders in a shrug. It was quite true that West could +shoot him in the back during the hunt. But Whaley knew the man pretty +well. He would make sure of meat before he struck. After the sled was +loaded, Whaley did not intend to turn his back on the fellow. + +Jessie had not been brought up in the North woods for nothing. She had +seen her brother Fergus make many a rabbit snare. Now she contrived +to fashion one out of some old strips of skin she found in the cabin. +After she had bent down a young sapling and fastened it to a fallen +log, she busied herself making a second one. + +Without snowshoes she did not find it possible to travel far, but she +managed to shoot a fox that adventured near the hut in the hope of +finding something to fill its lean and empty paunch. + +Before leaving, Whaley had brought into the house a supply of wood, +but Jessie added to this during the day by hauling birch poles from +the edge of the creek. + +Darkness fell early. The girl built up a roaring fire piled the wood +up against the door so that nobody could get in without waking her. +The rifle lay close at hand. She slept long and soundly. When she +shook the drowsiness from her eyes, the sun was shining through the +window. + +She breakfasted on stew made from a hindquarter of fox. After she had +visited her snares and reset one that had been sprung, she gathered +balsam boughs for a bed and carried them to the house to dry before +the fire. Whaley had left her a small hatchet, and with this she began +to shape a snowshoe from a piece of the puncheon floor. All day she +worked at this, and by night had a rough sort of wooden ski that might +serve at need. With red-hot coals, during the long evening, she burned +holes in it through which to put the straps. The skin of the fox, cut +into long strips, would do for thongs. It would be a crude, primitive +device, but she thought that at a pinch she might travel a few miles +on it. To-morrow she would make a mate for it, she decided. + +Except for the bed of balsam boughs, her arrangements for the night +were just as they had been the first day. Again she built up a big +fire, piled the wood in front of the door, and put the rifle within +reach. Again she was asleep almost at once, within a minute of the +time when she nestled down to find a soft spot in the springy mattress +she had made. + +Jessie worked hard on the second ski. By noon she had it pretty well +shaped. Unfortunately a small split in the wood developed into a +larger one. She was forced to throw it aside and begin on another +piece. + +A hundred times her eyes had lifted to sweep the snow field for any +sign of the hunters' return. Now, looking out of the window without +much expectation of seeing them, her glance fell on a traveler, a +speck of black on a sea of white. Her heart began to beat a drum of +excitement. She waited, eyes riveted, expecting to see a second figure +and a dog-team top the rise and show in silhouette. + +None appeared. The man advanced steadily. He did not look backward. +Evidently he had no companion. Was this lone traveler West? + +Jessie picked up the rifle and made sure that it was in good working +order. A tumultuous river seemed to beat through her temples. The +pulses in her finger-tips were athrob. + +Could she do this dreadful thing, even to save honor and life, though +she knew the man must be twice a murderer? Once she had tried and +failed, while he stood taunting her with his horrible, broken-toothed +grin. And once, in the stress of battle, she had wounded him while he +was attacking. + +The moving black speck became larger. It came to her presently with +certainty that this was not West. He moved more gracefully, more +lightly, without the heavy slouching roll.... And then she knew he was +not Whaley either. One of her friends! A little burst of prayer welled +out of her heart. + +She left the cabin and went toward the man. He waved a hand to her and +she flung up a joyful gesture in answer. For her rescuer was Onistah. + +Jessie found herself with both hands in his, biting her lower lip to +keep back tears. She could not speak for the emotion that welled up in +her. + +"You--all well?" he asked, with the imperturbable facial mask of his +race that concealed all emotion. + +She nodded. + +"Good," he went on. "Your father pray the Great Spirit keep you safe." + +"Where is Father?" + +He looked in the direction from which he had come. "We go Jasper's +cabin--your father, red soldier, American trader, Onistah. You gone. +Big storm--snow--sleet. No can go farther. Then your father he pray. +We wait till Great Spirit he say, 'No more wind, snow,' Then we move +camp. All search--go out find you." He pointed north, south, east, and +west. "The Great Spirit tell me to come here. I say, 'Sleeping Dawn +she with God, for Jesus' sake, Amen.'" + +"You dear, dear boy," she sobbed. + +"So I find you. Hungry?" + +"No. I shot a fox." + +"Then we go now." He looked at her feet. "Where your snowshoes?" + +"West took them to keep me here. I'm making a pair. Come. We'll finish +them." + +They moved toward the house. Onistah stopped. The girl followed his +eyes. They were fastened on a laden dog-train with two men moving +across a lake near the shore of which the cabin had been built. + +Her fear-filled gaze came back to the Indian. "It's West and Mr. +Whaley. What'll we do?" + +Already he was kneeling, fumbling with the straps of his snowshoes. +"You go find your father. Follow trail to camp. Then you send him +here. I hide in woods." + +"No--no. They'll find you, and that West would shoot you." + +"Onistah know tricks. They no find him." + +He fastened the snow-webs on her feet while she was still protesting. +She glanced again at the dog-train jogging steadily forward. If she +was going, it must be at once. Soon it would be too late for either of +them to escape. + +"You will hide in the woods, won't you, so they can't find you?" she +implored. + +He smiled reassurance. "Go," he said. + +Another moment, and she was pushing over the crust along the trail by +which the Blackfoot had come. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVII + +APACHE STUFF + + +The hunters brought back three caribou and two sacks of rabbits, +supplies enough to enable West to reach Lookout. The dogs were +stronger than when they had set out, for they had gorged themselves on +the parts of the game unfit for human use. + +Nothing had been said by either of the men as to what was to be done +with Jessie McRae, but the question was in the background of both +their thoughts, just as was the growing anger toward each other that +consumed them. They rarely spoke. Neither of them let the other drop +behind him. Neither had slept a wink the previous night. Instead, they +had kept themselves awake with hot tea. Fagged out after a day of hard +hunting, each was convinced his life depended on wakefulness. West's +iron strength had stood the strain without any outward signs of +collapse, but Whaley was stumbling with fatigue as he dragged himself +along beside the sled. + +The bad feeling between the partners was near the explosion point. It +was bound to come before the fugitive started on his long trip north. +The fellow had a single-track mind. He still intended to take the girl +with him. When Whaley interfered, there would be a fight. It could not +come too soon to suit West. His brooding had reached the point where +he was morally certain that the gambler meant to betray him to the +police and set them on his track. + +Smoke was rising from the chimney of the hut. No doubt the McRae girl +was inside, waiting for them with a heart of fear fluttering in +her bosom. Whaley's thin lips set grimly. Soon now it would be a +show-down. + +There was a moment's delay at the door, each hanging back under +pretense of working at the sled. There was always the chance that the +one who went first might get a shot in the back. + +West glanced at the big mittens on the other's hands, laughed hardily, +and pushed into the cabin. A startled grunt escaped him. + +"She's gone," he called out. + +"Probably in the woods back here--rabbit-shooting likely. She can't +have gone far without snowshoes," Whaley said. + +The big man picked up the ski Jessie had made. "Looky here." + +Whaley examined it. "She might have made a pair of 'em and got away. +Hope so." + +The yellow teeth of the convict showed in a snarl. "Think I don't see +yore game? Playin' up to McRae an' the red-coats. I wouldn't put it by +you to sell me out." + +The gambler's ice-cold eyes bored into West. Was it to be now? + +West was not quite ready. His hands were cold and stiff. Besides, the +other was on guard and the fugitive was not looking for an even break. + +"Oh, well, no use rowin' about that. I ain't gonna chew the rag with +you. It'll be you one way an' me another pretty soon," he continued, +shifty eyes dodging. + +"About the girl--easy to find out, I say. She sure didn't fly away. +Must 'a' left tracks. We'll take a look-see." + +Again Whaley waited deferentially, with a sardonic and mirthless grin, +to let the other pass first. There were many tracks close to the cabin +where they themselves, as well as the girl, had moved to and fro. +Their roving glances went farther afield. + +Plain as the swirling waters in the wake of a boat stretched the +tracks of a snowshoer across the lower end of the lake. + +They pushed across to examine them closer, following them a dozen +yards to the edge of the ice-field. The sign written there on that +white page told a tale to both of the observers, but it said more to +one than to the other. + +"Some one's been here," West cried with a startled oath. + +"Yes," agreed Whaley. He did not intend to give any unnecessary +information. + +"An' lit out again. Must 'a' gone to git help for the girl." + +"Yes," assented the gambler, and meant "No." + +What he read from the writing on the snow was this: Some one had come +and some one had gone. But the one who had come was not the one who +had gone. An Indian had made the first tracks. He could tell it by +the shape of the webs and by the way the traveler had toed in. The +outward-bound trail was different. Some one lighter of build was +wearing the snowshoes, some one who took shorter steps and toed out. + +"See. She run out to meet him. Here's where her feet kept sinkin' in," +West said. + +The other nodded. Yes, she had hurried to meet him but that was not +all he saw. There was the impression of a knee in the snow. It was an +easy guess that the man had knelt to take off the shoes and adjust +them to the girl's feet. + +"An' here's where she cut off into the woods," the convict went on. +"She's hidin' up there now. I'm hittin' the trail after her hot-foot." + +Whaley's derisive smile vanished almost before it appeared. What he +knew was his own business. If West wanted to take a walk in the woods, +it was not necessary to tell him that a man was waiting for him there +behind some tree. + +"Think I'll follow this fellow," Whaley said, with a lift of the hand +toward the tracks that led across the lake. "We've got to find out +where he went. If the Mounted are hot on our trail, we want to know +it." + +"Sure." West assented craftily, eyes narrowed to conceal the thoughts +that crawled through his murderous brain. "We gotta know that." + +He believed Whaley was playing into his hands. The man meant to betray +him to the police. He would never reach them. And he, Bully West, +would at last be alone with the girl, nobody to interfere with him. + +The gambler was used to taking chances. He took one now and made his +first mistake in the long duel he had been playing with West. The +eagerness of the fellow to have him gone was apparent. The convict +wanted him out of the way so that he could go find the girl. Evidently +he thought that Whaley was backing down as gracefully as he could. + +"I'll start right after him. Back soon," the gambler said casually. + +"Yes, soon," agreed West. + +Their masked eyes still clung to each other, wary and watchful. As +though without intent Whaley backed away, still talking to the other. +He wanted to be out of revolver range before he turned. West also was +backing clumsily, moving toward the sled. The convict wheeled and slid +rapidly to it. + +Whaley knew his mistake now. West's rifle lay on the sled and the man +was reaching for it. + +The man on the ice-field did the only thing possible. He bent low and +traveled fast. When the first shot rang out he was nearly a hundred +fifty yards away. He crumpled down into the snow and lay still. + +West's hands were cold, his fingers stiff. He had not been sure of his +aim. Now he gave a whoop of triumph. That was what happened to any one +who interfered with Bully West. He fired again at the still huddled +heap on the lake. + +Presently he would go out there and make sure the man was dead. Just +now he had more important business, an engagement to meet a girl in +the woods back of the house. + +"Got him good," he told himself aloud. "He sure had it comin' to him, +the damned traitor." + +To find the McRae girl could not be difficult. She had left tracks as +she waded away in the deep snow. There was no chance for her to hide. +Nor could she have gone far without webs. The little catamount might, +of course, shoot him. He had to move carefully, not to give her an +opportunity. + +As he went forward he watched every tree, every stick of timber behind +which she might find cover to ambush him. He was not of a patient +temperament, but life in the wilds had taught him to subdue when he +must his gusty restlessness. Now he took plenty of time. He was in a +hurry to hit the trail with his train and be off, but he could not +afford to be in such great haste as to stop a bullet with his body. + +He called to her. "Where you at, Dawn? I ain't aimin' to hurt you +none. Come out an' quit devilin' me." + +Then, when his wheedling brought no answer, he made the forest ring +with threats of what he would do to her when he caught her unless she +came to him at once. + +Moving slowly forward, he came to the end of the tracks that had been +made in the snow. They ended abruptly, in a thicket of underbrush. His +first thought was that she must be hidden here, but when he had beat +through it half a dozen times, he knew this was impossible. Then where +was she? + +He had told Whaley that she could not fly away. But if she hadn't +flown, what had become of her? There were no trees near enough to +climb without showing the impressions of her feet in the snow as she +moved to the trunk. He had an uneasy sense that she was watching him +all the time from some hidden place near at hand. He looked up into +the branches of the trees. They were heavy with snow which had not +been shaken from them. + +West smothered a laugh and an oath. He saw the trick now. She must +have back-tracked carefully, at each step putting her feet in exactly +the same place as when she had moved forward. Of course! The tracks +showed where she had brushed the deep drifts occasionally when the +moccasin went in the second time. + +It was slow business, for while he studied the sign he must keep a +keen eye cocked against the chance of a shot from his hidden prey. + +Twice he quartered over the ground before he knew he had reached the +place where the back-tracking ceased. Close to the spot was a pine. +A pile of snow showed where a small avalanche had plunged down. That +must have been when she disturbed it on the branches in climbing. + +His glance swept up the trunk and came to a halt. With his rifle he +covered the figure crouching close to it on the far side. + +"Come down," he ordered. + +He was due for one of the surprises of his life. The tree-dweller slid +down and stood before him. It was not Jessie McRae, but a man, an +Indian, the Blackfoot who had ridden out with the girl once to spoil +his triumph over the red-coat Beresford. + +For a moment he stood, stupefied, jaw fallen and mouth open. "Whad you +doin' here?" he asked at last. + +"No food my camp. I hunt," Onistah said. + +"Tha's a lie. Where's the McRae girl?" + +The slim Indian said nothing. His face was expressionless as a blank +wall. + +West repeated the question. He might have been talking to a block of +wood for all the answer he received. His crafty, cruel mind churned +over the situation. + +"Won't talk, eh? We'll see about that. You got her hid somewheres an' +I'm gonna find where. I'll not stand for yore Injun tricks. Drop that +gun an' marchê-back to the cabin. Un'erstand?" + +Onistah did as he was told. + +They reached the cabin. There was one thing West did not get hold of +in his mind. Why had not the Blackfoot shot him from the tree? He had +had a score of chances. The reason was not one the white man would be +likely to fathom. Onistah had not killed him because the Indian was a +Christian. He had learned from Father Giguère that he must turn the +other cheek. + +West, revolver close at hand, cut thongs from the caribou skins. +He tied his captive hand and foot, then removed his moccasins and +duffles. From the fire he raked out a live coal and put it on a flat +chip. This he brought across the room. + +"Changed yore mind any? Where's the girl?" he demanded. + +Onistah looked at him, impassive as only an Indian can be. + +"Still sulky, eh? We'll see about that." + +The convict knelt on the man's ankles and pushed the coal against the +naked sole of the brown foot. + +An involuntary deep shudder went through the Blackfoot's body. The +foot twitched. An acrid odor of burning flesh filled the room. No +sound came from the locked lips. + +The tormentor removed the coal. "I ain't begun to play with you yet. +I'm gonna give you some real Apache stuff 'fore I'm through. Where's +the girl? I'm gonna find out if I have to boil you in grease." + +Still Onistah said nothing. + +West brought another coal. "We'll try the other foot," he said. + +Again the pungent acrid odor rose to the nostrils. + +"How about it now?" the convict questioned. + +No answer came. This time Onistah had fainted. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVIII + +"IS A' WELL WI' YOU, LASS?" + + +Jessie's shoes crunched on the snow-crust. She traveled fast. In spite +of Onistah's assurance her heart was troubled for him. West and Whaley +would study the tracks and come to at least an approximation of the +truth. She did not dare think of what the gorilla-man would do to her +friend if they captured him. + +And how was it possible that they would not find him? His footsteps +would be stamped deep in the snow. He could not travel fast. Since he +had become a Christian, the Blackfoot, with the simplicity of a mind +not used to the complexities of modern life, accepted the words of +Jesus literally. He would not take a human life to save his own. + +She blamed herself for escaping at his expense. The right thing would +have been to send him back again for her father. But West had become +such a horrible obsession with her that the sight of him even at a +distance had put her in a panic. + +From the end of the lake she followed the trail Onistah had made. It +took into the woods, veering sharply to the right. The timber was +open. Even where the snow was deep, the crust was firm enough to hold. + +In her anxiety it seemed that hours passed. The sun was still fairly +high, but she knew how quickly it sank these winter days. + +She skirted a morass, climbed a long hill, and saw before her another +lake. On the shore was a camp. A fire was burning, and over this a man +stooping. + +At the sound of her call, the man looked up. He rose and began to run +toward her. She snowshoed down the hill, a little blindly, for the +mist of glad tears brimmed her eyes. + +Straight into Beresford's arms she went. Safe at last, she began to +cry. The soldier petted her, with gentle words of comfort. + +"It's all right now, little girl. All over with. Your father's here. +See! He's coming. We'll not let anything harm you." + +McRae took the girl into his arms and held her tight. His rugged face +was twisted with emotion. A dam of ice melted in his heart. The voice +with which he spoke, broken with feeling, betrayed how greatly he was +shaken. + +"My bairn! My wee dawtie! To God be the thanks." + +She clung to him, trying to control her sobs. He stroked her hair and +kissed her, murmuring Gaelic words of endearment. A thought pierced +him, like a sword-thrust. + +He held her at arm's length, a fierce anxiety in his haggard face. "Is +a' well wi' you, lass?" he asked, almost harshly. + +She understood his question. Her level eyes met his. They held no +reservations of shame. "All's well with me, Father. Mr. Whaley was +there the whole time. He stood out against West. He was my friend." +She stopped, enough said. + +"The Lord be thankit," he repeated again, devoutly. + +Tom Morse, rifle in hand, had come from the edge of the woods and was +standing near. He had heard her first call, had seen her go to the +arms of Beresford direct as a hurt child to those of its mother, and +he had drawn reasonable conclusions from that. For under stress +the heart reveals itself, he argued, and she had turned simply and +instinctively to the man she loved. He stood now outside the group, +silent. Inside him too a river of ice had melted. His haunted, sunken +eyes told the suffering he had endured. The feeling that flooded him +was deeper than joy. She had been dead and was alive again. She had +been lost and was found. + +"Where have you been?" asked Beresford. "We've been looking for days." + +"In a cabin on Bull Creek. Mr. Whaley took me there, but West +followed." + +"How did you get away?" + +"We were out of food. They went hunting. West took my snowshoes. +Onistah came. He saw them coming back and gave me his shoes. He went +and hid in the woods. But they'll see his tracks. They'll find him. We +must hurry back." + +"Yes," agreed McRae. "I'm thinkin' if West finds the lad, he'll do him +ill." + +Morse spoke for the first time, his voice dry as a chip. "We'd better +hurry on, Beresford and I. You and Miss McRae can bring the sled." + +McRae hesitated, but assented. There might be desperate need of haste. +"That'll be the best way. But you'll be carefu', lad. Yon West's a +wolf. He'd as lief kill ye baith as look at ye." + +The younger men were out of sight over the brow of the hill long +before McRae and Jessie had the dogs harnessed. + +"You'll ride, lass," the father announced. + +She demurred. "We can go faster if I walk. Let me drive. Then you can +break trail where the snow's soft." + +"No. You'll ride, my dear. There's nae sic a hurry. The lads'll do +what's to be done. On wi' ye." + +Jessie got into the cariole and was bundled up to the tip of the nose +with buffalo robes, the capote of her own fur being drawn over the +head and face. For riding in the sub-Arctic winter is a freezing +business. + +"Marché,"[6] ordered McRae. + +[Footnote: Most of the dogs of the North were trained by trappers +who talked French and gave commands in that language. Hence even +the Anglo-Saxon drivers used in driving a good many words of that +language. (W.M.R.)] + +Cuffy led the dogs up the hill, following the trail already broken. +The train made good time, but to Jessie it seemed to crawl. She was +tortured with anxiety for Onistah. An express could not have carried +her fast enough. It was small comfort to tell herself that Onistah was +a Blackfoot and knew every ruse of the woods. His tracks would lead +straight to him and the veriest child could follow them. Nor could she +persuade herself that Whaley would stand between him and West's anger. +To the gambler Onistah was only a nitchie. + +The train passed out of the woods to the shore of the lake. Here the +going was better. The sun was down and the snow-crust held dogs and +sled. A hundred fifty yards from the cabin McRae pulled up the team. +He moved forward and examined the snow. + +With a heave Jessie flung aside the robes that wrapped her and jumped +from the cariole. An invisible hand seemed to clutch tightly at her +throat. For what she and her father had seen were crimson splashes +in the white. Some one or something had been killed or wounded here. +Onistah, of course! He must have changed his mind, tried to follow +her, and been shot by West as he was crossing the lake. + +She groaned, her heart heavy. + +McRae offered comfort. "He'll likely be only wounded. The lads wouldna +hae moved him yet if he'd no' been livin'." + +The train moved forward, Jessie running beside Angus. + +Morse came to the door. He closed it behind him. + +"Onistah?" cried Jessie. + +"He's been--hurt. But we were in time. He'll get well." + +"West shot him? We saw stains in the snow." + +"No. He shot Whaley." + +"Whaley?" echoed McRae. + +"Yes. Wanted to get rid of him. Thought your daughter was hidden in +the woods here. Afraid, too, that Whaley would give him up to the +North-West Mounted." + +"Then Whaley's dead?" the Scotchman asked. + +"No. West hadn't time right then to finish the job. Pretty badly hurt, +though. Shot in the side and in the thigh." + +"And West?" + +"We came too soon. He couldn't finish his deviltry. He lit out over +the hill soon as he saw us." + +They went into the house. + +Jessie walked straight to where Onistah lay on the balsam boughs and +knelt beside him. Beresford was putting on one of his feet a cloth +soaked in caribou oil. + +"What did he do to you?" she cried, a constriction of dread at her +heart. + +A ghost of a smile touched the immobile face of the native. "Apache +stuff, he called it." + +"But--" + +"West burned his feet to make him tell where you were," Beresford told +her gently. + +"Oh!" she cried, in horror. + +"Good old Onistah. He gamed it out. Wouldn't say a word. West saw us +coming and hit the trail." + +"Is he--is he--?" + +"He's gone." + +"I mean Onistah." + +"Suffering to beat the band, but not a whimper out of him. He's not +permanently hurt--be walking around in a week or two." + +"You poor boy!" the girl cried softly, and she put her arm under the +Indian's head to lift it to an easier position. + +The dumb lips of the Blackfoot did not thank her, but the dark eyes +gave her the gratitude of a heart wholly hers. + +All that night the house was a hospital. The country was one where men +had learned to look after hurts without much professional aid. In a +rough way Angus McRae was something of a doctor. He dressed the wounds +of both the injured, using the small medical kit he had brought with +him. + +Whaley was a bit of a stoic himself. The philosophy of his class was +to take good fortune or ill undemonstratively. He was lucky to be +alive. Why whine about what must be? + +But as the fever grew on him with the lengthening hours, he passed +into delirium. Sometimes he groaned with pain. Again he fell into +disconnected babble of early days. He was back again with his father +and mother, living over his wild and erring youth. + +"... Don't tell Mother. I'll square it all right if you keep it from +her.... Rotten run of cards. Ninety-seven dollars. You'll have to +wait, I tell you.... Mother, Mother, if you won't cry like that ..." + +McRae used the simple remedies he had. In themselves they were, he +knew, of little value. He must rely on good nursing and the man's +hardy constitution to pull him through. + +With Morse and Beresford he discussed the best course to follow. It +was decided that Morse should take Onistah and Jessie back to Faraway +next day and return with a load of provisions. Whaley's fever must run +its period. It was impossible to tell yet whether he would live or +die, but for some days at least it would not be safe to move him. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIX + +NOT GOING ALONE + + +"Morse, I've watched ye through four-five days of near-hell. I ken +nane I'd rather tak wi' me as a lone companion on the long traverse. +You're canny an' you're bold. That's why I'm trustin' my lass to your +care. It's a short bit of a trip, an' far as I can see there's nae +danger. But the fear's in me. That's the truth, man. Gie me your word +you'll no' let her oot o' your sight till ye hand her ower to my wife +at Faraway." + +Angus clamped a heavy hand on the young man's shoulder. His blue eyes +searched steadily those of the trader. + +"I'll not let her twenty yards from me any time. That's a promise, +McRae," the trader said quietly. + +Well wrapped from the wind, Onistah sat in the cariole. + +Jessie kissed the Scotchman fondly, laughing at him the while. "You're +a goose, Father. I'm all right. You take good care of yourself. That +West might come back here." + +"No chance of that. West will never come back except at the end of +a rope. He's headed for the edge of the Barrens, or up that way +somewhere," Beresford said. "And inside of a week I'll be north-bound +on his trail myself." + +Jessie was startled, a good deal distressed. "I'd let him go. He'll +meet a bad end somewhere. If he never comes back, as you say he won't, +then he'll not trouble us." + +The soldier smiled grimly. "That's not the way of the Mounted. Get the +fellow you're sent after. That's our motto. I've been assigned the job +of bringing in West and I've got to get him." + +"You don't mean you're going up there alone to bring back that--that +wolf-man?" + +"Oh, no," the trooper answered lightly. "I'll have a Cree along as a +guide." + +"A Cree," she scoffed. "What good will he be if you find West? He'll +not help you against him at all." + +"Not what he's with me for. I'm not supposed to need any help to bring +back one man." + +"It's--it's just suicide to go after him alone," she persisted. "Look +what he did to the guard at the prison, to Mr. Whaley, to Onistah! +He's just awful--hardly human." + +"The lad's under orders, lass," McRae told her. "Gin they send him +into the North after West, he'll just have to go. He canna argy-bargy +aboot it." + +Jessie gave up, reluctantly. + +The little cavalcade started. Morse drove. The girl brought up the +rear. + +Her mind was still on the hazard of the journey Beresford must take. +When Morse stopped to rest the dogs for a few moments, she tucked up +Onistah again and recurred to the subject. + +"I don't think Win Beresford should go after West alone except for a +Cree guide. The Inspector ought to send another constable with him. Or +two more. If he knew that man--how cruel and savage he is--" + +Tom Morse spoke quietly. "He's not going alone. I'll be with him." + +She stared. "You?" + +"Yes. Sworn in as a deputy constable." + +"But--he didn't say you were going when I spoke to him about it a +little while ago." + +"He didn't know. I've made up my mind since." + +In point of fact he had come to a decision three seconds before he +announced it. + +Her soft eyes applauded him. "That'll be fine. His friends won't +worry so much if you're with him. But--of course you know it'll be a +horrible trip--and dangerous." + +"No picnic," he admitted. + +She continued to look at him, her cheeks flushed and her face vivid. +"You must like Win a lot. Not many men would go." + +"We're good friends," Morse answered dryly. "Anyhow, I owe West +something on my own account." + +The real reason why he was going he had not given. During the days she +had been lost he had been on the rack of torture. He did not want her +to suffer months of such mental distress while the man she loved was +facing alone the peril of his grim work in the white Arctic desert. + +They resumed the journey. + +Jessie said no more. She would not mention the subject again probably. +But it would be a great deal in her thoughts. She lived much of the +time inside herself with her own imagination. This had the generosity +and the enthusiasm of youth. She wanted to believe people fine and +good and true. It warmed her to discover unexpected virtues in them. + +Mid-afternoon brought them to Faraway. They drove down the main street +of the village to McRae's house while the half-breeds cheered from the +door of the Morse store. + +Jessie burst into the big family room where Matapi-Koma sat bulging +out from the only rocking-chair in the North woods. + +"Oh, Mother--Mother!" the girl cried, and hugged the Cree woman with +all the ardent young savagery of her nature. + +The Indian woman's fat face crinkled to an expansive smile. She had +stalwart sons of her own, but no daughters except this adopted child. +Jessie was very dear to her. + +In a dozen sentences the girl poured out her story, the words tumbling +pell-mell over each other in headlong haste. + +Matapi-Koma waddled out to the sled. "Onistah stay here," she said, +and beamed on him. "Blackfoot all same Cree to Matapi-Koma when he +friend Jessie. Angus send word nurse him till he well again." + +Tom carried the Indian into the house so that his feet would not touch +the ground. Jessie had stayed in to arrange the couch where Fergus +usually slept. + +She followed Morse to the door when he left. "We'll have some things +to send back to Father when you go. I'll bring them down to the store +to-morrow morning," she said. "And Mother wants you to come to supper +to-night. Don't you dare say you're too busy." + +He smiled at the intimate feminine fierceness of the injunction. The +last few hours had put them on a somewhat different footing. He would +accept such largesse as she was willing to offer. He recognized the +spirit in which it was given. She wanted to show her appreciation of +what he had done for her and was about to do for the man she loved. +Nor would Morse meet her generosity in a churlish spirit. + +"I'll be here when the gong rings," he told her heartily. + +"Let's see. It's nearly three now. Say five o'clock," she decided. + +"At five I'll be knockin' on the door." + +She flashed at him a glance both shy and daring. "And I'll open it +before you break through and bring it with you." + +The trader went away with a queer warmth in his heart he had not known +for many a day. The facts did not justify this elation, this swift +exhilaration of blood, but to one who has starved for long any food is +grateful. + +Jessie flew back into the house. She had a busy two hours before her. +"Mother, Mr. Morse is coming to dinner. What's in the house?" + +"Fergus brought a black-tail in yesterday." + +"Good. I know what I'll have. But first off, I want a bath. Lots of +hot water, and all foamy with soap. I've got to hurry. You can peel +the potatoes if you like. And fix some of those young onions. They're +nice. And Mother--I'll let you make the biscuits. That's all. I'll do +the rest." + +The girl touched a match to the fire that was set in her room. She +brought a tin tub and hot water and towels. Slim and naked she +stood before the roaring logs and reveled in her bath. The sense of +cleanliness was a luxury delicious. When she had dressed herself +from the soles of her feet up in clean clothes, she felt a new and +self-respecting woman. + +She did not pay much attention to the psychology of dress, but she +knew that when she had on the pretty plaid that had come from Fort +Benton, and when her heavy black hair was done up just right, she +had twice the sex confidence she felt in old togs. Jessie would have +denied indignantly that she was a coquette. None the less she was +intent on conquest. She wanted this quiet, self-contained American to +like her. + +The look she had seen in his red-brown eyes at times tantalized her. +She could not read it. That some current of feeling about her raced +deep in him she divined, but she did not know what it was. He had a +way of letting his steady gaze rest on her disturbingly. What was he +thinking? Did he despise her? Was he, away down out of sight, the kind +of man toward women that West and Whaley were? She wouldn't believe +it. He had never taken an Indian woman to live with him. There was not +even a rumor that he had ever taken an interest in any Cree girl. Of +course she did not like him--not the way she did Win Beresford or even +Onistah--but she was glad he held himself aloof. It would have greatly +disappointed her to learn of any sordid intrigue involving him. + +Jessie rolled up her sleeves and put on a big apron. She saw that +the onions and the potatoes were started and the venison ready for +broiling. From a chest of drawers she brought one of the new white +linen tablecloths of which she was inordinately proud. She would not +trust any one but herself to set the table. Morse had come from a good +family. He knew about such things. She was not going to let him go +away thinking Angus McRae's family were barbarians, even though his +wife was a Cree and his children of the half-blood. + +On the table she put a glass dish of wild-strawberry jam. In the +summer she had picked the fruit herself, just as she had gathered the +saskatoon berries sprinkled through the pemmican she was going to use +for the rubaboo. + + + + +CHAPTER XXX + +"M" FOR MORSE + + +Two in the village bathed that day. The other was Tom Morse. He +discarded his serviceable moccasins, his caribou-skin capote with the +fur on, his moose-skin trousers, and his picturesque blanket shirt. +For these he substituted the ungainly clothes of civilization, a pair +of square-toed boots, a store suit, a white shirt. + +This was not the way Faraway dressed for gala occasions, but in +several respects the trader did not choose to follow the habits of the +North. At times he liked to remind himself that he was an American and +not a French half-breed born in the woods. + +As he had promised, he was at the McRaes' by the appointed hour. +Jessie opened to his knock. + +The girl almost took his breath. He had not realized how attractive +she was. In her rough outdoor costumes she had a certain naïve +boyishness, a very taking quality of vital energy that was sexless. +But in the house dress she was wearing now, Jessie was wholly +feminine. The little face, cameo-fine and clear-cut, the slender body, +willow-straight, had the soft rounded curves that were a joy to the +eye. He had always thought of her as dark, but to his surprise he +found her amazingly fair for one of the métis blood. + +A dimpled smile flashed him welcome. "You did come, then?" + +"Is it the wrong night? Weren't you expectin' me?" he asked in +pretended alarm. + +"I was and I wasn't. It wouldn't have surprised me if you had decided +you were too busy to come." + +"Not when Miss Jessie McRae invites me." + +"She invited you once before," the girl reminded him. + +"Then she asked me because she thought she ought. Is that why I'm +asked this time?" + +She laughed. "You mustn't look a gift dinner in the mouth." + +They were by this time in the big family room. She relieved him of his +coat. He walked over to the couch upon which Onistah lay. + +"How goes it? Tough sleddin'?" he asked. + +The bronze face of the Blackfoot was immobile. He must still have been +in great pain from the burnt feet, but he gave no sign of it. + +"Onistah find good friends," he answered simply. + +Tom looked round the room, and again there came to him the sense of +home. Logs roared and snapped in the great fireplace. The table, set +with the dishes and the plated silver McRae had imported from the +States, stirred in him a pleasure that was almost poignant. The books, +the organ, the quaint old engravings Angus had brought with him when +he crossed the ocean: all of these touched the trader nearly. He was +in exile, living a bachelor life under the most primitive conditions. +The atmosphere of this house penetrated to every fiber of his being. +It filled him with an acute hunger. Here were love and friendly +intercourse and all the daily, homely routine that made life +beautiful. + +And here was the girl that he loved, vivid, vital, full of charm. The +swift deftness and grace of her movements enticed him. The inflections +of her warm, young voice set his pulses throbbing as music sometimes +did. An ardent desire of her flooded him. She was the most winsome +creature under heaven--but she was not for him. + +Matapi-Koma sat at the head of the table, a smiling and benignant +matron finished in copper. She had on her best dress, a beaded +silk with purple satin trimmings, brought by a Red River cart from +Winnipeg, accompanied with a guarantee from the trader that Queen +Victoria had none better. The guarantee was worth what it was worth, +but Matapi-Koma was satisfied. Never had she seen anything so grand. +That Angus McRae could afford to buy it for her proved him a great +chief. + +Jessie waited on the table herself. She set upon it such a dinner as +neither of her guests had eaten in years. Venison broiled to a turn, +juicy, succulent mallard ducks from the cold storage of their larder, +mashed potatoes with gravy, young boiled onions from Whoop-Up, +home-made rubaboo of delicious flavor, hot biscuits and +wild-strawberry jam! And finally, with the tea, a brandy-flavored plum +pudding that an old English lady at Winnipeg had taught Jessie how to +make. + +Onistah ate lying on the couch. Afterward, filled to repletion, with +the sense of perfect contentment a good dinner brings, the two young +men stuffed their pipes and puffed strata of smoke toward the log +rafters of the room. Jessie cleared the table, then sat down and +put the last stitches in the gun-case she had been working at +intermittently for a month. It was finished, but she had not till now +stitched the initials into the cloth. + +As the swift fingers of the girl flashed back and forth, both men +watched, not too obviously, the profile shadowed by the dark, +abundant, shining hair. The picture of her was an intimate one, but +Tom's tricky imagination tormented him with one of still nearer +personal association. He saw her in his own house, before his own +fireside, a baby clinging to her skirt. Then, resolutely, he put the +mental etching behind him. She loved his friend Beresford, a man out +of a thousand, and of course he loved her. Had he not seen her go +straight to his arms after her horrible experience with West? + +Matapi-Koma presently waddled out of the room and they could hear the +clatter of dishes. + +"I told her I'd help her wash them if she'd wait," explained Jessie. +"But she'd rather do them now and go to bed. My conscience is clear, +anyhow." She added with a little bubble of laughter, "And I don't have +to do the work. Is that the kind of a conscience you have, Mr. Morse?" + +"If I were you my conscience would tell me that I couldn't go and +leave my guests," he answered. + +She raked him with a glance of merry derision. "Oh, I know how yours +works. I wouldn't have it for anything. It's an awf'lly bossy one. +It's sending you out to the Barrens with Win Beresford just because +he's your friend." + +"Not quite. I have another reason too," he replied. + +"Yes, I know. You don't like West. Nobody does. My father doesn't--or +Fergus--or Mr. Whaley--but they're not taking the long trail after him +as you are. You can't get out of it that way." + +She had not, of course, hit on the real reason for going that +supplemented his friendship for the constable and he did not intend +that she should. + +"It doesn't matter much why I'm going. Anyhow, it'll be good for me. +I'm gettin' soft and fat. After I've been out in the deep snows a +month or so, I'll have taken up my belt a notch or two. It's time I +wrestled with a blizzard an' tried livin' on lean rabbit.[7]" + +[Footnote 7: Rabbit is about the poorest meat in the North. It is lean +and stringy, furnishes very little nourishment and not much fat, +and is not a muscle-builder. In a country where, oil and grease +are essentials, such food is not desirable. The Indians ate great +quantities of them. (W.M.R.)] + +Her gaze swept his lean, hard, compact body. "Yes, you look soft," she +mocked. "Father said something of that sort when he looked at that +door there you came through." + +Tom had been watching her stitching. He offered a comment now, +perhaps, to change the subject. It is embarrassing for a modest man to +talk about himself. + +"You're workin' that 'W' upside down," he said. + +"Am I? Who said, it was a 'W'?" + +"I guessed it might be." + +"You're a bad guesser. It's an 'M.' 'M' stands for McRae, doesn't it?" + +"Yes, and 'W' for Winthrop," he said with a little flare of boldness. + +A touch of soft color flagged her cheeks. "And 'I' for impudence," she +retorted with a smile that robbed the words of offense. + +He was careful not to risk outstaying his welcome. After an hour he +rose to go. His good-bye to Matapi-Koma and Onistah was made in the +large living-room. + +Jessie followed him to the outside door. + +He gave her a word of comfort as he buttoned his coat, "Don't you +worry about Win. I'll keep an eye on him." + +"Thank you. And he'll keep one on you, I suppose." + +He laughed. That reversal of the case was a new idea to him. The +prettiest girl in the North was not holding her breath till he +returned safely. "I reckon," he said. "We'll team together fine." + +"Don't be foolhardy, either of you," she cautioned. + +"No," he promised, and held out his hand. "Good-bye, if I don't see +you in the mornin'." + +He did not know she was screwing up her courage and had been for half +an hour to do something she had never done before. She plunged at it, +a tide of warm blood beating into her face beneath the tan. + +"'M' is for Morse too, and 'T' for Tom," she said. + +With the same motion she thrust the gun-case into his hand and him out +of the door. + +He stood outside, facing a closed door, the bit of fancy-work in his +mittens. An exultant electric tingle raced through his veins. She had +given him a token of friendship he would cherish all his life. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXI + +THE LONG TRAIL + + +For four days Whaley lay between life and death. There were hours when +the vital current in him ebbed so low that McRae thought it was the +beginning of the end. But after the fifth day he began definitely to +mend. His appetite increased. The fever in him abated. The delirium +passed away. Just a week from the time he had been wounded, McRae put +him on the cariole and took him to town over the hard crust of the +snow. + +Beresford returned from Fort Edmonton a few hours later, carrying with +him an appointment for Morse as guide and deputy constable. + +"Maintiens le droit," said the officer, clapping his friend on the +shoulder. "You're one of us now. A great chance for a short life you've +got. Time for the insurance companies to cancel any policies they may +have on you." + +Morse smiled. He was only a deputy, appointed temporarily, but it +pleased him to be chosen even in this capacity as a member of the most +efficient police force in the world. "Maintiens le droit" was the +motto of the Mounted. Tom did not intend that the morale of that body +should suffer through him if he could help it. + +Angus McRae had offered his dog-train for the pursuit and Beresford +had promptly accepted. The four dogs of the Scotch trapper were far +and away better than any others that could be picked up in a hurry. +They had stamina, and they were not savage and wolfish like most of +those belonging to the Indians and even to the Hudson's Bay Company. + +Supplies for the trip had been gathered by Morse. From the Crees he +had bought two hundred pounds of dried fish for the dogs. Their own +provisions consisted of pemmican, dried caribou meat, flour, salt, +tea, and tobacco. + +All Faraway was out to see the start. The travelers would certainly +cover hundreds and perhaps thousands of miles before their return. +Even in that country of wide spaces, where men mushed far when the +rivers and lakes were closed, this was likely to prove an epic trip. + +Beresford cracked the long lash and Cuffy leaned forward in the +traces. The tangle of dogs straightened out and began to move. A +French voyageur lifted his throat in a peculiar shout that was half +a bark. Indians and half-breeds snowshoed down the street beside +the sled. At the door of the McRae house stood Angus, his wife, and +daughter. + +"God wi' you haith," the trapper called. + +Jessie waved a scarf, and Beresford, who had spent the previous +evening with her, threw up a hand in gay greeting. + +The calvacade drew to the edge of the woods. Morse looked back. A slim +figure, hardly distinguishable in the distance, still stood in front +of the McRae house fluttering the scarf. + +A turn in the trail hid her. Faraway was shut out of view. + +For four or five miles the trappers stayed with them. It was rather a +custom of the North to speed travelers on their way in this fashion. +At the edge of the first lake the Indians and half-breeds said +good-bye and turned back. + +Morse moved onto the ice and broke trail. The dogs followed in +tandem--Cuffy, Koona, Bull, and Caesar. They traveled fast over the +ice and reached the woods beyond. The timber was not thick. Beyond +this was a second lake, a larger one. By the time they had crossed +this, the sun was going down. + +The men watched for a sheltered place to camp and as soon as they +found one, they threw off the trail to the edge of the woods, drawing +up the sledge back of them as a wind-break. They gathered pine for +fuel and cut balsam boughs for beds. It had come on to snow, and they +ate supper with their backs to the drive of the flakes, the hoods of +their furs drawn over their heads. + +The dogs sat round in a half-circle watching them and the frozen fish +thawing before the fire. Their faces, tilted a little sideways, ears +cocked and eyes bright, looked anxiously expectant. When the fish were +half-thawed, Morse tossed them by turn to the waiting animals, who +managed to get rid of their supper with a snap and a gulp. Afterward +they burrowed down in the snow and fell asleep. + +On the blazing logs Beresford had put two kettles filled with snow. +These he refilled after the snow melted, until enough water was in +them. Into one kettle he put a piece of fat caribou meat. The other +was to make tea. + +Using their snowshoes as shovels, they scraped a place clear and +scattered balsam boughs on it. On this they spread an empty flour +sack, cut open at the side. Tin plates and cups served as dish. + +Their supper consisted of soggy bannocks, fat meat, and tea. While +they ate, the snow continued to fall. It was not unwelcome, for so +long as this lasted the cold could not be intolerable. Moreover, +snow makes a good white blanket and protects against sudden drops in +temperature. + +They changed their moccasins and duffles and pulled on as night-wear +long buffalo-skin boots, hood, mufflers, and fur mits. A heavy fur +robe and a blanket were added. Into these last they snuggled down, +wrapping themselves up so completely that a tenderfoot would have +smothered for lack of air. + +Before they retired, they could hear the ice on the lake cracking like +distant thunder. The trees back of them occasionally snapped from the +cold with reports that sounded like pistol shots. + +In five minutes both men were asleep. They lay with their heads +entirely covered, as the Indians did. Not once during the night did +they stir. To disarrange their bedding and expose the nose or the +hands to the air would be to risk being frozen. + +Morse woke first. He soon had a roaring fire. Again there were two +kettles on it, one for fat meat and the other for strong tea. No +fish were thawing before the heat, for dogs are fed only once a day. +Otherwise they get sleepy and sluggish, losing the edge of their +keenness. + +They were off to an early start. There was a cold head wind that was +uncomfortable. For hours they held to the slow, swinging stride of the +webs. Sometimes the trail was through the forest, sometimes in and out +of brush and small timber. Twice during the day they crossed lakes and +hit up a lively pace. Once they came to a muskeg, four miles across, +and had to plough over the moss hags while brush tangled their feet +and slapped their faces. + +Cuffy was a prince of leaders. He seemed to know by some sixth sense +the best way to wind through underbrush and over swamps. He was +master of the train and ruled by strength and courage as well as +intelligence. Bull had ideas of his own, but after one sharp brush +with Cuffy, from which he had emerged ruffled and bleeding, the native +dog relinquished claim to dominance. + +The travelers made about fifteen miles before noon. They came to a +solitary tepee, built on the edge of a lake with a background of +snow-burdened spruce. This lodge was constructed of poles arranged +cone-shaped side by side, the chinks between plastered with moss +wedged in to fill every crevice. A thin wisp of smoke rose from an +open space in the top. + +At the sound of the yelping dogs a man lifted the moose-skin curtain +that served as a door. He was an old and wrinkled Cree. His face was +so brown and tough and netted with seams that it resembled a piece of +alligator leather. From out of it peered two very small bright eyes. + +"Ugh! Ugh!" he grunted. + +This appeared to be all the English that he knew. Beresford tried him +in French and discovered he had a smattering of it. After a good many +attempts, the soldier found that he had seen no white man with a +dog-train in many moons. The Cree lived there alone, it appeared, and +trapped for a living. Why he was separated from all his kin and tribal +relations the young Canadian could not find out at the time. Later he +learned that the old fellow was an outcast because he had once shown +the white feather in a battle with Blackfeet fifty years earlier. + +Before they left, the travelers discovered that he knew two more words +of English. One was rum, the other tobacco. He begged for both. They +left him a half-foot of tobacco. The scant supply of whiskey they had +brought was for an emergency. + +Just before night fell, Morse shot two ptarmigan in the woods. These +made a welcome addition to their usual fare. + +Though both the men were experienced in the use of snowshoes, their +feet were raw from the chafing of the thongs. Before the camp-fire +they greased the sore places with tallow. In a few days the irritation +due to the webs would disappear and the leg muscles brought into +service by this new and steady shuffle would harden and grow fit. + +They had built a wind-break of brush beside the sled and covered the +ground with spruce boughs after clearing away the snow. Here they +rested after supper, drying socks, duffles, and moccasins, which were +wet with perspiration, before the popping fire. + +Beresford pulled out his English briar pipe and Tom one picked from +the Company stock. Smoke wreathed their heads while they lounged +indolently on the spruce bed and occasionally exchanged a remark. They +knew each other well enough for long silences. When they talked, it +was because they had something to say. + +The Canadian looked at his friend's new gun-case and remarked with a +gleam in his eye: + +"I spoke for that first, Tom. Had miners on it, I thought." + +The American laughed sardonically. "It was a present for a good boy," +he explained. "I've a notion somebody was glad I was mushin' with you +on this trip. Maybe you can guess why. Anyhow, I drew a present out of +it." + +"I see you did," Beresford answered, grinning. + +"I'm to look after you proper an' see you're tucked up." + +"Oh, that's it?" + +"That's just it." + +The constable looked at him queerly, started to say something, then +changed his mind. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXII + +A PICTURE IN A LOCKET + + +It was characteristic of McRae that he had insisted on bringing Whaley +to his own home to recuperate. "It's nursin' you need, man, an' guid +food. Ye'll get baith at the hoose." + +The trader protested, and was overruled. His Cree wife was not just +now able to look after him. McRae's wife and daughter made good his +promise, and the wounded man thrived under their care. + +On an afternoon Whaley lay on the bed in his room smoking. Beside him +sat Lemoine, also puffing at a pipe. The trapper had brought to the +ex-gambler a strange tale of a locket and a ring he had seen bought +by a half-breed from a Blackfoot squaw who claimed to have had it +eighteen years. He had just finished telling of it when Jessie knocked +at the door and came into the room with a bowl of caribou broth. + +Whaley pretended to resent this solicitude, but his objection was a +fraud. He liked this girl fussing over him. His attitude toward her +was wholly changed. Thinking of her as a white girl, he looked at her +with respect. + +"No more slops," he said. "Bring me a good caribou steak and I'll say +thank you." + +"You're to eat what Mother sends," she told him. + +Lemoine had risen from the chair on which he had been sitting. He +stared at her, a queer look of puzzled astonishment in his eyes. +Jessie became aware of his gaze and flashed on him a look of +annoyance. + +"Have you seen a ghost, Mr. Lemoine?" she asked. + +"By gar, maybeso, Miss Jessie. The picture in the locket, it jus' lak +you--same hair, same eyes, same smile." + +"What picture in what locket?" + +"The locket I see at Whoop-Up, the one Pierre Roubideaux buy from old +Makoye-kin's squaw." + +"A picture of a Blackfoot?" + +"No-o. Maybe French--maybe from the 'Merican country. I do not know." + +Whaley took the pipe from his mouth and sat up, the chill eyes in his +white face fixed and intent. "Go back to Whoop-Up, Lemoine. Buy +that locket and that ring for me from Pierre Roubideaux. See +Makoye-kin--and his squaw. Find out where she got it--and when. Run +down the whole story." + +The trapper took off a fur cap and scratched his curly poll. +"Mais--pourquois? All that will take money, is it not so?" + +"I'll let you have the money. Spend what you need, but account for it +to me afterward." + +Jessie felt the irregular beat of a hammer inside her bosom. "What is +it you think, Mr. Whaley?" she cried softly. + +"I don't know what I think. Probably nothing to it. But there's a +locket. We know that. With a picture that looks like you, Lemoine here +thinks. We'd better find out whose picture it is, hadn't we?" + +"Yes, but--Do you mean that maybe it has something to do with me? How +can it? The sister of Stokimatis was my mother. Onistah is my cousin. +Ask Stokimatis. She knows. What could this woman of the picture be to +me?" + +Jessie could not understand the fluttering pulse in her throat. She +had not doubted that her mother was a Blackfoot. All the romance of +her clouded birth centered around the unknown father who had died when +she was a baby. Stokimatis had not been very clear about that. She had +never met the man, according to the story she had told Sleeping Dawn. +Neither she nor those of her tribal group knew anything of him. Was +there a mystery about his life? In her childish dreams Jessie had +woven one. He was to her everything desirable, for he was the tie that +bound her to all the higher standards of life she craved. + +"I don't know. Likely it's all a mare's nest. Find Stokimatis, +Lemoine, and bring her back with you. Well see what she can tell us. +And get the locket and the ring, with the story back of them." + +Again Lemoine referred to the cost. He would have to take his +dog-train to Whoop-Up, and from there out to the creek where Pierre +Roubideaux was living. Makoye-kin and his family might be wintering +anywhere within a radius of a hundred miles. Was there any use in +going out on such a wild-hare chase? + +Whaley thought there was and said so with finality. He did not give +his real reason, which was that he wanted to pay back to McRae and his +daughter the debt he owed. They had undoubtedly saved his life after +he had treated her outrageously. There was already one score to his +credit, of course. He had saved her from West. But he felt the balance +still tipped heavily against him. And he was a man who paid his debts. + +It was this factor of his make-up--the obligation of old associations +laid upon him--that had taken him out to West with money, supplies, +and a dog-train to help his escape. + +Jessie went out to find her father. Her eagerness to see him outflew +her steps. This was not a subject she could discuss with Matapi-Koma. +The Cree woman would not understand what a tremendous difference it +made if she could prove her blood was wholly of the superior race. Nor +could Jessie with tact raise such a point. It involved not only the +standing of Matapi-Koma herself, but also of her sons. + +The girl found McRae in the storeroom looking over a bundle of +assorted pelts--marten, fox, mink, and beaver. The news tumbled from +her lips in excited exclamations. + +"Oh, Father, guess! Mr. Lemoine saw a picture--a Blackfoot woman had +it--old Makoye-kin's wife--and she sold it. And he says it was like +me--exactly. Maybe it was my aunt--or some one. My father's sister! +Don't you think?" + +"I'll ken what I think better gin ye'll just quiet doon an' tell me a' +aboot it, lass." + +She told him. The Scotchman took what she had to say with no outward +sign of excitement. None the less his blood moved faster. He wanted +no change in the relations between them that would interfere with the +love she felt for him. To him it did not matter whether she was of the +pure blood or of the métis. He had always ignored the Indian in her. +She was a precious wildling of beauty and delight. By nature she was +of the ruling race. There was in her nothing servile or dependent, +none of the inertia that was so marked a mental characteristic of +the Blackfoot and the Cree. Her slender body was compact of fire and +spirit. She was alive to her finger-tips. + +None the less he was glad on her account. Since it mattered to her +that she was a half-blood, he would rejoice, too, if she could prove +the contrary. Or, if she could trace her own father's family, he would +try to be glad for her. + +With his rough forefinger he touched gently the tender curve of the +girl's cheek. "I'm thinkin' that gin ye find relatives across the +line, auld Angus McRae will be losin' his dawtie." + +She flew into his arms, her warm, young face pressed against his +seamed cheek. + +"Never--never! You're my father--always that no matter what I find. +You taught me to read and nursed me when I was sick. Always you've +cared for me and been good to me. I'll never have any real father but +you," she cried passionately. + +He stroked her dark, abundant hair fondly. "My lass, I've gi'en ye all +the love any yin could gi'e his ain bairn. I doot I've been hard on ye +at times, but I'm a dour auld man an' fine ye ken my heart was woe for +ye when I was the strictest." + +She could count on the fingers of one hand the times when he had said +as much. Of nature he was a bit of Scotch granite externally. He was +sentimental. Most of his race are. But he guarded the expression of it +as though it were a vice. + +"Maybe Onistah has heard his mother say something about it," Jessie +suggested. + +"Like enough. There'll be nae harm in askin' the lad." + +But the Blackfoot had little to tell. He had been told by Stokimatis +that Sleeping Dawn was his cousin, but he had never quite believed it. +Once, when he had pressed his mother with questions, she had smiled +deeply and changed the subject. His feeling was, and had always been, +that there was some mystery about the girl's birth. Stokimatis either +knew what it was or had some hint of it. + +His testimony at least tended to support the wild hopes flaming in the +girl's heart. + +Lemoine started south for Whoop-Up at break of day. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIII + +INTO THE LONE LAND + + +Into Northern Lights the pursuers drove after a four-day traverse. +Manders, of the Mounted, welcomed them with the best he had. No news +had come to him from the outside for more than two months, and after +his visitors were fed and warmed, they lounged in front of a roaring +log fire while he flung questions at them of what the world and its +neighbor were doing. + +Manders was a dark-bearded man, big for the North-West Police. He +had two hobbies. One was trouble in the Balkans, which he was always +prophesying. The other was a passion for Sophocles, which he read in +the original from a pocket edition. Start him on the chariot race in +"Elektra" and he would spout it while he paced the cabin and gestured +with flashing eyes. For he was a Rugby and an Oxford man, though born +with the wanderlust in his heart. Some day he would fall heir to a +great estate in England, an old baronetcy which carried with it manors +and deer parks and shaven lawns that had taken a hundred years to +grow. Meanwhile he lived on pemmican and sour bannocks. Sometimes +he grumbled, but his grumbling was a fraud. He was here of choice, +because he was a wild ass of the desert and his ears heard only the +call of adventure. Of such was the North-West Mounted. + +Presently, when the stream of his curiosity as to the outside began to +dry, Beresford put a few questions of his own. Manders could give him +no information. He was in touch with the trappers for a radius of a +hundred miles of which Northern Lights was the center, but no word had +come to him of a lone traveler with a dog-train passing north. + +"Probably striking west of here," the big black Englishman suggested. + +Beresford's face twisted to a wry, humorous grimace. East, west, or +north, they would have to find the fellow and bring him back. + +The man-hunters spent a day at Northern Lights to rest the dogs and +restock their supplies. They overhauled their dunnage carefully, +mended the broken moose-skin harness, and looked after one of the +animals that had gone a little lame from a sore pad. From a French +half-breed they bought additional equipment much needed for the trail. +He was a gay, good-looking youth in new fringed leather hunting-shirt, +blue Saskatchewan cap trimmed with ribbons, and cross belt of scarlet +cloth. His stock in trade was dog-shoes, made of caribou-skin by his +wife, and while in process of tanning soaked in some kind of liquid +that would prevent the canines from eating them off their feet. + +The temperature was thirty-five below zero when they left the post and +there were sun dogs in the sky. Manders had suggested that they had +better wait a day or two, but the man-hunters were anxious to be on +the trail. They had a dangerous, unpleasant job on hand. Both of them +wanted it over with as soon as possible. + +They headed into the wilds. The road they made was a crooked +path through the white, unbroken forest. They saw many traces of +fur-bearing animals, but did not stop to do any hunting. The intense +cold and the appearance of the sky were whips to drive them fast. In +the next two or three days they passed fifteen or twenty lakes. Over +these they traveled rapidly, but in the portages and the woods they +had to pack the snow, sometimes cut out obstructing brush, and again +help the dogs over rough or heavy places. + +The blizzard caught them the third day. They fought their way through +the gathering storm across a rather large lake to the timber's +edge. Here they cleared away a space about nine feet square and cut +evergreen boughs from the trees to cover it. At one side of this, +Morse built the fire while Beresford unharnessed the dogs and thawed +out a mess of frozen fish for them. Presently the kettles were +bubbling on the fire. The men ate supper and drew the sled up as a +barricade against the wind. + +The cold had moderated somewhat and it had come on to snow. All night +a sleety, wind-driven drizzle beat upon them. They rose from an +uncomfortable night to a gloomy day. + +They consulted about what was best to do. Their camp was in a poor +place, among a few water-logged trees that made a poor, smoky fire. It +had little shelter from the storm, and there was no evidence of fair +weather at hand. + +"Better tackle the next traverse," Morse advised. "Once we get across +the lake we can't be worse off than we are here." + +"Righto!" assented Beresford. + +They packed their supplies, harnessed the dogs, and were off. Into the +storm they drove, head down, buffeted by a screaming wind laden with +stinging sleet that swept howling across the lake. All about them they +heard the sharp reports of cracking ice. At any moment a fissure might +open, and its width might be an inch or several yards. In the blinding +gale they could see nothing. Literally, they had to feel their way. + +Morse went ahead to test the ice, Cuffy following close at his heels. +The water rushes up after a fissure and soon freezes over. The danger +is that one may come to it too soon. + +This was what happened. Morse, on his snowshoes, crossed the thinly +frozen ice safely. Cuffy, a step or two behind the trail-breaker, +plunged through into the water. The prompt energy of Beresford saved +the other dogs. He stopped them instantly and threw his whole weight +back to hold the sled. The St. Bernard floundered in the water for a +few moments and tried to reach Morse. The harness held Cuffy back. +Beresford ran to the edge of the break and called him. A second or two +later he was helping to drag the dog back upon the firm ice. + +In the bitter cold the matted coat of the St. Bernard, froze stiff. +Cuffy knew his danger. The instant the sled, was across the crack, he +plunged at the load and went forward with such speed that he seemed +almost to drag the other dogs with him. + +Fortunately the shore was near, not more than three or four miles +away. Within half an hour land was reached. A forest came down to the +edge of the lake. From the nearer trees Morse sliced birch bark. An +abundance of fairly dry wood was at hand. Before a roaring fire Cuffy +lay on a buffalo robe and steamed. Within an hour he was snuggling a +contented nose up to Beresford's caressing hand. + +Fagged out, the travelers went to bed early. Long before daybreak they +were up. The blizzard had died down during the night. It left behind +a crusted trail over which the dogs moved fast. The thermometer had +again dropped sharply and the weather was bitter cold. Before the +lights of an Indian village winked at them through the trees, they +had covered nearly forty miles. In the wintry afternoon darkness they +drove up. + +The native dogs were barking a welcome long before they came jingling +into the midst of the tepees. Bucks, squaws, and papooses tumbled +out to see them with guttural exclamations of greeting. Some of the +youngsters and one or two of the maidens had never before seen a white +man. + +A fast and furious mêlée interrupted conversation. The wolfish dogs +of the village were trying out the mettle of the four strangers. The +snarling and yelping drowned all other sounds until the gaunt horde +of sharp-muzzled; stiff-haired brutes had been beaten back by savage +blows from the whip and by quick thrusts of a rifle butt. + +The head man of the group invited the two whites into the largest hut. +Morse and Beresford sat down before a smoky fire and carried on a +difficult dialogue. They divided half a yard of tobacco among the men +present and gave each of the women a small handful of various-colored +beads. + +They ate sparingly of a stew made of fish, the gift of their hosts. +In turn the officers had added to the menu a large piece of fat moose +which was devoured with voracity. + +The Indians, questioned, had heard a story of a white man traveling +alone through the Lone Lands with a dog-train. He was a giant of a +fellow and surly, the word had gone out. Who he was or where he was +going they did not know, but he seemed to be making for the great +river in the north. That was the sum and substance of what Beresford +learned from them about West by persistent inquiry. + +After supper, since it was so bitterly cold outside, the man-hunters +slept in the tepee of the chief. Thirteen Indians too slept there. Two +of them were the head man's wives, six were his children, one was a +grandchild. Who the rest of the party were or what relation they bore +to him, the guests did not learn. + +The place was filthy and the air was vile. Before morning both the +young whites regretted they had not taken chances outside. + +"Not ever again," Beresford said with frank disgust after they had set +out next day. "I'll starve if I have to. I'll freeze if I must. But, +by Jove! I'll not eat Injun stew or sleep in a pot-pourri of nitchies. +Not good enough." + +Tom grinned. "While I was eatin' the stew, I thought I could stand +sleepin' there even if I gagged at the eats, and while I was tryin' to +sleep, I made up my mind if I had to choose one it would be the stew. +Next time we're wrastlin' with a blizzard, we'll know enough to be +thankful for our mercies. We'll be able to figure it might be a lot +worse." + +That afternoon they killed a caribou and got much-needed fresh meat +for themselves and the dogs. Unfortunately, while carrying the +hind-quarters to the sled, Beresford slipped and strained a tendon +in the left leg. He did not notice it much at the time, but after an +hour's travel the pain increased. He found it difficult to keep pace +with the dogs. + +They were traversing a ten-mile lake. Morse proposed that they camp as +soon as they reached the edge of it. + +"Better get on the sled and ride till then," he added. + +Beresford shook his head. "No, I'll carry on all right. Got to grin +and bear it. The sled's overloaded anyhow. You trot along and I'll +tag. Time you've got the fires built and all the work done, I'll loaf +into camp." + +Tom made no further protest. "All right. Take it easy. I'll unload and +run back for you." + +The Montanan found a good camp-site, dumped the supplies, and left +Cuffy as a guard. With the other dogs he drove back and met the +officer. Beresford was still limping doggedly forward. Every step sent +a shoot of pain through him, but he set his teeth and kept moving. + +None the less he was glad to see the empty sled. He tumbled on and let +the others do the work. + +At camp he scraped the snow away with a shoe while Morse cut spruce +boughs and chopped wood for the fire. + +Beresford suffered a good deal from his knee that night. He did not +sleep much, and when day came it was plain he could not travel. The +camp-site was a good one. There was plenty of wood, and the shape of +the draw in which they were located was a protection from the cold +wind. The dogs would be no worse for a day or two of rest. The +travelers decided to remain here as long as might be necessary. + +Tom went hunting. He brought back a bag of four ptarmigan late in +the afternoon. Fried, they were delicious. The dogs stood round in +a half-circle and caught the bones tossed to them. Crunch-- +crunch--crunch. The bones no longer were. The dogs, heads cocked +on one side, waited expectantly for more tender tidbits. + +"Saw deer tracks. To-morrow I'll have a try for one," Morse said. + +The lame man hobbled down to the lake next day, broke the ice, and +fished for jack pike. He took back to camp with him all he could +carry. + +On the fourth day his knee was so much improved that he was able to +travel slowly. They were glad to see that night the lights of Fort +Desolation, as one of the Mounted had dubbed the post on account of +its loneliness. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIV + +THE MAN-HUNTERS READ SIGN + + +In the white North travelers are few and far. It is impossible for one +to pass through the country without leaving a record of his progress +written on the terrain and in the minds of the natives. The fugitive +did not attempt concealment. He had with him now an Indian guide and +was pushing into the Barren Lands. There was no uncertainty about his +movements. From Fort Chippewayan he had swung to the northwest in the +line of the great frozen lakes, skirting Athabasca and following the +Great Slave River to the lake of the same name. This he crossed at the +narrowest point, about where the river empties into it, and headed for +the eastern extremity of Lake La Martre. + +On his heels, still far behind, trod the two pursuers, patient, +dogged, and inexorable. They had left far in the rear the out-forts of +the Mounted and the little settlements of the free traders. Already +they were deep in the Hudson's Bay Company trapping-grounds. Ahead of +them lay the Barrens, stretching to the inlets of the Arctic Ocean. + +The days were drawing out and the nights getting shorter. The +untempered sun of the Northland beat down on the cold snow crystals +and reflected a million sparks of light. In that white field the glare +was almost unbearable. Both of them wore smoked glasses, but even with +these their eyes continually smarted. They grew red and swollen. If +time had not been so great an element in their journey, they would +have tried to travel only after sunset. But they could not afford +this. West would keep going as long and as fast as he could. + +Each of them dreaded snow-blindness. They knew the sign of it--a +dreadful pain, a smarting of the eyeballs as though hot burning sand +were being flung against them. In camp at night they bathed their +swollen lids and applied a cool and healing salve. + +Meanwhile the weeks slipped into months and still they held like +bulldogs to the trail of the man they were after. + +The silence of the wide, empty white wastes surrounded them, except +for an occasional word, the whine of a dog, and the slithering crunch +of the sled-runners. From unfriendly frozen deserts they passed, +through eternal stillness, into the snow wilderness that seemed to +stretch forever. When they came to forests, now thinner, smaller, and +less frequent, they welcomed them as they would an old friend. + +"He's headin' for Great Bear, looks like," Morse suggested one morning +after an hour in which neither of them had spoken. + +"I was wondering when you'd chirp up, Tom," Beresford grinned +cheerfully. "Sometimes I think I'm fed up for life on the hissing of +snowshoe runners. The human voice sure sounds good up here. Yes, Great +Bear Lake. And after that, where?" + +"Up the lake, across to the Mackenzie, and down it to the ocean, I'd +say. He's makin' for the whaling waters. Herschel Island maybe. He's +hoping to bump into a whaler and get down on it to 'Frisco." + +"Your guess is just as good as any," the Canadian admitted. "He's +cut out a man-sized job for himself. I'll say that for him. It's a +five-to-one bet he never gets through alive, even if we don't nab +him." + +"What else can he do? He's got to keep going or be dragged back to be +hanged. I'd travel too if I were in his place." + +"So would I. He's certainly hitting her up. Wish he'd break his leg +for a week or two," the constable said airily. + +They swung into a dense spruce swamp and jumped up a half-grown bear. +He was so close to them that Tom, who was breaking trail, could see +his little shining eyes. Morse was carrying his rifle, in the hope +that he might see a lynx or a moose. The bear turned to scamper away, +but the intention never became a fact. A bullet crashed through the +head and brought the animal down. + +An hour later they reached an Indian camp on the edge of a lake. On +stages, built well up from the ground, drying fish were hanging out of +reach of the dogs. These animals came charging toward the travelers +as usual, lean, bristling, wolfish creatures that never had been +half-tamed. + +Beresford lashed them back with the whip. Indians came out from the +huts, matted hair hanging over their eyes. After the usual greetings +and small presents had been made, the man-hunters asked questions. + +"Great Bear Lake--wah-he-o-che (how far)?" + +The head man opened his eyes. Nobody in his right mind went to the +great water at this time of year. It was maybe fifteen, maybe twenty +days' travel. Who could tell? Were all the fair skins mad? Only three +days since another dog-train had passed through driven by a big shaggy +man who had left them no presents after he had bought fish. Three +whites in as many days, and before that none but voyageur half-breeds +in twice that number of years. + +The trooper let out a boyish whoop. "Gaining fast. Only three days +behind him, Tom. If our luck stands up, he'll never reach the Great +Bear." + +There was reason back of Beresford's exultant shout. At least one of +West's dogs had bleeding feet. This the stained snow on the trail +told them. Either the big man had no shoes for the animals or was too +careless to use them when needed, the constable had suggested to his +friend. + +"It's not carelessness," Morse said. "It's his bullying nature. Likely +he's got the shoes, only he won't put 'em on. He'll beat the poor +brute over the head instead and curse his luck when he breaks down. +He's too bull-headed to be a good driver." + +On the fourth day after this they came upon one of the minor tragedies +of sub-Arctic travel. The skeleton of a dog lay beside the trail. Its +bones had been picked clean by its ravenous cannibal companions. + +"Three left," Beresford commented. "He'll be figuring on picking up +another when he meets any Indians or Eskimos." + +"If he does it won't be any good to work with his train. I believe +we've got him. He isn't twenty-five miles ahead of us right now." + +"I'd put it at twenty. In about three days now the fireworks will +begin." + +It was the second day after this that they began to notice something +peculiar about the trail they were following. Hitherto it had taken +a straight line, except when the bad terrain had made a détour +advisable. Now it swayed uncertainly, much as a drunken man staggers +down a street. + +"What's wrong with him? It can't be liquor. Yet if he's not drunk, +what's got into him?" the soldier asked aloud, expecting no answer +that explained this phenomenon. + +Tom shook his head. "See. The Indian's drivin' now. He follows a +straight enough line. You can tell he's at the tail line by the shape +of the webs. And West's still lurchin' along in a crazy way. He fell +down here. Is he sick, d' you reckon?" + +"Give it up. Anyhow, he's in trouble. We'll know soon enough what it +is. Before night now we'll maybe see them." + +Before they had gone another mile, the trail in the snow showed +another peculiarity. It made a wide half-circle and was heading south +again. + +"He's given up. What's that mean? Out of grub, d' you think?" +Beresford asked. + +"No. If they had been, he'd have made camp and gone hunting. We +crossed musk-ox sign to-day, you know." + +"Righto. Can't be that. He must be sick." + +They kept their eyes open. At any moment now they were likely to make +a discovery. Since they were in a country of scrubby brush they moved +cautiously to prevent an ambush. There was just a possibility that the +fugitive might have caught sight of them and be preparing an +unwelcome surprise. But it was a possibility that did not look like a +probability. + +"Something gone 'way off in his plans," Morse said after they had +mushed on the south trail for an hour. "Looks like he don't know what +he's doing. Has he gone crazy?" + +"Might be that. Men do in this country a lot. We don't know what a +tough time he's been through." + +"I'll bet he's bucked blizzards aplenty in the last two months. Notice +one thing. West's trailin' after the guide like a lamb. He's makin' a +sure-enough drunk track. See how the point of his shoe caught the snow +there an' flung him down. The Cree stopped the sled right away so West +could get up. Why did he do that? And why don't West ever stray a foot +outa the path that's broke? That's not like him. He's always boss o' +the outfit--always leadin'." + +Beresford was puzzled, too. "I don't get the situation. It's been +pretty nearly a thousand miles that we've been following this +trail--eight hundred, anyhow. All the way Bully West has stamped his +big foot on it as boss. Now he takes second place. The reason's beyond +me." + +His friend's mind jumped at a conclusion. "I reckon I know why he's +followin' the straight and narrow path. The guide's got a line round +his waist and West's tied to it." + +"Why?" + +The sun's rays, reflected from the snow in a blinding, brilliant +glare, smote Morse full in the eyes. For days the white fields had +been very trying to the sight. There had been moments when black spots +had flickered before him, when red-hot sand had been flung against his +eyeballs if he could judge by the burning sensation. + +He knew now, in a flash, what was wrong with West. + +To Beresford he told it in two words. + +The constable slapped his thigh. "Of course. That's the answer." + +Night fell, the fugitives still not in sight. The country was so rough +that they might be within a mile or two and yet not be seen. + +"Better camp, I reckon," Morse suggested. + +"Yes. Here. We'll come up with them to-morrow." + +They were treated that evening to an indescribably brilliant +pyrotechnic display in the heavens. An aurora flashed across the sky +such as neither of them had ever seen before. The vault was aglow with +waves of red, violet, and purple that danced and whirled, with fickle, +inconstant flashes of gold and green and yellow bars. A radiant +incandescence of great power lit the arch and flooded it with light +that poured through the cathedral windows of the Most High. + +At daybreak they were up. Quickly they breakfasted and loaded. The +trail they followed was before noon a rotten one, due to a sudden rise +in the temperature, but it still bore south steadily. + +They reached the camp where West and his guide had spent the night. +Another chapter of the long story of the trail was written here. The +sled and the guide had gone on south, but West had not been with them. +His webs went wandering off at an angle, hesitant and uncertain. +Sometimes they doubled across the track he had already made. + +Beresford was breaking trail. His hand shot straight out. In the +distance there was a tiny black speck in the waste of white. It moved. + +Even yet the men who had come to bring the law into the Lone Lands did +not relax their vigilance. They knew West's crafty, cunning mind. +This might be a ruse to trap them. When they left the sled and moved +forward, it was with rules ready. The hunters stalked their prey as +they would have done a musk ox. Slowly, noiselessly, they approached. + +The figure was that of a huge man. He sat huddled in the snow, his +back to them. Despair was in the droop of the head and the set of the +bowed shoulders. + +One of the dogs howled. The big torso straightened instantly. The +shaggy head came up. Bully West was listening intently. He turned and +looked straight at them, but he gave no sign of knowing they were +there. The constable took a step and the hissing of the shoe-runner +sounded. + +"I'm watchin' you, Stomak-o-sox," the heavy voice of the convict +growled. "Can't fool me. I see every step you're takin'." + +It was an empty boast, almost pathetic in its futility. Morse and +Beresford moved closer, still without speech. + +West broke into violent, impotent cursing. "You're there, you damned +wood Cree! Think I don't know? Think I can't see you? Well, I can. +Plain as you can see me. You come here an' get me, or I'll skin you +alive like I done last week. Hear me?" + +The voice rose to a scream. It betrayed terror--the horrible deadly +fear of being left alone to perish in the icy wastes of the North. + +Beresford crept close and waved a hand in front of the big man's eyes. +West did not know it. He babbled vain and foolish threats at his +guide. + +The convict had gone blind--snow-blind, and Stomak-o-sox had left him +alone to make a push for his own life while there was still time. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXV + +SNOW-BLIND + + +West grinned up at the officer, his yellow canines showing like +tusks. His matted face was an unlovely sight. In it stark, naked fear +struggled with craftiness and cruelty. + +"Good you came back--good for you. I ain't blind. I been foolin' you +all along. Wanted, to try you out. Now we'll mush. Straight for the +big lake. North by west like we been going. Un'erstand, Stomak-o-sox? +I'll not beat yore head off this time, but if you ever try any monkey +tricks with Bully West again--" He let the threat die out in a sound +of grinding teeth. + +Beresford spoke. His voice was gentle. Vile though this murderer +was, there was something pitiable in his condition. One cannot see a +Colossus of strength and energy stricken to helplessness without some +sense of compassion. + +"It's not Stomak-o-sox. We're two of the North-West Mounted. You're +under arrest for breaking prison and for killing Tim Kelly." + +The information stunned West. He stared up out of sightless eyes. So +far as he had known, no member of the Mounted was within five hundred +miles of him. Yet the law had stretched out its long arm to snatch +him back from this Arctic waste after he had traveled nearly fifteen +hundred miles. It was incredible that there could exist such a police +force on earth. + +"Got me, did you?" he growled. He added the boast that he could not +keep back. "Well, you'd never 'a' got me if I hadn't gone blind--never +in this world. There ain't any two of yore damned spies could land +Bully West when he's at himself." + +"Had breakfast?" + +He broke into a string of curses. "No, our grub's runnin' low. That +wood Cree slipped away with all we had. Wish I'd killed him last week +when I skinned him with the dog-whip." + +"How long have you been blind?" + +"It's been comin' on two-three days. This damned burnin' glare from +the snow. Yesterday they give out completely. I tied myself by a line +to the Injun. Knew I couldn't trust him. After all I done for him +too." + +"Did you know he was traveling south with you--had been since +yesterday afternoon?" + +"No, was he?" Again West fell into his natural speech of invective. +"When I meet up with him, I'll sure enough fill him full o' slugs," he +concluded savagely. + +"You're not likely to meet him again. We've come to take you back to +prison." + +Morse brought the train up and the hungry man was fed. They treated +his eyes with the simple remedies the North knows and bound them with +a handkerchief to keep out the fierce light reflected from the snow. + +Afterward, they attached him by a line to the driver. He stumbled +along behind. Sometimes he caught his foot or slipped and plunged down +into the snow. Nobody had ever called him a patient man. Whenever any +mishap occurred, he polluted the air with his vile speech. + +They made slow progress, for the pace had to be regulated to suit the +prisoner. + +Day succeeded day, each with its routine much the same as the one +before. They made breakfast, broke camp, packed, and mushed. The swish +of the runners sounded from morning till night fell. Food began to run +scarce. Once they left the blind man at the camp while they +hunted wood buffalo. It was a long, hard business. They came back +empty-handed after a two-day chase, but less than a mile from camp +they sighted a half-grown polar bear and dropped it before the animal +had a chance to move. + +One happy hour they got through the Land of Little Sticks and struck +the forests again. + +They had a blazing fire again for the first time in six weeks. Brush +and sticks and logs went into it till it roared furiously. + +Morse turned from replenishing it to notice that West had removed the +bandage from his eyes. + +"Better keep it on," the young man advised. + +"I was changin' it. Too tight. Gives me a headache," the convict +answered sulkily. + +"Can you see anything at all yet?" + +"Not a thing. Looks to me like I never would." + +Tom turned his head for him, so that he faced the blaze squarely. "No +light at all?" + +"Nope. Don't reckon I ever will see." + +"Maybe you will. I've known' cases of snow-blindness where they +couldn't see for a month an' came out all right." + +"Hurts like blazes," growled the big fellow. + +"I know. But not as bad as it did, does it? That salve has helped +some." + +The two young fellows took care of the man as though he had been a +brother. They bathed his eyes, fed him, guided him, encouraged him. He +was a bad lot--the worst that either of them had known. But he was +in trouble and filled with self-pity. Never ill before, a giant of +strength and energy, his condition now apparently filled him with +despair. + +He would sit hunched down before the fire, head bowed in his hands, a +mountain of dole and woe. Sometimes he talked, and he blamed every one +but himself for his condition. He never had had a square deal. Every +one was against him. It was a rotten world. Then he would fall to +cursing God and man. + +In some ways he was less trouble than if he had been able to see. He +was helpless and had to trust to them. His safety depended on their +safety. He could not strike at them without injuring himself. No +matter how much he cringed at the thought of being dragged back to +punishment, he shrank still more from the prospect of death in the +snow wastes. The situation galled him. Every decent word he gave them +came grudgingly, and he still snarled and complained and occasionally +bullied as though he had the whip hand. + +"A nice specimen of _ursus horribilis_," Beresford murmured to his +companion one day. "Thought he was game, anyhow, but he's a yellow +quitter. Acts as though we were to blame for his blindness and for +what's waiting for him at the end of the journey. I like a man to +stand the gaff when it's prodding him." + +Morse nodded. "Look out for him. I've got a notion in the back o' my +head that he's beginning to see again. He'd kill us in a holy minute +if he dared. Only his blindness keeps him from it. What do you say? +Shall we handcuff him nights?" + +"Not necessary," the constable said. "He can't see a thing. Watch him +groping for that stick." + +"All his brains run to cunning. Don't forget that. Why should he have +to feel so long for that stick? He laid it down himself a minute ago. +Tryin' to slip one over on us maybe." + +The Canadian looked at the lean, brown face of his friend and grinned. +"I've a notion our imaginations too are getting a bit jumpy. We've had +one bully time on this trip--with the reverse English. It's all in the +day's work to buck blizzards and starve and freeze, though I wouldn't +be surprised if our systems were pretty well fed up with grief before +we caught Mr. Bully West. Since then--well, you couldn't call him a +cheerful traveling companion, could you? A dozen times a day I want to +rip loose and tell him how much I don't think of him." + +"Still--" + +"We'll keep an eye on him. If necessary, it'll be the bracelets for +him. I'd hate to have the Inspector send in a report to headquarters, +'Constable Beresford missing in the line of duty.' I've a prejudice +against being shot in the back." + +"That's one of the reasons I'm here--to see you're not if I can help +it." + +Beresford's boyish face lit up. He understood what his friend meant. +"Say, Faraway isn't New York or London or even Toronto. But how'd you +like to be sitting down to one of Jessie McRae's suppers? A bit of +broiled venison done to a juicy turn, potatoes, turnips, hot biscuits +spread with raspberry jam. By jove, it makes the mouth water." + +"And a slice of plum puddin' to top off with," suggested Morse, +bringing his own memory into play. "Don't ask me how I'd like it. +That's a justifiable excuse for murder. Get busy on that rubaboo. Our +guest's howlin' for his dinner." + +The faint suspicions of Morse made the officers more wary. They +watched their prisoner a little closer. Neither of them quite believed +that he was recovering his sight. It was merely a possibility to be +guarded against. + +But the guess of Morse had been true. It had been a week since flashes +of light had first come to West faintly. He began to distinguish +objects in a hazy way. Every day he could see better. Now he could +tell Morse from Beresford, one dog from another. Give him a few more +days and he would have as good vision as before he had gone blind. + +All this he hid cunningly, as a miser does his gold. For his warped, +cruel brain was planning death to these two men. After that, another +plunge into the North for life and freedom. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVI + +THE WILD BEAST LEAPS + + +Tom Morse was chopping wood. He knew how to handle an axe. His strokes +fell sure and strong, with the full circling sweep of the expert. + +The young tree crashed down and he began to lop off its branches. +Halfway up the trunk he stopped and raised his head to listen. + +No sound had come to him. None came now. But dear as a bell he heard +the voice of Win Beresford calling. + +"_Help! Help!_" + +It was not a cry that had issued from his friend's throat. Tom knew +that. But it was real. It had sprung out of his dire need from the +heart, perhaps in the one instant of time left him, and it had leaped +silently across space straight to the heart of his friend. + +Tom kicked into his snowshoes and began to run. He held the axe in his +hand, gripped near the haft. A couple of hundred yards, perhaps, lay +between him and camp, which was just over the brow of a small hill. +The bushes flew past as he swung to his stride. Never had he skimmed +the crust faster, but his feet seemed to be weighted with lead. Then, +as he topped the rise, he saw the disaster he had dreaded. + +The constable was crumpling to the ground, his body slack and inert, +while the giant slashed at him with a dub of firewood he had snatched +from the ground. The upraised arm of the soldier broke the force of +the blow, but Morse guessed by the way the arm fell that the bone had +snapped. + +At the sound of the scraping runners, West whirled. He lunged +savagely. Even as Tom ducked, a sharp pain shot through his leg from +the force of the glancing blow. The axe-head swung like a circle of +steel. It struck the convict's fur cap. The fellow went down like an +ox in a slaughter-house. + +Tom took one look at him and ran to his friend. Beresford was a sorry +sight. He lay unconscious, head and face battered, the blood from his +wounds staining the snow. + +The man-hunters had come into the wilderness prepared for emergencies. +Jessie McRae had prepared a small medicine case as a present for the +constable. Morse ran to the sled and found this. He unrolled bandages +and after he had washed the wounds bound them. As he was about to +examine the arm, he glanced up. + +For a fraction of a second West's wolfish eyes glared at him before +they took on again the stare of blindness. The man had moved. He had +hitched himself several yards nearer a rifle which stood propped +against a balsam. + +The revolver of the deputy constable came to light. "Stop right where +you're at. Don't take another step." + +The convict snarled rage, but he did not move. Some sure instinct +warned him what the cold light in the eyes of his captor meant, that +if he crept one inch farther toward the weapon he would die in his +tracks. + +"He--he jumped me," the murderer said hoarsely. + +"Liar! You've been shammin' for a week to get a chance at us. I'd like +to gun you now and be done with it." + +"Don't." West moistened dry lips. "Honest to God he jumped me. Got mad +at somethin' I said. I wouldn't lie to you, Tom." + +Morse kept him covered, circled round him to the rifle, and from there +to the sled. One eye still on the desperado, he searched for the steel +handcuffs. They were gone. He knew instantly that some time within the +past day or two West had got a chance to drop them in the snow. + +He found rawhide thongs. + +"Lie in the snow, face down," he ordered. "Hands behind you and +crossed at the wrists." + +Presently the prisoner was securely tied. Morse fastened him to the +sled and returned to Beresford. + +The arm was broken above the wrist, just as he had feared. He set it +as best he could, binding it with splints. + +The young officer groaned and opened his eyes. He made a motion to +rise. + +"Don't get up," said Morse. "You've been hurt." + +"Hurt?" Beresford's puzzled gaze wandered to the prisoner. A flash +of understanding lit it. "He asked me--to light--his pipe--and when +I--turned--he hit--me--with a club," the battered man whispered. + +"About how I figured it." + +"Afraid--I'm--done--in." + +"Not yet, old pal. We'll make a fight for it," the Montanan answered. + +"I'm sick." The soldier's head sank down. His eyes closed. + +All the splendid, lithe strength of his athletic youth had been beaten +out of him. To Morse it looked as though he were done for. Was it +possible for one to take such a terrific mauling and not succumb? If +he were at a hospital, under the care of expert surgeons and nurses, +with proper food and attention, he might have a chance in a hundred. +But in this Arctic waste, many hundred miles from the nearest doctor, +no food but the coarsest to eat, it would be a miracle if he survived. + +The bitter night was drawing in. Morse drove West in front of him to +bring back the wood he had been cutting. He made the man prepare the +rubaboo for their supper. After the convict had eaten, he bound his +hands again and let him lie down in his blankets beside the fire. + +Morse did not sleep. He sat beside his friend and watched the fever +mount in him till he was wildly delirious. Such nursing as was +possible he gave. + +The prisoner, like a chained wild beast, glowered at him hungrily. Tom +knew that if West found a chance to kill, he would strike. No scruple +would deter him. The fellow was without conscience, driven by the fear +of the fate that drew nearer with every step southward. His safety and +the desire of revenge marched together. Beresford was out of the way. +It would be his companion's turn next. + +After a time the great hulk of a man fell asleep and snored +stertorously. But Tom did not sleep. He dared not. He had to keep +vigilant guard to save both his friend's life and his own. For though +West's hands were tied, it would be the work of only a minute to burn +away with a live coal the thongs that bound them. + +The night wore away. There was no question of travel. Beresford was +in the grip of a raging fever and could not be moved. Morse made West +chop wood while he stood over him, rifle in hand. They were short of +food and had expected to go hunting next day. The supplies might last +at best six or seven more meals. What was to be done then? Morse could +not go and leave West where he could get at the man who had put him in +prison and with a dog-train to carry him north. Nor could he let West +have a rifle with which to go in search of game. + +There were other problems that made the situation impossible. Another +night was at hand, and again Tom must keep awake to save himself and +his friend from the gorilla-man who watched him, gloated over him, +waited for the moment to come when he could safely strike. And after +that there would be other nights--many of them. + +What should he do? What could he do? While he sat beside the delirious +officer, Tom pondered that question. On the other side of the fire lay +the prisoner. Triumph--a horrible, cruel, menacing triumph--rode in +his eye and strutted in his straddling walk when he got up. His hour +was coming. It was coming fast. + +Once Tom fell asleep for a cat-nap. He caught himself nodding, and +with a jerk flung back his head and himself to wakefulness. In the air +was a burning odor. + +Instinct told him what it was. West had been tampering with the +rawhide thongs round his wrists, had been trying to burn them away. + +He made sure that the fellow was still fast, then drank a tin cup of +strong tea. After he had fed the sick man a little caribou broth, +persuading him with infinite patience to take it, a spoonful at a +time, Morse sat down again to wear out the hours of darkness. + +The problem that pressed on him could no longer be evaded. A stark +decision lay before him. To postpone it was to choose one of the +alternatives. He knew now, almost beyond any possibility of doubt, +that either West must die or else he and his friend. If he had not +snatched himself awake so promptly an hour ago, Win and he would +already be dead men. It might be that the constable was going to die, +anyhow, but he had a right to his chance of life. + +On the other hand there was one rigid rule of the North-West Mounted. +The Force prided itself on living up to it literally. When a man +was sent out to get a prisoner, _he brought him in alive_. It was +a tradition. The Mounted did not choose the easy way of killing +lawbreakers because of the difficulty of capturing them. They walked +through danger, usually with aplomb, got their man, and brought him +in. + +That was what Beresford had done with Pierre Poulette after the +Frenchman had killed Buckskin Jerry. He had followed the man for +months, captured him, lived with him alone for a fourth of a year in +the deep snows, and brought him back to punishment. It was easy enough +to plead that this situation was a wholly different one. Pierre +Poulette was no such dangerous wild beast as Bully West. Win did not +have with him a companion wounded almost to death who had to be nursed +back to health, one struck down by the prisoner treacherously. There +was just a fighting chance for the officers to get back to Desolation +if West was eliminated from the equation. Tom knew he would have a +man's work cut out for him to win through--without the handicap of the +prisoner. + +Deep in his heart he believed that it was West's life or theirs. It +wasn't humanly possible, in addition to all the other difficulties +that pressed on him, to guard this murderer and bring him back for +punishment. There was no alternative, it seemed to Tom. Thinking could +not change the conditions. It might be sooner, it might be later, but +under existing circumstances the desperado would find his chance to +attack, _if he were alive to take it_. + +The fellow's life was forfeit. As soon as he was turned over to the +State, it would be exacted of him. Since his assault on Beresford, +surely he had lost all claim to consideration as a human being. + +Just now there were only three men in the world so far as they were +concerned. These three constituted society. Beresford, his mind still +wandering with incoherent mutterings, was a non-voting member. He, +Tom Morse, must be judge and jury. He must, if the prisoner were +convicted, play a much more horrible role. In the silence of the cold +sub-Arctic night he fought the battle out while automatically he +waited on his friend. + +West snored on the other side of the fire. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVII + +NEAR THE END OF A LONG CROOKED TRAIL + + +When West awoke, Morse was whittling on a piece of wood with his sharp +hunting-knife. It was a flat section from a spruce, and it had been +trimmed with an axe till it resembled a shake in shape. + +The outlaw's curiosity overcame his sullenness at last. It made him +jumpy, anyhow, to sit there in silence except for the muttering of the +sick man. + +"Whajamakin'?" he demanded. + +Morse said nothing. He smoothed the board to his satisfaction, then +began lettering on it with a pencil. + +"I said whajadoin'," growled West, after another silence. + +The special constable looked at him, and in the young man's eyes there +was something that made the murderer shiver. + +"I'm making a tombstone." + +"What?" West felt a drench of ice at his heart. + +"A marker for a grave." + +"For--for him? Maybe he won't die. Looks better to me. Fever ain't so +high." + +"It's not for him." + +West moistened his dry lips with his tongue. "You will have yore li'l +joke, eh? Who's it for?" + +"For you." + +"For me?" The man's fear burst from him in a shriek. "Whajamean for +me?" + +From the lettering Morse read aloud. "'Bully West, Executed, Some +Time late in March, 1875.'" And beneath it, "'May God Have Mercy on +His Soul.'" + +Tiny beads of sweat gathered on the convict's clammy forehead. "You +aimin' to--to murder me?" he asked hoarsely. + +"To execute you." + +"With--without a trial? My God, you can't do that! I got a right to a +trial." + +"You've been tried--and condemned. I settled all that in the night." + +"But--it ain't legal. Goddlemighty, you got no _right_ to act +thataway. All you can do is to take me back to the courts." The heavy +voice broke again to a scream. + +Morse slipped the hunting-knife back into its case. He looked steadily +at the prisoner. In his eyes there was no anger, no hatred. But back +of the sadness in them was an implacable resolution. + +"Courts and the law are a thousand miles away," he said. "You know +your crimes. You murdered Tim Kelly treacherously. You planned to +spoil an innocent girl's life by driving her to worse than death. +You shot your partner in the back after he did his best to help you +escape. You tortured Onistah and would have killed him if we hadn't +come in time. You assaulted my friend here and he'll probably die from +his wounds. It's the end of the long trail for you, Bully West. Inside +of half an hour you will be dead. If you've anything to say--if you +can make your peace with heaven--don't waste a moment." + +The face of West went gray. He stared at the other man, the +horror-filled eyes held fascinated. "You--you're tryin' to scare me," +he faltered. "You wouldn't do that. You couldn't. It ain't allowed by +the Commissioner." One of the bound arms twitched involuntarily. The +convict knew that he was lost. He had a horrible conviction that this +man meant to do as he had said. + +The face of Morse was inexorable as fate itself, but inside he was a +river of rushing sympathy. This man was bad. He himself had forced the +circumstances that made it impossible to let him live. None the less +Tom felt like a murderer. The thing he had to do was so horribly +cold-blooded. If this had been a matter between the two of them, he +could at least have given the fellow a chance for his life. But not +now--not with Win Beresford in the condition he was. If he were going +to save his friend, he could not take the chances of a duel. + +"Ten minutes now," Morse said. His voice was hoarse and low. He felt +his nerves twitching, a tense aching in the throat. + +"I always liked you fine, Tom," the convict pleaded desperately. "Me +'n' you was always good pals. You wouldn't do me dirt thataway now. If +you knew the right o' things--how that Kelly kep' a-devilin' me, how +Whaley was layin' to gun me when he got a chanct, how I stood up for +the McRae girl an' protected her against him. Goddlemighty, man, you +ain't aimin' to kill me like a wolf!" The shriek of uncontrollable +terror lifted into his voice once more. "I ain't ready to die. Gimme a +chance, Tom. I'll change my ways. I swear I will. I'll do like you say +every minute. I'll nurse Beresford. Me, I'm a fine nurse. If you'll +gimme a week--jus' one more week. That ain't much to ask. So's I can +git ready." + +The man slipped to his knees and began to crawl toward Morse. The +young man got up, his teeth set. He could not stand much of this sort +of thing without collapsing himself. + +"Get up," he said. "We're going over the hill there." + +"No--no--no!" + +It took Morse five minutes to get the condemned man to his feet. The +fellow's face was ashen. His knees shook. + +Tom was in almost as bad a condition himself. + +Beresford's high voice cut in. In his delirium he was perhaps living +over again his experience with Pierre Poulette. + +"Maintiens le droit. Get your man and bring him in. Tough sledding. +Never mind. Go through, old fellow. Bring him in. That's what you're +sent for. Hogtie him. Drag him with a rope around his neck. Get him +back somehow." + +The words struck Tom motionless. It was as though some voice were +speaking to him through the sick man's lips. He waited. + +"Righto, sir," the soldier droned on. "See what I can do, sir. Have +a try at it, anyhow." And again he murmured the motto of the Mounted +Police. + +Tom had excused himself for what he thought it was his duty to do on +the ground that it was not humanly possible to save his friend and +bring West back. It came to him in a flash that the Mounted Police +were becoming so potent a power for law and order because they never +asked whether the job assigned them was possible. They went ahead and +did it or died trying to do it. It did not matter primarily whether +Beresford and he got back alive or not. If West murdered them, other +red-coats would take the trail and get him. + +What he, Tom Morse, had to do was to carry on. He could not choose the +easy way, even though it was a desperately hard one for him. He could +not make himself a judge over this murderer, with power of life and +death. The thing that had been given him to do was to bring West to +Faraway. He had no choice in the matter. Win or lose, he had to play +the hand out as it was dealt him. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVIII + +OVER A ROTTING TRAIL + + +Tom believed that Beresford's delirious words had condemned them both +to death. He could not nurse his friend, watch West night and day, +keep the camp supplied with food, and cover the hundreds of miles +of bleak snow fields which stretched between them and the nearest +settlement. He did not think that any one man lived who was capable of +succeeding in such a task. + +Yet his first feeling was of immediate relief. The horrible duty that +had seemed to be laid upon him was not a duty at all. He saw his +course quite simply. All he had to do was to achieve the impossible. +If he failed in it, he would go down like a soldier in the day's work. +He would have, anyhow, no torturings of conscience, no blight resting +upon him till the day of his death. + +"You're reprieved, West," he announced simply. + +The desperado staggered to the sled and leaned against it faintly. His +huge body swayed. The revulsion was almost too much for him. + +"I--I--knowed you couldn't treat an old pardner thataway, Tom," he +murmured. + +Morse took the man out to a fir tree. He carried with him a blanket, a +buffalo robe, and a part of the dog harness. + +"Whad you aimin' to do?" asked West uneasily. He was not sure yet that +he was out of the woods. + +"Roll up in the blankets," ordered Morse. + +The fellow looked at his grim face and did as he was told. Tom tied +him to the tree, after making sure that his hands were fast behind +him. + +"I'll freeze here," the convict complained. + +The two officers were lean and gaunt from hard work and insufficient +nourishment, but West was still sleek and well padded with flesh. +He had not missed a meal, and during the past weeks he had been a +passenger. All the hard work, the packing at portages, the making of +camp, the long, wearing days of hunting, had fallen upon the two whose +prisoner he was. He could stand a bit of hardship, Tom decided. + +"No such luck," he said brusquely. "And I wouldn't try to break away +if I were you. I can't kill you, but I'll thrash you with the dog-whip +if you make me any trouble." + +Morse called Cuffy and set the dog to watch the bound man. He did not +know whether the St. Bernard would do this, but he was glad to see +that the leader of the train understood at once and settled down in +the snow to sleep with one eye watchful of West. + +Tom returned to his friend. He knew he must concentrate his efforts to +keep life in the battered body of the soldier. He must nurse and feed +him judiciously until the fever wore itself out. + +While he was feeding Win broth, he fell asleep with the spoon in his +hand. He jerkily flung back his head and opened his eyes. Cuffy still +lay close to the prisoner, evidently prepared for an all-night vigil +with short light naps from which the least movement would instantly +arouse him. + +"I'm all in. Got to get some sleep," Morse said to himself, half +aloud. + +He wrapped in his blankets. When his eyes opened, the sun was beating +down from high in the heavens. He had slept from one day into the +next. Even in his sleep he had been conscious of some sound drumming +at his ears. It was the voice of West. + +"You gonna sleep all day? Don't we get any grub? Have I gotta starve +while you pound yore ear?" + +Hurriedly Tom flung aside his wraps. He leaped to his feet, a new man, +his confidence and vitality all restored. + +The fire had died to ashes. He could hear the yelping of the dogs in +the distance. They were on a private rabbit hunt of their own, all of +them but Cuffy. The St. Bernard still lay in the snow watching West. + +Beresford's delirium was gone and his fever was less. He was very +weak, but Tom thought he saw a ghost of the old boyish grin flicker +indomitably into his eyes. As Tom looked at the swathed and bandaged +head, for the first time since the murderous attack he allowed +himself to hope. The never-say-die spirit of the man and the splendid +constitution built up by a clean outdoor life might pull him through +yet. + +"West was afraid you never were going to wake up, Tom. It worried him. +You know how fond of you he is," the constable said weakly. + +Morse was penitent. "Why didn't you wake me, Win? You must be dying of +thirst." + +"I could do with a drink," he admitted. "But you needed that sleep. +Every minute of it." + +Tom built up the fire and thawed snow. He gave Beresford a drink and +then fed more of the broth to him. He made breakfast for the prisoner +and himself. + +Afterward, he took stock of their larder. It was almost empty. "Enough +flour and pemmican for another mess of rubaboo. Got to restock right +away or our stomachs will be flat as a buffalo bull's after a long +stampede." + +He spoke cheerfully, yet he and Beresford both knew a hunt for game +might be unsuccessful. Rabbits would not do. He had to provide enough +to feed the dogs as well as themselves. If he did not get a moose, a +bear, or caribou, they would face starvation. + +Tom redressed the wounds of the trooper and examined the splints on +the arm to make sure they had not become disarranged during the night +in the delirium of the sick man. + +"Got to leave you, Win. Maybe for a day or more. I'll have plenty of +wood piled handy for the fire--and broth all ready to heat. Think you +can make out?" + +The prospect could not have been an inviting one for the wounded man, +but he nodded quite as a matter of course. + +"I'll be all right. Take your time. Don't spoil your hunt worrying +about me." + +Yet it was with extreme reluctance Tom had made up his mind to go. He +would take the dog-train with him--and West, unarmed, of course. He +had to take him on Beresford's account, because he dared not leave +him. But as he looked at his friend, all the supple strength stricken +out of him, weak and helpless as a sick child, he felt a queer tug at +the heart. What assurance had he that he would find him still alive on +his return? + +Beresford knew what he was thinking. He smiled, the gentle, +affectionate smile of the very ill. "It's all right, old fellow. Got +to buck up and carry on, you know. Look out--for West. Don't give him +any show at you. Never trust him--not for a minute. Remember he's--a +wolf." His weak hand gripped Tom's in farewell. + +The American turned away hurriedly, not to show the tears that +unexpectedly brimmed his lids. Though he wore the hard surface of the +frontier, his was a sensitive soul. He was very fond of this gay, +gallant youth who went out to meet adventure as though it were a lover +with whom he had an appointment. They had gone through hell together, +and the fires of the furnace had proved the Canadian true gold. After +all, Tom was himself scarcely more than a boy in years. He cherished, +deep hidden in him, the dreams and illusions that long contact with +the world is likely to dispel. At New Haven and Cambridge lads of his +age were larking beneath the elms and playing childish pranks on each +other. + +West drove the team. Tom either broke trail or followed. He came +across plenty of tracks, but most of them were old ones. He recognized +the spoor of deer, bear, and innumerable rabbits. Toward noon fresh +caribou tracks crossed their path. The slot pointed south. Over a soft +and rotting trail Morse swung round in pursuit. + +They made heavy going of it. He had to break trail through slushy +snow. His shoes broke through the crust and clogged with the sludgy +stuff so that his feet were greatly weighted. Fatigue pressed like a +load on his shoulders. The dogs and West wallowed behind. + +By night probably the trail would be much better, but they dared not +wait till then. The caribou would not stop to suit the convenience of +the hunters. This might be the last shot in the locker. Every dragging +lift of the webs carried Morse farther from camp, but food had to be +found and in quantity. + +It was close to dusk when Tom guessed they were getting near the herd. +He tied the train to a tree and pushed on with West. Just before +nightfall he sighted the herd grazing on muskeg moss. There were about +a dozen in all. The wind was fortunately right. + +Tom motioned to West not to follow him. On hands and knees the hunter +crept forward, taking advantage of such cover as he could find. It was +a slow, cold business, but he was not here for pleasure. A mistake +might mean the difference between life and death for him and Win +Beresford. + +For a stalker to determine the precise moment when to shoot is usually +a nice decision. Perhaps he can gain another dozen yards on his prey. +On the other hand, by moving closer he may startle them and lose his +chance. With so much at stake Tom felt for the second time in his life +the palsy that goes with buck fever. + +A buck flung up his head and sniffed toward the hidden danger. Tom +knew the sign of startled doubt. Instantly his trembling ceased. He +aimed carefully and fired. The deer dropped in its tracks. Again he +fired--twice--three times. The last shot was a wild one, sent on a +hundredth chance. The herd vanished in the gathering darkness. + +Tom swung forward exultant, his webs swishing swiftly over the snow. +He had dropped two. A second buck had fallen, risen, run fifty yards, +and come to earth again. The hunter's rifle was ready in case either +of the caribou sprang up. He found the first one dead, the other badly +wounded. At once he put the buck out of its pain. + +West came slouching out of the woods at Tom's signal. Directed by the +officer, he made a fire and prepared for business. The stars were +out as they dressed the meat and cooked a large steak on the coals. +Afterward they hung the caribou from the limb of a spruce, drawing +them high enough so that no prowling wolves could reach the game. + +With the coming of night the temperature had fallen and the snow +hardened. The crust held beneath their webs as they returned to +the sled. West wanted to camp where the deer had been killed. He +protested, with oaths, in his usual savage growl, that he was dead +tired and could not travel another step. + +But he did. Beneath the stars the hunters mushed twenty miles back to +camp. They made much better progress by reason of the frozen trail and +the good meal they had eaten. + +It was daybreak when Morse sighted the camp-fire smoke. His heart +leaped. Beresford must have been able to keep it alive with fuel. +Therefore he had been alive an hour or two ago at most. + +Dogs and men trudged into camp ready to drop with fatigue. + +Beresford, from where he lay, waved a hand at Tom. "Any luck?" he +asked. + +"Two caribou." + +"Good. I'll be ready for a steak to-morrow." + +Morse looked at him anxiously. The glaze had left his eyes. He was no +longer burning up with fever. Both voice and movements seemed stronger +than they had been twenty-four hours earlier. + +"Bully for you, Win," he answered. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIX + +A CREE RUNNER BRINGS NEWS + + +"Don't you worry about that lad, Jessie. He's got as many lives as a +cat--and then some. I've knew him ever since he was knee-high to a +grasshopper." + +Brad Stearns was talking. He sat in the big family room at the McRae +house and puffed clouds of tobacco, smoke to the rafters. + +"Meaning Mr. Beresford?" asked Jessie demurely. She was patching a +pair of leather trousers for Fergus and she did not raise her eyes +from the work. + +"Meanin' Tom Morse," the old-timer said. "Not but what Beresford's a +good lad too. Sand in his craw an' a kick like a mule in his fist. But +he was brought up somewheres in the East, an' o' course he's a leetle +mite less tough than Tom. No, sir. Tom'll bob up one o' these here +days good as ever. Don't you worry none about that. Why, he ain't been +gone but--lemme see, a week or so better'n four months. When a man's +got to go to the North Pole an' back, four months--" + +Beneath her long lashes the girl slanted a swift look at Brad. "That +makes twice you've told me in two minutes not to worry about Mr. +Morse. Do I look peaked? Am I lying awake nights thinking about him, +do you think?" She held up the renewed trousers and surveyed her +handiwork critically. + +Brad gazed at her through narrowed lids. "I'll be doggoned if I know +whether you are or you ain't. I'd bet a pair o' red-topped boots it's +one of them lads. 'Course Beresford's got a red coat an' spurs that +jingle an' a fine line o' talk. Tom he ain't got ary one o' the three. +But if it's a man you're lookin' for, a two-fisted man who--" + +A wave of mirth crossed Jessie's face like a ripple on still water. +Her voice mimicked his. "Why do you want to saw off an old maid on +that two-fisted man you've knew ever since he was knee-high to a +grasshopper? What did he ever do to you that was so doggoned mean?" + +"Now looky here, you can laugh at me all you've a mind to. All I'm +sayin' is--" + +"Oh, I'm not laughing at you," she interposed hurriedly with an +assumption of anxiety her bubbling eyes belied. "If you could show me +how to get your two-fisted man when he comes back--or even the one +with the red coat and the spurs and the fine line of talk--" + +"I ain't sayin' he ain't a man from the ground up too," Brad broke in. +"Considerin' his opportunities he's a right hefty young fellow. But +Tom Morse he--" + +"That's it exactly. Tom Morse he--" + +"Keep right on makin' fun o' me. Tom Morse he's a man outa ten +thousand, an' I don't know as I'm coverin' enough population at that." + +"And you're willing to make a squaw-man of him. Oh, Mr. Stearns!" + +He looked at her severely. "You got no license to talk thataway, +Jessie McRae. You're Angus McRae's daughter an' you been to Winnipeg +to school. Anyways, after what Lemoine found out--" + +"What did he find out? Pierre Roubideaux couldn't tell him anything +about the locket and the ring. Makoye-kin said he got it from his +brother who was one of a party that massacred an American outfit of +trappers headed for Peace River. He doesn't know whether the picture +of the woman in the locket was that of one of the women in the camp. +All we've learned is that I look like a picture of a white woman found +in a locket nearly twenty years ago. That doesn't take us very far, +does it?" + +"Well, Stokimatis may know something. When Onistah comes back with +her, we'll get the facts straight." + +McRae came into the room. "News, lass," he cried, and his voice rang. +"A Cree runner's just down frae Northern Lights. He says the lads were +picked up by some trappers near Desolation. One o' them's been badly +hurt, but he's on the mend. Which yin I dinna ken. What wi' starvation +an' blizzards an' battles they've had a tough time. But the word is +they're doing fine noo." + +"West?" asked Brad. "Did they get him?" + +"They got him. Dragged him back to Desolation with a rope round his +neck. Hung on to him while they were slam-bangin' through blizzards +an' runnin' a race wi' death to get back before they starved. Found +him up i' the Barrens somewhere, the story is. He'll be hangit at the +proper time an' place. It's in the Word. 'They that take the sword +shall perish with the sword.' Matthew 26:52." + +Brad let out the exultant rebel yell he had learned years before in +the Confederate army. "What'd I tell you about that boy? Ain't I +knowed him since he was a li'l' bit of a tad? He's a go-getter, Tom +is. Y'betcha!" + +Jessie's heart was singing too, but she could not forbear a friendly +gibe at him. "I suppose Win Beresford wasn't there at all. He hadn't a +thing to do with it, had he?" + +The old cowpuncher raised a protesting hand. "I ain't said a word +against him. Now have I, McRae? Nothin' a-tall. All I done said was +that I been tellin' everybody Tom would sure enough bring back Bully +West with him." + +The girl laughed. "You're daffy about that boy you brought up by hand. +I'll not argue with you." + +"They're both good lads," the Scotchman summed up, and passed to his +second bit of news. "Onistah and Stokimatis are in frae the Blackfoot +country. They stoppit at the store, but they'll be alang presently. I +had a word wi' Onistah. We'll wait for him here." + +"Did he say what he'd found out?" Jessie cried. + +"Only that he had brought back the truth. That'll be the lad knockin' +at the door." + +Jessie opened, to let in Onistah and his mother. Stokimatis and the +girl gravitated into each other's arms, as is the way with women who +are fond of each other. The Indian is stolid, but Jessie had the habit +of impetuosity, of letting her feelings sweep her into demonstration. +Even the native women she loved were not proof against it. + +McRae questioned Stokimatis. + +Without waste of words the mother of Onistah told the story she had +traveled hundreds of miles to tell. + +Sleeping Dawn was not the child of her sister. When the attack had +been made on the white trappers bound for Peace River, the mother of a +baby had slipped the infant under an iron kettle. After the massacre +her sister had found the wailing little atom of humanity. The Indian +woman had recently lost her own child. She hid the babe and afterward +was permitted to adopt it. When a few months later she died of +smallpox, Stokimatis had inherited the care of the little one. She had +named it Sleeping Dawn. Later, when the famine year came, she had sold +the child to Angus McRae. + +That was all she knew. But it was enough for Jessie. She did not know +who her parents had been. She never would know, beyond the fact that +they were Americans and that her mother had been a beautiful girl +whose eyes laughed and danced. But this knowledge made a tremendous +difference to her. She belonged to the ruling race and not to the +métis, just as much as Win Beresford and Tom Morse did. + +She tried to hide her joy, was indeed ashamed of it. For any +expression of it seemed like a reproach to Matapi-Koma and Onistah and +Stokimatis, to her brother Fergus and in a sense even to her father. +None the less her blood beat fast. What she had just found out meant +that she could aspire to the civilization of the whites, that she +had before her an outlook, was not to be hampered by the limitations +imposed upon her by race. + +The heart in the girl sang a song of sunshine dancing on grass, of +meadowlarks flinging out their carefree notes of joy. Through it like +a golden thread ran for a motif little melodies that had to do with a +man who had staggered into Fort Desolation out of the frozen North, +sick and starved and perhaps wounded, but still indomitably captain of +his soul. + + + + +CHAPTER XL + +"MALBROUCK S'EN VA-T-EN GUERRE" + + +Inspector MacLean was present in person when the two man-hunters of +the North-West Mounted returned to Faraway. Their reception was in the +nature of a pageant. Gayly dressed voyageurs and trappers, singing +old river songs that had been handed down to them from their fathers, +unharnessed the dogs and dragged the cariole into town. In it sat +Beresford, still unfit for long and heavy mushing. Beside it slouched +West, head down, hands tied behind his back, the eyes from the matted +face sending sidling messages of hate at the capering crowd. At his +heels moved Morse, grim and tireless, an unromantic figure of dominant +efficiency. + +Long before the worn travelers and their escort reached the village, +Jessie could hear the gay lilt of the chantey that heralded their +coming: + + "Malbrouck s'en va-t-en guerre, + Mironton-ton-ton, mirontaine." + +The girl hummed it herself, heart athrob with excitement. She found +herself joining in the cheer of welcome that rose joyously when the +cavalcade drew into sight. In her cheeks fluttered eager flags of +greeting. Tears brimmed the soft eyes, so that she could hardly +distinguish Tom Morse and Win Beresford, the one lean and gaunt and +grim, the other pale and hollow-eyed from illness, but scattering +smiles of largesse. For her heart was crying, in a paraphrase of the +great parable, "He was dead, and is alive again; he was lost, and is +found." + +Beresford caught sight of the Inspector's face and chuckled like +a schoolboy caught in mischief. This gay procession, with its +half-breeds in tri-colored woolen coats, its gay-plumed voyageurs +suggesting gallant troubadours of old in slashed belts and tassels, +was not quite the sort of return to set Inspector MacLean cheering. +Externally, at least, he was a piece of military machinery. A trooper +did his work, and that ended it. In the North-West Mounted it was not +necessary to make a gala day of it because a constable brought in his +man. If he didn't bring him in--well, that would be another and a +sadder story for the officer who fell down on the assignment. + +As soon as Beresford and Morse had disposed of their prisoner and +shaken off their exuberant friends, they reported to the Inspector. +He sat at a desk and listened dryly to their story. Not till they had +finished did he make any comment. + +"You'll have a week's furlough to recuperate, Constable Beresford. +After that report to the Writing-on-Stone detachment for orders. +Here's a voucher for your pay, Special Constable Morse. I'll say +to you both that it was a difficult job well done." He hesitated a +moment, then proceeded to free his mind. "As for this Roman triumph +business--victory procession with prisoners chained to your chariot +wheels--quite unnecessary, I call it." + +Beresford explained, smilingly. "We really couldn't help it, sir. They +were bound to make a Roman holiday out of us whether we wanted to or +not. You know how excitable the French are. Had to have their little +frolic out of it." + +"Not the way the Mounted does business. You know that, Beresford. +We don't want any fuss and feathers--any fol-de-rol--this +mironton-ton-ton stuff. Damn it, sir, you liked it. I could see you +eat it up. D'you s'pose I haven't eyes in my head?" + +The veneer of sobriety Beresford imposed on his countenance refused to +stay put. + +MacLean fumed on. "Hmp! Malbrouck s'en va-t-en guerre, eh? Very +pretty. Very romantic, no doubt. But damned sentimental tommyrot, just +the same." + +"Yes, sir," agreed the constable, barking into a cough just in time to +cut off a laugh. + +"Get out!" ordered the Inspector, and there was the glimmer of a +friendly smile in his own eyes. "And I'll expect you both to dine with +me to-night. Six o'clock sharp. I'll hear that wonderful story in more +detail. And take care of yourself, Beresford. You don't look strong +yet. I'll make that week two or three if necessary." + +"Thank you, sir." + +"Hmp! Don't thank me. Earned it, didn't you? What are you hanging +around for? Get out!" + +Constable Beresford had his revenge. As he passed the window, +Inspector MacLean heard him singing. The words that drifted to the +commissioned office! were familiar. + + "Malbrouck s'en va-t-en guerre, + Mironton-ton-ton, mirontaine." + +MacLean smiled at the irrepressible youngster. Like most people, he +responded to the charm of Winthrop Beresford. He could forgive him a +touch of debonair impudence if necessary. + +It happened that his heart was just now very warm toward both these +young fellows. They had come through hell and had upheld the best +traditions of the Force. Between the lines of the story they had told +he gathered that they had shaved the edge of disaster a dozen times. +But they had stuck to their guns like soldiers. They had fought it out +week after week, hanging to their man with bulldog pluck. And when at +last they were found almost starving in camp, they were dividing their +last rabbit with the fellow they were bringing out to be hanged. + +The Inspector walked to the window and looked down the street after +them. His lips moved, but no sound came from them. The rhythmic motion +of them might have suggested, if there had been anybody present to +observe, that his mind was running on the old river song. + + "Malbrouck s'en va-t-en guerre, + Mironton-ton-ton, mirontaine." + + + + +CHAPTER XLI + +SENSE AND NONSENSE + + +Beresford speaking, to an audience of one, who listened with soft dark +eyes aglow and sparkling. + +"He's the best scout ever came over the border, Jessie. Trusty as +steel, stands the gaff without whining, backs his friends to the +limit, and plays the game out till the last card's dealt and the last +trick lost. Tom Morse is a man in fifty thousand." + +"I know another," she murmured. "Every word you've said is true for +him too." + +"He's a wonder, that other." admitted the soldier dryly. "But we're +talking about Tom now. I tell you that iron man dragged West and me +out of the Barrens by the scruff of our necks. Wouldn't give up. +Wouldn't quit. The yellow in West came out half a dozen times. When +the ten-day blizzard caught us, he lay down and yelped like a cur. I +wouldn't have given a plugged six-pence for our chances. But Tom went +out into it, during a little lull, and brought back with him a timber +wolf. How he found it, how he killed it, Heaven alone knows. He was +coated with ice from head to foot. That wolf kept us and the dogs +alive for a week. Each day, when the howling of the blizzard died down +a bit, Tom made West go down with him to the creek and get wood. +It must have been a terrible hour. They'd come back so done up, so +frozen, they could hardly stagger in with their jags of pine for the +fire. I never heard the man complain--not once. He stood up to it the +way Tom Sayers used to." + +The girl felt a warm current of life prickling swiftly through her. "I +love to hear you talk so generously of him." + +"Of my rival?" he said, smiling. "How else can I talk? The scoundrel +has been heaping on me those coals of fire we read about. I haven't +told you half of it--how he nursed me like a woman and looked after me +so that I wouldn't take cold, how he used to tuck me up in the sled +with a hot stone at my feet and make short days' runs in order not to +wear out my strength. By Jove, it was a deucedly unfair advantage he +took of me." + +"Is he your rival?" she asked. + +"Isn't he?" + +"In business?" + +"How demure Miss McRae is," he commented. "Observe those long +eyelashes flutter down to the soft cheeks." + +"In what book did you read that?" she wanted to know. + +"In that book of suffering known as experience," he sighed, eyes +dancing. + +"If you're trying to tell me that you're in love with some girl--" + +"Haven't I been trying to tell you for a year?" + +Her eyes flashed a challenge at him. "Take care, sir. First thing you +know you'll be on thin ice. You might break through." + +"And if I did--" + +"Of course I'd snap you up before you could bat an eye. Is there a +girl living that wouldn't? And I'm almost an old maid. Don't forget +that. I'm to gather rosebuds while I may, because time's flying so +fast, some poet says." + +"Time stands still for you, my dear," he bowed, with a gay imitation +of the grand manner. + +"Thank you." Her smile mocked him. She had flirted a good deal with +this young man and understood him very well. He had no intention +whatever of giving up the gay hazards of life for any adventure so +enduring as matrimony. Moreover, he knew she knew it. "But let's stick +to the subject. While you're proposing--" + +"How you help a fellow along!" he laughed. "Am I proposing?" + +"Of course you are. But I haven't found out yet whether it's for +yourself or Mr. Morse." + +"A good suggestion--novel, too. For us both, let's say. You take your +choice." He flung out a hand in a gay debonair gesture. + +"You've told his merits, but I don't think I ever heard yours +mentioned," she countered. "If you'd recite them, please." + +"It's a subject I can do only slight justice." He bowed again. +"Sergeant Beresford, at your service, of the North-West Mounted." + +"Sergeant! Since when?" + +"Since yesterday. Promoted for meritorious conduct in the line of +duty. My pay is increased to one dollar and a quarter a day. In case +happily your choice falls on me, don't squander it on silks and +satins, on trips to Paris and London--" + +"If I choose you, it won't be for your wealth," she assured him. + +"Reassured, fair lady. I proceed with the inventory of Sergeant +Beresford's equipment as a future husband. Fond, but, alas! fickle. A +family black sheep, or if not black, at least striped. Likely not to +plague you long, if he's sent on many more jobs like the last. Said +to be good-tempered, but not docile. Kind, as men go, but a +ne'er-do-well, a prodigal, a waster. Something whispers in my ear that +he'll make a better friend than a husband." + +"A twin fairy is whispering the same in my ear," the girl nodded. +"At least a better friend to Jessie McRae. But I think he has a poor +advocate in you. The description is not a flattering one. I don't even +recognize the portrait." + +"But Tom Morse--" + +"Exactly, Tom Morse. Haven't you rather taken the poor fellow for +granted?" She felt an unexpected blush burn into her cheek. It stained +the soft flesh to her throat. For she was discovering that the +nonsense begun so lightly was embarrassing. She did not want to talk +about the feelings of Tom Morse toward her. "It's all very well to +joke, but--" + +"Shall I ask him?" he teased. + +She flew into a mild near-panic. "If you dare, Win Beresford!" The +flash in her eyes was no longer mirth. "We'll talk about something +else. I don't think it's very nice of us to--to--" + +"Tom retired from conversational circulation," he announced. "Shall we +talk of cats or kings?" + +"Tell me your plans, now you've been promoted." + +"Plans? Better men make 'em. I touch my hat, say, 'Yes, sir,' and help +work 'em out. Coming back to Tom for a minute, have you heard that +the Colonel has written him a letter of thanks for the distinguished +service rendered by him to the Mounted and suggesting that a permanent +place of importance can be found for him on the Force if he'll take +it?" + +"No. Did he? Isn't that just fine?" The soft glow had danced into her +eyes again. "He won't take it, will he?" + +"What do you think?" His eyes challenged hers coolly. He was willing, +if he could, to discover whether Jessie was in love with his friend. + +"Oh, I don't think he should," she said quickly. "He has a good +business. It's getting better all the time. He's a coming man. And of +course he'd get hard jobs in the Mounted, the way you do." + +"That's a compliment, if it's true," he grinned. + +"I dare say, but that doesn't make it any safer." + +"They couldn't give him a harder one than you did when you sent him +into the Barrens to bring back West." His eyes, touched with humor +and yet disconcertingly intent on information, were fixed steadily on +hers. + +The girl's cheeks flew color signals. "Why do you say that? I didn't +ask him to go. He volunteered." + +"Wasn't it because you wanted him to?" + +"I should think you'd be the last man to say that," she protested +indignantly. "He was your friend, and he didn't want you to run so +great a risk alone." + +"Then you didn't want him to go?" + +"If I did, it was for you. Maybe he blames me for it, but I don't see +how _you_ can. You've just finished telling me he saved your life a +dozen times." + +"Did I say I was blaming you?" His warm, affectionate smile begged +pardon if he had given offense. "I was just trying to get it straight. +You wanted him to go that time, but you wouldn't want him to go again. +Is that it?" + +"I wouldn't want either of you to go again. What are you driving at, +Win Beresford?" + +"Oh, nothing!" He laughed. "But if you think Tom's too good to waste +on the Mounted, you'd better tell him so while there's still time. +He'll make up his mind within a day or two." + +"I don't see him. He never comes here." + +"I wonder why." + +Jessie sometimes wondered why herself. + + + + +CHAPTER XLII + +THE IMPERATIVE URGE + + +The reason why Tom did not go to see Jessie was that he longed to do +so in every fiber of his being. His mind was never freed for a moment +from the routine of the day's work that it did not automatically turn +toward her. If he saw a woman coming down the street with the free +light step only one person in Faraway possessed, his heart would begin +to beat faster. In short, he suffered that torment known as being in +love. + +He dared not go to see her for fear she might discover it. She was the +sweetheart of his friend. It was as natural as the light of day that +she turn to Win Beresford with the gift of her love. Nobody like him +had ever come into her life. His gay courage, his debonair grace, +the good manners of that outer world such a girl must crave, the +affectionate touch of friendliness in his smile: how could any woman +on this forsaken edge of the Arctic resist them? + +She could not, of course, let alone one so full of the passionate +longing for life as Jessie McRae. + +If Tom could have looked on her unmoved, if he could have subdued +or concealed the ardent fire inside him, he would have gone to call +occasionally as though casually. But he could not trust himself. He +was like a volcano ready for eruption. Already he was arranging with +his uncle to put a subordinate here and let him return to Benton. +Until that could be accomplished, he tried to see her as little as +possible. + +But Jessie was a child of the imperative urge. She told herself fifty +times that it was none of her business if he did accept the offer of a +place in the North-West Mounted. He could do as he pleased. Why should +she interfere? And yet--and yet-- + +She found a shadow of excuse for herself in the fact that it had been +through her that he had offered himself as a special constable. He +might think she wanted him to enlist permanently. So many girls were +foolish about the red coats of soldiers. She had noticed that among +her school-girl friends at Winnipeg. If she had any influence with him +at all, she did not want it thrown on that side of the scale. + +But of course he probably did not care what she thought. Very likely +it was her vanity that whispered to her he had gone North with Win +Beresford partly to please her. Still, since she was his friend, ought +she not to just drop an offhand hint that he was a more useful citizen +where he was than in the Mounted? He couldn't very well resent that, +could he? Or think her officious? Or forward? + +She contrived little plans to meet him when he would be alone and she +could talk with him, but she rejected these because she was afraid he +would see through them. It had become of first importance to her that +Tom Morse should not think she had any but a superficial interest in +him. + +When at last she did meet him, it was by pure chance. Dusk was +falling. She was passing the yard where his storehouse was. He wheeled +out and came on her plumply face to face. Both were taken by surprise +completely. Out of it neither could emerge instantly with casual words +of greeting. + +Jessie felt her pulses throb. A queer consternation paralyzed the +faculties that ought to have come alertly to her rescue. She stood, +awkwardly silent, in a shy panic to her pulsing finger-tips. Later she +would flog herself scornfully for her folly, but this did not help in +the least now. + +"I--I was just going to Mr. Whaley's with a little dress Mother made +for the baby," she said at last. + +"It's a nice baby," was the best he could do. + +"Yes. It's funny. You know Mr. Whaley didn't care anything about it +before--while it was very little. But now he thinks it's wonderful. +I'm so glad he does." + +She was beginning to get hold of herself, to emerge from the emotional +crisis into which this meeting had plunged her. It had come to her +consciousness that he was as perturbed as she, and a discovery of this +nature always brings a woman composure. + +"He treats his wife a lot better too." + +"There was room for it," he said dryly. + +"She's a nice little thing." + +"Yes." + +Conversation, which had been momentarily brisk, threatened to die out +for lack of fuel. Anything was better than significant silences in +which she could almost hear the hammering of her heart. + +"Win Beresford told me about the offer you had to go into the +Mounted," she said, plunging. + +"Yes?" + +"Will you accept?" + +He looked at her, surprised. "Didn't Win tell you? I said right away I +couldn't accept. He knew that." + +"Oh! I don't believe he did tell me. Perhaps you hadn't decided +then." Privately she was determining to settle some day with Winthrop +Beresford for leading her into this. He had purposely kept silent, she +knew now, in the hope that she would talk to Tom Morse about it. "But +I'm glad you've decided against going in." + +"Why?" + +"It's dangerous, and I don't think it has much future." + +"Win likes it." + +"Yes, Win does. He'll get a commission one of these days." + +"He deserves one. I--I hope you'll both be very happy." + +He was walking beside her. Quickly her glance flashed up at him. Was +that the reason he had held himself so aloof from her? + +"I think we shall, very likely, if you mean Win and I. He's always +happy, isn't he? And I try to be. I'm sorry he's leaving this part of +the country. Writing-on-Stone is a long way from here. He may never +get back. I'll miss him a good deal. Of course you will too." + +This was plain enough, but Tom could not accept it at face value. +Perhaps she meant that she would miss him until Win got ready to send +for her. An idea lodged firmly in the mind cannot be ejected at an +instant's notice. + +"Yes, I'll miss him. He's a splendid fellow. I've never met one like +him, so staunch and cheerful and game. Sometime I'd like to tell you +about that trip we took. You'd be proud of him." + +"I'm sure all his friends are," she said, smiling a queer little smile +that was lost in the darkness. + +"He was a very sick man, in a great deal of pain, and we had a rather +dreadful time of it. Of course it hit him far harder than it did +either West or me. But never a whimper out of him from first to last. +Always cheerful, always hopeful, with a little joke or a snatch of a +song, even when it looked as though we couldn't go on another day. +He's one out of ten thousand." + +"I heard him say that about another man--only I think he said one in +fifty thousand," she made comment, almost in a murmur. + +"Any girl would be lucky to have such a man for a husband," he added +fatuously. + +"Yes. I hope he'll find some nice one who will appreciate him." + +This left no room for misunderstanding. Tom's brain whirled. "You--you +and he haven't had any--quarrel?" + +"No. What made you think so?" + +"I don't know. I suppose I'm an idiot. But I thought--" + +He stopped. She took up his unfinished sentence. + +"You thought wrong." + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MAN SIZE*** + + +******* This file should be named 10404-8.txt or 10404-8.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +https://www.gutenberg.org/1/0/4/0/10404 + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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For +example an eBook of filename 10234 would be found at: + +https://www.gutenberg.org/1/0/2/3/10234 + +or filename 24689 would be found at: +https://www.gutenberg.org/2/4/6/8/24689 + +An alternative method of locating eBooks: +https://www.gutenberg.org/GUTINDEX.ALL + +*** END: FULL LICENSE *** diff --git a/old/10404-8.zip b/old/10404-8.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3354712 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/10404-8.zip diff --git a/old/10404.txt b/old/10404.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..71a41de --- /dev/null +++ b/old/10404.txt @@ -0,0 +1,10231 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook, Man Size, by William MacLeod Raine + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: Man Size + +Author: William MacLeod Raine + +Release Date: December 8, 2003 [eBook #10404] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: US-ASCII + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MAN SIZE*** + + +E-text prepared by Kevin Handy, Dave Maddock, Josephine Paolucci, and the +Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team + + + +MAN-SIZE + +BY + +WILLIAM MACLEOD RAINE + +AUTHOR OF + +THE BIG-TOWN ROUND UP, + +OH, YOU TEX! ETC + +1922 + + + + + + +TO + +CAPTAIN SIR CECIL E. DENNY, BART. + +OF THE FIRST THREE HUNDRED RIDERS OF THE PLAINS + +WHO CARRIED LAW INTO THE LONE LANDS + +AND MADE THE SCARLET AND GOLD + +A SYNONYM FOR + +JUSTICE, INTEGRITY, AND INDOMITABLE PLUCK + + + + +CONTENTS + + + I. IN THE DANGER ZONE + + II. THE AMAZON + + III. ANGUS McRAE DOES HIS DUTY + + IV. THE WOLFERS + + V. MORSE JUMPS UP TROUBLE + + VI. "SOMETHING ABOUT THESE GUYS" + + VII. THE MAN IN THE SCARLET JACKET + + VIII. AT SWEET WATER CREEK + + IX. TOM MAKES A COLLECTION + + X. A CAMP-FIRE TALE + + XI. C.N. MORSE TURNS OVER A LEAF + + XII. TOM DUCKS TROUBLE + + XIII. THE CONSTABLE BORES THROUGH DIFFICULTIES + + XIV. SCARLET-COATS IN ACTION + + XV. KISSING DAY + + XVI. A BUSINESS DEAL + + XVII. A BOARD CREAKS + + XVIII. A GUN ROARS + + XIX. "D' YOU WONDER SHE HATES ME?" + + XX. ONISTAH READS SIGN + + XXI. ON THE FRONTIER OF DESPAIR + + XXII. "MY DAMN PRETTY LI'L' HIGH-STEPPIN' SQUAW" + + XXIII. A FORETASTE OF HELL + + XXIV. WEST MAKES A DECISION + + XXV. FOR THE WEE LAMB LOST + + XXVI. A RESCUE + + XXVII. APACHE STUFF + + XXVIII. "IS A' WELL WI' YOU, LASS?" + + XXIX. NOT GOING ALONE + + XXX. "M" FOR MORSE + + XXXI. THE LONG TRAIL + + XXXII. A PICTURE IN A LOCKET + + XXXIII. INTO THE LONE LAND + + XXXIV. THE MAN-HUNTERS READ SIGN + + XXXV. SNOW-BLIND + + XXXVI. THE WILD BEAST LEAPS + + XXXVII. NEAR THE END OF A LONG CROOKED TRAIL + +XXXVIII. OVER A ROTTING TRAIL + + XXXIX. A CREE RUNNER BRINGS NEWS + + XL. "MALBROUCK S'EN VA-T-EN GUERRE" + + XLI. SENSE AND NONSENSE + + XLII. THE IMPERATIVE URGE + + + + + +CHAPTER I + +IN THE DANGER ZONE + + +She stood on the crown of the hill, silhouetted against a sky-line of +deepest blue. Already the sun was sinking in a crotch of the plains +which rolled to the horizon edge like waves of a great land sea. Its +reflected fires were in her dark, stormy eyes. Its long, slanted rays +were a spotlight for the tall, slim figure, straight as that of a boy. + +The girl's gaze was fastened on a wisp of smoke rising lazily from a +hollow of the crumpled hills. That floating film told of a camp-fire +of buffalo chips. There was a little knitted frown of worry on her +forehead, for imagination could fill in details of what the coulee +held: the white canvas tops of prairie schooners, some spans of oxen +grazing near, a group of blatant, profane whiskey-smugglers from +Montana, and in the wagons a cargo of liquor to debauch the Bloods and +Piegans near Fort Whoop-Up. + +Sleeping Dawn was a child of impulse. She had all youth's capacity for +passionate indignation and none of the wisdom of age which tempers +the eager desire of the hour. These whiskey-traders were ruining her +people. More than threescore Blackfeet braves had been killed within +the year in drunken brawls among themselves. The plains Indians would +sell their souls for fire-water. When the craze was on them, they +would exchange furs, buffalo robes, ponies, even their wives and +daughters for a bottle of the poison. + +In the sunset glow she stood rigid and resentful, one small fist +clenched, the other fast to the barrel of the rifle she carried. The +evils of the trade came close to her. Fergus McRae still carried the +gash from a knife thrust earned in a drunken brawl. It was likely that +to-morrow he would cut the trail of the wagon wheels and again make +a bee-line for liquor and trouble. The swift blaze of revolt found +expression in the stamp of her moccasined foot. + +As dusk fell over the plains, Sleeping Dawn moved forward lightly, +swiftly, toward the camp in the hollow of the hills. She had no +definite purpose except to spy the lay-out, to make sure that her +fears were justified. But through the hinterland of her consciousness +rebellious thoughts were racing. These smugglers were wholly outside +the law. It was her right to frustrate them if she could. + +Noiselessly she skirted the ridge above the coulee, moving through +the bunch grass with the wary care she had learned as a child in the +lodges of the tribe. + +Three men crouched on their heels in the glow of a camp-fire well +up the draw. A fourth sat at a little distance from them riveting a +stirrup leather with two stones. The wagons had been left near the +entrance of the valley pocket some sixty or seventy yards from the +fire. Probably the drivers, after they had unhitched the teams, had +been drawn deeper into the draw to a spot more fully protected from +the wind. + +While darkness gathered, Sleeping Dawn lay in the bunch grass with her +eyes focused on the camp below. Her untaught soul struggled with the +problem that began to shape itself. These men were wolfers, desperate +men engaged in a nefarious business. They paid no duty to the British +Government. She had heard her father say so. Contrary to law, they +brought in their vile stuff and sold it both to breeds and tribesmen. +They had no regard whatever for the terrible injury they did the +natives. Their one intent was to get rich as soon as possible, so they +plied their business openly and defiantly. For the Great Lone Land was +still a wilderness where every man was a law to himself. + +The blood of the girl beat fast with the racing pulse of excitement. +A resolution was forming in her mind. She realized the risks and +estimated chances coolly. These men would fire to kill on any skulker +near the camp. They would take no needless hazard of being surprised +by a band of stray Indians. But the night would befriend her. She +believed she could do what she had in mind and easily get away to the +shelter of the hill creases before they could kill or capture her. + +A shadowy dog on the outskirt of the camp rose and barked. The girl +waited, motionless, tense, but the men paid little heed to the +warning. The man working at the stirrup leather got to his feet, +indeed, carelessly, rifle in hand, and stared into the gloom; but +presently he turned on his heel and sauntered back to his job of +saddlery. Evidently the hound was used to voicing false alarms +whenever a coyote slipped past or a skunk nosed inquisitively near. + +Sleeping Dawn followed the crest of the ridge till it fell away to +the mouth of the coulee. She crept up behind the white-topped wagon +nearest the entrance. + +An axe lay against the tongue. She picked it up, glancing at the same +time toward the camp-fire. So far she had quite escaped notice. The +hound lay blinking into the flames, its nose resting on crossed paws. + +With her hunting-knife the girl ripped the canvas from the side of the +top. She stood poised, one foot on a spoke, the other on the axle. The +axe-head swung in a half-circle. There was a crash of wood, a swift +jet of spouting liquor. Again the axe swung gleaming above her head. A +third and a fourth time it crashed against the staves. + +A man by the camp-fire leaped to his feet with a startled oath. +"What's that?" he demanded sharply. + +From the shadows of the wagons a light figure darted. The man snatched +up a rifle and fired. A second time, aimlessly, he sent a bullet into +the darkness. + +The silent night was suddenly alive with noises. Shots, shouts, the +barking of the dog, the slap of running feet, all came in a confused +medley to Sleeping Dawn. + +She gained a moment's respite from pursuit when the traders stopped +at the wagons to get their bearings. The first of the white-topped +schooners was untouched. The one nearest the entrance to the coulee +held four whiskey-casks with staves crushed in and contents seeping +into the dry ground. + +Against one of the wheels a rifle rested. The girl flying in a panic +had forgotten it till too late. + +The vandalism of the attack amazed the men. They could have understood +readily enough some shots out of the shadows or a swoop down upon the +camp to stampede and run off the saddle horses. Even a serious attempt +to wipe out the party by a stray band of Blackfeet or Crees was an +undertaking that would need no explaining. But why should any one do +such a foolish, wasteful thing as this, one to so little purpose in +its destructiveness? + +They lost no time in speculation, but plunged into the darkness in +pursuit. + + + + +CHAPTER II + +THE AMAZON + + +The dog darted into the bunch grass and turned sharply to the right. +One of the men followed it, the others took different directions. + +Up a gully the hound ran, nosed the ground in a circle of sniffs, and +dipped down into a dry watercourse. Tom Morse was at heel scarcely a +dozen strides behind. + +The yelping of the dog told Morse they were close on their quarry. +Once or twice he thought he made out the vague outline of a flying +figure, but in the night shadows it was lost again almost at once. + +They breasted the long slope of a low hill and took the decline +beyond. The young plainsman had the legs and the wind of a Marathon +runner. His was the perfect physical fitness of one who lives a clean, +hard life in the dry air of the high lands. The swiftness and the +endurance of the fugitive told him that he was in the wake of youth +trained to a fine edge. + +Unexpectedly, in the deeper darkness of a small ravine below the hill +spur, the hunted turned upon the hunter. Morse caught the gleam of a +knife thrust as he plunged. It was too late to check his dive. A flame +of fire scorched through his forearm. The two went down together, +rolling over and over as they struggled. + +Startled, Morse loosened his grip. He had discovered by the feel of +the flesh he was handling so roughly that it was a woman with whom he +was fighting. + +She took advantage of his hesitation to shake free and roll away. + +They faced each other on their feet. The man was amazed at the young +Amazon's fury. Her eyes were like live coals, flashing at him hatred +and defiance. Beneath the skin smock she wore, her breath came +raggedly and deeply. Neither of them spoke, but her gaze did not yield +a thousandth part of an inch to his. + +The girl darted for the knife she had dropped. Morse was upon her +instantly. She tried to trip him, but when they struck the ground she +was underneath. + +He struggled to pin down her arms, but she fought with a barbaric +fury. Her hard little fist beat upon his face a dozen times before he +pegged it down. + +Lithe as a panther, her body twisted beneath his. Too late the flash +of white teeth warned him. She bit into his arm with the abandon of a +savage. + +"You little devil!" he cried between set teeth. + +He flung away any scruples he might have had and pinned fast her +flying arms. The slim, muscular body still writhed in vain contortions +till he clamped it fast between knees from which not even an untamed +cayuse could free itself. + +She gave up struggling. They glared at each other, panting from their +exertions. Her eyes still flamed defiance, but back of it he read +fear, a horrified and paralyzing terror. To the white traders along +the border a half-breed girl was a squaw, and a squaw was property +just as a horse or a dog was. + +For the first time she spoke, and in English. Her voice came +bell-clear and not in the guttural of the tribes. + +"Let me up!" It was an imperative, urgent, threatening. + +He still held her in the vice, his face close to her flaming eyes. +"You little devil," he said again. + +"Let me up!" she repeated wildly. "Let me up, I tell you." + +"Like blazes I will. You're through biting and knifing me for one +night." He had tasted no liquor all day, but there was the note of +drunkenness in his voice. + +The terror in her grew. "If you don't let me up--" + +"You'll do what?" he jeered. + +Her furious upheaval took him by surprise. She had unseated him and +was scrambling to her feet before he had her by the shoulders. + +The girl ducked her head in an effort to wrench free. She could as +easily have escaped from steel cuffs as from the grip of his brown +fingers. + +"You'd better let me go!" she cried. "You don't know who I am." + +"Nor care," he flung back. "You're a nitchie, and you smashed our +kegs. That's enough for me." + +"I'm no such thing a nitchie[1]," she denied indignantly. + +[Footnote 1: In the vernacular of the Northwest Indians were +"nitchies." (W.M.R.)] + +The instinct of self-preservation was moving in her. She had played +into the hands of this man and his companions. The traders made their +own laws and set their own standards. The value of a squaw of the +Blackfeet was no more than that of the liquor she had destroyed. It +would be in character for them to keep her as a chattel captured in +war. + +"The daughter of a squaw-man then," he said, and there was in his +voice the contempt of the white man for the half-breed. + +"I'm Jessie McRae," she said proudly. + +Among the Indians she went by her tribal name of Sleeping Dawn, but +always with the whites she used the one her adopted father had given +her. It increased their respect for her. Just now she was in desperate +need of every ounce that would weigh in the scales. + +"Daughter of Angus McRae?" he asked, astonished. + +"Yes." + +"His woman's a Cree?" + +"His wife is," the girl corrected. + +"What you doin' here?" + +"Father's camp is near. He's hunting hides." + +"Did he send you to smash our whiskey-barrels?" + +"Angus McRae never hides behind a woman," she said, her chin up. + +That was true. Morse knew it, though he had never met McRae. His +reputation had gone all over the Northland as a fearless fighting man +honest as daylight and stern as the Day of Judgment. If this girl was +a daughter of the old Scot, not even a whiskey-trader could safely lay +hands on her. For back of Angus was a group of buffalo-hunters related +to him by blood over whom he held half-patriarchal sway. + +"Why did you do it?" Morse demanded. + +The question struck a spark of spirit from her. "Because you're +ruining my people--destroying them with your fire-water." + +He was taken wholly by surprise. "Do you mean you destroyed our +property for that reason?" + +She nodded, sullenly. + +"But we don't trade with the Crees," he persisted. + +It was on the tip of her tongue to tell him that she was of the +Blackfoot tribe and not of the Crees, but again for reasons of policy +she was less than candid. Till she was safely out of the woods, it was +better this man should not know she was only an adopted daughter of +Angus McRae. She offered another reason, and with a flare of passion +which he was to learn as a characteristic of her. + +"You make trouble for my brother Fergus. He shot Akokotos (Many +Horses) in the leg when the fire-water burned in him. He was stabbed +by a Piegan brave who did not know what he was doing. Fergus is good. +He minds his own business. But you steal away his brains. Then he runs +wild. It was _you_, not Fergus, that shot Akokotos. The Great Spirit +knows you whiskey-traders, and not my poor people who destroy each +other, are the real murderers." + +Her logic was feminine and personal, from his viewpoint wholly unfair. +Moreover, one of her charges did not happen to be literally true. + +"We never sold whiskey to your brother--not our outfit. It was +Jackson's, maybe. Anyhow, nobody made him buy it. He was free to take +it or leave it." + +"A wolf doesn't have to eat the poisoned meat in a trap, but it eats +and dies," she retorted swiftly and bitterly. + +Adroitly she had put him on the defensive. Her words had the sting of +barbed darts. + +"We're not talking of wolves." + +"No, but of Blackfeet and Bloods and Sarcees," she burst out, again +with that flare of feminine ferocity so out of character in an Indian +woman or the daughter of one. "D'you think I don't know how you +Americans talk? A good Indian is a dead Indian. No wonder we hate you +all. No wonder the tribes fight you to the death." + +He had no answer for this. It was true. He had been brought up in a +land of Indian wars and he had accepted without question the common +view that the Sioux, the Crows, and the Cheyennes, with all their +blood brothers, were menaces to civilization. The case for the natives +he had never studied. How great a part broken pledges and callous +injustice had done to drive the tribes to the war-path he did not +know. Few of the actual frontiersmen were aware of the wrongs of the +red men. + +The young man's hands fell from her arms. Hard-eyed and grim, he +looked her over from head to foot. The short skirt and smock of +buckskin, the moccasins of buffalo hide, all dusty and travel-stained, +told of life in a primitive country under the simplest and hardest +conditions. + +Yet the voice was clear and vibrant, the words well enunciated. She +bloomed like a desert rose, had some quality of vital life that struck +a spark from his imagination. + +What manner of girl was she? Not by any possibility would she fit into +the specifications of the cubby-hole his mind had built for Indian +women. The daughters even of the boisbrules had much of the heaviness +and stolidity of their native mothers. Jessie McRae was graceful as a +fawn. Every turn of the dark head, every lift of the hand, expressed +spirit and verve. She must, he thought, have inherited almost wholly +from her father, though in her lissom youth he could find little of +McRae's heavy solidity of mind and body. + +"Your brother is of the metis[2]. He's not a tribesman. And he's no +child. He can look out for himself," Morse said at last. + +[Footnote 2: The half-breeds were known as "metis." The word means, of +course, mongrel. (W.M.R.)] + +His choice of a word was unfortunate. It applied as much to her as to +Fergus. Often it was used contemptuously. + +"Yes, and the metis doesn't matter," she cried, with the note of +bitterness that sat so strangely on her hot-blooded, vital youth. "You +can ride over him as though you're lords of the barren lands. You can +ruin him for the money you make, even if he's a subject of the Great +Mother and not of your country. He's only a breed--a mongrel." + +He was a man of action. He brushed aside discussion. "We'll be movin' +back to camp." + +Instantly her eyes betrayed the fear she would not put into words. +"No--no! I won't go." + +His lids narrowed. The outthrust of his lean jaw left no room for +argument. "You'll go where I say." + +She knew it would be that way, if he dragged her by the hair of the +head. Because she was in such evil case she tamed her pride to sullen +pleading. + +"Don't take me there! Let me go to father. He'll horsewhip me. I'll +have him do it for you. Isn't that enough? Won't that satisfy you?" + +Red spots smoldered like fire in his brown eyes. If he took her back +to the traders' camp, he would have to fight Bully West for her. That +was certain. All sorts of complications would rise. There would be +trouble with McRae. The trade with the Indians of his uncle's firm, of +which he was soon to be a partner, would be wrecked by the Scotchman. +No, he couldn't take her back to the camp in the coulee. There was too +much at stake. + +"Suits me. I'll take you up on that. He's to horsewhip you for that +fool trick you played on us and to make good our loss. Where's his +camp?" + +From the distance of a stone-throw a heavy, raucous voice called, +"'Lo, Morse!" + +The young man turned to the girl, his lips set in a thin, hard line. +"Bully West. The dog's gone back and is bringin' him here, I reckon. +Like to meet him?" + +She knew the reputation of Bully West, notorious as a brawler and +a libertine. Who in all the North did not know of it? Her heart +fluttered a signal of despair. + +"I--I can get away yet--up the valley," she said in a whisper, eyes +quick with fear. + +He smiled grimly. "You mean _we_ can." + +"Yes." + +"Hit the trail." + +She turned and led the way into the darkness. + + + + +CHAPTER III + +ANGUS McRAE DOES HIS DUTY + + +The harsh shout came to them again, and with it a volley of oaths that +polluted the night. + +Sleeping Dawn quickened her pace. The character of Bully West was +sufficiently advertised in that single outburst. She conceived him +bloated, wolfish, malignant, a man whose mind traveled through filthy +green swamps breeding fever and disease. Hard though this young man +was, in spite of her hatred of him, of her doubt as to what lay behind +those inscrutable, reddish-brown eyes of his, she would a hundred +times rather take chances with him than with Bully West. He was at +least a youth. There was always the possibility that he might not yet +have escaped entirely from the tenderness of boyhood. + +Morse followed her silently with long, tireless, strides. The girl +continued to puzzle him. Even her manner of walking expressed +personality. There was none of the flat-footed Indian shuffle about +her gait. She moved lightly, springily, as one does who finds in it +the joy of calling upon abundant strength. + +She was half Scotch, of course. That helped to explain her. The words +of an old song hummed themselves through his mind. + + "Yestreen I met a winsome lass, a bonny lass was she, + As ever climbed the mountain-side, or tripped aboon the lea; + She wore nae gold, nae jewels bright, nor silk nor satin rare, + But just the plaidie that a queen might well be proud to wear." + +Jessie McRae wore nothing half so picturesque as the tartan. Her +clothes were dingy and dust-stained. But they could not eclipse the +divine, dusky youth of her. She was slender, as a panther is, and her +movements had more than a suggestion of the same sinuous grace. + +Of the absurdity of such thoughts he was quite aware. She was a +good-looking breed. Let it go at that. In story-books there were +Indian princesses, but in real life there were only squaws. + +Not till they were out of the danger zone did he speak. "Where's your +father's camp?" + +She pointed toward the northwest. "You don't need to be afraid. He'll +pay you for the damage I did." + +He looked at her in the steady, appraising way she was to learn as a +peculiarity of his. + +"I'm not afraid," he drawled. "I'll get my pay--and you'll get yours." + +Color flamed into her dusky face. When she spoke there was the throb +of contemptuous anger in her voice. "It's a great thing to be a man." + +"Like to crawfish, would you?" + +She swung on him, eyes blazing. "No. I don't ask any favors of a +wolfer." + +She spat the word at him as though it were a missile. The term was one +of scorn, used only in speaking of the worst of the whiskey-traders. +He took it coolly, his strong white teeth flashing in a derisive +smile. + +"Then this wolfer won't offer any, Miss McRae." + +It was the last word that passed between them till they reached the +buffalo-hunter's camp. If he felt any compunctions, she read nothing +of the kind in his brown face and the steady stride carrying her +straight to punishment. She wondered if he knew how mercilessly +twenty-year-old Fergus had been thrashed after his drunken spree among +the Indians, how sternly Angus dispensed justice in the clan over +which he ruled. Did he think she was an ordinary squaw, one to be +whipped as a matter of discipline by her owner? + +They climbed a hill and looked down on a camp of many fires in the +hollow below. + +"Is it you, lass?" a voice called. + +Out of the shadows thrown by the tents a big bearded man came to meet +them. He stood six feet in his woolen socks. His chest was deep and +his shoulders tremendously broad. Few in the Lone Lands had the +physical strength of Angus McRae. + +His big hand caught the girl by the shoulder with a grip that was +half a caress. He had been a little anxious about her and this found +expression in a reproach. + +"You shouldna go out by your lane for so lang after dark, Jess. Weel +you ken that." + +"I know, Father." + +The blue eyes beneath the grizzled brows of the hunter turned upon +Morse. They asked what he was doing with his daughter at that time and +place. + +The Montana trader answered the unspoken question, an edge of irony in +his voice. "I found Miss McRae wanderin' around, so I brought her home +where she would be safe and well taken care of." + +There was something about this Angus did not understand. At night in +the Lone Lands, among a thousand hill pockets and shoestring draws, +it would be only a millionth chance that would bring a man and woman +together unexpectedly. He pushed home questions, for he was not one to +slough any of the responsibilities that belonged to him as father of +his family. + +A fat and waistless Indian woman appeared in the tent flap as the +three approached the light. She gave a grunt of surprise and pointed +first at Morse and then at the girl. + +The trader's hands were covered with blood, his shirt-sleeve soaked in +it. Stains of it were spattered over the girl's clothes and face. + +The Scotchman looked at them, and his clean-shaven upper lip grew +straight, his whole face stern. "What'll be the meanin' o' this?" he +asked. + +Morse turned to the girl, fastened his eyes on her steadily, and +waited. + +"Nae lees. I'll hae the truth," Angus added harshly. + +"I did it--with my hunting-knife," the daughter said, looking straight +at her father. + +"What's that? Are ye talkin' havers, lass?" + +"It's the truth, Father." + +The Scotchman swung on the trader with a swift question, at the end of +it a threat. "Why would she do that? Why? If you said one word to my +lass--" + +"No, Father. You don't understand. I found a camp of whiskey-traders, +and I stole up and smashed four-five kegs. I meant to slip away, but +this man caught me. When he rushed at me I was afraid--so I slashed at +him with my knife. We fought." + +"You fought," her father repeated. + +"He didn't know I was a girl--not at first." + +The buffalo-hunter passed that point. "You went to this trader's camp +and ruined his goods?" + +"Yes." + +"Why?" + +The slim girl faced her judge steadily with eyes full of apprehension. +"Fergus," she said in a low voice, "and my people." + +"What aboot them?" + +"These traders break the law. They sell liquor to Fergus and to--" + +"Gin that's true, is it your business to ram-stam in an' destroy ither +folks' property? Did I bring you up i' the fear o' the Lord to slash +at men wi' your dirk an' fight wi' them like a wild limmer? I've been +ower-easy wi' you. Weel, I'll do my painfu' duty the nicht, lass." The +Scotchman's eyes were as hard and as inexorable as those of a hanging +judge. + +"Yes," the girl answered in a small voice. "That's why he brought me +home instead of taking me to his own camp. You're to whip me." + +Angus McRae was not used to having the law and the judgment taken out +of his own hands. He frowned at the young man beneath heavy grizzled +eyebrows drawn sternly together. "An' who are you to tell me how to +govern my ain hoose?" he demanded. + +"My name's Morse--Tom Morse, Fort Benton, Montana, when my hat's +hangin' up. I took up your girl's proposition, that if I didn't head +in at our camp, but brought her here, you were to whip her and pay me +damages for what she'd done. Me, I didn't propose it. She did." + +"You gave him your word on that, Jess?" her father asked. + +"Yes." She dragged out, reluctantly, after a moment: "With a +horsewhip." + +"Then that's the way it'll be. The McRaes don't cry back on a +bargain," the dour old buffalo-hunter said. "But first we'll look at +this young man's arm. Get water and clean rags, Jess." + +Morse flushed beneath the dark tan of his cheeks. "My arm's all right. +It'll keep till I get back to camp." + +"No such thing, my lad. We'll tie it up here and now. If my lass cut +your arm, she'll bandage the wound." + +"She'll not. I'm runnin' this arm." + +McRae slammed a heavy fist down into the palm of his hand. "I'll be +showin' you aboot that, mannie." + +"Hell, what's the use o' jawin'? I'm goin' to wait, I tell you." + +"Don't curse in my camp, Mr. Morse, or whatever your name is." The +Scotchman's blue eyes flashed. "It's a thing I do not permeet. Nor do +I let beardless lads tell me what they will or won't do here. Your +wound will be washed and tied up if I have to order you hogtied first. +So mak the best o' that." + +Morse measured eyes with him a moment, then gave way with a sardonic +laugh. McRae had a full share of the obstinacy of his race. + +"All right. I'm to be done good to whether I like it or not. Go to +it." The trader pulled back the sleeve of his shirt and stretched out +a muscular, blood-stained arm. An ugly flesh wound stretched halfway +from elbow to wrist. + +Jessie brought a basin, water, a towel, and clean rags. By the light +of a lantern in the hands of her father, she washed and tied up the +wound. Her lips trembled. Strange little rivers of fire ran through +her veins when her finger-tips touched his flesh. Once, when she +lifted her eyes, they met his. He read in them a concentrated passion +of hatred. + +Not even when she had tied the last knot in the bandage did any of +them speak. She carried away the towel and the basin while McRae hung +the lantern to a nail in the tent pole and brought from inside a +silver-mounted riding-whip. It was one he had bought as a present for +his daughter last time he had been at Fort Benton. + +The girl came back and stood before him. A pulse beat fast in her +brown throat. The eyes betrayed the dread of her soul, but they met +without flinching those of the buffalo-hunter. + +The Indian woman at the tent entrance made no motion to interfere. The +lord of her life had spoken. So it would be. + +With a strained little laugh Morse took a step forward. "I reckon I'll +not stand out for my pound of flesh, Mr. McRae. Settle the damages for +the lost liquor and I'll call it quits." + +The upper lip of the Scotchman was a straight line of resolution. "I'm +not thrashing the lass to please you, but because it's in the bond and +because she's earned it. Stand back, sir." + +The whip swung up and down. The girl gasped and shivered. A flame of +fiery pain ran through her body to the toes. She set her teeth to bite +back a scream. Before the agony had passed, the whip was winding round +her slender body again like a red-hot snake. It fell with implacable +rhythmic regularity. + +Her pride and courage collapsed. She sank to her knees with a wild +burst of wailing and entreaties. At last McRae stopped. + +Except for the irregular sobbing breaths of the girl there was +silence. The Indian woman crouched beside the tortured young thing and +rocked the dark head, held close against her bosom, while she crooned +a lullaby in the native tongue. + +McRae, white to the lips, turned upon his unwelcome guest. "You're nae +doot wearyin' to tak the road, man. Bring your boss the morn an' I'll +mak a settlement." + +Morse knew he was dismissed. He turned and walked into the darkness +beyond the camp-fires. Unnoticed, he waited there in a hollow and +listened. For along time there came to him the soft sound of weeping, +and afterward the murmur of voices. He knew that the fat and shapeless +squaw was pouring mother love from her own heart to the bleeding one +of the girl. + +Somehow that brought him comfort. He had a queer feeling that he had +been a party to some horrible outrage. Yet all that had taken place +was the whipping of an Indian girl. He tried to laugh away the weak +sympathy in his heart. + +But the truth was that inside he was a wild river of woe for her. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +THE WOLFERS + + +When Tom Morse reached camp he found Bully West stamping about in a +heady rage. The fellow was a giant of a man, almost muscle-bound in +his huge solidity. His shoulders were rounded with the heavy pack of +knotted sinews they carried. His legs were bowed from much riding. It +was his boast that he could bend a silver dollar double in the palm of +his hand. Men had seen him twist the tail rod of a wagon into a knot. +Sober, he was a sulky, domineering brute with the instincts of a +bully. In liquor, the least difference of opinion became for him a +cause of quarrel. + +Most men gave him a wide berth, and for the sake of peace accepted +sneers and insults that made the blood boil. + +"Where you been all this time?" he growled. + +"Ploughin' around over the plains." + +"Didn't you hear me callin'?" + +"D'you call? I've been quite a ways from camp. Bumped into Angus +McRae's buffalo-hunting outfit. He wants to see us to-morrow." + +"What for?" + +"Something about to-night's business. Seems he knows who did it. +Offers to settle for what we lost." + +Bully West stopped in his stride, feet straddled, head thrust forward. +"What's that?" + +"Like I say. We're to call on him to-morrow for a settlement, you 'n' +me." + +"Did McRae bust our barrels?" + +"He knows something about it. Didn't have time to talk long with him. +I hustled right back to tell you." + +"He can come here if he wants to see me," West announced. + +This called for no answer and Tom gave it none. He moved across to the +spot where the oxen were picketed and made sure the pins were still +fast. Presently he rolled his blanket round him and looked up into a +sky all stars. Usually he dropped asleep as soon as his head touched +the seat of the saddle he used as a pillow. But to-night he lay awake +for hours. He could not get out of his mind the girl he had met and +taken to punishment. A dozen pictures of her rose before him, all of +them mental snapshots snatched from his experience of the night. Now +he was struggling to hold her down, his knees clamped to her writhing, +muscular torso. Again he held her by the strong, velvet-smooth arms +while her eyes blazed fury and defiance at him. Or her stinging words +pelted him as she breasted the hill slopes with supple ease. Most +vivid of all were the ones at her father's camp, especially those when +she was under the torture of the whip. + +No wonder she hated him for what he had done to her. + +He shook himself into a more comfortable position and began to count +stars.... Ninety-five, ninety-six, ninety-seven.... What was the use +of stressing the affair, anyhow? She was only a half-breed. In +ten years she would be fat, shapeless, dirty, and repellent. Her +conversation would be reduced to grunts. The glance he had had at her +mother was illuminating. + +Where was he?... One hundred eleven, twelve, thirteen.... Women had +not obtruded much into his life. He had lived in the wind and the sun +of the outdoors, much of the time in the saddle. Lawless he was, +but there was a clean strain in his blood. He had always felt an +indifferent contempt for a squaw-man. An American declassed himself +when he went in for that sort of thing, even if he legalized the +union by some form of marriage. In spite of her magnificent physical +inheritance of health and vitality, in spite of the quick and +passionate spirit that informed her, she would be the product of her +environment and ancestry, held close to barbarism all her life. The +man who mated with her would be dragged down to her level. + +Two hundred three, four, five.... How game she had been! She had +played it out like a thoroughbred, even to telling her father that he +was to use the horsewhip in punishing her. He had never before seen a +creature so splendid or so spirited. Squaw or no squaw, he took off +his hat to her. + +The sun had climbed the hilltop when Morse wakened. + +"Come an' get it!" Barney the cook was yelling at him. + +Bully West had changed his mind about not going to the +buffalo-hunter's camp. + +"You 'n' Brad'll stay here, Barney, while me 'n' Tom are gone," he +gave orders. "And you'll keep a sharp lookout for raiders. If any one +shows up that you're dubious of, plug him and ask questions afterward. +Un'erstand?" + +"I hear ye," replied Barney, a small cock-eyed man with a malevolent +grin. "An' we'll do just that, boss." + +Long before the traders reached it, the camp of the buffalo-hunters +advertised its presence by the stench of decaying animal matter. +Hundreds of hides were pegged to the ground. Men and women, squatting +on their heels, scraped bits of fat from the drying skins. Already a +train of fifty Red River carts[3] stood ready for the homeward start, +loaded with robes tied down by means of rawhide strips to stand the +jolting across the plains. Not far away other women were making +pemmican of fried buffalo meat and fat, pounded together and packed +with hot grease in skin bags. This food was a staple winter diet and +had too a market value for trade to the Hudson's Bay Company, which +shipped thousands of sacks yearly to its northern posts on the Peace +and the Mackenzie Rivers. + +[Footnote 3: The Red River cart was a primitive two-wheeled affair, +made entirely of wood, without nails or metal tires. It was usually +drawn by an ox. (W.M.R.)] + +The children and the sound of their laughter gave the camp a domestic +touch. Some of the brown, half-naked youngsters, their skins +glistening in the warm sun, were at work doing odd jobs. Others, too +young to fetch and carry, played with a litter of puppies or with a +wolf cub that had been caught and tamed. + +The whole bustling scene was characteristic of time and place. A score +of such outfits, each with its Red River carts and its oxen, its dogs, +its women and children, traveled to the plains each spring to hunt +the bison. They killed thousands upon thousands of them, for it took +several animals to make a sack of pemmican weighing one hundred fifty +pounds. The waste was enormous, since only the choicest cuts of meat +were used. + +Already the buffalo were diminishing in numbers. Vast hordes still +roamed the plains. They could be killed by scores and hundreds. But +the end was near. It had been several years since Colonel Dodge +reported that he had halted his party of railroad builders two days +to let a herd of over half a million bison pass. Such a sight was no +longer possible. The pressure of the hunters had divided the game into +the northern and the southern herds. Within four or five years the +slaughter was to be so great that only a few groups of buffalo would +be left. + +The significance of this extermination lay largely in its application +to the Indians. The plains tribes were fed and clothed and armed and +housed by means of the buffalo. Even the canoes of the lake Indians +were made from buffalo skins. The failure of the supply reduced the +natives from warriors to beggars. + +McRae came forward to meet the traders, the sleeves of his shirt +rolled to the elbows of his muscular brown arms. He stroked a great +red beard and nodded gruffly. It was not in his dour honest nature to +pretend that he was glad to see them when he was not. + +"Well, I'm here," growled West, interlarding a few oaths as a +necessary corollary of his speech. "What's it all about, McRae? What +do you know about the smashing of our barrels?" + +"I'll settle any reasonable damage," the hunter said. + +Bully West frowned. He spread his legs deliberately, folded his arms, +and spat tobacco juice upon a clean hide drying in the sun. "Hold yore +hawsses a minute. The damage'll be enough. Don't you worry about that. +But first off, I aim to know who raided our camp. Then I reckon I'll +whop him till he's wore to a frazzle." + +Under heavy, grizzled brows McRae looked long at him. Both were +outstanding figures by reason of personality and physique. One was a +constructive force, the other destructive. There was a suggestion of +the gorilla in West's long arms matted with hair, in the muscles of +back and shoulders so gnarled and knotted that they gave him almost +a deformed appearance. Big and broad though he was, the Scot was the +smaller. But power harnessed and controlled expressed itself in every +motion of the body. Moreover, the blue eyes that looked straight and +hard out of the ruddy face told of coordination between mind and +matter. + +Angus McRae was that rare product, an honest, outspoken man. He sought +to do justice to all with whom he had dealings. Part of West's demand +was fair, he reflected. The trader had a right to know all the facts +in the case. But the old Hudson's Bay trapper had a great reluctance +to tell them. His instinct to protect Jessie was strong. + +"I've saved ye the trouble, Mr. West. The guilty yin was o' my ain +family. Your young man will tell ye I've done a' the horsewhippin' +that's necessary." + +The big trail boss looked blackly at his helper. He would settle with +Morse at the proper time. Now he had other business on hand. + +"Come clean, McRae. Who was it? There'll be nothin' doin' till I know +that," he growled. + +"My daughter." + +West glared at him, for once astonished out of profanity. + +"What?" + +"My daughter Jessie." + +"Goddlemighty, d'ja mean to tell me a girl did it?" He threw back his +head in a roar of Homeric laughter. "Ever hear the beat of that? A +damn li'l' Injun squaw playin' her tricks on Bully West! If she was +mine I'd tickle her back for it." + +The eyes in the Scotchman's granite face flashed. "Man, can you never +say twa-three words withoot profanity? This is a God-fearin' camp. +There's nae place here for those who tak His name in vain." + +"Smashed 'em with her own hands--is that what you mean? I'll give it +to her that she's a plucky li'l' devil, even if she is a nitchie." + +McRae reproved him stiffly. "You'll please to remember that you're +talking of my daughter, Mr. West. I'll allow no such language aboot +her. You're here to settle a business matter. What do ye put the +damage at?" + +They agreed on a price, to be paid in hides delivered at Whoop-Up. +West turned and went straddling to the place where he and Morse had +left their horses. On the way he came face to face with a girl, a +lithe, dusky young creature, Indian brown, the tan of a hundred +summer suns and winds painted on the oval of her lifted chin. She was +carrying a package of sacks to the place where the pemmican was being +made. + +West's eyes narrowed. They traveled up and down her slender body. They +gloated on her. + +After one scornful glance which swept over and ignored Morse, the girl +looked angrily at the man barring her way. Slowly the blood burned +into her cheeks. For there was that in the trader's smoldering eyes +that would have insulted any modest maiden. + +"You Jessie McRae?" he demanded, struck of a sudden with an idea. + +"Yes." + +"You smashed my whiskey-barrels?" + +"My father has told you. If he says so, isn't that enough?" + +He slapped an immense hand on his thigh, hugely diverted. "You damn +li'l' high-steppin' filly! Why? What in hell 'd I ever do to you?" + +Angus McRae strode forward, eyes blazing. He had married a Cree woman, +had paid for her to her father seven ponies, a yard of tobacco, and a +bottle of whiskey. His own two-fisted sons were metis. The Indian in +them showed more plainly than the Celt. Their father accepted the fact +without resentment. But there was in his heart a queer feeling about +the little lass he had adopted. Her light, springing step, the lift of +the throat and the fearlessness of the eye, the instinct in her for +cleanliness of mind and body, carried him back forty years to the land +of heather, to a memory of the laird's daughter whom he had worshiped +with the hopeless adoration of a red-headed gillie. It had been the +one romance of his life, and somehow it had reincarnated itself in +his love for the half-breed girl. To him it seemed a contradiction of +nature that Jessie should be related to the flat-footed squaws who +were slaves to their lords. He could not reconcile his heart to the +knowledge that she was of mixed blood. She was too fine, too dainty, +of too free and imperious a spirit. + +"Your horses are up the hill, Mr. West," he said pointedly. + +It is doubtful whether the trader heard. He could not keep his +desirous eyes from the girl. + +"Is she a half or a quarter-breed?" he asked McRae. + +"That'll be her business and mine, sir. Will you please tak the road?" +The hunter spoke quietly, restraining himself from an outbreak. But +his voice carried an edge. + +"By Gad, she's some clipper," West said, aloud to himself, just as +though the girl had not been present. + +"Will you leave my daughter oot o' your talk, man?" warned the +Scotchman. + +"What's ailin' you?" West's sulky, insolent eyes turned on the +buffalo-hunter. "A nitchie's a nitchie. Me, I talk straight. But I aim +to be reasonable too. I don't like a woman less because she's got the +devil in her. Bully West knows how to tame 'em so they'll eat outa his +hand. I've took a fancy to yore girl. Tha's right, McRae." + +"You may go to the tent, Jessie," the girl's father told her. He was +holding his temper in leash with difficulty. + +"Wait a mo." The big trader held out his arm to bar the way. "Don't +push on yore reins, McRae. I'm makin' you a proposition. Me, I'm +lookin' for a wife, an' this here breed girl of yours suits me. Give +her to me an' I'll call the whole thing square. Couldn't say fairer +than that, could I?" + +The rugged hunter looked at the big malformed border ruffian with +repulsion. "Man, you gi'e me a scunner," he said. "Have done wi' this +foolishness an' be gone. The lass is no' for you or the like o' you." + +"Hell's hinges, you ain't standin' there tellin' me that a Cree breed +is too good for Bully West, are you?" roared the big whiskey-runner. + +"A hundred times too good for you. I'd rather see the lass dead in +her coffin than have her life ruined by you," McRae answered in dead +earnest. + +"You don't get me right, Mac," answered the smuggler, swallowing his +rage. "I know yore religious notions. We'll stand up before a sky +pilot and have this done right. I aim to treat this girl handsome." + +Jessie had turned away at her father's command. Now she turned swiftly +upon the trader, eyes flashing. "I'd rather Father would drive a +knife in my heart than let me be married to a wolfer!" she cried +passionately. + +His eyes, untrammeled by decency, narrowed to feast on the brown +immature beauty of her youth. + +"Tha' so?" he jeered. "Well, the time's comin' when you'll go down on +yore pretty knees an' beg me not to leave you. It'll be me 'n' you one +o' these days. Make up yore mind to that." + +"Never! Never! I'd die first!" she exploded. + +Bully West showed his broken, tobacco-stained teeth in a mirthless +grin. "We'll see about that, dearie." + +"March, lass. Your mother'll be needin' you," McRae said sharply. + +The girl looked at West, then at Morse. From the scorn of that glance +she might have been a queen and they the riffraff of the land. She +walked to the tent. Not once did she look back. + +"You've had your answer both from her and me. Let that be an end o' +it," McRae said with finality. + +The trader's anger ripped out in a crackle of obscene oaths. They +garnished the questions that he snarled. "Wha's the matter with me? +Why ain't I good enough for yore half-breed litter?" + +It was a spark to gunpowder. The oaths, the insult, the whole +degrading episode, combined to drive McRae out of the self-restraint +he had imposed on himself. He took one step forward. With a wide sweep +of the clenched fist he buffeted the smuggler on the ear. Taken by +surprise, West went spinning against the wheel of a cart. + +The man's head sank between his shoulders and thrust forward. A sound +that might have come from an infuriated grizzly rumbled from the hairy +throat. His hand reached for a revolver. + +Morse leaped like a crouched cat. Both hands caught at West's arm. The +old hunter was scarcely an instant behind him. His fingers closed on +the wrist just above the weapon. + +"Hands off," he ordered Morse. "This is no' your quarrel." + +The youngster's eyes met the blazing blue ones of the Scot. His +fingers loosened their hold. He stepped back. + +The two big men strained. One fought with every ounce of power in him +to twist the arm from him till the cords and sinews strained; the +other to prevent this and to free the wrist. It was a test of sheer +strength. + +Each labored, breathing deep, his whole energy centered on cooerdinated +effort of every muscle. They struggled in silence except for the +snarling grunts of the whiskey-runner. + +Slowly, almost imperceptibly at first, the wrist began to turn from +McRae. Sweat beads gathered on West's face. He fought furiously to +hold his own. But the arm turned inexorably. + +The trader groaned. As the cords tightened and shoots of torturing +pain ran up the arm, the huge body of the man writhed. The revolver +fell from his paralyzed fingers. His wobbling knees sagged and +collapsed. + +McRae's fingers loosened as the man slid down and caught the bull-like +throat. His grip tightened. West fought savagely to break it. He could +as soon have freed himself from the clamp of a vice. + +The Scotchman shook him till he was black in the face, then flung him +reeling away. + +"Get oot, ye yellow wolf!" he roared. "Or fegs! I'll break every bone +in your hulkin' body. Oot o' my camp, the pair o' you!" + +West, strangling, gasped for air, as does a catfish on the bank. He +leaned on the cart wheel until he was able to stand. The help of Morse +he brushed aside with a sputtered oath. His eyes never left the man +who had beaten him. He snarled hike a whipped wolf. The hunter's +metaphor had been an apt one. The horrible lust to kill was stamped on +his distorted, grinning face, but for the present the will alone was +not enough. + +McRae's foot was on the revolver. His son Fergus, a swarthy, +good-looking youngster, had come up and was standing quietly behind +his father. Other hunters were converging toward their chief. + +The Indian trader swore a furious oath of vengeance. Morse tried to +lead him away. + +"Some day I'll get yore squaw girl right, McRae, an' then God help +her," he threatened. + +The bully lurched straddling away. + +Morse, a sardonic grin on his lean face, followed him over the hill. + + + + +CHAPTER V + +MORSE JUMPS UP TROUBLE + + +"Threw me down, didn't you?" snarled West out of the corner of his +mouth. "Knew all the time she did it an' never let on to me. A hell of +a way to treat a friend." + +Tom Morse said nothing. He made mental reservations about the word +friend, but did not care to express them. His somber eyes watched the +big man jerk the spade bit cruelly and rowel the bronco when it went +into the air. It was a pleasure to West to torture an animal when no +human was handy, though he preferred women and even men as victims. + +"Whad he mean when he said you could tell me how he'd settled with +her?" he growled. + +"He whipped her last night when I took her back to camp." + +"Took her back to camp, did you? Why didn't you bring her to me? Who's +in charge of this outfit, anyhow, young fellow, me lad?" + +"McRae's too big a man for us to buck. Too influential with the +half-breeds. I figured it was safer to get her right home to him." The +voice of the younger man was mild and conciliatory. + +"_You_ figured!" West's profanity polluted the clear, crisp morning +air. "I got to have a run in with you right soon. I can see that. +Think because you're C.N. Morse's nephew, you can slip yore funny +business over on me. I'll show you." + +The reddish light glinted for a moment in the eyes of Morse, but he +said nothing. Young though he was, he had a capacity for silence. West +was not sensitive to atmospheres, but he felt the force of this young +man. It was not really in his mind to quarrel with him. For one thing +he would soon be a partner in the firm of C.N. Morse & Company, of +Fort Benton, one of the biggest trading outfits in the country. West +could not afford to break with the Morse interests. + +With their diminished cargo the traders pushed north. Their +destination was Whoop-Up, at the junction of the Belly and the St. +Mary's Rivers. This fort had become a rendezvous for all the traders +within hundreds of miles, a point of supply for many small posts +scattered along the rivers of the North. + +Twelve oxen were hitched to each three-wagon load. Four teams had left +Fort Benton together, but two of them had turned east toward Wood +Mountain before the party was out of the Assiniboine country. West had +pushed across Lonesome Prairie to the Sweet Grass Hills and from there +over the line into Canada. + +Under the best of conditions West was no pleasant traveling companion. +Now he was in a state of continual sullen ill-temper. For the first +time in his life he had been publicly worsted. Practically he had +been kicked out of the buffalo camp, just as though he were a drunken +half-breed and not one whose barroom brawls were sagas of the +frontier. + +His vanity was notorious, and it had been flagrantly outraged. He +would never be satisfied until he had found a way to get his revenge. +More than once his simmering anger leaped out at the young fellow who +had been a witness of his defeat. In the main he kept his rage sulkily +repressed. If Tom Morse wanted to tell of the affair with McRae, he +could lessen the big man's prestige. West did not want that. + +The outfit crossed the Milk River, skirted Pakoghkee Lake, and swung +westward in the direction of the Porcupine Hills. Barney had been a +trapper in the country and knew where the best grass was to be found. +In many places the feed was scant. It had been cropped close by the +great herds of buffalo roaming the plains. Most of the lakes were +polluted by the bison, so that whenever possible their guide found +camps by running water. The teams moved along the Belly River through +the sand hills. + +Tom Morse was a crack shot and did the hunting for the party. The +evening before the train reached Whoop-Up, he walked out from camp to +try for an antelope, since they were short of fresh meat. He climbed a +small butte overlooking the stream. His keen eyes swept the panorama +and came to rest on a sight he had never before seen and would never +forget. + +A large herd of buffalo had come down to the river crossing. They were +swimming the stream against a strong current, their bodies low in the +water and so closely packed that he could almost have stepped from one +shaggy head to another. Not fifty yards from him they scrambled ashore +and went lumbering into the hazy dusk. Something had frightened them +and they were on a stampede. Even the river had not stopped their +flight. The earth shook with their tread as they found their stride. + +That wild flight into the gathering darkness was symbolic, Morse +fancied. The vast herds were vanishing never to return. Were they +galloping into the Happy Hunting Ground the Indians prayed for? What +would come of their flight? When the plains knew them no more, how +would the Sioux and the Blackfeet and the Piegans live? Would the +Lonesome Lands become even more desolate than they were now? + +"I wonder," he murmured aloud. + +It is certain that he could have had no vision of the empire soon to +be built out of the desert by himself and men of his stamp. Not even +dimly could he have conceived a picture of the endless wheat-fields +that would stretch across the plains, of the farmers who would pour +into the North by hundreds of thousands, of the cities which would +rise in the sand hills as a monument to man's restless push of +progress and his indomitable hope. No living man's imagination had yet +dreamed of the transformation of this _terra incognita_ into one of +the world's great granaries. + +The smoke of the traders' camp-fire was curling up and drifting away +into thin veils of film before the sun showed over the horizon hills. +The bull-teams had taken up their steady forward push while the quails +were still flying to and from their morning water-holes. + +"Whoop-Up by noon," Barney predicted. + +"Yes, by noon," Tom Morse agreed. "In time for a real sure-enough +dinner with potatoes and beans and green stuff." + +"Y' bet yore boots, an' honest to gosh gravy," added Brad Stearns, +a thin and wrinkled little man whose leathery face and bright eyes +defied the encroachment of time. He was bald, except for a fringe of +grayish hair above the temples and a few long locks carefully disposed +over his shiny crown. But nobody could have looked at him and called +him old. + +They were to be disappointed. + +The teams struck the dusty road that terminated at the fort and +were plodding along it to the crackling accompaniment of the long +bull-whips. + +"Soon now," Morse shouted to Stearns. + +The little man nodded. "Mebbe they'll have green corn on the cob. +Betcha the price of the dinner they do." + +"You've made a bet, dad." + +Stearns halted the leaders. "What's that? Listen." + +The sound of shots drifted to them punctuated by faint, far yells. The +shots did not come in a fusillade. They were intermittent, died down, +popped out again, yielded to whoops in distant crescendo. + +"Injuns," said Stearns. "On the peck, looks like. Crees and Blackfeet, +maybe, but you never can tell. Better throw off the trail and dig in." + +West had ridden up. He nodded. "Till we know where we're at. Get busy, +boys." + +They drew up the wagons in a semicircle, end to end, the oxen bunched +inside, partially protected by a small cottonwood grove in the rear. + +This done, West gave further orders. "We gotta find out what's doin'. +Chances are it's nothin' but a coupla bunches of braves with a cargo +of redeye aboard, Tom, you an' Brad scout out an' take a look-see. +Don't be too venturesome. Soon's you find out what the rumpus is, +hot-foot it back and report, y' understand." The big wolfer snapped +out directions curtly. There was no more competent wagon boss in the +border-land than he. + +Stearns and Morse rode toward the fort. They deflected from the road +and followed the river-bank to take advantage of such shrubbery as +grew there. They moved slowly and cautiously, for in the Indian +country one took no unnecessary chances. From the top of a small rise, +shielded by a clump of willows, the two looked down on a field of +battle already decided. Bullets and arrows were still flying, but the +defiant, triumphant war-whoops of a band of painted warriors slowly +moving toward them showed that the day was won and lost. A smaller +group of Indians was retreating toward the swamp on the left-hand side +of the road. Two or three dead braves lay in the grassy swale between +the foes. + +"I done guessed it, first crack," Brad said. "Crees and Blackfeet. +They sure enough do mix it whenever they get together. The Crees +ce'tainly got the jump on 'em this time." + +It was an old story. From the northern woods the Crees had come +down to trade at the fort. They had met a band of Blackfeet who had +traveled up from the plains for the same purpose. Filled with bad +liquor, the hereditary enemies had as usual adjourned to the ground +outside for a settlement while the traders at the fort had locked the +gates and watched the battle from the loopholes of the stockade. + +"Reckon we better blow back to camp," suggested the old plainsman. +"Mr. Cree may be feelin' his oats heap much. White man look all same +Blackfeet to him like as not." + +"Look." Morse pointed to a dip in the swale. + +An Indian was limping through the brush, taking advantage of such +cover as he could find. He was wounded. His leg dragged and he moved +with difficulty. + +"He'll be a good Injun mighty soon," Stearns said, rubbing his bald +head as it shone in the sun. "Not a chance in the world for him. +They'll git him soon as they reach the coulee. See. They're stoppin' +to collect that other fellow's scalp." + +At a glance Morse had seen the situation. This was none of his affair. +It was tacitly understood that the traders should not interfere in +the intertribal quarrels of the natives. But old Brad's words, "good +Injun," had carried him back to a picture of a brown, slim girl +flashing indignation because Americans treated her race as though only +dead Indians were good ones. He could never tell afterward what was +the rational spring of his impulse. + +At the touch of the rein laid flat against its neck, the cow-pony he +rode laid back its ears, turned like a streak of light, and leaped to +a hand gallop. It swept down the slope and along the draw, gathering +speed with every jump. + +The rider let out a "Hi-yi-yi" to attract the attention of the wounded +brave. Simultaneously the limping fugitive and the Crees caught sight +of the flying horseman who had obtruded himself into the fire zone. + +An arrow whistled past Morse. He saw a bullet throw up a spurt of dirt +beneath the belly of his horse. The Crees were close to their quarry. +They closed in with a run. Tom knew it would be a near thing. He +slackened speed slightly and freed a foot from the stirrup, stiffening +it to carry weight. + +The wounded Indian crouched, began to run parallel with the horse, and +leaped at exactly the right instant. His hand caught the sleeve of his +rescuer at the same time that the flat of his foot dropped upon the +white man's boot. A moment, and his leg had swung across the rump of +the pony and he had settled to the animal's back. + +So close was it that a running Cree snatched at the bronco's tail and +was jerked from his feet before he could release his hold. + +As the cow-pony went plunging up the slope, Morse saw Brad Stearns +silhouetted against the sky-line at the summit. His hat was gone and +his bald head was shining in the sun. He was pumping bullets from his +rifle at the Crees surging up the hill after his companion. + +Stearns swung his horse and jumped it to a lope. Side by side with +Morse he went over the brow in a shower of arrows and slugs. + +"Holy mackerel, boy! What's eatin' you?" he yelled. "Ain't you got any +sense a-tall? Don't you know better 'n to jump up trouble thataway?" + +"We're all right now," the younger man said. "They can't catch us." + +The Crees were on foot and would be out of range by the time they +reached the hilltop. + +"Hmp! They'll come to our camp an' raise Cain. Why not? What business +we got monkeyin' with their scalping sociables? It ain't neighborly." + +"West won't like it," admitted Morse. + +"He'll throw a cat fit. What do you aim to do with yore friend +Mighty-Nigh-Lose-His-Scalp? If I know Bully--and you can bet a silver +fox fur ag'in' a yard o' tobacco that I do--he won't give no glad hand +to him. Not none." + +Morse did not know what he meant to do with him. He had let an impulse +carry him to quixotic action. Already he was half-sorry for it, but he +was obstinate enough to go through now he had started. + +When he realized the situation, Bully West exploded in language +sulphurous. He announced his determination to turn the wounded man +over to the Crees as soon as they arrived. + +"No," said Morse quietly. + +"No what?" + +"I won't stand for that. They'd murder him." + +"That any o' my business--or yours?" + +"I'm makin' it mine." + +The eyes of the two men crossed, as rapiers do, feeling out the +strength back of them. The wounded Indian, tall and slender, stood +straight as an arrow, his gaze now on one, now on the other. His face +was immobile and expressionless. It betrayed no sign of the emotions +within. + +"Show yore cards, Morse," said West. "What's yore play? I'm goin' to +tell the Crees to take him if they want him. You'll go it alone if you +go to foggin' with a six-shooter." + +The young man turned to the Indian he had rescued. He waved a hand +toward the horse from which they had just dismounted. "Up!" he +ordered. + +The Indian youth caught the point instantly. Without using the +stirrups he vaulted to the saddle, light as a mountain lion. His bare +heels dug into the sides of the animal, which was off as though shot +out of a gun. + +Horse and rider skirted the cottonwoods and disappeared in a +depression beyond. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +"SOMETHING ABOUT THESE GUYS" + + +West glared at Morse, his heavy chin outthrust, his bowed legs wide +apart. "You've done run on the rope long enough with me, young feller. +Here's where you take a fall hard." + +The younger man said nothing. He watched, warily. Was it to be a +gun-play? Or did the big bully mean to manhandle him? Probably the +latter. West was vain of his reputation as a two-fisted fighter. + +"I'm gonna beat you up, then turn you over to the Crees," the +infuriated man announced. + +"You can't do that, West. He's a white man same as you," protested +Stearns. + +"This yore put-in, Brad?" West, beside himself with rage, swung on the +little man and straddled forward a step or two threateningly. + +"You done said it," answered the old-timer, falling back. "An' don't +you come closter. I'm liable to get scared, an' you'd ought not to +forget I'm as big as you behind a six-shooter." + +"Here they come--like a swarm o' bees!" yelled Barney. + +The traders forgot, for the moment, their quarrel in the need of +common action. West snatched up a rifle and dropped a bullet in front +of the nearest Indian. The warning brought the Crees up short. They +held a long consultation and one of them came forward making the peace +sign. + +In pigeon English he expressed their demands. + +"He's gone--lit right out--stole one of our broncs. You can search the +camp if you've a mind to," West replied. + +The envoy reported. There was another long pow-wow. + +Brad, chewing tobacco complacently behind a wagon wheel, commented +aloud. "Can't make up their minds whether to come on an' massacree us +or not. They got a right healthy fear of our guns. Don't blame 'em a +bit." + +Some of the Crees were armed with bows and arrows, others with rifles. +But the trade guns sold the Indians of the Northern tribes were of the +poorest quality.[4] + +[Footnote 4: These flintlock muskets were inaccurate. They would not +carry far. Their owners were in constant danger of having fingers or a +hand blown off in explosions. The price paid for these cheap firearms +was based on the length of them. The butt was put on the floor and +the gun held upright. Skins laid flat were piled beside it till they +reached the muzzle. The trader exchanged the rifle for the furs. +(W.M.R.)] + +The whites, to the contrary, were armed with the latest repeating +Winchesters. In a fight with them the natives were at a terrible +disadvantage. + +The Crees realized this. A delegation of two came forward to search +the camp. West pointed out the tracks of the horse upon which their +tribal enemy had ridden away. + +They grunted, "Ugh! Ugh! Ugh!" + +Overbearing though he was, West was an embryonic diplomat. He filled +a water-bucket with whiskey and handed it, with a tin cup, to the +wrinkled old brave nearest him. + +"For our friends the Crees," he said. "Tell your chief my young +man didn't understand. He thought he was rescuing a Cree from the +Blackfeet." + +"Ugh! Ugh!" The Indians shuffled away with their booty. + +There was more talk, but the guttural protests died away before the +temptation of the liquor. The braves drank, flung a few shots in +bravado toward the wagons, and presently took themselves off. + +The traders did not renew their quarrel. West's reasons for not +antagonizing the Morse family were still powerful as ever. He subdued +his desire to punish the young man and sullenly gave orders to hitch +up the teams. + +It was mid-afternoon when the oxen jogged into Whoop-Up. The post was +a stockade fort, built in a square about two hundred yards long, of +cottonwood logs dovetailed together. The buildings on each side of +the plaza faced inward. Loopholes had been cut in the bastions as a +protection against Indians. + +In the big stores was a large supply of blankets, beads, provisions, +rifles, and clothing. The adjacent rooms were half-empty now, but in +the spring they would be packed to the eaves with thousands of buffalo +robes and furs brought in from outlying settlements by hunters. Later +these would be hauled to Fort Benton and from there sent down the +Missouri to St. Louis and other points. + +Morse, looking round, missed a familiar feature. + +"Where's the liquor?" he asked. + +"S-sh!" warned the clerk with whom he was talking. "Haven't you heard? +There's a bunch of police come into the country from Winnipeg. The +lid's on tight." His far eye drooped to the cheek in a wise wink. "If +you've brought in whiskey, you'd better get it out of the fort and +bury it." + +"That's up to West. I wouldn't advise any police to monkey with a +cargo of his." + +"You don't say." The clerk's voice was heavy with sarcasm. "Well, I'll +just make a li'l' bet with you. If the North-West Mounted start to +arrest Bully West or to empty his liquor-kegs, they'll go right +through with the job. They're go-getters, these red-coats are." + +"Red-coats? Not soldiers, are they?" + +"Well, they are and they ain't. They're drilled an' in companies. But +they can arrest any one they've a mind to, and their officers can try +and sentence folks. They don't play no favorites either. Soon as they +hear of this mix-up between the Crees and the Blackfeet they'll be +right over askin' whyfors, and if they find who gave 'em the booze +some one will be up to the neck in trouble and squawkin' for help." + +West had been talking in whispers with Reddy Madden, the owner of the +place. He stepped to the door. + +"Don't onhook, Brad. We're travelin' some more first," he called to +Stearns. + +The oxen plodded out of the stockade and swung to the left. A guide +rode beside West and Morse. He was Harvey Gosse, a whiskey-runner +known to both of them. The man was a long, loose-limbed fellow with a +shrewd eye and the full, drooping lower lip of irresolution. It had +been a year since either of the Fort Benton men had been in the +country. Gosse told them of the change that was taking place in it. + +"Business ain't what it was, an' that ain't but half of it," the lank +rider complained regretfully. "It ain't ever gonna be any more. These +here red-coats are plumb ruinin' trade. Squint at a buck cross-eyed, +whisper rum to him, an' one o' these guys jumps a-straddle o' yore +neck right away." + +"How many of these--what is it you call 'em, Mounted Police?--well, +how many of 'em are there in the country?" asked West. + +"Not so many. I reckon a hundred or so, far as I've heard tell." + +West snorted scornfully. "And you're lettin' this handful of +tenderfeet buffalo you! Hell's hinges! Ain't none of you got any +guts?" + +Gosse dragged slowly a brown hand across an unshaven chin. "I reckon +you wouldn't call 'em tenderfeet if you met up with 'em, Bully. +There's something about these guys--I dunno what it is exactly--but +there's sure something that tells a fellow not to prod 'em overly +much." + +"Quick on the shoot?" the big trader wanted to know. + +"No, it ain't that. They don't hardly ever draw a gun. They jest walk +in kinda quiet an' easy, an' tell you it'll be thisaway. And tha's the +way it is every crack outa the box." + +"Hmp!" West exuded boastful incredulity. "I reckon they haven't bumped +into any one man-size yet." + +The lank whiskey-runner guided the train, by winding draws, into the +hills back of the post. Above a small gulch, at the head of it, the +teams were stopped and unloaded. The barrels were rolled downhill into +the underbrush where they lay cached out of sight. From here they +would be distributed as needed. + +"You boys'll take turn an' turn about watching till I've sold the +cargo," West announced. "Arrange that among yoreselves. Tom, I'll let +you fix up how you'll spell each other. Only thing is, one of you has +to be here all the time, y' understand." + +Morse took the first watch and was followed by Stearns, who in turn +gave place to Barney. The days grew to a week. Sometimes West appeared +with a buyer in a cart or leading a pack-horse. Then the cached +fire-water would be diminished by a keg or two. + +It was a lazy, sleepy life. There was no need for a close guard. +Nobody knew where the whiskey was except themselves and a few +tight-mouthed traders. Morse discovered in himself an inordinate +capacity for sleep. He would throw himself down on the warm, sundried +grass and fall into a doze almost instantly. When the rays of the sun +grew too hot, it was easy to roll over into the shade of the draw. +He could lie for hours on his back after he wakened and watch +cloud-skeins elongate and float away, thinking of nothing or letting +thoughts happen in sheer idle content. + +He had never had a girl, to use the word current among his fellows. +His scheme of life would, he supposed, include women by and by, but +hitherto he had dwelt in a man's world, in a universe of space and +sunshine and blowing wind, under primitive conditions that made for +tough muscles and a clean mind trained to meet frontier emergencies. +But now, to his disgust, he found slipping into his reveries pictures +of a slim, dark girl, arrow-straight, with eyes that held for him only +scorn and loathing. The odd thing about it was that when his brain was +busy with her a strange exultant excitement tingled through his veins. + +One day a queer thing happened. He had never heard of psychic +phenomena or telepathy, but he opened his eyes from a day-dream of her +to see Jessie McRae looking down at him. + +She was on an Indian cayuse, round-bellied and rough. Very erect she +sat, and on her face was the exact expression of scornful hatred he +had seen in his vision of her. + +He jumped to his feet. "You--here!" + +A hot color flooded her face with anger to the roots of the hair. +Without a word, without another glance at him, she laid the bridle +rein to the pony's neck and swung away. + +Unprotesting, he let her go. The situation had jumped at him too +unexpectedly for him to know how to meet it. He stood, motionless, the +red light in his eyes burning like distant camp-fires in the night. +For the first time in his life he had been given the cut direct by a +woman. + +Yet she wasn't a woman after all. She was a maid, with that passionate +sense of tragedy which comes only to the very young. + +It was in his mind to slap a saddle on his bronco and ride after her. +But why? Could he by sheer dominance of will change her opinion of +him? She had grounded it on good and sufficient reasons. He was +associated in her mind with the greatest humiliation of her life, with +the stinging lash that had cut into her young pride and her buoyant +courage as cruelly as it had into her smooth, satiny flesh. Was it +likely she would listen to any regrets, any explanations? Her hatred +of him was not a matter for argument. It was burnt into her soul as +with a red-hot brand. He could not talk away what he had done or the +thing that he was. + +She had come upon him by chance while he was asleep. He guessed that +Angus McRae's party had reached Whoop-Up and had stopped to buy +supplies and perhaps to sell hides and pemmican. The girl had probably +ridden out from the stockade to the open prairie because she loved to +ride. The rest needed no conjecture. In that lone land of vast spaces +travelers always exchanged greetings. She had discovered him lying +in the grass. He might be sick or wounded or dead. The custom of the +country would bring her straight across the swales toward him to find +out whether he needed help. + +Then she had seen who he was--and had ridden away. + +A sardonic smile of self-mockery stamped for a moment on his brown +boyish face the weariness of the years. + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +THE MAN IN THE SCARLET JACKET + + +Morse ambled out at a road gait to take his turn at guard duty. He was +following the principle that the longest way round is the shortest +road to a given place. The reason for this was to ward off any +suspicion that might have arisen if the watchers had always come and +gone by the same trail. Therefore they started for any point of the +compass, swung round in a wide detour, and in course of time arrived +at the cache. + +There wasn't any hurry anyhow. Each day had twenty-four hours, and a +fellow lived just as long if he didn't break his neck galloping along +with his tail up like a hill steer on a stampede. + +To-day Morse dropped in toward the cache from due west. His eyes +were open, even if the warmth of the midday sun did make him sleepy. +Something he saw made him slip from the saddle, lead his horse into a +draw, and move forward very carefully through the bunch grass. + +What he had seen was a man crouched behind some brush, looking down +into the little gorge where the whiskey cache was--a man in leather +boots, tight riding-breeches, scarlet jacket, and jaunty forage cap. +It needed no second glance to tell Tom Morse that the police had run +down the place where they had hidden their cargo. + +From out of the little canon a man appeared. He was carrying a keg of +whiskey. The man was Barney. West had no doubt sent word to him that +he would shortly bring a buyer with him to the rendezvous. + +The man in the scarlet jacket rose and stepped out into the open. He +was a few feet from Barney. In his belt there was a revolver, but he +did not draw it. + +Barney stopped and stared at him, his mouth open, eyes bulging. "Where +in Heligoland you come from?" he asked. + +"From Sarnia, Ontario," the red-coat answered. "Glad to meet you, +friend. I've been looking for you several days." + +"For me!" said Barney blankly. + +"For you--and for that keg of forty-rod you're carrying. No, don't +drop it. We can talk more comfortably while both your hands are busy." +The constable stepped forward and picked from the ground a rifle. +"I've been lying in the brush two hours waiting for you to get +separated from this. Didn't want you making any mistakes in your +excitement." + +"Mistakes!" repeated Barney. + +"Yes. You're under arrest, you know, for whiskey-smuggling." + +"You're one of these here border police." Barney used the rising +inflection in making his statement. + +"Constable Winthrop Beresford, North-West Mounted, at your service," +replied the officer jauntily. He was a trim, well-set-up youth, quick +of step and crisp of speech. + +"What you gonna do with me?" + +"Take you to Fort Macleod." + +It was perhaps because his eyes were set at not quite the right angles +and because they were so small and wolfish that Barney usually aroused +distrust. He suggested now, with an ingratiating whine in his voice, +that he would like to see a man at Whoop-Up first. + +"Jes' a li'l' matter of business," he added by way of explanation. + +The constable guessed at his business. The man wanted to let his boss +know what had taken place and to give him a chance to rescue him if he +would. Beresford's duty was to find out who was back of this liquor +running. It would be worth while knowing what man Barney wanted to +talk with. He could afford to take a chance on the rescue. + +"Righto," he agreed. "You may put that barrel down now." + +Barney laid it down, end up. With one sharp drive of the rifle butt +the officer broke in the top of the keg, He kicked the barrel over +with his foot. + +This was the moment Morse chose for putting in an appearance. + +"Hello! What's doin'?" he asked casually. + +Beresford, cool and quiet, looked straight at him. "I'll ask _you_ +that." + +"Kinda expensive to irrigate the prairie that way, ain't it?" + +"Doesn't cost me anything. How about you?" + +Morse laughed at the question fired back at him so promptly. This +young man was very much on the job. "Not a bean," the Montanan said. + +"Good. Then you'll enjoy the little show I'm putting on--five thousand +dollars' worth of liquor spilt all at one time." + +"Holy Moses! Where is this blind tiger you're raidin'?" + +"Down in the gully. Lucky you happened along just by chance. You'll be +able to carry the good news to Whoop-Up and adjacent points." + +"You're not really aimin' to spill all that whiskey." + +"That's my intention. Any objections?" The scarlet-coated officer +spoke softly, without any edge to his voice. But Tom began to +understand why the clerk at the trading-post had called the Mounted +Police go-getters. This smooth-shaven lad, so easy and carefree +of manner, had a gleam in his eye that meant business. His very +gentleness was ominous. + +Tom Morse reflected swiftly. His uncle's firm had taken a chance of +this very finale when it had sent a convoy of liquor into forbidden +territory. Better to lose the stock than to be barred by the Canadian +Government from trading with the Indians at all. This officer was not +one to be bribed or bullied. He would go through with the thing he had +started. + +"Why, no! How could I have any objections?" Morse said. + +He shot a swift, slant look at Barney, a look that told the Irishman +to say nothing and know nothing, and that he would be protected +against the law. + +"Glad you haven't," Constable Beresford replied cheerfully--so very +cheerfully in fact that Morse suspected he would not have been much +daunted if objections had been mentioned. "Perhaps you'll help me with +my little job, then." + +The trader grinned. He might as well go the limit with the bluff he +was playing. "Sure. I'll help you make a fourth o' July outa the kegs. +Lead me to 'em." + +"You don't know where they are, of course?" + +"In the gully, you said," Morse replied innocently + +"So I did. Righto. Down you go, then." The constable turned to Barney. +"You next, friend." + +A well-defined trail led down the steep side of the gulch. It ended in +a thick growth of willow saplings. Underneath the roof of this foliage +were more than a score of whiskey-casks. + +After ten minutes with the rifle butt there was nothing to show for +the cache but broken barrels and a trough of wet sand where the liquor +had run down the bed of the dry gully. + +It was time, Morse thought, to play his own small part in the +entertainment. + +"After you, gentlemen," Beresford said, stepping aside to let them +take the trail up. + +Morse too moved back to let Barney pass. The eyes of the two men met +for a fraction of a second. Tom's lips framed silently one word. In +that time a message was given and received. + +The young man followed Barney, the constable at his heels. Morse +stumbled, slipped to all fours, and slid back. He flung out his arms +to steady himself and careened back against the constable. His flying +hands caught at the scarlet coat. His bent head and shoulders thrust +Beresford back and down. + +Barney started to run. + +The officer struggled to hold his footing against the awkward incubus, +to throw the man off so that he could pursue Barney. His efforts were +vain. Morse, evidently trying to regain his equilibrium, plunged +wildly at him and sent him ploughing into the willows. The Montanan +landed heavily on top, pinned him down, and smothered him. + +The scarlet coat was a center of barrel hoops, bushes, staves, and +wildly jerking arms and legs. + +Morse made heroic efforts to untangle himself from the clutter. Once +or twice he extricated himself almost, only to lose his balance on the +slippery bushes and come skating down again on the officer just as he +was trying to rise. + +It was a scene for a moving-picture comedy, if the screen had been a +feature of that day. + +When at last the two men emerged from the gulch, Barney was nowhere to +be seen. With him had vanished the mount of Beresford. + +The constable laughed nonchalantly. He had just lost a prisoner, which +was against the unwritten law of the Force, but he had gained another +in his place. It would not be long till he had Barney too. + +"Pretty work," he said appreciatively. "You couldn't have done it +better if you'd done it on purpose, could you?" + +"Done what?" asked Morse, with bland naivete. + +"Made a pillow and a bed of me, skated on me, bowled me over like a +tenpin." + +"I ce'tainly was awkward. Couldn't get my footin' at all, seemed like. +Why, where's Barney?" Apparently the trader had just made a discovery. + +"Ask of the winds, 'Oh, where?'" Beresford dusted off his coat, his +trousers, and his cap. When he had removed the evidence of the battle +of the gulch, he set his cap at the proper angle and cocked an +inquiring eye at the other. "I suppose you know you're under arrest." + +"Why, no! Am I? What for? Which of the statues, laws, and ordinances +of Queen Vic have I been bustin' without knowin' of them?" + +"For aiding and abetting the escape of a prisoner." + +"Did I do all that? And when did I do it?" + +"While you were doing that war-dance on what was left of my manhandled +geography." + +"Can you arrest a fellow for slippin'?" + +"Depends on how badly he slips. I'm going to take a chance on +arresting you, anyhow." + +"Gonna take away my six-shooter and handcuff me?" + +"I'll take your revolver. If necessary, I'll put on the cuffs." + +Morse looked at him, not without admiration. The man in the scarlet +jacket wasted nothing. There was about him no superfluity of build, +of gesture, of voice. Beneath the close-fitting uniform the muscles +rippled and played when he moved. His shoulders and arms were those +of a college oarsman. Lean-flanked and clean-limbed, he was in the +hey-day of a splendid youth. It showed in the steady eyes set wide in +the tanned face, in the carriage of the close-cropped, curly head, in +the spring of the step. The Montanan recognized in him a kinship of +dynamic force. + +"Just what would I be doing?" the whiskey-runner asked, smiling. + +Beresford met his smile. "I fancy I'll find that out pretty soon. Your +revolver, please." He held out his hand, palm up. + +"Let's get this straight. We're man to man. What'll you do if I find +I've got no time to go to Fort Macleod with you?" + +"Take you with me." + +"Dead or alive?" + +"No, alive." + +"And if I won't go?" asked Morse. + +"Oh, you'll go." The officer's bearing radiated a quiet, imperturbable +confidence. His hand was still extended, "_If_ you please." + +"No hurry. Do you know what you're up against? When I draw this gun I +can put a bullet through your head and ride away?" + +"Yes." + +"Unless, of course, you plug me first." + +"Can't do that. Against the regulations." + +"Much obliged for that information. You've got only a dead man's +chance then--if I show fight." + +"Better not. Game hardly worth the candle. My pals would run you +down," the constable advised coolly. + +"You still intend to arrest me?" + +"Oh, yes." + +As Morse looked at him, patient as an animal of prey, steady, +fearless, an undramatic Anglo-Saxon who meant to go through with the +day's work, he began to understand the power that was to make the +North-West Mounted Police such a force in the land. The only way he +could prevent this man from arresting him was to kill the constable; +and if he killed him, other jaunty red-coated youths would come to +kill or be killed. It came to him that he was up against a new order +which would wipe Bully West and his kind from the land. + +He handed his revolver to Beresford. "I'll ride with you." + +"Good. Have to borrow your horse till we reach Whoop-Up. You won't +mind walking?" + +"Not at all. Some folks think that's what legs were made for," +answered Morse, grinning. + +As he strode across the prairie beside the horse, Morse was still +puzzling over the situation. He perceived that the strength of the +officer's position was wholly a moral one. A lawbreaker was confronted +with an ugly alternative. The only way to escape arrest was to commit +murder. Most men would not go that far, and of those who would the +great majority would be deterred because eventually punishment was +sure. The slightest hesitation, the least apparent doubt, a flicker of +fear on the officer's face, would be fatal to success. He won because +he serenely expected to win, and because there was back of him a +silent, impalpable force as irresistible as the movement of a glacier. + +Beresford must have known that the men who lived at Whoop-Up were +unfriendly to the North-West Mounted. Some of them had been put out of +business. Their property had been destroyed and confiscated. Fines +had been imposed on them. The current whisper was that the +whiskey-smugglers would retaliate against the constables in person +whenever there was a chance to do so with impunity. Some day a +debonair wearer of the scarlet coat would ride out gayly from one +of the forts and a riderless horse would return at dusk. There were +outlaws who would ask nothing better than a chance to dry-gulch one of +these inquisitive riders of the plains. + +But Beresford rode into the stockade and swung from the saddle with +smiling confidence. He nodded here and there casually to dark, sullen +men who watched his movements with implacably hostile eyes. + +His words were addressed to Reddy Madden. "Can you let me have a horse +for a few days and charge it to the Force? I've lost mine." + +Some one sniggered offensively. Barney had evidently reached Whoop-Up +and was in hiding. + +"Your horse came in a while ago, constable," Madden said civilly. +"It's in the corral back of the store." + +"Did it come in without a rider?" Beresford asked. + +The question was unnecessary. The horse would have gone to Fort +Macleod and not have come to Whoop-Up unless a rider had guided it +here. But sometimes one found out things from unwilling witnesses if +one asked questions. + +"Didn't notice. I was in the store myself." + +"Thought perhaps you hadn't noticed," the officer said. "None of you +other gentlemen noticed either, did you?" + +The "other gentlemen" held a dogged, sulky silence. A girl cantered +through the gate of the stockade and up to the store. At sight of +Morse her eyes passed swiftly to Beresford. His answered smilingly +what she had asked. It was all over in a flash, but it told the man +from Montana who the informer was that had betrayed to the police the +place of the whiskey cache. + +To the best of her limited chance, Jessie McRae was paying an +installment on the debt she owed Bully West and Tom Morse. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +AT SWEET WATER CREEK + + +Before a fire of buffalo chips Constable Beresford and his prisoner +smoked the pipe of peace. Morse sat on his heels, legs crossed, after +the manner of the camper. The officer lounged at full length, an elbow +dug into the sand as a support for his head. The Montanan was +on parole, so that for the moment at least their relations were +forgotten. + +"After the buffalo--what?" asked the American. "The end of the +Indian--is that what it means? And desolation on the plains. Nobody +left but the Hudson's Bay Company trappers, d'you reckon?" + +The Canadian answered in one word. "Cattle." + +"Some, maybe," Morse assented. "But, holy Moses, think of the millions +it would take to stock this country." + +"Bet you the country's stocked inside of five years of the time the +buffalo are cleared out. Look at what the big Texas drives are doing +in Colorado and Wyoming and Montana. Get over the idea that this land +up here is a desert. That's a fool notion our school geographies are +responsible for. Great American Desert? Great American fiddlesticks! +It's a man's country, if you like; but I've yet to see the beat of +it." + +Morse had ceased to pay attention. His head was tilted, and he was +listening. + +"Some one ridin' this way," he said presently. "Hear the hoofs click +on the shale. Who is it? I wonder. An' what do they want? When folks' +intentions hasn't been declared it's a good notion to hold a hand you +can raise on." + +Without haste and without delay Beresford got to his feet. "We'll step +back into the shadow," he announced. + +"Looks reasonable to me," agreed the smuggler. + +They waited in the semi-darkness back of the camp-fire. + +Some one shouted. "Hello, the camp!" At the sound of that clear, +bell-like voice Morse lifted his head to listen better. + +The constable answered the call. + +Two riders came into the light. One was a girl, the other a slim, +straight young Indian in deerskin shirt and trousers. The girl swung +from the saddle and came forward to the camp-fire. The companion of +her ride shadowed her. + +Beresford and his prisoner advanced from the darkness. + +"Bully West's after you. He's sworn to kill you," the girl called to +the constable. + +"How do you know?" + +"Onistah heard him." She indicated with a wave of her hand the +lithe-limbed youth beside her. "Onistah was passing the stable--behind +it, back of the corral. This West was gathering a mob to follow +you--said he was going to hang you for destroying his whiskey." + +"He is, eh?" Beresford's salient jaw set. His light blue eyes gleamed +hard and chill. He would see about that. + +"They'll be here soon. This West was sure you'd camp here at Sweet +Water Creek, close to the ford." A note of excitement pulsed in the +girl's voice. "We heard 'em once behind us on the road. You'd better +hurry." + +The constable swung toward the Montanan. His eyes bored into those of +the prisoner. Would this man keep his parole or not? He would find out +pretty soon. + +"Saddle up, Morse. I'll pack my kit. We'll hit the trail." + +"Listen." Jessie stood a moment, head lifted. "What's that?" + +Onistah moved a step forward, so that for a moment the firelight +flickered over the copper-colored face. Tom Morse made a discovery. +This man was the Blackfoot he had rescued from the Crees. + +"Horses," the Indian said, and held up the fingers of both hands to +indicate the numbers. "Coming up creek. Here soon." + +"We'll move back to the big rocks and I'll make a stand there," +the officer told the whiskey-runner. "Slap the saddles on without +cinching. We've got no time to lose." His voice lost its curtness as +he turned to the girl. "Miss McRae, I'll not forget this. Very likely +you've saved my life. Now you and Onistah had better slip away +quietly. You mustn't be seen here." + +"Why mustn't I?" she asked quickly. "I don't care who sees me." + +She looked at Morse as she spoke, head up, with that little touch of +scornful defiance in the quivering nostrils that seemed to express a +spirit free and unafraid. The sense of superiority is generally not a +lovely manifestation in any human being, but there are moments when it +tells of something fine, a disdain of actions low and mean. + +Morse strode away to the place where the horses were picketed. He +could hear voices farther down the creek, caught once a snatch of +words. + +"... must be somewheres near, I tell you." + +Noiselessly he slipped on the saddles, pulled the picket-pins, and +moved toward the big rocks. + +The place was a landmark. The erosion of the ages had played strange +tricks with the sandstone. The rocks rose like huge red toadstools or +like prehistoric animals of vast size. One of them was known as the +Three Bears, another as the Elephant. + +Among these boulders Morse found the party he had just left. The +officer was still trying to persuade Jessie McRae to attempt escape. +She refused, stubbornly. + +"There are three of us here. Onistah is a good shot. So am I. For that +matter, if anybody is going to escape, it had better be you," she +said. + +"Too late now," Morse said. "See, they've found the camp-fire." + +Nine or ten riders had come out of the darkness and were approaching +the camping-ground. West was in the lead. Morse recognized Barney +and Brad Stearns. Two of the others were half-breeds, one an Indian +trailer of the Piegan tribe. + +"He must 'a' heard us comin' and pulled out," Barney said. + +"Then he's back in the red rocks," boomed West triumphantly. + +"Soon find out." Brad Stearns turned the head of his horse toward the +rocks and shouted. "Hello, Tom! You there?" + +No answer came from the rocks. + +"Don't prove a thing," West broke out impatiently. "This fellow's got +Tom buffaloed. Didn't he make him smash the barrels? Didn't he take +away his six-gun from him and bring him along like he hadn't any mind +of his own? Tom's yellow. Got a streak a foot wide." + +"Nothin' of the kind," denied Stearns, indignation in his voice. "I +done brought up that boy by hand--learned him all he knows about +ridin' and ropin'. He'll do to take along." + +"Hmp! He always fooled you, Brad. Different here. I'm aimin' to give +him the wallopin' of his life when I meet up with him. And that'll be +soon, if he's up there in the rocks. I'm goin' a-shootin'." Bully West +drew his revolver and rode forward. + +The constable had disposed of his forces so that behind the cover of +the sandstone boulders they commanded the approach. He had tried to +persuade Jessie that this was not her fight, but a question from her +had silenced him. + +"If that Bully West finds me here, after he's killed you, d' you think +I can get him to let me go because it wasn't my fight?" + +She had asked it with flashing eyes, in which for an instant he had +seen the savagery of fear leap out. Beresford was troubled. The girl +was right enough. If West went the length of murder, he would be an +outlaw. Sleeping Dawn would not be safe with him after she had ridden +out to warn his enemy that he was coming. The fellow was a primeval +brute. His reputation had run over the whole border country of +Rupert's Land. + +Now he appealed to Morse. "If they get me, will you try to save Miss +McRae? This fellow West is a devil, I hear." + +The officer caught a gleam of hot red eyes. "I'll 'tend to that. We'll +mix first, him 'n' me. Question now is, do I get a gun?" + +"What for?" + +"Didn't you hear him make his brags about what he was gonna do to me? +If there's shootin' I'm in on it, ain't I?" + +"No. You're a prisoner. I can't arm you unless your life is in +danger." + +West pulled up his horse about sixty yards from the rocks. He shouted +a profane order. The purport of it was that Beresford had better come +out with his hands up if he didn't want to be dragged out by a rope +around his neck. The man's speech crackled with oaths and obscenity. + +The constable stepped into the open a few yards. "What do you want?" +he asked. + +"You." The whiskey-runner screamed it in a sudden gust of passion. +"Think you can make a fool of Bully West? Think you can bust up our +cargo an' get away with it? I'll show you where you head in at." + +"Don't make any mistake, West," advised the officer, his voice cold as +the splash of ice-water. "Three of us are here, all with rifles, all +dead shots. If you attack us, some of you are going to get killed." + +"Tha's a lie. You're alone--except for Tom Morse, an' he ain't fool +enough to fight to go to jail. I've got you where I want you." West +swung from the saddle and came straddling forward. In the uncertain +light he looked more like some misbegotten ogre than a human being. + +"That's far enough," warned Beresford, not a trace of excitement in +manner or speech. His hands hung by his sides. He gave no sign of +knowing that he had a revolver strapped to his hip ready for action. + +The liquor smuggler stopped to pour out abuse. He was working himself +up to a passion that would justify murder. The weapon in his hand +swept wildly back and forth. Presently it would focus down to a deadly +concentration in which all motion would cease. + +The torrent of vilification died on the man's lips. He stared past the +constable with bulging eyes. From the rocks three figures had come. +Two of them carried rifles. All three of them he recognized. His +astonishment paralyzed the scurrilous tongue. What was McRae's girl +doing at the camp of the officer? + +It was characteristic of him that he suspected the worst of her. +Either Tom Morse or this red-coat had beaten him to his prey. Jealousy +and outraged vanity flared up in him so that discretion vanished. + +The barrel of his revolver came down and began to spit flame. + +Beresford gave orders. "Back to the rocks." He retreated, backward, +firing as he moved. + +The companions of West surged forward. Shots, shouts, the shifting +blur of moving figures, filled the night. Under cover of the darkness +the defenders reached again the big rocks. + +The constable counted noses. "Everybody all right?" he asked. Then, +abruptly, he snapped out: "Who was responsible for that crazy business +of you coming out into the open?" + +"Me," said the girl. "I wanted that West to know you weren't alone." + +"Didn't you know better than to let her do it?" the officer demanded +of Morse. + +"He couldn't help it. He tried to keep me back. What right has he to +interfere with me?" she wanted to know, stiffening. + +"You'll do as I say now," the constable said crisply. "Get back of +that rock there, Miss McRae, and stay there. Don't move from cover +unless I tell you to." + +Her dark, stormy eyes challenged his, but she moved sullenly to obey. +Rebel though she was, the code of the frontier claimed and held her +respect. She had learned of life that there were times when her will +must be subordinated for the general good. + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +TOM MAKES A COLLECTION + + +The attackers drew back and gathered together for consultation. West's +anger had stirred their own smoldering resentment at the police, had +dominated them, and had brought them on a journey of vengeance. But +they had not come out with any intention of storming a defended +fortress. The enthusiasm of the small mob ebbed. + +"I reckon we done bit off more'n we can chaw," Harvey Gosse murmured, +rubbing his bristly chin. "I ain't what you might call noways anxious +to have them fellows spill lead into me." + +"Ten of us here. One man, an Injun, an' a breed girl over there. You +lookin' for better odds, Harv?" jeered the leader of the party. + +"I never heard that a feller was any less dead because an Injun or a +girl shot him," the lank smuggler retorted. + +"Be reasonable, Bully," urged Barney with his ingratiating whine. "We +come out to fix the red-coat. We figured he was alone except for Tom, +an' o' course Tom's with us. But this here's a different proposition. +Too many witnesses ag'in' us. I reckon you ain't tellin' us it's safe +to shoot up Angus McRae's daughter even if she is a metis." + +"Forget her," the big whiskey-runner snarled. "She won't be a witness +against us." + +"Why won't she?" + +"Hell's hinges! Do I have to tell you all my plans? I'm sayin' she +won't. That goes." He flung out a gesture of scarcely restrained rage. +He was not one who could reason away opposition with any patience. It +was his temperament to override it. + +Brad Stearns rubbed his bald head. He always did when he was working +out a mental problem. West's declaration could mean only one of two +things. Either the girl would not be alive to give witness or she +would be silent because she had thrown in her lot with the big trader. + +The old-timer knew West's vanity and his weakness for women. From Tom +Morse he had heard of his offer to McRae for the girl. Now he had no +doubt what the man intended. + +But what of her? What of the girl he had seen at her father's camp, +the heart's desire of the rugged old Scotchman? In the lightness +of her step, in the lift of her head, in speech and gesture and +expression of face, she was of the white race, an inheritor of its +civilization and of its traditions. Only her dusky color and a certain +wild shyness seemed born of the native blood in her. She was proud, +passionate, high-spirited. Would she tamely accept Bully West for her +master and go to his tent as his squaw? Brad didn't believe it. She +would fight--fight desperately, with barbaric savagery. + +Her fight would avail her nothing. If driven to it, West would take +her with him into the fastnesses of the Lone Lands. They would +disappear from the sight of men for months. He would travel swiftly +with her to the great river. Every sweep of his canoe paddle would +carry them deeper into that virgin North where they could live on what +his rifle and rod won for the pot. A little salt, pemmican, and flour +would be all the supplies he needed to take with them. + +Brad had no intention of being a cat's-paw for him. The older man had +come along to save Tom Morse from prison and for no other reason. He +did not intend to be swept into indiscriminate crime. + +"Don't go with me, Bully," Stearns said. "Count me out. Right here's +where I head for Whoop-Up." + +He turned his horse's head and rode into the darkness. + +West looked after him, cursing. "We're better off without the +white-livered coyote," he said at last. + +"Brad ain't so fur off at that. I'd like blame well to be moseyin' to +Whoop-Up my own self," Gosse said uneasily. + +"You'll stay right here an' go through with this job, Harv," West +told him flatly. "All you boys'll do just that. If any of you's got +a different notion we'll settle that here an' now. How about it?" He +straddled up and down in front of his men, menacing them with knotted +fists and sulky eyes. + +Nobody cared to argue the matter with him. He showed his broken teeth +in a sour grin. + +"Tha's settled, then," he went on. "It's my say-so. My orders go--if +there's no objections." + +His outthrust head, set low on the hunched shoulders, moved from right +to left threateningly as his gaze passed from one to another. If there +were any objections they were not mentioned aloud. + +"Now we know where we're at," he continued. "It'll be thisaway. Most +of us will scatter out an' fire at the rocks from the front here; the +others'll sneak round an' come up from behind--get right into the +rocks before this bully-puss fellow knows it. If you get a chance, +plug him in the back, but don't hurt the Injun girl. Y' understand? I +want her alive an' not wounded. If she gets shot up, some one's liable +to get his head knocked off." + +But it did not, after all, turn out quite the way West had planned it. +He left out of account one factor--a man among the rocks who had been +denied a weapon and any part in the fighting. + +The feint from the front was animated enough. The attackers scattered +and from behind clumps of brush grass and bushes poured in a fire that +kept the defenders busy. Barney, with the half-breeds and the Indian +at heel, made a wide circle and crept up to the red sandstone +outcroppings. He did not relish the job any more than those behind +him did, but he was a creature of West and usually did as he was told +after a bit of grumbling. It was not safe for him to refuse. + +To Tom Morse, used to Bully West and his ways, the frontal attack did +not seem quite genuine. It was desultory and ineffective. Why? What +trick did Bully have up his sleeve? Tom put himself in his place to +see what he would do. + +And instantly he knew. The real attack would come from the rear. With +the firing of the first shot back there, Bully West would charge. +Taken on both sides the garrison would fall easy victims. + +The constable and Onistah were busy answering the fire of the +smugglers. Sleeping Dawn was crouched down behind two rocks, the +barrel of her rifle gleaming through a slit of open space between +them. She was compromising between the orders given her and the +anxiety in her to fight back Bully West. As much as she could she kept +under cover, while at the same time firing into the darkness whenever +she thought she saw a movement. + +Morse slipped rearward on a tour of investigation. The ground here +fell away rather sharply, so that one coming from behind would have to +climb over a boulder field rising to the big rocks. It took Tom only a +casual examination to see that a surprise would have to be launched by +way of a sort of rough natural stairway. + +A flat shoulder of sandstone dominated the stairway from above. Upon +this Morse crouched, every sense alert to detect the presence of any +one stealing up the pass. He waited, eager and yet patient. What he +was going to attempt had its risk, but the danger whipped the blood in +his veins to a still excitement. + +Occasionally, at intervals, the rifles cracked. Except for that no +other sound came to him. He could keep no count of time. It seemed to +him that hours slipped away. In reality it could have been only a few +minutes. + +Below, from the foot of the winding stairway, there was a sound, such +a one as might come from the grinding of loose rubble beneath the sole +of a boot. Presently the man on the ledge heard it again, this time +more distinctly. Some one was crawling up the rocks. + +Tom peered into the darkness intently. He could see nothing except the +flat rocks disappearing vaguely in the gloom. Nor could he hear again +the crunch of a footstep on disintegrated sandstone. His nerves grew +taut. Could he have made a mistake? Was there another way up from +behind? + +Then, at the turn of the stairway, a few feet below him, a figure rose +in silhouette. It appeared with extraordinary caution, first a head, +then the barrel of a rifle, finally a crouched body followed by bowed +legs. On hands and knees it crept forward, hitching the weapon along +beside it. Exactly opposite Morse, under the very shadow of the +sloping ledge on which he lay, the figure rose and straightened. + +The man stood there for a second, making up his mind to move on. He +was one of the half-breeds West had brought with him. Almost into his +ear came a stern whisper. + +"Hands up! I've got you covered. Don't move. Don't say a word." + +Two arms shot skyward. In the fingers of one hand a rifle was +clenched. + +Morse leaned forward and caught hold of it. "I'll take this," he said. +The brown fingers relaxed. "Skirt round the edge of the rock there. +Lie face down in that hollow. Got a six-shooter." + +He had. Morse took it from him. + +"If you move or speak one word, I'll pump lead into you," the Montanan +cautioned. + +The half-breed looked into his chill eyes and decided to take no +chances. He lay down on his face with hands stretched out exactly as +ordered. + +His captor returned to the shoulder of rock above the trail. Presently +another head projected itself out of the darkness. A man crept up, and +like the first stopped to take stock of his surroundings. + +Against the back of his neck something cold pressed. + +"Stick up your hands, Barney," a voice ordered. + +The little man let out a yelp. "Mother o' Moses, don't shoot." + +"How many more of you?" asked Morse sharply. + +"One more." + +The man behind the rifle collected his weapons and put Barney +alongside his companion. Within five minutes he had added a third man +to the collection. + +With a sardonic grin he drove them before him to Beresford. + +"I'm a prisoner an' not in this show, you was careful to explain to +me, Mr. Constable, but I busted the rules an' regulations to collect a +few specimens of my own," he drawled by way of explanation. + +Beresford's eyes gleamed. The debonair impudence of the procedure +appealed mightily to him. He did not know how this young fellow had +done it, but he must have acted with cool nerve and superb daring. + +"Where were they? And how did you get 'em without a six-shooter?" + +"They was driftin' up the pass to say 'How-d'you-do?' from the back +stairway. I borrowed a gun from one o' them. I asked 'em to come along +with me and they reckoned they would." + +The booming of a rifle echoed in the rocks to the left. From out of +them Jessie McRae came flying, something akin to terror in her face. + +"I've shot that West. He tried to run in on me and--and--I shot him." +Her voice broke into an hysterical sob. + +"Thought I told you to keep out of this," the constable said. "I seem +to have a lot of valuable volunteer help. What with you and friend +Morse here--" He broke off, touched at her distress. "Never mind about +that, Miss McRae. He had it coming to him. I'll go out and size up the +damage to him, if his friends have had enough--and chances are they +have." + +They had. Gosse advanced waving a red bandanna handkerchief as a flag +of truce. + +"We got a plenty," he said frankly. "West's down, an' another of the +boys got winged. No use us goin' on with this darned foolishness. +We're ready to call it off if you'll turn Morse loose." + +Beresford had walked out to meet him. He answered, curtly. "No." + +The long, lank whiskey-runner rubbed his chin bristles awkwardly. "We +'lowed maybe--" + +"I keep my prisoners, both Morse and Barney." + +"Barney!" repeated Gosse, surprised. + +"Yes, we've got him and two others. I don't want them. I'll turn 'em +over to you. But not Morse and Barney. They're going to the post with +me for whiskey-running." + +Gosse went back to the camp-fire, where the Whoop-Up men had carried +their wounded leader. Except West, they were all glad to drop the +battle. The big smuggler, lying on the ground with a bullet in his +thigh, cursed them for a group of chicken-hearted quitters. His anger +could not shake their decision. They knew when they had had enough. + +The armistice concluded, Beresford and Morse walked over to the +camp-fire to find out how badly West was hurt. + +"Sorry I had to hit you, but you would have it, you know," the +constable told him grimly. + +The man snapped his teeth at him like a wolf in a trap. "You didn't +hit me, you liar. It was that li'l' hell-cat of McRae. You tell her +for me I'll get her right for this, sure as my name's Bully West." + +There was something horribly menacing in his rage. In the jumping +light of the flames the face was that of a demon, a countenance +twisted and tortured by the impotent lust to destroy. + +Morse spoke, looking steadily at him in his quiet way. "I'm servin' +notice, West, that you're to let that girl alone." + +There was a sound in the big whiskey-runner's throat like that of +an infuriated wild animal. He glared at Morse, a torrent of abuse +struggling for utterance. All that he could say was, "You damned +traitor." + +The eyes of the younger man did not waver. "It goes. I'll see you're +shot like a wolf if you harm her." + +The wounded smuggler's fury outleaped prudence. In a surge of +momentary insanity he saw red. The barrel of his revolver rose +swiftly. A bullet sang past Morse's ear. Before he could fire again, +Harvey Gosse had flung himself on the man and wrested the weapon from +his hand. + +Hard-eyed and motionless, Morse looked down at the madman without +saying a word. It was Beresford who said ironically, "Talking about +those who keep faith." + +"You hadn't oughta of done that, Bully," Gosse expostulated. "We'd +done agreed this feud was off for to-night." + +"Get your horses and clear out of here," the constable ordered. "If +this man's able to fight he's able to travel. You can make camp +farther down the creek." + +A few minutes later the clatter of horse-hoofs died away. Beresford +was alone with his prisoners and his guests. + +Those who were still among the big rocks came forward to the +camp-fire. Jessie arrived before the others. She had crept to the camp +on the heels of Beresford and Morse, driven by her great anxiety to +find out how badly West was hurt. + +From the shadows of a buffalo wallow she had seen and heard what had +taken place. + +One glance of troubled curiosity she flashed at Morse. What sort of +man was this quiet, brown-faced American who smuggled whiskey in to +ruin the tribes, who could ruthlessly hold a girl to a bargain that +included horsewhipping for her, who for some reason of his own fought +beside the man taking him to imprisonment, and who had flung defiance +at the terrible Bully West on her behalf? She hated him. She always +would. But with her dislike of him ran another feeling now, born of +the knowledge of new angles in him. + +He was hard as nails, but he would do to ride the river with. + + + + +CHAPTER X + +A CAMP-FIRE TALE + + +Another surprise was waiting for Jessie. As soon as Onistah came into +the circle of light, he walked straight to the whiskey-smuggler. + +"You save my life from Crees. Thanks," he said in English. + +Onistah offered his hand. + +The white man took it. He was embarrassed. "Oh, well, I kinda took a +hand." + +The Indian was not through. "Onistah never forget. He pay some day." + +Tom waved this aside. "How's the leg? Seems to be all right now." + +Swiftly Jessie turned to the Indian and asked him a question in the +native tongue. He answered. They exchanged another sentence or two. + +The girl spoke to Morse. "Onistah is my brother. I too thank you," she +said stiffly. + +"Your brother! He's not Angus McRae's son, is he?" + +"No. And I'm not his daughter--really. I'll tell you about that," she +said with a touch of the defensive defiance that always came into her +manner when the subject of her birth was referred to. + +She did, later, over the camp-fire. + +It is fortunate that desire and opportunity do not always march +together. The constable and Morse had both been dead men if Bully West +could have killed with a wish. Sleeping Dawn would have been on the +road to an existence worse than death. Instead, they sat in front of +the coals of buffalo chips while the big smuggler and his companions +rode away from an ignominious field of battle. + +When the constable and his prisoner had first struck camp, there had +been two of them. Now there were six. For in addition to Jessie McRae, +the Blackfoot, and Barney, another had come out of the night and +hailed them with a "Hello, the camp!" This last self-invited guest was +Brad Stearns, who had not ridden to Whoop-Up as he had announced, but +had watched events from a distance on the chance that he might be of +help to Tom Morse. + +Jessie agreed with Beresford that she must stay in camp till morning. +There was nothing else for her to do. She could not very well ride the +night out with Onistah on the road back to the fort. But she stayed +with great reluctance. + +Her modesty was in arms. Never before had she, a girl alone, been +forced to make camp with five men as companions, all but one of them +almost strangers to her. The experience was one that shocked her sense +of fitness. + +She was troubled and distressed, and she showed it. Her impulsiveness +had swept her into an adventure that might have been tragic, that +still held potentialities of disaster. For she could not forget the +look on West's face when he had sworn to get even with her. This man +was a terrible enemy, because of his boldness, his evil mind, and his +lack of restraining conscience. + +Yet even now she could not blame herself for what she had done. The +constable's life was at stake. It had been necessary to move swiftly +and decisively. + +Sitting before the fire, Sleeping Dawn began to tell her story. She +told it to Beresford as an apology for having ridden forty miles with +Onistah to save his life. It was, if he chose so to accept it, an +explanation of how she came to do so unwomanly a thing. + +"Onistah's mother is my mother," she said. "When I was a baby my own +mother died. Stokimatis is her sister. I do not know who my father +was, but I have heard he was an American. Stokimatis took me to her +tepee and I lived there with her and Onistah till I was five or six. +Then Angus McRae saw me one day. He liked me, so he bought me for +three yards of tobacco, a looking-glass, and five wolf pelts." + +It may perhaps have been by chance that the girl's eyes met those of +Morse. The blood burned beneath the tan of her dusky cheeks, but her +proud eyes did not flinch while she told the damning facts about her +parentage and life. She was of the metis, the child of an unknown +father. So far as she knew her mother had never been married. She had +been bought and sold like a negro slave in the South. Let any one that +wanted to despise her make the most of all this. + +So far as any expression went Tom Morse looked hard as pig iron. He +did not want to blunder, so he said nothing. But the girl would have +been amazed if she could have read his thoughts. She seemed to him a +rare flower that has blossomed in a foul swamp. + +"If Angus McRae took you for his daughter, it was because he loved +you," Beresford said gently. + +"Yes." The mobile face was suddenly tender with emotion. "What can any +father do more than he has done for me? I learned to read and write at +his knee. He taught me the old songs of Scotland that he's so fond of. +He tried to make me good and true. Afterward he sent me to Winnipeg to +school for two years." + +"Good for Angus McRae," the young soldier said. + +She smiled, a little wistfully. "He wants me to be Scotch, but of +course I can't be that even though I sing 'Should auld acquaintance' +to him. I'm what I am." + +Ever since she had learned to think for herself, she had struggled +against the sense of racial inferiority. Even in the Lone Lands men +of education had crossed her path. There was Father Giguere, tall and +austere and filled with the wisdom of years, a scholar who had left +his dear France to serve on the outposts of civilization. And there +was the old priest's devoted friend Philip Muir, of whom the story ran +that he was heir to a vast estate across the seas. Others she had seen +at Winnipeg. And now this scarlet-coated soldier Beresford. + +Instinctively she recognized the difference between them and the +trappers and traders who frequented the North woods. In her bed at +night she had more than once wept herself to sleep because life had +built an impassable barrier between what she was and what she wanted +to be. + +"To the Scot nobody is quite like a Scot," Beresford admitted with +a smile. "When he wants to make you one, Mr. McRae pays you a great +compliment" + +The girl flashed a look of gratitude at him and went on with her +story. "Whenever we are near Stokimatis, I go to see her. She has +always been very fond of me. It wasn't really for money she sold me, +but because she knew Angus McRae could bring me up better than she +could. I was with her to-day when Onistah came in and told us what +this West was going to do. There wasn't time for me to reach Father. I +couldn't trust anybody at Whoop-Up, and I was afraid if Onistah came +alone, you wouldn't believe him. You know how people are about--about +Indians. So I saddled a horse and rode with him." + +"That was fine of you. I'll never forget it, Miss McRae," the young +soldier said quietly, his eyes for an instant full on hers. "I don't +think I've ever met another girl who would have had the good sense and +the courage to do it." + +Her eyes fell from his. She felt a queer delightful thrill run through +her blood. He still respected her, was even grateful to her for what +she had done. No experience in the ways of men and maids warned her +that there was another cause for the quickened pulse. Youth had looked +into the eyes of youth and made the world-old call of sex to sex. + +In a little pocket opening from the draw Morse arranged blankets for +the girl's bed. He left Beresford to explain to her that she could +sleep there alone without fear, since a guard would keep watch against +any possible surprise attack. + +When the soldier did tell her this, Jessie smiled back her +reassurance. "I'm not afraid--not the least littlest bit," she said +buoyantly. "I'll sleep right away." + +But she did not. Jessie was awake to the finger-tips, her veins apulse +with the flow of rushing rivers of life. Her chaotic thoughts centered +about two men. One had followed crooked trails for his own profit. +There was something in him hard and unyielding as flint. He would +go to his chosen end, whatever that might be, over and through any +obstacles that might rise. But to-night, on her behalf, he had thrown +down the gauntlet to Bully West, the most dreaded desperado on the +border. Why had he done it? Was he sorry because he had forced her +father to horsewhip her? Or was his warning merely the snarl of one +wolf at another? + +The other man was of a different stamp. He had brought with him from +the world whence he had come a debonair friendliness, an ease of +manner, a smile very boyish and charming. In his jaunty forage cap and +scarlet jacket he was one to catch and hold the eye by reason of his +engaging personality. He too had fought her battle. She had heard him, +in that casually careless way of his, try to take the blame of having +wounded West. Her happy thoughts went running out to him gratefully. + +Not the least cause of her gratitude was that there had not been the +remotest hint in his manner that there was any difference between her +and any white girl he might meet. + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +C.N. MORSE TURNS OVER A LEAF + + +The North-West Mounted Police had authority not only to arrest, but +to try and to sentence prisoners. The soldierly inspector who sat in +judgment on Morse at Fort Macleod heard the evidence and stroked an +iron-gray mustache reflectively. As he understood it, his business was +to stop whiskey-running rather than to send men to jail. Beresford's +report on this young man was in his favor. The inspector adventured +into psychology. + +"Studied the Indians any--the effect of alcohol on them?" he asked +Morse. + +"Some," the prisoner answered. + +"Don't you think it bad for them?" + +"Yes, sir." + +"Perhaps you've been here longer than I. Isn't this whiskey-smuggling +bad business all round?" + +"Not for the smuggler. Speakin' as an outsider, I reckon he does it +because he makes money," Morse answered impersonally. + +"For the country, I mean. For the trapper, for the breeds, for the +Indians." + +"No doubt about that." + +"You're a nephew of C.N. Morse, aren't you?" + +"Yes, sir." + +"Wish you'd take him a message from me. Tell him that it's bad +business for a big trading firm like his to be smuggling whiskey." The +officer raised a hand to stop the young man's protest. "Yes, I know +you're going to tell me that we haven't proved he's been smuggling. +We'll pass that point. Carry him my message. Just say it's bad +business. You can tell him if you want to that we're here to put an +end to it and we're going to do it. But stress the fact that it isn't +good business. Understand?" + +"Yes." + +"Very well, sir." A glint of a smile showed in the inspector's eyes. +"I'll give you a Scotch verdict, young man. Not guilty, but don't do +it again. You're discharged." + +"Barney, too?" + +"Hmp! He's a horse of another color. Think we'll send him over the +plains." + +"Why make two bites of a cherry, sir? He can't be guilty if I'm not," +the released prisoner said. + +"Did I say you weren't?" Inspector MacLean countered. + +"Not worth the powder, is he, sir?" Tom insinuated nonchalantly. +"Rather a fathead, Barney is. If he's guilty, it's not as a principal. +You'd much better send me up." + +The officer laughed behind the hand that stroked the mustache. "Do you +want to be judge and jury as well as prisoner, my lad?" + +"Thought perhaps my uncle would understand the spirit of your message +better if Barney went along with me, Inspector." The brown eyes were +open and guileless. + +MacLean studied the Montanan deliberately. He began to recognize +unusual qualities in this youth. + +"Can't say I care for your friend Barney. He's a bad egg, or I miss my +guess." + +"Not much taken with him myself. Thought if I'd get him to travel +south with me it might save you some trouble." + +"It might," the Inspector agreed. "It's his first offense so far as +I know." Under bristling eyebrows he shot a swift look at this +self-assured youngster. He had noticed that men matured at an early +age on the frontier. The school of emergency developed them fast. +But Morse struck him as more competent even than the other boyish +plainsmen he had met. "Will you be responsible for him?" + +The Montanan came to scratch reluctantly. He had no desire to be bear +leader for such a doubtful specimen as Barney. + +"Yes," he said, after a pause. + +"Keep him in the States, will you?" + +"Yes." + +"Take him along, then. Wish you luck of him." + +As soon as he reached Fort Benton, Tom reported to his uncle. He told +the story of the whiskey cargo and its fate, together with his own +adventures subsequent to that time. + +The head of the trading firm was a long, loose-jointed Yankee who had +drifted West in his youth. Since then he had acquired gray hairs and +large business interests. At Inspector MacLean's message he grinned. + +"Thinks it's bad business, does he?" + +"Told me to tell you so," Tom answered. + +"Didn't say why, I guess." + +"No." + +The old New Englander fished from a hip pocket a plug of tobacco, cut +off a liberal chew, and stowed this in his cheek. Then, lounging back +in the chair, he cocked a shrewd eye at his nephew. + +"Wonder what he meant." + +Tom volunteered no opinion. He recognized his uncle's canny habit of +fishing in other people's minds for confirmation of what was in his +own. + +"Got any idee what he was drivin' at?" the old pioneer went on. + +"Sorta." + +C.N. Morse chuckled. "Got a notion myself. Let's hear yours." + +"The trade with the North-West Mounted is gonna be big for a while. +The Force needs all kinds of supplies. It'll have to deal through some +firm in Benton as a clearin' house. He's servin' notice that unless +C.N. Morse & Company mends its ways, it can't do business with the +N.W.M.P." + +"That all?" asked the head of the firm. + +"That's only half of it. The other half is that no firm of +whiskey-runners will be allowed to trade across the line." + +C.N. gave another little chirrup of mirth. "Keep your brains whittled +up, don't you? Any advice you'd like to give?" + +Tom was not to be drawn. "None, sir." + +"No comments, son? Passin' it up to Uncle Newt, eh?" + +"You're the head of the firm. I'm hired to do as I'm told." + +"You figure on obeyin' orders and lettin' it go at that?" + +"Not quite." The young fellow's square chin jutted out. "For instance, +I'm not gonna smuggle liquor through any more. I had my eyes opened +this trip. You haven't been on the ground like I have. If you want a +plain word for it, Uncle Newt--" + +"Speak right out in meetin', Tom. Shouldn't wonder but what I can +stand it." The transplanted Yankee slanted at his nephew a quizzical +smile. "I been hearin' more or less plain language for quite a spell, +son." + +Tom gave it to him straight from the shoulder, quietly but without +apology. "Sellin' whiskey to the tribes results in wholesale murder, +sir." + +"Strong talk, boy," his uncle drawled. + +"Not too strong. You know I don't mean anything personal, Uncle Newt. +To understand this thing you've got to go up there an' see it. The +plains tribes up there go crazy over fire-water an' start killin' each +other. It's a crime to let 'em have it." + +Young Morse began to tell stories of instances that had come under his +own observation, of others that he had heard from reliable sources. +Presently he found himself embarked on the tale of his adventures with +Sleeping Dawn. + +The fur-trader heard him patiently. The dusty wrinkled boots of the +merchant rested on the desk. His chair was tilted back in such a way +that the weight of his body was distributed between the back of his +neck, the lower end of the spine, and his heels. He looked a picture +of sleepy, indolent ease, but Tom knew he was not missing the least +detail. + +A shadow darkened the doorway of the office. Behind it straddled a +huge, ungainly figure. + +"'Lo, West! How're tricks?" C.N. Morse asked in his lazy way. He did +not rise from the chair or offer to shake hands, but that might be +because it was not his custom to exert himself. + +West stopped in his stride, choking with wrath. He had caught sight of +Tom and was glaring at him. "You're here, eh? Sneaked home to try to +square yourself with the old man, did ya?" The trail foreman turned to +the uncle. "I wanta tell you he double-crossed you for fair, C.N. He's +got a heluva nerve to come back here after playin' in with the police +the way he done up there." + +"I've heard something about that," the fur-trader admitted cautiously. +"You told me Tom an' you didn't exactly gee." + +"He'll never drive another bull-team for me again." West tacked to his +pronouncement a curdling oath. + +"We'll call that settled, then. You're through bull-whackin', Tom." +There was a little twitch of whimsical mirth at the corners of the old +man's mouth. + +"Now you're shoutin, C.N. Threw me down from start to finish, he did. +First off, when the breed girl busted the casks, he took her home +'stead of bringin' her to me. Then at old McRae's camp when I was +defendin' myself, he jumped me too. My notion is from the way he acted +that he let on to the red-coat where the cache was. Finally when I +rode out to rescue him, he sided in with the other fellow. Hadn't been +for him I'd never 'a' had this slug in my leg." The big smuggler +spoke with extraordinary vehemence, spicing his speech liberally with +sulphurous language. + +The grizzled Yankee accepted the foreman's attitude with a wave of the +hand that dismissed any counterargument. But there was an ironic gleam +in his eye. + +"'Nough said, West. If you're that sot on it, the boy quits the +company pay-roll as an employee right now. I won't have him annoyin' +you another hour. He becomes a member of the firm to-day." + +The big bully's jaw sagged. He stared at his lean employer as though a +small bomb had exploded at his feet and numbed his brains. But he was +no more surprised than Tom, whose wooden face was expressionless. + +"Goddlemighty! Ain't I jus' been tellin' you how he wrecked the whole +show--how he sold out to that bunch of spies the Canadian Gov'ment has +done sent up there?" exploded West. + +"Oh, I don't guess he did that," Morse, Senior, said lightly. "We +got to remember that times are changin', West. Law's comin' into the +country an' we old-timers oughta meet it halfway with the glad hand. +You can't buck the Union Jack any more than you could Uncle Sam. I +figure I've sent my last shipment of liquor across the line." + +"Scared, are you?" sneered the trail boss. + +"Maybe I am. Reckon I'm too old to play the smuggler's game. And I've +got a hankerin' for respectability--want the firm to stand well with +the new settlers. Legitimate business from now on. That's our motto, +boys." + +"What church you been j'inin', C.N.?" + +"Well, maybe it'll come to that too. Think I'd make a good deacon?" +the merchant asked amiably, untwining his legs and rising to stretch. + +West slammed a big fist on the table so that the inkwell and the pens +jumped. "All I got to say is that this new Sunday-school outfit you +aim to run won't have no use for a he-man. I'm quittin' you right +now." + +The foreman made the threat as a bluff. He was the most surprised man +in Montana when his employer called it quietly, speaking still in the +slow, nasal voice of perfect good-nature. + +"Maybe you're right, West. That's for you to say, of course. You know +your own business best. Figure out your time an' I'll have Benson +write you a check. Hope you find a good job." + +The sense of baffled anger in West foamed up. His head dropped down +and forward threateningly. + +"You do, eh? Lemme tell you this, C.N. I don't ask no odds of you or +any other guy. Jes' because you're the head of a big outfit you can't +run on me. I won't stand for it a minute." + +"Of course not. I'd know better'n to try that with you. No hard +feelings even if you quit us." It was a characteristic of the New +Englander that while he was a forceful figure in this man's country, +he rarely quarreled with any one. + +"That so? Well, you listen here. I been layin' off that new pardner of +yours because he's yore kin. Not anymore. Different now. He's liable +to have a heluva time an' don't you forget it for a minute." + +The fur-trader chewed his cud imperturbably. When he spoke it Was +still without a trace of acrimony. + +"Guess you'll think better of that maybe, West. Guess you're a little +hot under the collar, ain't you? Don't hardly pay to hold grudges, +does it? There was Rhinegoldt now. Kept nursin' his wrongs an' finally +landed in the pen. Bad medicine, looks like to me." + +West was no imbecile. He understood the threat underneath the suave +words of the storekeeper. Rhinegoldt had gone to the penitentiary +because C.N. Morse had willed it so. The inference was that another +lawbreaker might go for the same reason. The trail boss knew that this +was no idle threat. Morse could put him behind the bars any time he +chose. The evidence was in his hands. + +The bully glared at him. "You try that, C.N. Jus' try it once. +There'll be a sudden death in the Morse family if you do. Mebbe two. +Me, I'd gun you both for a copper cent. Don't fool yourself a minute." + +"Kinda foolish talk, West. Don't buy you anything. Guess you better +go home an' cool off, hadn't you? I'll have your time made up to-day, +unless you want your check right now." + +The broken teeth of the desperado clicked as his jaw clamped. He +looked from the smiling, steady-eyed trader to the brown-faced youth +who watched the scene with such cool, alert attention. He fought with +a wild, furious impulse in himself to go through with his threat, +to clean up and head out into the wilds. But some saving sense of +prudence held his hand. C.N. Morse was too big game for him. + +"To hell with the check," he snarled, and swinging on his heel jingled +out of the office. + +The nephew spoke first. "You got rid of him on purpose." + +"Looked that way to you, did it?" the uncle asked in his usual +indirect way. + +"Why?" + +"Guess you'd say it was because he won't fit into the new policy of +the firm. Guess you'd say he'd always be gettin' us into trouble with +his overbearin' and crooked ways." + +"That's true. He would." + +"Maybe it would be a good idee to watch him mighty close. They say +he's a bad hombre. Might be unlucky for any one he got the drop on." + +Tom knew he was being warned. "I'll look out for him," he promised. + +The older man changed the subject smilingly. "Here's where C.N. Morse +& Company turns over a leaf, son. No more business gambles. Legitimate +trade only. That the idee you're figurin' on makin' me live up to?" + +"Suits me if it does you," Tom answered cheerfully, "But where do +I come in? What's my job in the firm? You'll notice I haven't said +'Thanks' yet." + +"You?" C.N. gave him a sly, dry smile. "Oh, all you have to do is to +handle our business north of the line--buy, sell, trade, build up +friendly relations with the Indians and trappers, keep friendly with +the police, and a few little things like that." + +Tom grinned. + +"Won't have a thing to do, will I?" + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +TOM DUCKS TROUBLE + + +To Tom Morse, sitting within the railed space that served for an +office in the company store at Faraway, came a light-stepping youth in +trim boots, scarlet jacket, and forage cap set at a jaunty angle. + +"'Lo, Uncle Sam," he said, saluting gayly. + +"'Lo, Johnnie Canuck. Where you been for a year and heaven knows how +many months?" + +"Up Peace River, after Pierre Poulette, fellow who killed Buckskin +Jerry." + +Tom took in Beresford's lean body, a gauntness of the boyish face, +hollows under the eyes that had not been there when first they had +met. There had come to him whispers of the long trek into the frozen +Lone Lands made by the officer and his Indian guide. He could guess +the dark and dismal winter spent by the two alone, without books, +without the comforts of life, far from any other human being. It must +have been an experience to try the soul. But it had not shaken the +Canadian's blithe joy in living. + +"Get him?" the Montanan asked. + +The answer he could guess. The North-West Mounted always brought +back those they were sent for. Already the Force was building up the +tradition that made them for a generation rulers of half a continent. + +"Got him." Thus briefly the red-coat dismissed an experience that +had taken toll of his vitality greater than five years of civilized +existence. "Been back a week. Inspector Crouch sent me here to have a +look-see." + +"At what? He ain't suspectin' any one at Faraway of stretchin', +bendin', or bustin' the laws." + +Tom cocked a merry eye at his visitor. Rumor had it that Faraway was +a cesspool of iniquity. It was far from the border. When sheriffs of +Montana became too active, there was usually an influx of population +at the post, of rough, hard-eyed men who crossed the line and pushed +north to safety. + +"Seems to be. You're not by any chance lookin' for trouble?" + +"Duckin' it," answered Tom promptly. + +The officer smiled genially. "It's knocking at your door." His +knuckles rapped on the desk. + +"If I ever bumped into a Santa Claus of joy--" + +"Oh, thanks!" Beresford murmured. + +"--you certainly ain't him. Onload your grief." + +"The theme of my discourse is aborigines, their dispositions, +animadversions, and propensities," explained the constable. "According +to the latest scientific hypotheses, the metempsychosis--" + +Tom threw up his hands. "Help! Help! I never studied geology none. +Don't know this hypotenuse you're pow-wowin' about any more'n my paint +hawss does. Come again in one syllables." + +"Noticed any trouble among the Crees lately--that is, any more than +usual?" + +The junior partner of C.N. Morse & Company considered. "Why, yes, +seems to me I have--heap much swagger and noise, plenty rag-chewin' +and tomahawk swingin'." + +"Why?" + +"Whiskey, likely." + +"Where do they get it?" + +Tom looked at the soldier quizzically. "Your guess is good as mine," +he drawled. + +"I'm guessing West and Whaley." + +Morse made no comment. Bully West had thrown in his fortune with Dug +Whaley, a gambler who had drifted from one mining camp to another and +been washed by the tide of circumstance into the Northwest. Ostensibly +they supplied blankets, guns, food, and other necessities to the +tribes, but there was a strong suspicion that they made their profit +in whiskey smuggled across the plains. + +"But to guess it and to prove it are different propositions. How am +I going to hang it on them? I can't make a bally fool of myself +by prodding around in their bales and boxes. If I didn't find +anything--and it'd be a long shot against me--West and his gang would +stick their tongues in their cheeks and N.W.M.P. stock would shoot +down. No, I've got to make sure, jump 'em, and tie 'em up by finding +the goods on the wagons." + +"Fat chance," speculated Tom. + +"That's where you come in." + +"Oh, I come in there, do I? I begin to hear Old Man Trouble knockin' +at my door like you promised. Break it kinda easy. Am I to go up an' +ask Bully West where he keeps his fire-water cached? Or what?" + +"Yes. Only don't mention to him that you're asking. Your firm and his +trade back and forth, don't they?" + +"Forth, but not back. When they've got to have some goods--if it's +neck or nothing with them--they buy from us. We don't buy from them. +You couldn't exactly call us neighborly." + +Beresford explained. "West's just freighted in a cargo of goods. I can +guarantee that if he brought any liquor with him--and I've good reason +to think he did--it hasn't been unloaded yet. To-morrow the wagons +will scatter. I can't follow all of 'em. If I cinch Mr. West, it's got +to be to-night." + +"I see. You want me to give you my blessin'. I'll come through with a +fine big large one. Go to it, constable. Hogtie West with proof. +Soak him good. Send him up for 'steen years. You got my sympathy an' +approval, one for the grief you're liable to bump into, the other for +your good intentions." + +The officer's grin had a touch of the proverbial Cheshire cat's +malice. "Glad you approve. But you keep that sympathy for yourself. +I'm asking you to pull the chestnut out of the fire for me. You'd +better look out or you'll burn your paw." + +"Just remember I ain't promisin' a thing. I'm a respectable business +man now, and, as I said, duckin' trouble." + +"Find out for me in which wagon the liquor is. That's all I ask." + +"How can I find out? I'm no mind reader." + +"Drift over casually and offer to buy goods. Poke around a bit. Keep +cases on 'em. Notice the wagons they steer you away from." + +Tom thought it over and shook his head. "No, I don't reckon I will." + +"Any particular reason?" + +"Don't look to me hardly like playin' the game. I'm ferninst West +every turn of the road. He's crooked as a dog's hind laig. But it +wouldn't be right square for me to spy on him. Different with you. +That's what you're paid for. You're out to run him down any way you +can. He knows that. It's a game of hide an' go seek between you an' +him. Best man wins." + +The red-coat assented at once. "Right you are, I'll get some one +else." He rose to go. "See you later maybe." + +Tom nodded. "Sorry I can't oblige, but you see how it is." + +"Quite. I oughtn't to have asked you." + +Beresford strode briskly out of the store. + +Through the window Morse saw him a moment later in whispered +conversation with Onistah. They were standing back of an outlying +shed, in such a position that they could not be seen from the road. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII + +THE CONSTABLE BORES THROUGH DIFFICULTIES + + +The early Northern dusk was falling when Beresford dropped into the +store again. Except for two half-breeds and the clerk dickering at the +far end of the building over half a dozen silver fox furs Morse had +the place to himself. + +Yet the officer took the precaution to lower his voice. "I want an +auger and a wooden plug the same size. Get 'em to me without anybody +knowing it." + +The manager of the C.N. Morse & Company Northern Stores presently +shoved across the counter to him a gunny-sack with a feed of oats. +"Want it charged to the Force, I reckon?" + +"Yes." + +"Say, constable, I wancha to look at these moccasins I'm orderin' for +the Inspector. Is this what he wants? Or isn't it?" + +Tom led the way into his office. He handed the shoe to Beresford. +"What's doin'?" he asked swiftly, between sentences. + +The soldier inspected the footwear. "About right, I'd say. Thought +you'd find what you were looking for. A fellow usually does when he +goes at it real earnest." + +The eyes in the brown face were twinkling merrily. + +"Findin' the goods is one thing. Gettin' 'em's quite another," Tom +suggested. + +The voice of one of the trappers rose in protest. "By gar, it iss what +you call dirt cheap. I make you a present. V'la!" + +"Got to bore through difficulties," Beresford said. "Then you're +liable to bump into disappointment. But you can't ever tell till you +try." + +His friend began to catch the drift of the officer's purpose. He was +looking for a liquor shipment, _and he had bought an auger to bore +through difficulties_. + +Tom's eyes glowed. "Come over to the storeroom an' take a look at my +stock. Want you to see I'm gonna have these moccasins made from good +material." + +They kept step across the corral, gay, light-hearted sons of the +frontier, both hard as nails, packed muscles rippling like those of +forest panthers. Their years added would not total more than twoscore +and five, but life had taken hold of them young and trained them to +its purposes, had shot them through and through with hardihood and +endurance and the cool prevision that forestalls disaster. + +"I'm in on this," the Montanan said. + +"Meaning?" + +"That I buy chips, take a hand, sit in, deal cards." + +The level gaze of the police officer studied him speculatively. "Now +why this change of heart?" + +"You get me wrong. I'm with you to a finish in puttin' West and Whaley +out of business. They're a hell-raisin' outfit, an' this country'll be +well rid of 'em. Only thing is I wanta play my cards above the table. +I couldn't spy on these men. Leastways, it didn't look quite square to +me. But this is a bronc of another color. Lead me to that trouble you +was promisin' a while ago." + +Beresford led him to it, by way of a rain-washed gully, up which they +trod their devious path slowly and without noise. From the gully they +snaked through the dry grass to a small ditch that had been built to +drain the camping-ground during spring freshets. This wound into the +midst of the wagon train encampment. + +The plainsmen crept along the dry ditch with laborious care. They +advanced no single inch without first taking care to move aside any +twig the snapping of which might betray them. + +From the beginning of the adventure until its climax no word was +spoken. Beresford led, the trader followed at his heels. + +The voices of men drifted to them from a camp-fire in the shelter of +the wagons. There were, Tom guessed, about four of them. Their words +came clear through the velvet night. They talked the casual elemental +topics common to their kind. + +There was a moonlit open space to be crossed. The constable took it +swiftly with long strides, reached a wagon, and dodged under it. His +companion held to the cover of the ditch. He was not needed closer. + +The officer lay flat on his back, set the point of the auger to the +woodwork of the bed, and began to turn. Circles and half-circles of +shavings flaked out and fell upon him. He worked steadily. Presently +the resistance of the wood ceased. The bit had eaten its way through. + +Beresford withdrew the tool and tried again, this time a few inches +from the hole he had made. The pressure lessened as before, but in a +second or two the steel took a fresh hold. The handle moved slowly and +steadily. + +A few drops of moisture dripped down, then a small stream. The +constable held his hand under this and tasted the flow. It was rum. + +Swiftly he withdrew the bit, fitted the plug into the hole, and pushed +it home. + +He crawled from under the wagon, skirted along the far side of it, ran +to the next white-topped vehicle, and plumped out upon the campers +with a short, sharp word of command. + +"Up with your hands! Quick!" + +For a moment the surprised quartette were too amazed to obey. + +"What in Halifax--?" + +"Shove 'em up!" came the crisp, peremptory order. + +Eight hands wavered skyward. + +"Is this a hold-up--or what?" one of the teamsters wanted to know +sulkily. + +"Call it whatever you like. You with the fur cap hitch up the mules to +the second wagon. Don't make a mistake and try for a getaway. You'll +be a dead smuggler." + +The man hesitated. Was this red-coat alone? + +Tom strolled out of the ditch, a sawed-off shotgun under his arm. +"I judge you bored through your difficulties, constable," he said +cheerfully. + +"Through the bed of the wagon and the end of a rum keg. Stir your +stumps, gentlemen of the whiskey-running brigade. We're on the way to +Fort Edmonton if it suits you." + +If it did not suit them, they made no audible protest of disagreement. +Growls were their only comment when, under direction of Beresford, +the Montanan stripped them of their weapons and kept guard on the +fur-capped man--his name appeared to be Lemoine--while the latter +brought the mules to the wagon pointed out by the officer. + +"Hook 'em," ordered Morse curtly. + +The French-Indian trapper hitched the team to the wagon. Presently +it moved beyond the circle of firelight into the darkness. Morse sat +beside the driver, the short-barreled weapon across his knees. +Three men walked behind the wagon. A fourth, in the uniform of the +North-West Mounted, brought up the rear on horseback. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV + +SCARLET-COATS IN ACTION + + +When Bully West discovered that such part of the cargo of wet goods +as was in wagon number two had disappeared and along with it the four +mule-skinners, his mind jumped to an instant conclusion. That it +happened to be the wrong one was natural enough to his sulky, +suspicious mind. + +"Goddlemighty, they've double-crossed us," he swore to his partner, +with an explosion of accompanying profanity. "Figure on cleanin' up on +the goods an' cuttin' back to the States. Tha's what they aim to do. +Before I can head 'em off. Me, I'll show 'em they can't play monkey +tricks on Bully West." + +This explanation did not satisfy Whaley. The straight black line of +the brows above the cold eyes met in frowning thought. + +"I've got a hunch you're barkin' up the wrong tree," he lisped with a +shrug of shoulders. + +Voice and gesture were surprising in that they were expressions of +this personality totally unexpected. Both were almost womanlike in +their delicacy. They suggested the purr and soft padding of a cat, an +odd contradiction to the white, bloodless face with the inky brows. +The eyes of "Poker" Whaley could throw fear into the most reckless +bull-whacker on the border. They held fascinating and sinister +possibilities of evil. + +"Soon see. We'll hit the trail right away after them," Bully replied. + +Whaley's thin lip curled. He looked at West as though he read to +the bottom of that shallow mind and meant to make the most of his +knowledge. + +"Yes," he murmured, as though to himself. "Some one ought to stay with +the rest of the outfit, but I reckon I'd better go along. Likely you +couldn't handle all of 'em if they showed fight." + +West's answer was a roar of outraged vanity. "Me! Not round up them +tame sheep. I'll drive 'em back with their tongues hangin' out. +Understand?" + +At break of day he was in the saddle. An experienced trailer, West +found no difficulty in following the wagon tracks. No attempt had been +made to cover the flight. The whiskey-runner could trace at a road +gait the narrow tracks along the winding road. + +The country through which he traveled was the border-land between the +plains and the great forests that rolled in unbroken stretch to the +frozen North. Sometimes he rode over undulating prairie. Again he +moved through strips of woodland or skirted beautiful lakes from the +reedy edges of which ducks or geese rose whirring at his approach. A +pair of coyotes took one long look at him and skulked into a ravine. +Once a great moose started from a thicket of willows and galloped over +a hill. + +West heeded none of this. No joy touched him as he breasted summits +and looked down on wide sweeps of forest and rippling water. The +tracks of the wheel rims engaged entirely his sulky, lowering gaze. If +the brutish face reflected his thoughts, they must have been far from +pleasant ones. + +The sun flooded the landscape, climbed the sky vault, slid toward the +horizon. Dusk found him at the edge of a wooded lake. + +He looked across and gave a subdued whoop of triumph. From the timber +on the opposite shore came a tenuous smoke skein. A man came to the +water with a bucket, filled it, and disappeared in the woods. Bully +West knew he had caught up with those he was tracking. + +The smuggler circled the lower end of the lake and rode through the +timber toward the smoke. At a safe distance he dismounted, tied +the horse to a young pine, and carefully examined his rifle. Very +cautiously he stalked the camp, moving toward it with the skill and +the stealth of a Sarcee scout. + +Camp had been pitched in a small open space surrounded by bushes. +Through the thicket, on the south side, he picked a way, pushing away +each sapling and weed noiselessly to make room for the passage of his +huge body. For such a bulk of a figure he moved lightly. Twice he +stopped by reason of the crackle of a snapping twig, but no sign of +alarm came from his prey. + +They sat hunched--the four of them--before a blazing log fire, +squatting on their heels in the comfortable fashion of the outdoors +man the world over. Their talk was fragmentary. None gave any sign of +alertness toward any possible approaching danger. + +No longer wary, West broke through the last of the bushes and +straddled into the open. + +"Well, boys, hope you got some grub left for yore boss," he jeered, +triumph riding voice and manner heavily. + +He waited for the startled dismay he expected. None came. The drama of +the moment did not meet his expectation. The teamsters looked at him, +sullenly, without visible fear or amazement. None of them rose or +spoke. + +Sultry anger began to burn in West's eyes. "Thought you'd slip one +over on the old man, eh? Thought you could put over a raw steal an' +get away with it. Well, lemme tell you where you get off at. I'm gonna +whale every last one of you to a frazzle. With a big club. An' +I'm gonna drive you back to Faraway like a bunch of whipped curs. +Understand?" + +Still they said nothing. It began to penetrate the thick skull of +the trader that there was something unnatural about their crouched +silence. Why didn't they try to explain? Or make a break for a +getaway? + +He could think of nothing better to say, after a volley of curses, +than to repeat his threat. "A thunderin' good wallopin', first off. +Then we hit the trail together, you-all an' me." + +From out of the bushes behind him a voice came. "That last's a good +prophecy, Mr. West. It'll be just as you say." + +The big fellow wheeled, the rifle jumping to his shoulder. Instantly +he knew he had been tricked, led into a trap. They must have heard him +coming, whoever they were, and left his own men for bait. + +From the other side two streaks of scarlet launched themselves at him. +West turned to meet them. A third flash of red dived for his knees. He +went down as though hit by a battering-ram. + +But not to stay down. The huge gorilla-shaped figure struggled to +its feet, fighting desperately to throw off the three red-coats long +enough to drag out a revolver. He was like a bear surrounded by +leaping dogs. No sooner had he buffeted one away than the others +were dragging him down. Try as he would, he could not get set. The +attackers always staggered him before he could quite free himself for +action. They swarmed all over him, fought close to avoid his sweeping +lunges, hauled him to his knees by sheer weight of the pack. + +Lemoine flung one swift look around and saw that his captors were very +busy. Now if ever was the time to take a hand in the melee. Swiftly he +rose. He spoke a hurried word in French. + +"One moment, s'il vous plait." From the bushes another man had +emerged, one not in uniform. Lemoine had forgotten him. "Not your +fight. Better keep out," he advised, and pointed the suggestion with a +short-barreled shotgun. + +The trapper looked at him. "Is it that this iss your fight, Mistair +Morse?" he demanded. + +"Fair enough. I'll keep out too." + +The soldiers had West down by this time. They were struggling to +handcuff him. He fought furiously, his great arms and legs threshing +about like flails. Not till he had worn himself out could they pinion +him. + +Beresford rose at last, the job done. His coat was ripped almost from +one shoulder. "My word, he's a whale of an animal," he panted. "If I +hadn't chanced to meet you boys he'd have eaten me alive." + +The big smuggler struggled for breath. When at last he found words, it +was for furious and horrible curses. + +Not till hours later did he get as far as a plain question. "What does +this mean? Where are you taking me, you damned spies?" he roared. + +Beresford politely gave him information. "To the penitentiary, I hope, +Mr. West, for breaking Her Majesty's revenue laws." + + + + +CHAPTER XV + +KISSING DAY + + +All week Jessie and her foster-mother Matapi-Koma had been busy +cooking and baking for the great occasion. Fergus had brought in a +sack full of cottontails and two skunks. To these his father had added +the smoked hindquarters of a young buffalo, half a barrel of dried +fish, and fifty pounds of pemmican. For Angus liked to dispense +hospitality in feudal fashion. + +Ever since Jessie had opened her eyes at the sound of Matapi-Koma's +"Koos koos kwa" (Wake up!), in the pre-dawn darkness of the wintry +Northern morn, she had heard the crunch of snow beneath the webs of +the footmen and the runners of the sleds. For both full-blood Crees +and half-breeds were pouring into Faraway to take part in the +festivities of Ooche-me-gou-kesigow (Kissing Day). + +The traders at the post and their families would join in the revels. +With the exception of Morse, they had all taken Indian wives, in +the loose marriage of the country, and for both business and family +reasons they maintained a close relationship with the natives. Most of +their children used the mother tongue, though they could make shift +to express themselves in English. In this respect as in others the +younger McRaes were superior. They talked English well. They could +read and write. Their father had instilled in them a reverence for the +Scriptures and some knowledge of both the Old and New Testaments. It +was his habit to hold family prayers every evening. Usually half +a dozen guests were present at these services in addition to his +immediate household. + +With the Indians came their dogs, wolfish creatures, prick-eared and +sharp-muzzled, with straight, bristling hair. It was twenty below +zero, but the gaunt animals neither sought nor were given shelter. +They roamed about in front of the fort stockade, snapping at each +other or galloping off on rabbit hunts through the timber. + +The custom was that on this day the braves of the tribe kissed every +woman they met in token of friendship and good-will. To fail of +saluting one, young or old, was a breach of good manners. Since +daybreak they had been marching in to Angus McRae's house and gravely +kissing his wife and daughter. + +Jessie did not like it. She was a fastidious young person. But she +could not escape without mortally offending the solemn-eyed warriors +who offered this evidence of their esteem. As much as possible she +contrived to be busy upstairs, but at least a dozen times she was +fairly cornered and made the best of it. + +At dinner she and the other women of the fort waited on their guests +and watched prodigious quantities of food disappear rapidly. When the +meal was ended, the dancing began. The Crees shuffled around in a +circle, hopping from one foot to the other in time to the beating of +a skin drum. The half-breeds and whites danced the jigs and reels the +former had brought with them from the Red River country. They took the +floor in couples. The men did double-shuffles and cut pigeon wings, +moving faster and faster as the fiddler quickened the tune till they +gave up at last exhausted. Their partners performed as vigorously, the +moccasined feet twinkling in and out so fast that the beads flashed. + +Because it was the largest building in the place, the dance was held +in the C.N. Morse & Company store. From behind the counter Jessie +applauded the performers. She did not care to take part herself. The +years she had spent at school had given her a certain dignity. + +A flash of scarlet caught her eye. Two troopers of the Mounted +Police had come into the room and one of them was taking off his fur +overcoat. The trim, lean-flanked figure and close-cropped, curly head +she recognized at once with quickened pulse. When Winthrop Beresford +came into her neighborhood, Jessie McRae's cheek always flew a flag of +greeting. + +A squaw came up to the young soldier and offered innocently her face +for a kiss. + +Beresford knew the tribal custom. It was his business to help +establish friendly relations between the Mounted and the natives. He +kissed the wrinkled cheek gallantly. A second dusky lady shuffled +forward, and after her a third. The constable did his duty. + +His roving eye caught Jessie's, and found an imp of mischief dancing +there. She was enjoying the predicament in which he found himself. Out +of the tail of that same eye he discovered that two more flat-footed +squaws were headed in his direction. + +He moved briskly across the floor to the counter, vaulted it, and +stood beside Jessie. She was still laughing at him. + +"You're afraid," she challenged. "You ran away." + +A little devil of adventurous mirth was blown to flame in him. "I saw +another lady, lonely and unkissed. The Force answers every call of +distress." + +Her chin tilted ever so little as she answered swiftly. + + "He who will not when he may, + When he will he shall have nay." + +Before she had more than time to guess that he would really dare, the +officer leaned forward and kissed the girl's dusky cheek. + +The color flamed into it. Jessie flung a quick, startled look at him. + +"Kissing Day, Sleeping Dawn," he said, smiling. + +Instantly she followed his lead. "Sleeping Dawn hopes that the Great +Spirit will give to the soldier of the Great Mother across the seas +many happy kissing days in his life." + +"And to you. Will you dance with me?" + +"Not to-day, thank you. I don't jig in public." + +"I was speaking to Miss McRae and not to Sleeping Dawn, and I was +asking her to waltz with me." + +She accepted him as a partner and they took the floor. The other +dancers by tacit consent stepped back to watch this new step, so +rhythmic, light, and graceful. It shocked a little their sense of +fitness that the man's arm should enfold the maiden, but they were +full of lively curiosity to see how the dance was done. + +A novel excitement pulsed through the girl's veins. It was not the +kiss alone, though that had something to do with the exhilaration that +flooded her. Formally his kiss had meant only a recognition of +the day. Actually it had held for both of them a more personal +significance, the swift outreach of youth to youth. But the dance was +an escape. She had learned at Winnipeg the waltz of the white race. +No other girl at Faraway knew the step. She chose to think that the +constable had asked her because this stressed the predominance of her +father's blood in her. It was a symbol to all present that the ways of +the Anglo-Saxon were her ways. + +She had the light, straight figure, the sense of rhythm, the +instinctively instant response of the born waltzer. As she glided over +the floor in the arms of Beresford, the girl knew pure happiness. Not +till he was leading her back to the counter did she wake from the +spell the music and motion had woven over her. + +A pair of cold eyes in a white, bloodless face watched her beneath +thin black brows. A shock ran through her, as though she had been +drenched with icy water. She shivered. There was a sinister menace in +that steady, level gaze. More than once she had felt it. Deep in her +heart she knew, from the world-old experience of her sex, that the man +desired her, that he was biding his time with the patience and the +ruthlessness of a panther. "Poker" Whaley had in him a power of +dangerous evil notable in a country where bad men were not scarce. + +The officer whispered news to Jessie. "Bully West broke jail two weeks +ago. He killed a guard. We're here looking for him." + +"He hasn't been here. At least I haven't heard it," she answered +hurriedly. + +For Whaley, in his slow, feline fashion, was moving toward them. + +Bluntly the gambler claimed his right. "Ooche-me-gou-kesigow," he +said. + +The girl shook her head. "Are you a Cree, Mr. Whaley?" + +For that he had an answer. "Is Beresford?" + +"Mr. Beresford is a stranger. He didn't know the custom--that it +doesn't apply to me except with Indians. I was taken by surprise." + +Whaley was a man of parts. He had been educated for a priest, but had +kicked over the traces. There was in him too much of the Lucifer for +the narrow trail the father of a parish must follow. + +He bowed. "Then I must content myself with a dance." + +Jessie hesitated. It was known that he was a libertine. The devotion +of his young Cree wife was repaid with sneers and the whiplash. But he +was an ill man to make an enemy of. For her family's sake rather than +her own she yielded reluctantly. + +Though a heavy-set man, he was an excellent waltzer. He moved evenly +and powerfully. But in the girl's heart resentment flamed. She knew he +was holding her too close to him, taking advantage of her modesty in a +way she could not escape without public protest. + +"I'm faint," she told him after they had danced a few minutes. + +"Oh, you'll be all right," he said, still swinging her to the music. + +She stopped. "No, I've had enough." Jessie had caught sight of her +brother Fergus at the other end of the room. She joined him. Tom Morse +was standing by his side. + +Whaley nodded indifferently toward the men and smiled at Jessie, but +that cold lip smile showed neither warmth nor friendliness. "We'll +dance again--many times," he said. + +The girl's eyes flashed. "We'll have to ask Mrs. Whaley about that. I +don't see her here to-night. I hope she's quite well." + +It was impossible to tell from the chill, expressionless face of the +squaw-man whether her barb had stung or not. "She's where she belongs, +at home in the kitchen. It's her business to be well. I reckon she is. +I don't ask her." + +"You're not a demonstrative husband, then?" + +"Husband!" He shrugged his shoulders insolently. "Oh, well! What's in +a name?" + +She knew the convenient code of his kind. They took to themselves +Indian wives, with or without some form of marriage ceremony, and +flung them aside when they grew tired of the tie or found it galling. +There was another kind of squaw-man, the type represented by her +father. He had joined his life to that of Matapi-Koma for better or +worse until such time as death should separate them. + +In Jessie's bosom a generous indignation burned. There was a reason +why just now Whaley should give his wife much care and affection. +She turned her shoulder and began to talk with Fergus and Tom Morse, +definitely excluding the gambler from the conversation. + +He was not one to be embarrassed by a snub. He held his ground, +narrowed eyes watching her with the vigilant patience of the panther +he sometimes made her think of. Presently he forced a reentry. + +"What's this I hear about Bully West escaping from jail?" + +Fergus answered. "Two-three weeks ago. Killed a guard, they say. He +was headin' west an' north last word they had of him." + +All of them were thinking the same thing, that the man would reach +Faraway if he could, lie hidden till he had rustled an outfit, then +strike out with a dog team deeper into the Lone Lands. + +"Here's wishin' him luck," his partner said coolly. + +"All the luck he deserves," amended Morse quietly. + +"You can't keep a good man down," Whaley boasted, looking straight at +the other Indian trader. "I wouldn't wonder but what he'll pay a few +debts when he gets here." + +Tom smiled and offered another suggestion. "If he gets here and has +time. He'll have to hurry." + +His gaze shifted across the room to Beresford, alert, gay, +indomitable, and as implacable as fate. + + + + +CHAPTER XVI + +A BUSINESS DEAL + + +It was thirty below zero. The packed snow crunched under the feet of +Morse as he moved down what served Faraway for a main street. The +clock in the store registered mid-afternoon, but within a few minutes +the sub-Arctic sun would set, night would fall, and aurora lights +would glow in the west. + +Four false suns were visible around the true one, the whole forming a +cross of five orbs. Each of these swam in perpendicular segments of a +circle of prismatic colors. Even as the young man looked, the lowest +of the cluster lights plunged out of sight. By the time he had reached +the McRae house, darkness hung over the white and frozen land. + +Jessie opened the door to his knock and led him into the living-room +of the family, where also the trapper's household ate and Fergus +slept. It was a rough enough place, with its mud-chinked log walls and +its floor of whipsawed lumber. But directly opposite the door was a +log-piled hearth that radiated comfort and cheerfulness. Buffalo robes +served as rugs and upon the walls had been hung furs of silver fox, +timber wolves, mink, and beaver. On a shelf was a small library of not +more than twenty-five books, but they were ones that only a lover of +good reading would have chosen. Shakespeare and Burns held honored +places there. Scott's poems and three or four of his novels were in +the collection. In worn leather bindings were "Tristram Shandy," +and Smollett's "Complete History of England." Bunyan's "Pilgrim's +Progress" shouldered Butler's "Hudibras" and Baxter's "The Saint's +Everlasting Rest." Into this choice company one frivolous modern novel +had stolen its way. "Nicholas Nickleby" had been brought from Winnipeg +by Jessie when she returned from school. The girl had read them all +from cover to cover, most of them many times. Angus too knew them all, +with the exception of the upstart "storybook" written by a London +newspaper man of whom he had never before heard. + +"I'm alone," Jessie explained. "Father and Fergus have gone out to the +traps. They'll not be back till to-morrow. Mother's with Mrs. Whaley." + +Tom knew that the trader's wife was not well. She was expecting to be +confined in a few weeks. + +He was embarrassed at being alone with the girl inside the walls of +a house. His relations with Angus McRae reached civility, but not +cordiality. The stern old Scotchman had never invited him to drop in +and call. He resented the fact that through the instrumentality of +Morse he had been forced to horsewhip the lass he loved, and the +trader knew he was not forgiven his share in the episode and probably +never would be. Now Tom had come only because a matter of business had +to be settled one way or the other at once. + +"Blandoine is leavin' for Whoop-Up in the mornin'. I came to see your +father about those robes. If we buy, it'll have to be now. I can send +'em down with Blandoine," he explained. + +She nodded, briskly. "Father said you could have them at your price if +you'll pay what he asked for those not split. They're good hides--cows +and young bulls."[5] + +[Footnote 5: A split robe was one cut down the middle and sewn +together with sinews. The ones skinned from the animal in a single +piece were much more valuable, but the native women usually prepared +the hides the other way because of the weight in handling. One of the +reasons the Indians gave the missionaries in favor of polygamy was +that one wife could not dress a buffalo robe without assistance. The +braves themselves did not condescend to menial labor of this kind. +(W.M.R.)] + +"It's a deal," the fur-trader said promptly. "Glad to get 'em, though +I'm payin' all I can afford for the split ones." + +"I'll get the key to the storehouse," Jessie said. + +She walked out of the room with the springy, feather-footed step that +distinguished her among all the women that he knew. In a few moments +she was back. Instead of giving him the key, she put it down on the +table near his hand. + +Beneath the tan the dark blood beat into his face. He knew she had +done this in order not to run the risk of touching him. + +For a long moment his gaze gripped and held her. Between them passed +speech without words. His eyes asked if he were outside the pale +completely, if he could never wipe out the memory of that first cruel +meeting. Hers answered proudly that, half-breed though she was, he was +to her only a wolfer, of less interest than Black, the leader of her +father's dog train. + +He picked up the key and left, wild thoughts whirling through his +mind. He loved her. Of what use was it trying longer to disguise it +from himself. Of the inferior blood she might be, yet his whole being +went out to her in deep desire. He wanted her for his mate. He craved +her in every fiber of his clean, passionate manhood, as he had never +before longed for a woman in his life. And she hated him--hated him +with all the blazing scorn of a young proud soul whose fine body had +endured degradation on his account. He was a leper, to be classed with +Bully West. + +Nor did he blame her. How could she feel otherwise and hold her +self-respect. The irony of it brought a bitter smile to his lips. If +she only knew it, the years would avenge her a hundredfold. For he had +cut himself off from even the chance of the joy that might have been +his. + +In the sky an aurora flashed with scintillating splendor. The heavens +were aglow with ever-changing bars and columns of colored fire. + +Morse did not know it. Not till he had passed a dozen steps beyond a +man in heavy furs did his mind register recognition of him as Whaley. +He did not even wonder what business was taking the gambler toward +Angus McRae's house. + +Business obtruded its claims. He arranged with Blandoine to take +the robes out with him and walked back to the McRae storehouse. It +adjoined the large log cabin where the Scotchman and his family lived. + +Blandoine and he went over the robes carefully in order that there +should be no mistake as to which ones the trainmaster took. This done, +Morse locked the door and handed the key to his companion. + +To him there was borne the sound of voices--one low and deep, the +other swift and high. He caught no words, but he became aware that a +queer excitement tingled through his veins. At the roots of his hair +there was an odd, prickling sensation. He could give himself no +reason, but some instinct of danger rang in him like a bell. The low +bass and the light high treble--they reached him alternately, cutting +into each other, overriding each other, clashing in agitated dissent. + +Then--a shrill scream for help! + +Morse could never afterward remember opening the door of the log +house. It seemed to him that he burst through it like a battering-ram, +took the kitchen in two strides, and hurled himself against the sturdy +home-made door which led into the living-room. + +This checked him, for some one had slid into its socket the bar used +as a bolt. He looked around the kitchen and found in one swift glance +what he wanted. It was a large back log for the fireplace. + +With this held at full length under his arm he crashed forward. The +wood splintered. He charged again, incited by a second call for +succor. This time his attack dashed the bolt and socket from their +place. Morse stumbled into the room like a drunken man. + + + + +CHAPTER XVII + +A BOARD CREAKS + + +After Morse had closed the door, Jessie listened until the crisp +crunch of his footsteps had died away. She subdued an impulse to call +him back and put into words her quarrel against him. + +From the table she picked up a gun-cover of moose leather she was +making and moved to the fireplace. Automatically her fingers fitted +into place a fringe of red cloth. (This had been cut from an old +petticoat, but the source of the decoration would remain a secret, not +on any account to be made known to him who was to receive the gift.) +Usually her hands were busy ones, but now they fell away from the work +listlessly. + +The pine logs crackled, lighting one end of the room and filling the +air with aromatic pungency. As she gazed into the red coals her mind +was active. + +She knew that her scorn of the fur-trader was a fraud. Into her hatred +of him she threw an energy always primitive and sometimes savage. But +he held her entire respect. It was not pleasant to admit this. Her +mind clung to the shadowy excuse that he had been a wolfer, although +the Indians looked on him now as a good friend and a trader who would +not take advantage of them. Angus McRae himself had said there was no +better citizen in the Northland. + +No, she could not hold Tom Morse in contempt as she would have liked. +But she could cherish her animosity and feed it on memories that +scorched her as the whiplash had her smooth and tender flesh. She +would never forgive him--never. Not if he humbled himself in the dust. + +Toward Angus McRae she held no grudge whatever. He had done only his +duty as he saw it. The circumstances had forced his hand, for her word +had pledged him to punishment. But this man who had walked into her +life so roughly, mastered her by physical force, dragged her to +the ignominy of the whip, and afterward had dared to do her a +service--when she woke at night and thought of him she still burned +with shame and anger. He had been both author and witness of her +humiliation. + +The girl's reverie stirred reflection of other men, for already she +had suitors in plenty. Upon one of them her musing lingered. He had +brought to her gifts of the friendly smile, of comradeship, of youth's +debonair give-and-take. She did not try to analyze her feeling for +Winthrop Beresford. It was enough to know that he had brought into her +existence the sparkle of joy. + +For life had stalked before her with an altogether too tragic mien. +In this somber land men did not laugh much. Their smiles held a +background of gravity. Icy winter reigned two thirds of the year and +summer was a brief hot blaze following no spring. Nature demanded of +those who lived here that they struggle to find subsistence. In that +conflict human beings forgot that they had been brought into the world +to enjoy it with careless rapture. + +Somewhere in the house a board, creaked. Jessie heard it +inattentively, for in the bitter cold woodwork was always snapping and +cracking. + +Beresford had offered her a new philosophy of life. She did not quite +accept it, yet it fascinated. He believed that the duty of happiness +was laid on people as certainly as the duty of honesty. She remembered +that once he had said.... + +There had come to her no sound, but Jessie knew that some one had +opened the door and was standing on the threshold watching her. She +turned her head. Her self-invited guest was Whaley. + +Jessie rose. "What do you want?" + +She was startled at the man's silent entry, ready to be alarmed if +necessary, but not yet afraid. It was as though her thoughts waited +for the cue he would presently give. Some instinct for safety made her +cautious. She did not tell the free trader that her father and Fergus +were from home. + +He looked at her, appraisingly, from head to foot, in such a way that +she felt his gaze had stripped her. + +"You know what I want. You know what I'm going to get ... some day," +he purred in his slow, feline way. + +She pushed from her mind a growing apprehension. + +"Father and Fergus--if you want them--" + +"Have I said I wanted them?" he asked. "They're out in the woods +trappin'. I'm not lookin' for them. The two of us'll be company for +each other." + +"Go," she said, anger flaring at his insolence. "Go. You've no +business here." + +"I'm not here for business, but for pleasure, my dear." + +The cold, fishy eyes in his white face gloated. Suddenly she wanted to +scream and pushed back the desire scornfully. If she did, nobody would +hear her. This had to be fought out one to one. + +"Why didn't you knock?" she demanded. + +"We'll say I did and that you didn't hear me," he answered suavely. +"What's it matter among friends anyhow?" + +"What do you want?" By sheer will power she kept her voice low. + +"Your mother's over at the house. I dropped in to say she'll probably +stay all night." + +"Is your wife worse?" + +He lifted the black brows that contrasted so sharply with the pallor +of the face. "Really you get ahead of me, my dear. I don't recall ever +getting married." + +"That's a hateful thing to say," she flamed, and bit her lower lip +with small white teeth to keep from telling the squaw-man what she +thought of him. The Cree girl he had taken to wife was going down +into the Valley of the Shadow to bear him a child while he callously +repudiated her. + +He opened his fur coat and came to the fireplace. "I can say nicer +things--to the right girl," he said, and looked meaningly at her. + +"I'll have to go get Susie Lemoine to stay with me," Jessie said +hurriedly. "I didn't know Mother wasn't coming home." + +She made a move toward a fur lying across the back of a chair. + +He laid a hand upon her arm. "What's your rush? What are you dodgin' +for, girl? I'm good as Susie to keep the goblins from gettin you." + +"Don't touch me." Her eyes sparked fire. + +"You're mighty high-heeled for a nitchie. I reckon you forget you're +Sleeping Dawn, daughter of a Blackfoot squaw." + +"I'm Jessie McRae, daughter of Angus, and if you insult me, you'll +have to settle with him." + +He gave a short snort of laughter. "Wake up, girl. What's the use of +foolin' yourself? You're a breed. McRae's tried to forget it and so +have you. But all the time you know damn well you're half Injun." + +Jessie looked at him with angry contempt, then wheeled for the door. + +Whaley had anticipated that and was there before her. His narrowed, +covetous eyes held her while one hand behind his back slid the bolt +into place. + +"Let me out!" she cried. + +"Be reasonable. I'm not aimin' to hurt you." + +"Stand aside and let me through." + +He managed another insinuating laugh. "Have some sense. Quit ridin' +that high horse and listen while I talk to you." + +But she was frightened by this time as much as she was incensed. A +drum of dread was beating in her panicky heart. She saw in his eyes +what she had never before seen on a face that looked into hers--though +she was to note it often in the dreadful days that followed--the +ruthless appetite of a wild beast crouching for its kill." + +"Let me go! Let me go!" Her voice was shrilly out of control. "Unbar +the door, I tell you!" + +"I'm a big man in this country. Before I'm through. I'll be head chief +among the trappers for hundreds of miles. I'm offerin' you the chance +of a lifetime. Throw in with me and you'll ride in your coach at +Winnipeg some day." Voice and words were soft and smooth, but back of +them Jessie felt the panther couched for its spring. + +She could only repeat her demand, in a cry that reached its ictus in a +sob. + +"If you're dreamin' about that red-coat spy--hopin' he'll marry +you after he's played fast and loose with you--why, forget such +foolishness. I know his kind. When he's had his fling, he'll go back +to his own people and settle down. He's lookin' for a woman, not a +wife." + +"That's a lie!" she flung out, rage for the moment in ascendent. "Open +that door or I'll--" + +Swiftly his hand shot forward and caught her wrist. "What'll you do?" +he asked, and triumph rode in his eyes. + +She screamed. One of his hands clamped down over her mouth, the other +went round her waist and drew the slim body to him. She fought, +straining from him, throwing back her head in another lifted shriek +for help. + +As well she might have matched her strength with a buffalo bull. He +was still under forty, heavy-set, bones packed with heavy muscles. It +seemed to her that all the power of her vital youth vanished and left +only limp and flaccid weakness. He snatched her close and kissed the +dusky eyes, the soft cheeks, the colorful lips.... + +She became aware that he was holding her from him, listening. There +was a crash of wood. + +Again her call for help rang out. + +Whaley flung her from him. He crouched, every nerve and muscle tense, +lips drawn back in a snarl. She saw that in his hand there was a +revolver. + +Against the door a heavy weight was hurled. The wood burst into +splinters as the bolt shot from the socket. Drunkenly a man plunged +across the threshold, staggering from the impact of the shock. + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII + +A GUN ROARS + + +The two men glared at each other, silently, their faces distorted to +gargoyles in the leaping and uncertain light. Wary, vigilant, tense, +they faced each other as might jungle tigers waiting for the best +moment to attack. + +There was a chance for the situation to adjust itself without +bloodshed. Whaley could not afford to kill and Morse had no desire to +force his hand. + +Jessie's fear outran her judgment. She saw the menace of the revolver +trained on her rescuer and thought the gambler was about to fire. She +leaped for the weapon, and so precipitated what she dreaded. + +The gun roared. A bullet flew past Morse and buried itself in a log. +Next instant, clinging with both hands to Whaley's wrist, Jessie found +herself being tossed to and fro as the man struggled to free his arm. +Flung at a tangent against the wall, she fell at the foot of the couch +where Fergus slept. + +Again the blaze and roar of the revolver filled the room. Morse +plunged head down at his enemy, still carrying the log he had used as +a battering-ram. It caught the gambler at that point of the stomach +known as the solar plexus. Whaley went down and out of consciousness +like an ox that has been pole-axed. + +Tom picked up the revolver and dropped it into the pocket of his fur +coat. He stooped to make sure that his foe was beyond the power of +doing damage. Then he lifted Jessie from the corner where she lay +huddled. + +"Hurt?" he asked. + +The girl shuddered. "No. Is he--is he killed?" + +"Wind knocked out of him. Nothing more." + +"He didn't hit you?" + +There was the ghost of a smile in his eyes. "No, I hit him." + +"He was horrid. I--I--" Again a little shiver ran through her body. +She felt very weak at the knees and caught for a moment at the lapel +of his coat to steady herself. Neither of them was conscious of the +fact that she was in his arms, clinging to him while she won back +self-control. + +"It's all right now. Don't worry. Lucky I came back to show Blandoine +which furs to take." + +"If you hadn't--" She drew a ragged breath that was half a sob. + +Morse loved her the more for the strain of feminine hysteria that made +her for the moment a soft and tender child to be comforted. He had +known her competent, savage, disdainful, one in whom vital and +passionate life flowed quick. He had never before seen the weakness in +her reaching out to strength. That by sheer luck it was _his_ power to +which she clung filled him with deep delight. + +He began to discount his joy lest she do it instead. His arm fell away +from her waist. + +"I 'most wrecked the house," he said with a humorous glance at the +door. "I don't always bring one o' the walls with me when I come into +a room." + +"He bolted the door," she explained rather needlessly. "He wouldn't +let me out." + +"I heard you call," he answered, without much more point. + +She glanced at the man lying on the floor. "You don't think he might +be--" She stopped, unwilling to use the word. + +Tom knelt beside him and felt his heart. + +"It's beating," he said. And added quickly, "His eyes are open." + +It was true. The cold, fishy eyes had flickered open and were taking +stock of the situation. The gambler instantly chose his line of +defense. He spoke, presently. + +"What in the devil was bitin' you, Morse? Just because I was jokin' +the girl, you come rampagin' in and knock me galley west with a big +club. I'll not stand for that. Soon as I'm fit to handle myself, you +and I'll have a settlement." + +"Get up and get out," ordered the younger man. + +"When I get good and ready. Don't try to run on me, young fellow. Some +other fools have found that dangerous." + +Whaley sat up, groaned, and pressed his hands upon the abdomen at the +point where he had been struck. + +The reddish-brown glint in the eyes of Morse advertised the cold rage +of the Montanan. He caught the gambler by the collar and pulled him to +his feet. + +"Get out, you yellow wolf!" he repeated in a low, savage voice. + +The white-faced trader was still wobbly on his feet. He felt both +sore and sick at the pit of his stomach, in no mood for any further +altercation with this hard-hitting athlete. But he would not go +without saving his face. + +"I don't know what business you've got to order me out--unless--" His +gaze included the girl for a moment, and the insult of his leer was +unmistakable. + +Morse caught him by the scruff of the neck, ran him out of the room, +and flung him down the steps into the road. The gambler tripped on the +long buffalo coat he was wearing and rolled over in the snow. Slowly +he got to his feet and locked eyes with the other. + +Rage almost choked his words. "You'll be sorry for this one o' these +days, Morse. I'll get you right. Nobody has ever put one over on Poker +Whaley and nobody ever will. Don't forget that." + +Tom Morse wasted no words. He stood silently on the steps, a splendid, +supple figure of menacing power, and watched his foe pass down the +road. There was in him a cruel and passionate desire to take the +gambler and break him with his hands, to beat him till he crawled away +a weak and wounded creature fit for a hospital. He clamped his teeth +hard and fought down the impulse. + +Presently he turned and walked slowly back into the house. His face +was still set and his hands clenched. He knew that if Whaley had hurt +Jessie, he would have killed him with his naked fingers. + +"You can't stay here. Where do you want me to take you?" he asked, and +his cold hardness reminded her of the Tom Morse who had led her to the +whip one other night. + +She did not know that inside he was a caldron of emotion and that it +was only by freezing himself he could keep down the volcanic eruption. + +"I'll go to Susie Lemoine's," she said in a small, obedient voice. + +With his hands in his pockets he stood and let he find a fur coat and +slip into it. He had a sense of frustration. He wanted to let go of +himself and tell all that was in his torrid heart. Instead, he encased +himself in ice and drove her farther from him. + +They walked down the road side by side, neither of them speaking. She +too was a victim of chaotic feeling. It would be long before she could +forget how he had broken through the door and saved her. + +But she could not find the words to tell him so. They parted at the +door of Lemoine's cabin with a chill "Good-night" that left them both +unhappy and dissatisfied. + + + + +CHAPTER XIX + +"D'YOU WONDER SHE HATES ME?" + + +To Morse came Angus McRae with the right hand of friendship the day +after the battle in the log house. + +Eyes blue as Highland lochs fastened to those of the fur-trader. "Lad, +I canna tell ye what's in my heart. 'The Lord bless thee, and keep +thee. The Lord make his face shine upon thee, and be gracious unto +thee. The Lord lift up his countenance upon thee, and give thee +peace.'" + +Tom, embarrassed, made light of the affair. "Lucky I was +Johnnie-on-the-Spot." + +The old Scot shook his head. "No luck sent ye back to hear the +skreigh o' the lass, but the whisper of the guid Father withoot whose +permission not even a sparrow falls to the ground. He chose you as the +instrument. I'll never be forgettin' what you did for my dawtie, Tom +Morse. Jess will have thankit you, but I add mine to hers." + +In point of fact Jessie had not thanked him in set words. She had been +in too great an agitation of spirit to think of it. But Morse did not +say so. + +"Oh, that's all right. Any one would have done it. Mighty glad I was +near enough. Hope she doesn't feel any worse for the shock." + +"Not a bit. I'm here to ask ye to let bygones be bygones. I've nursed +a grudge, but, man, it's clean, washed oot o' my heart. Here's my +hand, if you'll tak it." + +Tom did, gladly. He discovered at the same moment that the sun was +striking sparks of light from a thousand snow crystals. It was a good +world, if one only looked for the evidence of it. + +"The latchstring is always oot for you at the hame of Angus McRae. +Will you no' drap in for a crack the nicht?" asked the trapper. + +"Not to-night. Sometime. I'll see." Tom found himself in the position +of one who finds open to him a long-desired pleasure and is too shy to +avail himself of it immediately. "Have you seen Whaley yet to-day?" he +asked, to turn the subject. + +The hunter's lip grew straight and grim. "I have not. He's no' at the +store. The clerk says a messenger called for him early this mornin' +and he left the clachan at once. Will he be hidin' oot, do you think?" + +Tom shook his head. "Not Whaley. He'll bluff it through. The fellow's +not yellow. Probably he'll laugh it off and say he was only stealin' a +kiss an' that Miss Jessie was silly to make a fuss about it." + +"We'll let it go at that--after I've told him publicly what I think o' +him." + +Where Whaley had been nobody in Faraway knew. When he returned at +sunset, he went direct to the store and took off his snowshoes. He was +knocking the packed and frozen slush from them at the moment Angus +McRae confronted him. + +The trader laughed, from the lips, just as Tom had prophesied he would +do. "I reckon I owe you an apology, McRae," he said. "That li'l' +wild-cat of yours lost her head when I jollied her and Morse broke the +door down like the jackass he is." + +The dressing-down that Angus McRae gave Whaley is still remembered +by one or two old-timers in the Northwest. In crisp, biting words he +freed his mind without once lapsing into profanity. He finished with a +warning. "Tak tent you never speak to the lass again, or you an' me'll +come to grips." + +The storekeeper heard him out, a sneering smile on his white face. +Inside, he raged with furious anger, but he did not let his feelings +come to the surface. He was a man who had the patience to wait for +his vengeance. The longer it was delayed, the heavier would it be. A +characteristic of his cold, callous temperament was that he took fire +slowly, but, once lit, his hate endured like peat coals in a grate. A +vain man, his dignity was precious to him. He writhed at the defeat +Morse had put upon him, at his failure with Jessie, at the scornful +public rebuke of her father. Upon all three of these some day he would +work a sweet revenge. Like all gamblers, he followed hunches. Soon, +one of these told him, his chance would come. When it did he would +make all three of them sweat blood. + +Beresford met Tom Morse later in the day. He cocked a whimsical eye at +the fur-trader. + +"I hear McRae's going to sue you for damages to his house," he said. + +"Where did you hear all that?" asked his friend, apparently busy +inspecting a half-dozen beaver furs. + +"And Whaley, for damages to his internal machinery. Don't you know you +can't catapult through a man's tummy with a young pine tree and not +injure his physical geography?" the constable reproached. + +"When you're through spoofin' me, as you subjects of the Queen call +it," suggested Tom. + +"Why, then, I'll tell you to keep an eye on Whaley. He doesn't love +you a whole lot for what you did, and he's liable to do you up first +chance he gets." + +"I'm not lookin' for trouble, but if Whaley wants a fight--" + +"He doesn't--not your kind of a fight. His idea will be to have you +foul before he strikes. Walk with an eye in the back of your head. +Sleep with it open, Don't sit at windows after lamps are lit--not +without curtains all down. Play all your cards close." The red-coat +spoke casually, slapping his boot with a small riding-switch. He was +smiling. None the less Tom knew he was in dead earnest. + +"Sounds like good advice. I'll take it," the trader said easily. +"Anything more on your chest?" + +"Why, yes. Where did Whaley go to-day? What called him out of town on +a hurry-up trip of a few hours?" + +"Don't know. Do you?" + +"No, but I'm a good guesser." + +"Meanin'?" + +"Bully West. Holed up somewhere out in the woods. A fellow came in +this morning and got Whaley, who snowshoed back with him at once." + +Tom nodded agreement. "Maybeso. Whaley was away five or six hours. +That means he probably traveled from eight to ten miles out." + +"Question is, in what direction? Nobody saw him go or come--at least, +so as to know that he didn't circle round the town and come in from +the other side." + +"He'll go again, with supplies for West. Watch him." + +"I'll do just that." + +"He might send some one with them." + +"Yes, he might do that," admitted Beresford. "I'll keep an eye on +the store and see what goes out. We want West. He's a cowardly +murderer--killed the man who trusted him--shot him in the back. This +country will be well rid of him when he's hanged for what he did to +poor Tim Kelly." + +"He's a rotten bad lot, but he's dangerous. Never forget that," warned +the fur-buyer. "If he ever gets the drop on you for a moment, you're +gone." + +"Of course we may be barking up the wrong tree," the officer reflected +aloud. "Maybe West isn't within five hundred miles of here. Maybe he +headed off another way. But I don't think it. He had to get back to +where he was known so as to get an outfit. That meant either this +country or Montana. And the word is that he was seen coming this way +both at Slide Out and crossing Old Man's River after he made his +getaway." + +"He's likely figurin' on losin' himself in the North woods." + +"My notion, too. Say, Tom, I have an invitation from a young lady for +you and me. I'm to bring you to supper, Jessie McRae says. To-night. +Venison and sheep pemmican--and real plum pudding, son. You're to +smoke the pipe of peace with Angus and warm yourself in the smiles of +Miss Jessie and Matapi-Koma. How's the programme suit you?" + +Tom flushed. "I don't reckon I'll go," he said after a moment's +deliberation. + +His friend clapped an affectionate hand on his shoulder. "Cards down, +old fellow. Spill the story of this deadly feud between you and Jessie +and I'll give you an outside opinion on it." + +The Montanan looked at him bleakly. "Haven't you heard? If you +haven't, you're the only man in this country that hasn't." + +"You mean--about the whipping?" Beresford asked gently. + +"That's all," Morse answered bitterly. "Nothing a-tall. I merely had +her horsewhipped. You wouldn't think any girl would object to that, +would you?" + +"I'd like to hear the right of it. How did it happen?" + +"The devil was in me, I reckon. We were runnin' across the line that +consignment of whiskey you found and destroyed near Whoop-Up. She came +on our camp one night, crept up, and smashed some barrels. I caught +her. She fought like a wild-cat." Morse pulled up the sleeve of his +coat and showed a long, ragged scar on the arm. "Gave me that as a +lil' souvenir to remember her by. You see, she was afraid I'd take her +back to camp. So she fought. You know West. I wouldn't have taken her +to him." + +"What did you do?" + +"After I got her down, we came to terms. I was to take her to McRae's +camp and she was to be horsewhipped by him. My arm was hurtin' like +sin, and I was thinkin' her only a wild young Injun." + +"So you took her home?" + +"And McRae flogged her. You know him. He's Scotch--and thorough. It +was a sickening business. When he got through, he was white as snow. I +felt like a murderer. D'you wonder she hates me?" + +Beresford's smile was winning. "Is it because she hates you that she +wants you to come to supper to-night?" + +"It's because she's in debt to me--or thinks she is, for of course she +isn't--and wants to pay it and get rid of it as soon as she can. I +tell you, Win, she couldn't bear to touch my hand when she gave me the +key to the storehouse the other night--laid it down on the table for +me to pick up. It has actually become physical with her. She'd shudder +if I touched her. I'm not going to supper there. Why should I take +advantage of a hold I have on her generosity? No, I'll not go." + +And from that position Beresford could not move him. + +After supper the constable found a chance to see Jessie alone. She was +working over the last touches of the gun-case. + +"When it's finished who gets it?" he asked, sitting down gracefully on +the arm of a big chair. + +She flashed a teasing glance at him. "Who do you think deserves it?" + +"I deserve it," he assured her at once. "But it isn't the deserving +always who get the rewards in this world. Very likely you'll give it +to some chap like Tom Morse." + +"Who wouldn't come to supper when we asked him." She lifted steady, +inquiring eyes. "What was the real reason he didn't come?" + +"Said he couldn't get away from the store because--" + +"Yes, I heard that. I'm asking for the real reason, Win." + +He gave it. "Tom thinks you hate him and he won't force himself on +your generosity." + +"Oh!" She seemed to be considering that. + +"Do you?" + +"Do I what?" + +"Hate him." + +She felt a flush burning beneath the dusky brown of her cheeks. "If +you knew what he'd done to me--" + +"Perhaps I do," he said, very gently. + +Her dark eyes studied him intently. "He told you?" + +"No, one hears gossip. He hates himself because of it. Tom's white, +Jessie." + +"And I'm Indian. Of course that does make a difference. If he'd had a +white girl whipped, you couldn't defend him," she flamed. + +"You know I didn't mean that, little pal." His sunny smile was +disarming. "What I mean is that he's sorry for what he did. Why not +give him a chance to be friends?" + +"Well, we gave him a chance to-night, didn't we? And he chose not to +take it. What do you want me to do--go and thank him kindly for having +me whipped?" + +Beresford gave up with a shrug. He knew when he had said enough. Some +day the seed he had dropped might germinate. + +"Wouldn't it be a good idea to work a W.B. on that case?" he asked +with friendly impudence. "Then if I lost it, whoever found it could +return it." + +"I don't give presents to people who lose them," she parried. + +Her dancing eyes were very bright as they met his. She loved the trim +lines of his clean beautiful youth and the soul expressed by them. + +Matapi-Koma waddled into the room and the Mounted Policeman +transferred his attention to her. She weighed two hundred twelve +pounds, but was not sensitive on the subject. Beresford claimed +anxiously that she was growing thin. + +The Indian woman merely smiled on him benignantly. She liked him, as +all women did. And she hoped that he would stay in the country and +marry Sleeping Dawn. + + + + +CHAPTER XX + +ONISTAH READS SIGN + + +McRae fitted Jessie's snowshoes. + +"You'll be hame before the dark, lass," he said, a little anxiously. + +"Yes, Father." + +The hunter turned to Onistah. "She's in your care, lad. Gin the +weather changes, or threatens to, let the traps go and strike for the +toon. You're no' to tak chances." + +"Back assam weputch (very early)," promised the Blackfoot. + +He was proud of the trust confided to him. To him McRae was a great +man. Among many of the trappers and the free traders the old Scot's +word was law. They came to him with their disputes for settlement and +abided by his decisions. For Angus was not only the patriarch of the +clan, if such a loose confederation of followers could be called a +clan; he was esteemed for his goodness and practical common sense. + +Onistah's heart swelled with an emotion that was more than vanity. His +heart filled with gladness that Jessie should choose him as guide and +companion to snowshoe with her out into the white forests where her +traps were set. For the young Indian loved her dumbly, without any +hope of reward, in much the same way that some of her rough soldiers +must have loved Joan of Arc. Jessie was a mistress whose least whim he +felt it a duty to obey. He had worshiped her ever since he had seen +her, a little eager warm-hearted child, playing in his mother's +wigwam. She was as much beyond his reach as the North Star. Yet her +swift tender smile was for him just as it was for Fergus. + +They shuffled out of the village into the forest that crept up to the +settlement on all sides. Soon they were deep in its shadows, pushing +along the edge of a muskeg which they skirted carefully in order not +to be hampered by its treacherous boggy footing. + +Jessie wore a caribou-skin capote with the fur on as a protection +against the cold wind. Her moccasins were of smoked moose-skin +decorated with the flower-pattern bead embroidery so much in use among +the French half-breeds of the North. The socks inside them were of +duffle and the leggings of strouds, both materials manufactured for +the Hudson's Bay Company for its trappers. + +The day was comparatively warm, but the snow was not slushy nor very +deep. None the less she was glad when they reached the trapping ground +and Onistah called a halt for dinner. She was tired, from the weight +of the snow on her shoes, and her feet were blistered by reason of the +lacings which cut into the duffle and the tender flesh inside. + +Onistah built a fire of poplar, which presently crackled like a battle +front and shot red-hot coals at them in an irregular fusillade. Upon +this they made tea, heated pemmican and bannocks, and thawed a jar of +preserves Jessie had made the previous summer of service berries and +wild raspberries. Before it they dried their moccasins, socks, and +leggings. + +Afterward they separated to make a round of the traps, agreeing to +meet an hour and a half later at the place of their dinner camp. + +The Blackfoot found one of the small traps torn to pieces, probably by +a bear, for he saw its tracks in the snow. He rebuilt the snare +and baited it with parts of a rabbit he had shot. In one trap he +discovered a skunk and in another a timber wolf. When he came in sight +of the rendezvous, he was late. + +Jessie was not there. He waited half an hour in growing anxiety before +he went to meet her. Night would fall soon. He must find her while it +was still light enough to follow her tracks. The disasters that might +have fallen upon her crowded his mind. A bear might have attacked her. +She might be lost or tangled in the swampy muskeg. Perhaps she had +accidentally shot herself. + +As swiftly as he could he snowshoed through the forest, following the +plain trail she had left. It carried him to a trap from which she had +taken prey, for it was newly baited and the snow was sprinkled with +blood. Before he reached the second gin, the excitement in him +quickened. Some one in snowshoes had cut her path and had deflected +to pursue. Onistah knew that the one following was a white man. The +points of the shoes toed out. Crees toed in, just the same on webs as +in moccasins. + +His imagination was active. What white man had any business in these +woods? Why should he leave that business to overtake Jessie McRae? +Onistah did not quite know why he was worried, but involuntarily he +quickened his pace. + +Less than a quarter of a mile farther on, he read another chapter of +the story written in the trampled snow. There had been a struggle. His +mistress had been overpowered. He could see where she had been flung +into a white bank and dragged out of it. She had tried to run and had +got hardly a dozen yards before recapture. From that point the tracks +moved forward in a straight line, those of the smaller webs blotted +out by the ones made by the larger. The man was driving the girl +before him. + +Who was he? Where was he taking her? For what purpose? Onistah could +not guess. He knew that McRae had made enemies, as any forceful +character on the frontier must. The Scotchman had kicked out lazy +ne'er-do-wells from his camp. As a free trader he had matched himself +against the Hudson's Bay Company. But of those at war with him few +would stoop to revenge themselves on his daughter. The Blackfoot had +not heard of the recent trouble between Whaley and the McRaes, nor had +the word reached him that Bully West was free again. Wherefore he was +puzzled at what the signs on the snow told him. + +Yet he knew he had read them correctly. The final proof of it to him +was that Jessie broke trail and not the man. If he were a friend he +would lead the way. He was at her heels because he wanted to make sure +that she did not try to escape or to attack him. + +The tracks led down into the muskeg. It was spitting snow, but he had +no difficulty in seeing where the trail led from hummock to hummock in +the miry earth. The going here was difficult, for the thick moss was +full of short, stiff brush that caught the webbed shoes and tripped +the traveler. It was hard to find level footing. The mounds were +uneven, and more than once Onistah plunged knee-deep from one into the +swamp. + +He crossed the muskeg and climbed an ascent into the woods, swinging +sharply to the right. There was no uncertainty as to the direction of +the tracks in the snow. If they veered for a few yards, it was only to +miss a tree or to circle down timber. Whoever he might be, the man who +had taken Jessie prisoner knew exactly where he was going. + +The Blackfoot knew by the impressions of the webs that he was a large, +heavy man. Once or twice he saw stains of tobacco juice on the snow. +The broken bits of a whiskey-bottle flung against a tree did not tend +to reassure him. + +He saw smoke. It came from a tangle of undergrowth in a depression of +the forest. Very cautiously, with the patience of his race, he circled +round the cabin through the timber and crept up to it on hands and +knees. Every foot of the way he took advantage of such cover as was to +be had. + +The window was a small, single-paned affair built in the end opposite +the door. Onistah edged close to it and listened. He heard the drone +of voices, one heavy and snarling, another low and persuasive. + +His heart jumped at the sound of a third voice, a high-pitched treble. +He would have known it among a thousand. It had called to him in +the swirl of many a wind-swept storm. He had heard it on the long +traverse, in the stillness of the lone night, at lakeside camps built +far from any other human being. His imagination had heard it on +the summer breeze as he paddled across a sun-drenched lake in his +birch-bark canoe. + +The Blackfoot raised his head till he could look through the window. + +Jessie McRae sat on a stool facing him. Two men were in the room. One +strode heavily up and down while the other watched him warily. + + + + +CHAPTER XXI + +ON THE FRONTIER OF DESPAIR + + +The compulsion of life had denied Jessie the niceness given girls by +the complexities of modern civilization. She had been brought up close +to raw stark nature. The habits of animals were familiar to her and +the vices of the biped man. + +A traveler in the sub-Arctic is forced by the deadly cold of the North +into a near intimacy of living with his fellows. Jessie had more than +once taken a long sled journey with her father. On one occasion she +had slept in a filthy Indian wigwam with a dozen natives all breathing +the same foul, unventilated air. Again she had huddled up against the +dogs, with her father and two French half-breeds, to keep in her the +spark of life a blizzard's breath was trying to blow out. + +On such a trip some of the common decencies of existence are dropped. +The extreme low temperature makes it impossible for one to wash either +face or hands without the skin chapping and breaking. Food at which +one would revolt under other circumstances is devoured eagerly. + +Jessie was the kind of girl such a life had made her, with +modifications in the direction of fineness induced by McRae's sturdy +character, her schooling at Winnipeg, and the higher plane of the +family standard. As might have been expected, she had courage, energy, +and that quality of decisive action bred by primitive conditions. + +But she had retained, too, a cleanness of spirit hardly to be looked +for in such a primeval daughter of Eve. Her imagination and her +reading had saved the girl's sweet modesty. A certain detachment made +it possible for her to ignore the squalor of the actual and see it +only as a surface triviality, to let her mind dwell in inner concepts +of goodness and beauty while bestiality crossed the path she trod. + +So when she found in one of the gins a lynx savage with the pain of +bruised flesh and broken bone snapped by the jaws of the trap, +the girl did what needed to be done swiftly and with a minimum of +reluctance. + +She was close to the second trap when the sound of webs slithering +along the snow brought her up short. Her first thought was that +Onistah had changed his mind and followed her, but as soon as the +snowshoer came out of the thick timber, she saw that he was not an +Indian. + +He was a huge man, and he bulked larger by reason of the heavy furs +that enveloped him. His rate of travel was rapid enough, but there was +about the gait an awkward slouch that reminded her of a grizzly. Some +sullenness of temperament seemed to find expression in the fellow's +movements. + +The hood of his fur was drawn well forward over the face. He wore blue +glasses, as a protection against snow-blindness apparently. Jessie +smiled, judging him a tenderfoot; for except in March and April there +is small danger of the sun glare which destroys sight. Yet he hardly +looked like a newcomer to the North. For one thing he used the web +shoes as an expert does. Before he stopped beside her, she was +prepared to revise a too hasty opinion. + +Jessie recoiled at the last moment, even before she recognized him. It +was too late to take precautions now. He caught her by the wrist and +tore off his glasses, at the same time shaking back the hood. + +"Glad to death to meet up with you, missie," he grinned evilly through +broken, tobacco-stained teeth. + +The blood drenched out of her heart. She looked at the man, silent +and despairing. His presence here could mean to her nothing less than +disaster. The girl's white lips tried to frame words they could not +utter. + +"Took by surprise, ain't you?" he jeered. "But plumb pleased to see +old Bully West again, eh? It's a damn long lane that ain't got a crook +in it somewheres. An' here we are at the turn together, jus' you'n' +me, comfy, like I done promised it would be when I last seen you." + +She writhed in a swift, abortive attempt to break his hold. + +He threw back his head in a roar of laughter, then with a twist of his +fingers brought his captive to the knees. + +Sharp teeth flashed in a gleam of white. He gave a roar of pain and +tore away his hand. She had bit him savagely in the wrist, as she had +once done with another man on a memorable occasion. + +"Goddlemighty!" he bellowed. "You damn li'l' hell-cat!" + +She was on her feet and away instantly. But one of the snowshoes had +come off in the struggle. At each step she took the left foot plunged +through the white crust and impeded progress. + +In a dozen strides he had reached her. A great arm swung round and +buffeted the runner on the side of the head. The blow lifted the girl +from her feet and flung her into a drift two yards away. + +She looked up, dazed from the shock. The man was standing over her, a +huge, threatening, ill-shaped Colossus. + +"Get up!" he ordered harshly, and seized her by the shoulder. + +She found herself on her feet, either because she had risen or because +he had jerked her up. A ringing in the head and a nausea made for +dizziness. + +"I'll learn you!" he exploded with curses. "Try that again an' I'll +beat yore head off. You're Bully West's woman, un'erstand? When I say +'Come!' step lively. When I say 'Go!' get a move on you." + +"I'll not." Despite her fear she faced him with spirit. "My friends +are near. They'll come and settle, with you for this." + +He put a check on his temper. Very likely what she said was true. It +was not reasonable to suppose that she was alone in the forest many +miles from Faraway. She had come, of course, to look at the traps, but +some one must have accompanied her. Who? And how many? The skulking +caution of his wild-beast nature asserted itself. He had better play +safe. Time enough to tame the girl when he had her deep in the Lone +Lands far from any other human being except himself. Just now the +first need was to put many miles between them and the inevitable +pursuit. + +"Come," he said. "We'll go." + +She started back for the snowshoe that had been torn off. Beside it +lay her rifle. If she could get hold of it again-- + +The great hulk moved beside her, his thumb and fingers round the back +of her neck. Before they reached the weapon, he twisted her aside so +cruelly that a flame of pain ran down her spine. She cried out. + +He laughed as he stooped for the gun and the web. "Don' play none o' +yore monkey tricks on Bully West. He knew it all 'fore you was born." + +The pressure of his grip swung Jessie to the left. He gave her a push +that sent her reeling and flung at her the snowshoe. + +"Hump yoreself now." + +She knelt and adjusted the web. She would have fought if there had +been the least chance of success. But there was none. Nor could she +run away. The fellow was a callous, black-hearted ruffian. He would +shoot her down rather than see her escape. If she became stubborn and +refused to move, he would cheerfully torture her until she screamed +with agony. There was nothing he would like better. No, for the +present she must take orders. + +"Hit the trail, missie. Down past that big tree," he snapped. + +"Where are you taking me?" + +"Don't ask me questions. Do like I tell you." + +The girl took one look at his heavy, brutal face and did as she +was told. Onistah would find her. When she did not show up at the +rendezvous, he would follow her trail and discover that something was +amiss. Good old Onistah never had failed her. He was true as tried +steel and in all the North woods there was no better tracker. + +There would be a fight. If West saw him first, he would shoot the +Blackfoot at sight. She did not need to guess that. He would do it for +two reasons. The first was the general one that he did not want any of +her friends to know where he was. The more specific one was that he +already had a grudge against the young Indian that he would be glad to +pay once for all. + +Jessie's one hope was that Onistah would hasten to the rescue. Yet she +dreaded the moment of his coming. He was a gentle soul, one of Father +Giguere's converts. It was altogether likely that he would walk into +the camp of the escaped convict openly and become a victim of the +murderer's guile. Onistah did not lack courage. He would fight if he +had to do so. Indeed, she knew that he would go through fire to save +her. But bravery was not enough. She could almost have wished that her +foster-brother was as full of devilish treachery as the huge ape-man +slouching at her heels. Then the chances of the battle would be more +even. + +The desperado drove her down into the muskeg, directing the girl's +course with a flow of obscene and ribald profanity. + +It is doubtful if she heard him. As her lithe, supple limbs carried +her from one moss hump to another, she was busy with the problem of +escape. She must get away soon. Every hour increased the danger. The +sun would sink shortly. If she were still this ruffian's prisoner +when the long Arctic night fell, she would suffer the tortures of the +damned. She faced the fact squarely, though her cheeks blanched at the +prospect and the heart inside her withered. + +From the sloping side of a hummock her foot slipped and she slid into +the icy bog to her knees. Within a few minutes duffles and leggings +were frozen and she was suffering at each step. + +Out of the muskeg they came into the woods. A flake of snow fell on +Jessie's cheek and chilled her blood. For she knew that if it came on +to snow before Onistah took the trail or even before he reached the +place to which West was taking her, the chances of a rescue would be +very much diminished. A storm would wipe out the tracks they had made. + +"Swing back o' the rock and into the brush," West growled. Then, as +she took the narrow trail through the brush that had grown up among +half a dozen small down trees, he barked a question: "Whadjasay yore +Injun name was?" + +"My name is Jessie McRae," she answered with a flash of angry pride. +"You know who I am--the daughter of Angus McRae. And if you do me any +harm, he'll hunt you down and kill you like a wolf." + +He caught her by the arm and whirled the girl round. His big yellow +canines snapped like tusks and he snarled at her through clenched +jaws. "Did you hear yore master's voice? I said, what was yore squaw +name?" + +She almost shrieked from the pain of his fingers' savage clutch into +her flesh. The courage died out of her arteries. + +"Sleeping Dawn they called me." + +"Too long," he pronounced. "I'll call you Dawn." The sight of her +terror of him, the foretaste of the triumph he was to enjoy, restored +him for a moment to a brutal good-humor. "An' when I yell 'Dawn' at +you o' mornin's, it'll be for you to hump yoreself an' git up to build +the fires and rustle breakfast. I'll treat you fine if you behave, but +if you git sulky, you'll taste the dog-whip. I'm boss. You'll have +a heluva time if you don't come runnin' when I snap my fingers. +Un'erstand?" + +She broke down in a wailing appeal to whatever good there was in him. +"Let me go back to Father! I know you've broke prison. If you're good +to me, he'll help you escape. You know he has friends everywhere. +They'll hide you from the red-coats. He'll give you an outfit to get +away--money--anything you want. Oh, let me go, and--and--" + +He grinned, and the sight of his evil mirth told her she had failed. + +"Didn't I tell you I'd git you right some day? Didn't I promise Angus +McRae I'd pay him back aplenty for kickin' me outa his hide camp? +Ain't you the lil' hell-cat that busted my whiskey-kegs, that ran to +the red-coat spy an' told him where the cache was, that shot me up +when I set out to dry-gulch him, as you might say? Where do you figure +you got a license to expect Bully West to listen to Sunday-school pap +about being good to you? You're my squaw, an' lucky at that you got a +real two-fisted man. Hell's hinges! What's eatin' you?" + +"Never!" she cried. "It's true what I told you once. I'd rather die. +Oh, if you've got a spark of manhood in you, don't make me kill +myself. I'm just a girl. If I ever did you wrong, I'm sorry. I'll make +it right. My father--" + +"Listen." His raucous voice cut through her entreaties. "I've heard +more'n plenty about McRae. All I want o' him is to get a bead on +him once with a rifle. Get me? Now this other talk--about killin' +yoreself--nothin' to it a-tall. Go to it if tha's how you feel. Yore +huntin'-knife's right there in yore belt." He reached forward and +plucked it from its sheath, then handed it to her blade first, +stepping back a pace at once to make sure she did not use it on him. +"You got yore chance now. Kill away. I'll stand right here an' see +nobody interferes with you." + +She shifted the knife and gripped the handle. A tumult seethed in +her brain. She saw nothing but that evil, grinning face, hideous and +menacing. For a moment murder boiled up in her, red-hot and sinister. +If she could kill him now as he stood jeering at her--drive the blade +into that thick bull neck.... + +The madness passed. She could not do it even if it were within +her power. The urge to kill was not strong enough. It was not +overwhelming. And in the next thought she knew, too, that she could +not kill herself either. The blind need to live, the animal impulse of +self-preservation, at whatever cost, whatever shame, was as yet more +powerful than the horror of the fate impending. + +She flung the knife down into the snow in a fury of disgust and +self-contempt. + +His head went back in a characteristic roar of revolting mirth. He had +won. Bully West knew how to conquer 'em, no matter how wild they were. + +With feet dragging, head drooped, and spirits at the zero hour, Jessie +moved down a ravine into sight of a cabin. Smoke rose from the chimney +languidly. + +"Home," announced West. + +To the girl, at the edge of desperation, that log house appeared as +the grave of her youth. All the pride and glory and joy that had made +life so vital a thing were to be buried here. When next she came out +into the sunlight she would be a broken creature--the property of this +horrible caricature of a man. + +Her captor opened the door and pushed the girl inside. + +She stood on the threshold, eyes dilating, heart suddenly athrob with +hope. + +A man sitting on a stool before the open fire turned his head to see +who had come in. + + + + +CHAPTER XXII + +"MY DAMN PRETTY LI'L' HIGH-STEPPIN' SQUAW" + + +The man on the stool was Whaley. + +One glance at the girl and one at West's triumphant gargoyle grin was +enough. He understood the situation better than words could tell it. + +To Jessie, at this critical moment of her life, even Whaley seemed a +God-send. She pushed across the room awkwardly, not waiting to free +herself of the webs packed with snow. In the dusky eyes there was a +cry for help. + +"Save me from him!" she cried simply, as a child might have done. "You +will, won't you?" + +The black eyebrows in the cold, white face drew to a line. The +gambler's gaze, expressionless as a blank wall, met hers steadily. + +"Why don't you send for your friend Morse?" he asked. "He's in that +business. I ain't." + +It was as though he had struck her in the face. The eyes that clung to +his we're horror-filled. Did there really live men so heartless that +they would not lift a hand to snatch a child from a ferocious wolf? + +West's laughter barked out, rapacious and savage. "She's mine, jus' +like I said she'd be. My damn pretty li'l' high-steppin' squaw." + +His partner looked at him bleakly. "Oh, she's yours, is she?" + +"You bet yore boots. I'll show her--make her eat outa my hand," +boasted the convict. + +"Will you show McRae too--and all his friends, as well as the +North-West Mounted? Will you make 'em all eat out of your hands?" + +"Whadjamean?" + +"Why, I had a notion you were loaded up with trouble and didn't need +to hunt more," sneered the gambler. "I had a notion the red-coats were +on your heels to take you across the plains to hang you." + +"I'll learn 'em about that," the huge fugitive bragged. "They say +I'm a killer. Let it ride. I'll sure enough let 'em see they're good +guessers." + +Whaley shrugged his shoulders and looked at him with cold contempt. +"You've got a bare chance for a getaway if you travel light and fast. +I'd want long odds to back it," he said coolly. + +"Tha's a heluva thing to tell a friend," West snarled. + +"It's the truth. Take it or leave it. But if you try to bull this +through your own way and don't let me run it, you're done for." + +"How done for?" + +The gambler did not answer. He turned to Jessie. "Unless you want your +feet to freeze, you'd better get those duffles off." + +The girl took off her mits and tried to unfasten the leggings after +she had kicked the snowshoes from her feet. But her stiff fingers +could not loosen the knots. + +The free trader stooped and did it for her while West watched him +sulkily. Jessie unwound the cloth and removed moccasins and duffles. +She sat barefooted before the fire, but not too close. + +"If they're frozen I'll get snow," Whaley offered. + +"They're not frozen, thank you," she answered. + +"Whadjamean done for?" repeated West. + +His partner's derisive, scornful eye rested on him. "Use your brains, +man. The Mounted are after you hot and heavy. You know their record. +They get the man they go after. Take this fellow Beresford, the one +that jugged you." + +The big ruffian shook a furious fist in the air. "Curse him!" he +shouted, and added a dozen crackling oaths. + +"Curse him and welcome," Whaley replied. "But don't fool yourself +about him. He's a go-getter. Didn't he go up Peace River after Pierre +Poulette? Didn't he drag him back with cuffs on 'most a year later? +That's what you've got against you, three hundred red-coats like him." + +"You tryin' to scare me?" demanded West sullenly. + +"I'm trying to hammer some common sense into your head. Your chance +for a safe getaway rests on one thing. You've got to have friends in +the Lone Lands who'll hide you till you can slip out of the country. +Can you do that if the trappers--friends of McRae, nearly all of +'em--carry the word of what you did to this girl?" + +"I'm gonna take her with me." West stuck doggedly to his idea. He knew +what he wanted. His life was forfeit, anyhow. He might as well go +through to a finish. + +From where she sat before the great fire Jessie's whisper reached +Whaley. "Don't let him, please." It was an ineffective little wail +straight from the heart. + +Whaley went on, as though he had not heard. "It's your deal, not mine. +I'm just telling you. Take this girl along, and your life's not worth +a plugged nickel." + +"Hell's hinges! In two days she'll be crazy about me. Tha's how I am +with women." + +"In two days she'll hate the ground you walk on, if she hasn't killed +herself or you by that time." + +Waves of acute pain were pricking into Jessie's legs from the pink +toes to the calves. She was massaging them to restore circulation and +had to set her teeth to keep from crying. + +But her subconscious mind was wholly on what passed between the men. +She knew that Whaley was trying to reestablish over the other the +mental dominance he had always held. It was a frail enough tenure, no +doubt, likely to be upset at any moment by vanity, suspicion, or heady +gusts of passion. In it, such as it was, lay a hope. Watching the +gambler's cold, impassive face, the stony look in the poker eyes, she +judged him tenacious and strong-willed. For reasons of his own he was +fighting her battle. He had no intention of letting West take her with +him. + +Why? What was the motive in the back of his mind? She acquitted the +man of benevolence. If his wishes chanced to march with hers, it was +because of no altruism. He held a bitter grudge against Angus McRae +and incidentally against her for the humiliation of his defeat at the +hands of Morse. To satisfy this he had only to walk out of the house +and leave her to an ugly fate. Why did he not do this? Was he playing +a deep game of his own in which she was merely a pawn? + +She turned the steaming duffles over on the mud hearth to dry the +other side. She drew back the moccasins and the leggings that the heat +might not scorch them. The sharp pain waves still beat into her feet +and up her limbs. To change her position she drew up a stool and sat +on it. This she had pushed back to a corner of the fireplace. + +For Bully West was straddling up and down the room, a pent volcano +ready to explode. He knew Whaley's advice was good. It would be +suicide to encumber himself with this girl in his flight. But he had +never disciplined his desires. He wanted her. He meant to take her. +Passion, the lust for revenge, the bully streak in him that gloated at +the sight of some one young and fine trembling before him: all these +were factors contributing to the same end. By gar, he would have what +he had set his mind on, no matter what Whaley said. + +Jessie knew the fellow was dangerous as a wounded buffalo bull in a +corral. He would have his way if he had to smash and trample down +any one that opposed him. Her eyes moved to Whaley's black-browed, +bloodless face. How far would the gambler go in opposition to the +other? + +As her glance shifted back to West, it was arrested at the window. +The girl's heart lost a beat, then sang a paean of joy. For the +copper-colored face of Onistah was framed in the pane. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII + +A FORETASTE OF HELL + + +Jessie's eyes flew to West and to Whaley. As yet neither of them had +seen the Blackfoot. She raised a hand and pretended to brush back a +lock of hair. + +The Indian recognized it as a signal that she had seen him. His head +disappeared. + +Thoughts in the girl's mind raced. If Winthrop Beresford or Tom Morse +had been outside instead of Onistah, she would not have attempted to +give directions. Either of them would have been more competent than +she to work out the problem. But the Blackfoot lacked initiative. He +would do faithfully whatever he was told to do, but any independent +action attempted by him was likely to be indecisive. She could not +conceive of Onistah holding his own against two such men as these +except by slaughtering them from the window before they knew he was +there. He had not in him sufficient dominating ego. + +Whaley was an unknown quantity. It was impossible to foresee how he +would accept the intrusion of Onistah. Since he was playing his own +game, the chances are that he would resent it. In West's case there +could be no doubt. If it was necessary to his plans, he would not +hesitate an instant to kill the Indian. + +Reluctantly, she made up her mind to send him back to Faraway for +help. He would travel fast. Within five hours at the outside he ought +to be back with her father or Beresford. Surely, with Whaley on her +side, she ought to be safe till then. + +She caught sight of Onistah again, his eyes level with the +window-sill. He was waiting for instructions. + +Jessie gave them to him straight and plain. She spoke to Whaley, but +for the Blackfoot's ear. + +"Bring my father here. At once. I want him. Won't you, please?" + +Whaley's blank poker stare focused on her. "The last word I had from +Angus McRae was to keep out of your affairs. I can take a hint without +waiting for a church to fall on me. Get some one else to take your +messages." + +"If you're going back to town I thought--perhaps--you'd tell him how +much I need him," she pleaded. "Then he'd come--right away." + +Onistah's head vanished. He knew what he had to do and no doubt was +already on the trail. Outside it was dark. She could hear the swirling +of the wind and the beat of sleet against the window-pane. A storm was +rising. She prayed it might not be a blizzard. Weather permitting, her +father should be here by eight or nine o'clock. + +West, straddling past, snarled at her. "Get Angus McRae outa yore +head. Him an' you's come to the partin' o' the ways. You're travelin' +with me now. Un'erstand?" + +His partner, sneering coldly, offered a suggestion. "If you expect +to travel far you'd better get your webs to hitting snow. This girl +wasn't out looking at the traps all by herself. Her trail leads +straight here. Her friends are probably headed this way right now." + +"Tha's right." West stopped in his stride. His slow brain stalled. +"What d' you reckon I better do? If there's only one or two we +might--" + +"No," vetoed Whaley. "Nothing like that. Your play is to get out. And +keep getting out when they crowd you. No killing." + +"Goddlemighty, I'm a wolf, not a rabbit. If they crowd me, I'll sure +pump lead," the desperado growled. Then, "D' you mean light out +to-night?" + +"To-night." + +"Where'll I go?" + +"Porcupine Creek, I'd say. There's an old cabin there Jacques Perritot +used to live in. The snow'll blot out our tracks." + +"You goin' too?" + +"I'll see you that far," Whaley answered briefly. + +"Better bring down the dogs from the coulee, then." + +The gambler looked at him with the cool insolence that characterized +him. "When did I hire out as your flunkey, West?" + +The outlaw's head was thrust forward and down. He glared at his +partner, who met this manifestation of anger with hard eyes into which +no expression crept. West was not insane enough to alienate his last +ally. He drew back sullenly. + +"All right. I'll go, since you're so particular." As his heavy body +swung round awkwardly, the man's eyes fell on Jessie. She had +lifted one small foot and was starting to pull on one of the duffle +stockings. He stood a moment, gloating over the beautifully shaped +ankle and lower limb, then slouched forward and snatched her up from +the stool into his arms. + +His savage, desirous eyes had given her an instant's warning. She was +half up before his arms, massive as young trees, dragged her into his +embrace. + +"But before I go I'll have a kiss from my squaw," he roared. "Just to +show her that Bully West has branded her and claims ownership." + +She fought, fiercely, desperately, pushing against his rough bearded +face and big barrel chest with all the force in her lithe young body. +She was as a child to him. His triumphant laughter pealed as he +crushed her warm soft trunk against his own and buried her in his +opened coat. With an ungentle hand he forced round the averted head +till the fear-filled eyes met his. + +"Kiss yore man," he ordered. + +The girl said nothing. She still struggled to escape, using every +ounce of strength she possessed. + +The fury of her resistance amused him. He laughed again, throwing back +the heavy bristling jaw in a roar of mirth. + +"Yore man--yore master," he amended. + +He smothered her with his foul kisses, ravished her lips, her eyes, +the soft hot cheeks, the oval of the chin, and the lovely curve of +the throat. She was physically nauseated when he flung her from him +against the wall and strode from the room with another horrible whoop +of exultation. + +She clung to the wall, panting, eyes closed. A shocking sense of +degradation flooded her soul. She felt as though she were drowning in +it, fathoms deep. Her lids fluttered open and she saw the gambler. He +was still sitting on the stool. A mocking, cynical smile was in the +eyes that met Jessie's. + +"And Tom Morse--where, oh, where is he?" the man jeered. + +A chill shook her. Dry sobs welled up in her throat. She was lost. +For the first time she knew the cold clutch of despair at her heart. +Whaley did not intend to lift a hand for her. He had sat there and let +West work his will. + +"Angus McRae gave me instructions aplenty," he explained maliciously. +"I was to keep my hands off you. I was to mind my own business. When +you see him again--if you ever do--will you tell him I did exactly as +he said?" + +She did not answer. What was there to say? In the cabin was no sound +except that of her dry, sobbing breath. + +Whaley rose and came across the room. He had thrown aside the +gambler's mask of impassivity. His eyes were shining strangely. + +"I'm going--now--out into the storm. What about you? If you're here +when West comes back, you know what it means. Make your choice. Will +you go with me or stay with him?" + +"You're going home?" + +"Yes." His smile was enigmatic. It carried neither warmth nor +conviction. + +The man had played his cards well. He had let West give her a +foretaste of the hell in store for her. Anything rather than that, she +thought. And surely Whaley would take her home. He was no outlaw, but +a responsible citizen who must go back to Faraway to live. He had to +face her father and Winthrop Beresford of the Mounted--and Tom Morse. +He would not harm her. He dared not. + +But she took one vain precaution. "You promise to take me to my +father. You'll not--be like him." A lift of the head indicated the man +who had just gone out. + +"He's a fool. I'm not. That's the difference." He shrugged his +shoulders. "Make your own choice. If you'd rather stay here--" + +But she had made it. She was getting hurriedly into her furs and was +putting on her mittens. Already she had adjusted the snowshoes. + +"We'd better hurry," she urged. "He might come back." + +"It'll be bad luck for him if he does," the gambler said coolly. "You +ready?" + +She nodded that she was. + +In another moment they were out of the warm room and into the storm. +The wind was coming in whistling gusts, carrying with it a fine sleet +that whipped the face and stung the eyeballs. Before she had been out +in the storm five minutes, Jessie had lost all sense of direction. + +Whaley was an expert woodsman. He plunged into the forest, without +hesitation, so surely that she felt he must know where he was going. +The girl followed at his heels, head down against the blast. + +Before this day she had not for months taken a long trip on webs. Leg +muscles, called into use without training, were sore and stiff. In the +darkness the soft snow piled up on the shoes. Each step became a drag. +The lacings and straps lacerated her tender flesh till she knew her +duffles were soaked with blood. More than once she dropped back so far +that she lost sight of Whaley. Each time he came back with words of +encouragement and good cheer. + +"Not far now," he would promise. "Across a little bog and then camp. +Keep coming." + +Once he found her sitting on the snow, her back to a tree. + +"You'd better go on alone. I'm done," she told him drearily. + +He was not angry at her. Nor did he bully or browbeat. + +"Tough sledding," he said gently. "But we're 'most there. Got to keep +going. Can't quit now." + +He helped Jessie to her feet and led the way down into a spongy +morass. The brush slapped her face. It caught in the meshes of her +shoes and flung her down. The miry earth, oozing over the edges of the +frames, clogged her feet and clung to them like pitch. + +Whaley did his best to help, but when at last she crept up to the +higher ground beyond the bog every muscle ached with fatigue. + +They were almost upon it before she saw a log cabin looming out of the +darkness. + +She sank on the floor exhausted. Whaley disappeared into the storm +again. Sleepily she wondered where he was going. She must have dozed, +for when her eyes next reported to the brain, there was a brisk fire +of birch bark burning and her companion was dragging broken bits of +dead and down timber into the house. + +"Looks like she's getting her back up for a blizzard. Better have +plenty of fuel in," he explained. + +"Where are we?" she asked drowsily. + +"Cabin on Bull Creek," he answered. "Better get off your footwear." + +While she did this her mind woke to activity. Why had he brought her +here? They had no food. How would they live if a blizzard blew up and +snowed them in? And even if they had supplies, how could she live +alone for days with this man in a cabin eight by ten? + +As though he guessed what was in her mind, he answered plausibly +enough one of the questions. + +"No chance to reach Faraway. Too stormy. It was neck or nothing. Had +to take what we could get." + +"What'll we do if--if there's a blizzard?" she asked timidly. + +"Sit tight." + +"Without food?" + +"If it lasts too long, I'll have to wait for a lull and make a try for +Faraway. No use worrying. We can't help what's coming. Got to face the +music." + +Her eyes swept the empty cabin. No bed. No table. One home-made +three-legged stool. A battered kettle. It was an uninviting prospect, +even if she had not had to face possible starvation while she was +caged with a stranger who might any minute develop wolfish hunger for +her as he had done only forty-eight hours before. + +He did not look at her steadily. His gaze was in the red glow of the +fire a good deal. She talked, and he answered in monosyllables. When +he looked at her, his eyes glowed with the hot red light reflected +from the fire, Live coals seemed to burn in them. + +In spite of the heat a little shiver ran down her spine. + +Silence became too significant. She was afraid of it. So she talked, +persistently, at times a little hysterically. Her memory was good. If +she liked a piece of poetry, she could learn it by reading it over +a few times. So, in her desperation, she "spoke pieces" to this man +whose face was a gray mask, just as the girls had done at her school +in Winnipeg. + +Often, at night camps, she had recited for her father. If she had no +dramatic talent, at least she had a sweet, clear voice, an earnestness +that never ranted, and some native or acquired skill in handling +inflections. + +"Do you like Shakespeare?" she asked. "My father's very fond of him. +I know parts of several of the plays. 'Henry V' now. That's good. +There's a bit where he's talking to his soldiers before they fight the +French. Would you like that?" + +"Go on," he said gruffly, sultry eyes on the fire. + +With a good deal of spirit she flung out the gallant lines. He began +to watch her, vivid, eager, so pathetically anxious to entertain him +with her small stock of wares. + + "But, if it be a sin to covet honor, + I am the most offending soul alive." + +There was about her a quality very fine and taking. He caught it first +in those two lines, and again when her full young voice swelled to +English Harry's prophecy. + + "And Crispin Crispian shall ne'er go by, + From this day to the ending of the world, + But we in it shall be remembered. + We few, we happy few, we band of brothers: + For he to-day that sheds his blood with me + Shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile, + This day shall gentle his condition: + And gentlemen in England now abed + Shall think themselves accurs'd they were not here, + And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks + That fought with us upon Saint Crispin's day." + +As he watched her, old memories stirred in him. He had come from a +good family in the Western Reserve, where he had rough-and-tumbled up +through the grades into High School. After a year here he had gone +to a Catholic School, Sacred Heart College, and had studied for the +priesthood. He recalled his mother, a gentle, white-haired old lady, +with fond pride in him; his father, who had been the soul of honor. By +some queer chance she had lit on the very lines that he had learned +from the old school reader and recited before an audience the last day +prior to vacation. + +He woke from his reveries to discover that she was giving him +Tennyson, that fragment from "Guinevere" when Arthur tells her of the +dream her guilt has tarnished. And as she spoke there stirred in him +the long-forgotten aspirations of his youth. + + "... for indeed I knew + Of no more subtle master under heaven + Than is the maiden passion for a maid, + Not only to keep down the base in man, + But teach high thought and amiable words + And courtliness, and the desire of fame, + And love of truth, and all that makes a man." + +His eyes were no longer impassive. There was in them, for the moment +at least, a hunted, haggard look. He saw himself as he was, in a blaze +of light that burned down to his very soul. + +And he saw her too transformed--not a half-breed, the fair prey of any +man's passion, but a clean, proud, high-spirited white girl who lived +in the spirit as well as the flesh. + +"You're tired. Better lie down and sleep," he told her, very gently. + +Jessie looked at him, and she knew she was safe. She might sleep +without fear. This man would not harm her any more than Beresford +or Morse would have done. Some chemical change had occurred in his +thoughts that protected her. She did not know what it was, but her +paean of prayer went up to heaven in a little rush of thanksgiving. + +She did not voice her gratitude to him. But the look she gave him was +more expressive than words. + +Out of the storm a voice raucous and profane came to them faintly. + +"Ah, crapaud Wulf, pren' garde. Yeu-oh! (To the right!) Git down to +it, Fox. Sacre demon! Cha! Cha! (To the left!)" + +Then the crack of a whip and a volley of oaths. + +The two in the cabin looked at each other. One was white to the lips. +The other smiled grimly. It was the gambler that spoke their common +thought. + +"Bully West, by all that's holy!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV + +WEST MAKES A DECISION + + +Came to those in the cabin a string of oaths, the crack of a whip +lashing out savagely, and the yelps of dogs from a crouching, cowering +team. + +Whaley slipped a revolver from his belt to the right-hand pocket of +his fur coat. + +The door burst open. A man stood on the threshold, a huge figure +crusted with snow, beard and eyebrows ice-matted. He looked like the +storm king who had ridden the gale out of the north. This on the +outside, at a first glance only. For the black scowl he flung at his +partner was so deadly that it seemed to come red-hot from a furnace of +hate and evil passion. + +"Run to earth!" he roared. "Thought you'd hole up, you damned fox, +where I wouldn't find you. Thought you'd give Bully West the slip, +you'n' that li'l' hell-cat. Talk about Porcupine Creek, eh? Tried to +send me mushin' over there while you'n' her--" + +What the fellow said sent a hot wave creeping over the girl's face to +the roots of her hair. The gambler did not speak, but his eyes, filmed +and wary, never lifted from the other's bloated face. + +"Figured I'd forget the ol' whiskey cache, eh? Figured you could gimme +the double-cross an' git away with it? Hell's hinges, Bully West's no +fool! He's forgot more'n you ever knew." + +The man swaggered forward, the lash of the whip trailing across the +puncheon floor. Triumph rode in his voice and straddled in his gait. +He stood with his back to the fireplace absorbing heat, hands behind +him and feet set wide. His eyes gloated over the victims he had +trapped. Presently he would settle with both of them. + +"Not a word to say for yoreselves, either one o' you," he jeered. +"Good enough. I'll do what talkin' 's needed, then I'll strip the hide +off'n both o' you." With a flirt of the arm he sent the lash of the +dog-whip snaking out toward Jessie. + +She shrank back against the wall, needlessly. It was a threat, not an +attack; a promise of what was to come. + +"Let her alone." They were the first words Whaley had spoken. In his +soft, purring voice they carried out the suggestion of his crouched +tenseness. If West was the grizzly bear, the other was the forest +panther, more feline, but just as dangerous. + +The convict looked at him, eyes narrowed, head thrust forward and +down. "What's that?" + +"I said to let her alone." + +West's face heliographed amazement. "Meanin'--?" + +"Meaning exactly what I say. You'll not touch her." + +It was a moment before this flat defiance reached the brain of the big +man through the penumbra of his mental fog. When it did, he strode +across the room with the roar of a wild animal and snatched the girl +to him. He would show whether any one could come between him and his +woman. + +In three long steps Whaley padded across the floor. Something cold and +round pressed against the back of the outlaw's tough red neck. + +"Drop that whip." + +The order came in a low-voiced imperative. West hesitated. This +man--his partner--would surely never shoot him about such a trifle. +Still-- + +"What's eatin' you?" he growled. "Put up that gun. You ain't fool +enough to shoot." + +"Think that hard enough and you'll never live to know better. Hands +off the girl." + +The slow brain of West functioned. He had been taken wholly by +surprise, but as his cunning mind Worked the situation out, he saw how +much it would be to Whaley's profit to get rid of him. The gambler +would get the girl and the reward for West's destruction. He would +inherit his share of their joint business and would reinstate himself +as a good citizen with the Mounted and with McRae's friends. + +Surlily the desperado yielded. "All right, if you're so set on it." + +"Drop the whip." + +The fingers of West opened and the handle fell to the floor. Deftly +the other removed a revolver from its place under the outlaw's left +armpit. + +West glared at him. That moment the fugitive made up his mind that he +would kill Whaley at the first good opportunity. A tide of poisonous +hatred raced through his veins. Its expression but not its virulence +was temporarily checked by wholesome fear. He must be careful that the +gambler did not get him first. + +His voice took on a whine intended for good-fellowship. "I reckon +I was too pre-emtory. O' course I was sore the way you two left me +holdin' the sack. Any one would 'a' been now, wouldn't they? But no +use friends fallin' out. We got to make the best of things." + +Whaley's chill face did not warm. He knew the man with whom he was +dealing. When he began to butter his phrases, it was time to look out +for him. He would forget that his partner had brought him from Faraway +a dog-team with which to escape, that he was supplying him with funds +to carry him through the winter. He would remember only that he had +balked and humiliated him. + +"Better get into the house the stuff from the sled," the gambler said. +"And we'll rustle wood. No telling how long this storm'll last." + +"Tha's right," agreed West. "When I saw them sun dogs to-day I figured +we was in for a blizzard. Too bad you didn't outfit me for a longer +trip." + +A gale was blowing from the north, carrying on its whistling breath +a fine hard sleet that cut the eyeballs like powdered glass. The men +fought their way to the sled and wrestled with the knots of the frozen +ropes that bound the load. The lumps of ice that had gathered round +these had to be knocked off with hammers before they could be freed. +When they staggered into the house with their packs, both men +were half-frozen. Their hands were so stiff that the fingers were +jointless. + +They stopped only long enough to limber up the muscles. Whaley handed +to Jessie the revolver he had taken from West. + +"Keep this," he said. His look was significant. It told her that in +the hunt for wood he might be blinded by the blizzard and lost. If he +failed to return and West came back alone, she would know what to do +with it. + +Into the storm the two plunged a second time. They carried ropes and +an axe. Since West had arrived, the gale had greatly increased. The +wind now was booming in deep, sullen roars and the temperature had +fallen twenty degrees already. The sled dogs were nowhere to be seen +or heard. They had burrowed down into the snow where the house would +shelter them from the hurricane as much as possible. + +The men reached the edge of the creek. They struggled in the frozen +drifts with such small dead trees as they could find. In the darkness +Whaley used the axe as best he could at imminent risk to his legs. +Though they worked only a few feet apart, they had to shout to make +their voices carry. + +"We better be movin' back," West called through his open palms. "We +got all we can haul." + +They roped the wood and dragged it over the snow in the direction +they knew the house to be. Presently they found the sled and from it +deflected toward the house. + +Jessie had hot tea waiting for them. They kicked off their webs and +piled the salvaged wood into the other end of the cabin, after which +they hunkered down before the fire to drink tea and eat pemmican and +bannocks. + +They had with them about fifty pounds of frozen fish for the dogs and +provisions enough to last the three of them four or five meals. Whaley +had brought West supplies enough to carry him only to Lookout, where +he was to stock for a long traverse into the wilds. + +As the hours passed there grew up between the gambler and the girl a +tacit partnership of mutual defense. No word was spoken of it, but +each knew that the sulky brute in the chimney corner was dangerous. He +would be held by no scruples of conscience, no laws of friendship or +decency. If the chance came he would strike. + +The storm raged and howled. It flung itself at the cabin with what +seemed a ravenous and implacable fury. The shriek of it was now +like the skirling of a thousand bagpipes, again like the wailing of +numberless lost souls. + +Inside, West snored heavily, his ill-shaped head drooping on the big +barrel chest of the man. Jessie slept while Whaley kept guard. Later +she would watch in her turn. + +There were moments when the gale died down, but only to roar again +with a frenzy of increased violence. + +The gray day broke and found the blizzard at its height. + + + + +CHAPTER XXV + +FOR THE WEE LAMB LOST + + +Beresford, in front of the C.N. Morse & Company trading-post, watched +his horse paw at the snow in search of grass underneath. It was a sign +that the animal was prairie-bred. On the plains near the border grass +cures as it stands, retaining its nutriment as hay. The native pony +pushes the snow aside with its forefoot and finds its feed. But in the +timber country of the North grass grows long and coarse. When its sap +dries out, it rots. + +The officer was thinking that he had better put both horse and cariole +up for the winter. It was time now for dogs and sled. Even in summer +this was not a country for horses. There were so many lakes that a +birch-bark canoe covered the miles faster. + +Darkness was sweeping down over the land, and with it the first flakes +of a coming storm. Beresford had expected this, for earlier in the day +he had seen two bright mock suns in the sky. The Indians had told +him that these sun dogs were warnings of severe cold and probably a +blizzard. + +Out of the edge of the forest a man on snowshoes came. He was moving +fast. Beresford, watching him idly, noticed that he toed in. Therefore +he was probably a Cree trapper. But the Crees were usually indolent +travelers. They did not cover ground as this man was doing. + +The man was an Indian. The soldier presently certified his first guess +as to that. But not until the native was almost at the store did he +recognize him as Onistah. + +The Blackfoot wasted no time in leading up to what he had to say. +"Sleeping Dawn she prisoner of Bully West and Whaley. She say bring +her father. She tell me bring him quick" + +Beresford's body lost its easy grace instantly and became rigid. His +voice rang with sharp authority. + +"Where is she?" + +"She at Jasper's cabin on Cache Creek. She frightened." + +As though the mention of Sleeping Dawn's name had reached him by some +process of telepathy, Tom Morse had come out and stood in the door of +the store. The trooper wheeled to him. + +"Get me a dog-team, Tom. That fellow West has got Jessie McRae with +him on Cache Creek. We've got to move quick." + +The storekeeper felt as though the bottom had dropped out of his +heart. He glanced up at the lowering night. "Storm brewing. We'll get +started right away." Without a moment's delay he disappeared inside +the store to make his preparations. + +Onistah carried the news to McRae. + +The blood washed out of the ruddy-whiskered face of the Scot, but his +sole comment was a Scriptural phrase of faith. "I have been young, and +now am old; yet have I not seen the righteous forsaken..." + +It was less than half an hour later that four men and a dog-train +moved up the main street of Faraway and disappeared in the forest. +Morse broke trail and McRae drove the tandem. Onistah, who had already +traveled many miles, brought up the rear. The trooper exchanged places +with Morse after an hour's travel. + +They were taking a short-cut and it led them through dead and down +timber that delayed the party. Tom was a good axeman, and more than +once he had to chop away obstructing logs. At other times by main +strength the men lifted or dragged the sled over bad places. + +The swirling storm made it difficult to know where they were going or +to choose the best way. They floundered through deep snow and heavy +underbrush, faces bleeding from the whip of willow switches suddenly +released and feet so torn by the straps of the snowshoes that the +trail showed stains of blood which had soaked from the moccasins. + +Onistah, already weary, began to lag. They dared not wait for him. +There was, they felt, not a moment to be lost. McRae's clean-shaven +upper lip was a straight, grim surface. He voiced no fears, no doubts, +but the others knew from their own anxiety how much he must be +suffering. + +The gale increased. It drove in bitter blasts of fine stinging sleet. +When for a few hundred yards they drew out of the thick forest into an +open grove, it lashed them so furiously they could scarcely move in +the teeth of it. + +The dogs were whimpering at their task. More than once they stopped, +exhausted by the wind against which they were battling. Their eyes +turned dumbly to McRae for instructions. He could only drive them back +to the trail Morse was breaking. + +The train was one of the best in the North. The leader was a large +St. Bernard, weighing about one hundred sixty pounds, intelligent, +faithful, and full of courage. He stood thirty-four inches high at his +fore shoulder. Not once did Cuffy falter. Even when the others quit, +he was ready to put his weight to the load. + +Through the howling of the wind Beresford shouted into the ear of +Morse. "Can't be far now. Question is can we find Jasper's in this +blizzard." + +Morse shook his head. It did not seem likely. Far and near were words +which had no meaning. A white, shrieking monster seemed to be hemming +them in. Their world diminished to the space their outstretched arms +could reach. The only guide they had was Cache Creek, along the bank +of which they were traveling. Jasper's deserted cabin lay back from +it a few hundred yards, but Tom had not any data to tell him when he +ought to leave the creek. + +Cuffy solved the problem for him. The St. Bernard stopped, refused +the trail Beresford and Morse were beating down in the deep snow. He +raised his head, seemed to scent a haven, whined, and tried to plunge +to the left. + +McRae came forward and shouted to his friends. "We'll gi'e Cuffy his +head. He'll maybe ken mair than we do the nicht." + +The trail-breakers turned from the creek, occasionally stopping to +make sure Cuffy was satisfied. Through heavy brush they forced a way +into a coulee. The St. Bernard led them plump against the wall of a +cabin. + +There was a light inside, the fitful, leaping glow of fire flames. +The men stumbled through drifts to the door, McRae in the lead. The +Scotchman found the latch and flung open the door. The other two +followed him inside. + +The room was empty. + +At first they could not believe their eyes. It was not reasonable to +suppose that any sane human beings would have left a comfortable house +to face such a storm. But this was just what they must have done. The +state of the fire, which was dying down to hot coals, told them it had +not been replenished for hours. West and Whaley clearly had decided +they were not safe here and had set out for another hiding-place. + +The men looked at each other in blank silence. The same thought was +in the mind of all. For the present they must give up the pursuit. +It would not be possible to try to carry on any farther in such +a blizzard. Yet the younger men waited for McRae to come to his +decision. If he called on them to do more, they would make a try with +him. + +"We'll stay here," Angus said quietly. "Build up the fire, lads, and +we'll cast back for Onistah." + +Neither of the others spoke. They knew it must have cost the Scotchman +a pang to give up even for the night. He had done it only because he +recognized that he had no right to sacrifice all their lives in vain. + +The dogs took the back trail reluctantly. The sled had been unloaded +and was lighter. Moreover, they followed a trail already broken except +where the sweep of the wind had filled it up. McRae cheered them to +their work. + +"Up wi' ye, Koona! Guid dog. Cha, cha! You'll be doin' gran' work, +Cuffy. Marche!" + +Morse stumbled over Onistah where he lay in the trail. The Blackfoot +was still conscious, though he was drowsing into that sleep which is +fatal to Arctic travelers caught in a blizzard. He had crawled on +hands and feet through the snow after his knees failed him. It must +have been only a few minutes after he completely collapsed that they +found him. + +He was given a gulp or two of whiskey and put on the sled. Again the +dogs buckled to the pull. A quarter of an hour later the party reached +the cabin. + +Onistah was given first aid. Feet and face were rubbed with snow to +restore circulation and to prevent frost-bite. He had been rescued in +time to save him from any permanent ill effects. + +In the back of all their minds lay a haunting fear. What had become +of Jessie? There was a chance that the blizzard had caught the party +before it reached its destination. Neither West nor Whaley was an +inexperienced musher. They knew the difficulties of sub-Arctic travel +and how to cope with them. But the storm had blown up with unusual +swiftness. + +Even if the party had reached safety, the girl's troubles were not +ended. With the coming of darkness her peril would increase. As long +as Whaley was with West there was hope. The gambler was cold-blooded +as a fish, but he had the saving sense of sanity. If he meant to +return to Faraway--and there was no reason why he should not--he dared +not let any harm befall the girl. But West was a ruffian unmitigated. +His ruthless passion might drive him to any evil. + +In front of the fire they discussed probabilities. Where had the two +free traders taken the girl? Not far, in the face of such a storm. +They canvassed places likely to serve as retreats for West. + +Once McRae, speaking out of his tortured heart, made an indirect +reference to what all of them were thinking. He was looking somberly +into the fire as he spoke. + +"Yea, the darkness hideth not from Thee, but the night shineth as the +day: the darkness and the light are both alike to Thee." + +He found in his religion a stay and comfort. If he knew that under +cover of darkness evil men do evil deeds, he could reassure himself +with the promise that the hairs of his daughter's head were numbered +and that she was under divine protection. + +From a pocket next his shirt he drew a small package in oilskin. It +was a Bible he had carried many years. By the light of the leaping +flames he read a chapter from the New Testament and the twenty-third +Psalm, after which the storm-bound men knelt while he prayed that God +would guard and keep safe "the wee lamb lost in the tempest far frae +the fold." + +Morse and Beresford were tough as hickory withes. None in the North +woods had more iron in the blood than they. Emergencies had tested +them time and again. But neither of them was ashamed to kneel with the +big rugged Scotchman while he poured his heart out in a petition for +his lass. The security of the girl whom all four loved each in his own +way was out of the hands of her friends. To know that McRae had found +a sure rock upon which to lean brought the younger men too some +measure of peace. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVI + +A RESCUE + + +The gray day wore itself away into the deeper darkness of early dusk. +Like a wild beast attacking its prey, the hurricane still leaped with +deep and sullen roars at the little cabin on Bull Creek. It beat upon +it in wild, swirling gusts. It flung blasts of wind, laden with snow +and sleet, against the log walls and piled drifts round them almost to +the eaves. + +Long since Whaley had been forced to take the dogs into the cabin to +save them from freezing to death. It was impossible for any of the +three human beings to venture out for more than a few minutes at a +time. Even then they had to keep close to the walls in order not to +lose contact with the house. + +When feeding-time came the dogs made pandemonium. They were +half-famished, as teams in the Lone Lands usually are, and the smell +of the frozen fish thawing before the fire set them frantic. West and +Whaley protected Jessie while she turned the fish. This was not easy. +The plunging animals almost rushed the men off their feet. They had +to be beaten back cruelly with the whip-stocks, for they were wild as +wolves and only the sharpest pain would restrain them. + +The half-thawed fish were flung to them in turn. There was a snarl, a +snap of the jaws, a gulp, and the fish was gone. Over one or two that +fell in the pack the train worried and fought, with sharp yelps +and growls, until the last fragment had been torn to pieces and +disappeared. + +Afterward the storm-bound trio drank tea and ate pemmican, still +fighting back the pack. West laid open the nose of one in an ugly cut +with the iron-bound end of his whip-butt. Perhaps he was not wholly to +blame. Many of the dog-trains of the North are taught to understand +nothing but the sting of the whip and will respond only to brutal +treatment. + +The second night was a repetition of the first. The three were divided +into two camps. Whaley or Jessie McRae watched West every minute. +There was a look in his eye they distrusted, a sulky malice back of +which seemed to smoke banked fires of murderous desire. He lay on the +floor and slept a good deal in short cat-naps. Apparently his dreams +were not pleasant. He would growl incoherently through set teeth and +clench great hairy fists in spasms of rage. Out of these he wakened +with a start to glare around suspiciously at the others. It was clear +the thought was in the back of his mind that they might destroy him +while he was asleep. + +Throughout the third day the storm continued unabated. Whaley and +West discussed the situation. Except for a few pounds of fish, their +provisions were gone. If the blizzard did not moderate, they would +soon face starvation. + +During the night the wind died down. Day broke clear, a faint and +wintry sun in the sky. + +To West the other man made a proposal. "Have to get out and hunt food. +We'll find caribou in some of the coulees along the creek. What say?" + +The convict looked at him with sly cunning. "How about this girl? +Think I'm gonna leave her to mush out an' put the police on my trail? +No, sir. I'll take her snowshoes with me." + +Whaley shrugged his shoulders. "She couldn't find her way home if she +had shoes. But please yourself about that." + +West's shifty gaze slid over him. The proposal of a hunt suited him. +He must have a supply of food to carry him to Lookout. Whaley was a +good shot and an expert trailer. If there were caribou or moose in the +vicinity, he was likely to make a kill. In any event there would be +hundreds of white rabbits scurrying through the woods. He decided +craftily to make use of the gambler, and after he was through with +him-- + +The men took with them part of the tea and enough fish to feed the +dogs once. They expected to find game sufficient to supply themselves +and stock up for a few days. Whaley insisted on leaving Jessie her +rifle, in order that she might shoot a rabbit or two if any ventured +near the cabin. She had three frozen fish and a handful of tea. + +Before they started Whaley drew Jessie aside. "Can't say how long +we'll be gone. Maybe two days--or three. You'll have to make out with +what you've got till we get back." He hesitated a moment, then his +cold, hard eyes held fast to hers. "Maybe only one of us will come +back. Keep your eyes open. If there's only one of us--and it's +West--don't let him get into the house. Shoot him down. Take his +snowshoes and the team. Follow the creek down about five miles, then +strike southwest till you come to Clear Lake. You know your way home +from there." + +Her dark eyes dilated. "Do you think he means to--to--?" + +The man nodded. "He's afraid of me--thinks I mean to set the police on +his trail. If he can he'll get rid of me. But not yet--not till we've +got a couple of caribou. I'll be watching him all the time." + +"How can you watch him while you're hunting?" + +He lifted his shoulders in a shrug. It was quite true that West could +shoot him in the back during the hunt. But Whaley knew the man pretty +well. He would make sure of meat before he struck. After the sled was +loaded, Whaley did not intend to turn his back on the fellow. + +Jessie had not been brought up in the North woods for nothing. She had +seen her brother Fergus make many a rabbit snare. Now she contrived +to fashion one out of some old strips of skin she found in the cabin. +After she had bent down a young sapling and fastened it to a fallen +log, she busied herself making a second one. + +Without snowshoes she did not find it possible to travel far, but she +managed to shoot a fox that adventured near the hut in the hope of +finding something to fill its lean and empty paunch. + +Before leaving, Whaley had brought into the house a supply of wood, +but Jessie added to this during the day by hauling birch poles from +the edge of the creek. + +Darkness fell early. The girl built up a roaring fire piled the wood +up against the door so that nobody could get in without waking her. +The rifle lay close at hand. She slept long and soundly. When she +shook the drowsiness from her eyes, the sun was shining through the +window. + +She breakfasted on stew made from a hindquarter of fox. After she had +visited her snares and reset one that had been sprung, she gathered +balsam boughs for a bed and carried them to the house to dry before +the fire. Whaley had left her a small hatchet, and with this she began +to shape a snowshoe from a piece of the puncheon floor. All day she +worked at this, and by night had a rough sort of wooden ski that might +serve at need. With red-hot coals, during the long evening, she burned +holes in it through which to put the straps. The skin of the fox, cut +into long strips, would do for thongs. It would be a crude, primitive +device, but she thought that at a pinch she might travel a few miles +on it. To-morrow she would make a mate for it, she decided. + +Except for the bed of balsam boughs, her arrangements for the night +were just as they had been the first day. Again she built up a big +fire, piled the wood in front of the door, and put the rifle within +reach. Again she was asleep almost at once, within a minute of the +time when she nestled down to find a soft spot in the springy mattress +she had made. + +Jessie worked hard on the second ski. By noon she had it pretty well +shaped. Unfortunately a small split in the wood developed into a +larger one. She was forced to throw it aside and begin on another +piece. + +A hundred times her eyes had lifted to sweep the snow field for any +sign of the hunters' return. Now, looking out of the window without +much expectation of seeing them, her glance fell on a traveler, a +speck of black on a sea of white. Her heart began to beat a drum of +excitement. She waited, eyes riveted, expecting to see a second figure +and a dog-team top the rise and show in silhouette. + +None appeared. The man advanced steadily. He did not look backward. +Evidently he had no companion. Was this lone traveler West? + +Jessie picked up the rifle and made sure that it was in good working +order. A tumultuous river seemed to beat through her temples. The +pulses in her finger-tips were athrob. + +Could she do this dreadful thing, even to save honor and life, though +she knew the man must be twice a murderer? Once she had tried and +failed, while he stood taunting her with his horrible, broken-toothed +grin. And once, in the stress of battle, she had wounded him while he +was attacking. + +The moving black speck became larger. It came to her presently with +certainty that this was not West. He moved more gracefully, more +lightly, without the heavy slouching roll.... And then she knew he was +not Whaley either. One of her friends! A little burst of prayer welled +out of her heart. + +She left the cabin and went toward the man. He waved a hand to her and +she flung up a joyful gesture in answer. For her rescuer was Onistah. + +Jessie found herself with both hands in his, biting her lower lip to +keep back tears. She could not speak for the emotion that welled up in +her. + +"You--all well?" he asked, with the imperturbable facial mask of his +race that concealed all emotion. + +She nodded. + +"Good," he went on. "Your father pray the Great Spirit keep you safe." + +"Where is Father?" + +He looked in the direction from which he had come. "We go Jasper's +cabin--your father, red soldier, American trader, Onistah. You gone. +Big storm--snow--sleet. No can go farther. Then your father he pray. +We wait till Great Spirit he say, 'No more wind, snow,' Then we move +camp. All search--go out find you." He pointed north, south, east, and +west. "The Great Spirit tell me to come here. I say, 'Sleeping Dawn +she with God, for Jesus' sake, Amen.'" + +"You dear, dear boy," she sobbed. + +"So I find you. Hungry?" + +"No. I shot a fox." + +"Then we go now." He looked at her feet. "Where your snowshoes?" + +"West took them to keep me here. I'm making a pair. Come. We'll finish +them." + +They moved toward the house. Onistah stopped. The girl followed his +eyes. They were fastened on a laden dog-train with two men moving +across a lake near the shore of which the cabin had been built. + +Her fear-filled gaze came back to the Indian. "It's West and Mr. +Whaley. What'll we do?" + +Already he was kneeling, fumbling with the straps of his snowshoes. +"You go find your father. Follow trail to camp. Then you send him +here. I hide in woods." + +"No--no. They'll find you, and that West would shoot you." + +"Onistah know tricks. They no find him." + +He fastened the snow-webs on her feet while she was still protesting. +She glanced again at the dog-train jogging steadily forward. If she +was going, it must be at once. Soon it would be too late for either of +them to escape. + +"You will hide in the woods, won't you, so they can't find you?" she +implored. + +He smiled reassurance. "Go," he said. + +Another moment, and she was pushing over the crust along the trail by +which the Blackfoot had come. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVII + +APACHE STUFF + + +The hunters brought back three caribou and two sacks of rabbits, +supplies enough to enable West to reach Lookout. The dogs were +stronger than when they had set out, for they had gorged themselves on +the parts of the game unfit for human use. + +Nothing had been said by either of the men as to what was to be done +with Jessie McRae, but the question was in the background of both +their thoughts, just as was the growing anger toward each other that +consumed them. They rarely spoke. Neither of them let the other drop +behind him. Neither had slept a wink the previous night. Instead, they +had kept themselves awake with hot tea. Fagged out after a day of hard +hunting, each was convinced his life depended on wakefulness. West's +iron strength had stood the strain without any outward signs of +collapse, but Whaley was stumbling with fatigue as he dragged himself +along beside the sled. + +The bad feeling between the partners was near the explosion point. It +was bound to come before the fugitive started on his long trip north. +The fellow had a single-track mind. He still intended to take the girl +with him. When Whaley interfered, there would be a fight. It could not +come too soon to suit West. His brooding had reached the point where +he was morally certain that the gambler meant to betray him to the +police and set them on his track. + +Smoke was rising from the chimney of the hut. No doubt the McRae girl +was inside, waiting for them with a heart of fear fluttering in +her bosom. Whaley's thin lips set grimly. Soon now it would be a +show-down. + +There was a moment's delay at the door, each hanging back under +pretense of working at the sled. There was always the chance that the +one who went first might get a shot in the back. + +West glanced at the big mittens on the other's hands, laughed hardily, +and pushed into the cabin. A startled grunt escaped him. + +"She's gone," he called out. + +"Probably in the woods back here--rabbit-shooting likely. She can't +have gone far without snowshoes," Whaley said. + +The big man picked up the ski Jessie had made. "Looky here." + +Whaley examined it. "She might have made a pair of 'em and got away. +Hope so." + +The yellow teeth of the convict showed in a snarl. "Think I don't see +yore game? Playin' up to McRae an' the red-coats. I wouldn't put it by +you to sell me out." + +The gambler's ice-cold eyes bored into West. Was it to be now? + +West was not quite ready. His hands were cold and stiff. Besides, the +other was on guard and the fugitive was not looking for an even break. + +"Oh, well, no use rowin' about that. I ain't gonna chew the rag with +you. It'll be you one way an' me another pretty soon," he continued, +shifty eyes dodging. + +"About the girl--easy to find out, I say. She sure didn't fly away. +Must 'a' left tracks. We'll take a look-see." + +Again Whaley waited deferentially, with a sardonic and mirthless grin, +to let the other pass first. There were many tracks close to the cabin +where they themselves, as well as the girl, had moved to and fro. +Their roving glances went farther afield. + +Plain as the swirling waters in the wake of a boat stretched the +tracks of a snowshoer across the lower end of the lake. + +They pushed across to examine them closer, following them a dozen +yards to the edge of the ice-field. The sign written there on that +white page told a tale to both of the observers, but it said more to +one than to the other. + +"Some one's been here," West cried with a startled oath. + +"Yes," agreed Whaley. He did not intend to give any unnecessary +information. + +"An' lit out again. Must 'a' gone to git help for the girl." + +"Yes," assented the gambler, and meant "No." + +What he read from the writing on the snow was this: Some one had come +and some one had gone. But the one who had come was not the one who +had gone. An Indian had made the first tracks. He could tell it by +the shape of the webs and by the way the traveler had toed in. The +outward-bound trail was different. Some one lighter of build was +wearing the snowshoes, some one who took shorter steps and toed out. + +"See. She run out to meet him. Here's where her feet kept sinkin' in," +West said. + +The other nodded. Yes, she had hurried to meet him but that was not +all he saw. There was the impression of a knee in the snow. It was an +easy guess that the man had knelt to take off the shoes and adjust +them to the girl's feet. + +"An' here's where she cut off into the woods," the convict went on. +"She's hidin' up there now. I'm hittin' the trail after her hot-foot." + +Whaley's derisive smile vanished almost before it appeared. What he +knew was his own business. If West wanted to take a walk in the woods, +it was not necessary to tell him that a man was waiting for him there +behind some tree. + +"Think I'll follow this fellow," Whaley said, with a lift of the hand +toward the tracks that led across the lake. "We've got to find out +where he went. If the Mounted are hot on our trail, we want to know +it." + +"Sure." West assented craftily, eyes narrowed to conceal the thoughts +that crawled through his murderous brain. "We gotta know that." + +He believed Whaley was playing into his hands. The man meant to betray +him to the police. He would never reach them. And he, Bully West, +would at last be alone with the girl, nobody to interfere with him. + +The gambler was used to taking chances. He took one now and made his +first mistake in the long duel he had been playing with West. The +eagerness of the fellow to have him gone was apparent. The convict +wanted him out of the way so that he could go find the girl. Evidently +he thought that Whaley was backing down as gracefully as he could. + +"I'll start right after him. Back soon," the gambler said casually. + +"Yes, soon," agreed West. + +Their masked eyes still clung to each other, wary and watchful. As +though without intent Whaley backed away, still talking to the other. +He wanted to be out of revolver range before he turned. West also was +backing clumsily, moving toward the sled. The convict wheeled and slid +rapidly to it. + +Whaley knew his mistake now. West's rifle lay on the sled and the man +was reaching for it. + +The man on the ice-field did the only thing possible. He bent low and +traveled fast. When the first shot rang out he was nearly a hundred +fifty yards away. He crumpled down into the snow and lay still. + +West's hands were cold, his fingers stiff. He had not been sure of his +aim. Now he gave a whoop of triumph. That was what happened to any one +who interfered with Bully West. He fired again at the still huddled +heap on the lake. + +Presently he would go out there and make sure the man was dead. Just +now he had more important business, an engagement to meet a girl in +the woods back of the house. + +"Got him good," he told himself aloud. "He sure had it comin' to him, +the damned traitor." + +To find the McRae girl could not be difficult. She had left tracks as +she waded away in the deep snow. There was no chance for her to hide. +Nor could she have gone far without webs. The little catamount might, +of course, shoot him. He had to move carefully, not to give her an +opportunity. + +As he went forward he watched every tree, every stick of timber behind +which she might find cover to ambush him. He was not of a patient +temperament, but life in the wilds had taught him to subdue when he +must his gusty restlessness. Now he took plenty of time. He was in a +hurry to hit the trail with his train and be off, but he could not +afford to be in such great haste as to stop a bullet with his body. + +He called to her. "Where you at, Dawn? I ain't aimin' to hurt you +none. Come out an' quit devilin' me." + +Then, when his wheedling brought no answer, he made the forest ring +with threats of what he would do to her when he caught her unless she +came to him at once. + +Moving slowly forward, he came to the end of the tracks that had been +made in the snow. They ended abruptly, in a thicket of underbrush. His +first thought was that she must be hidden here, but when he had beat +through it half a dozen times, he knew this was impossible. Then where +was she? + +He had told Whaley that she could not fly away. But if she hadn't +flown, what had become of her? There were no trees near enough to +climb without showing the impressions of her feet in the snow as she +moved to the trunk. He had an uneasy sense that she was watching him +all the time from some hidden place near at hand. He looked up into +the branches of the trees. They were heavy with snow which had not +been shaken from them. + +West smothered a laugh and an oath. He saw the trick now. She must +have back-tracked carefully, at each step putting her feet in exactly +the same place as when she had moved forward. Of course! The tracks +showed where she had brushed the deep drifts occasionally when the +moccasin went in the second time. + +It was slow business, for while he studied the sign he must keep a +keen eye cocked against the chance of a shot from his hidden prey. + +Twice he quartered over the ground before he knew he had reached the +place where the back-tracking ceased. Close to the spot was a pine. +A pile of snow showed where a small avalanche had plunged down. That +must have been when she disturbed it on the branches in climbing. + +His glance swept up the trunk and came to a halt. With his rifle he +covered the figure crouching close to it on the far side. + +"Come down," he ordered. + +He was due for one of the surprises of his life. The tree-dweller slid +down and stood before him. It was not Jessie McRae, but a man, an +Indian, the Blackfoot who had ridden out with the girl once to spoil +his triumph over the red-coat Beresford. + +For a moment he stood, stupefied, jaw fallen and mouth open. "Whad you +doin' here?" he asked at last. + +"No food my camp. I hunt," Onistah said. + +"Tha's a lie. Where's the McRae girl?" + +The slim Indian said nothing. His face was expressionless as a blank +wall. + +West repeated the question. He might have been talking to a block of +wood for all the answer he received. His crafty, cruel mind churned +over the situation. + +"Won't talk, eh? We'll see about that. You got her hid somewheres an' +I'm gonna find where. I'll not stand for yore Injun tricks. Drop that +gun an' marche-back to the cabin. Un'erstand?" + +Onistah did as he was told. + +They reached the cabin. There was one thing West did not get hold of +in his mind. Why had not the Blackfoot shot him from the tree? He had +had a score of chances. The reason was not one the white man would be +likely to fathom. Onistah had not killed him because the Indian was a +Christian. He had learned from Father Giguere that he must turn the +other cheek. + +West, revolver close at hand, cut thongs from the caribou skins. +He tied his captive hand and foot, then removed his moccasins and +duffles. From the fire he raked out a live coal and put it on a flat +chip. This he brought across the room. + +"Changed yore mind any? Where's the girl?" he demanded. + +Onistah looked at him, impassive as only an Indian can be. + +"Still sulky, eh? We'll see about that." + +The convict knelt on the man's ankles and pushed the coal against the +naked sole of the brown foot. + +An involuntary deep shudder went through the Blackfoot's body. The +foot twitched. An acrid odor of burning flesh filled the room. No +sound came from the locked lips. + +The tormentor removed the coal. "I ain't begun to play with you yet. +I'm gonna give you some real Apache stuff 'fore I'm through. Where's +the girl? I'm gonna find out if I have to boil you in grease." + +Still Onistah said nothing. + +West brought another coal. "We'll try the other foot," he said. + +Again the pungent acrid odor rose to the nostrils. + +"How about it now?" the convict questioned. + +No answer came. This time Onistah had fainted. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVIII + +"IS A' WELL WI' YOU, LASS?" + + +Jessie's shoes crunched on the snow-crust. She traveled fast. In spite +of Onistah's assurance her heart was troubled for him. West and Whaley +would study the tracks and come to at least an approximation of the +truth. She did not dare think of what the gorilla-man would do to her +friend if they captured him. + +And how was it possible that they would not find him? His footsteps +would be stamped deep in the snow. He could not travel fast. Since he +had become a Christian, the Blackfoot, with the simplicity of a mind +not used to the complexities of modern life, accepted the words of +Jesus literally. He would not take a human life to save his own. + +She blamed herself for escaping at his expense. The right thing would +have been to send him back again for her father. But West had become +such a horrible obsession with her that the sight of him even at a +distance had put her in a panic. + +From the end of the lake she followed the trail Onistah had made. It +took into the woods, veering sharply to the right. The timber was +open. Even where the snow was deep, the crust was firm enough to hold. + +In her anxiety it seemed that hours passed. The sun was still fairly +high, but she knew how quickly it sank these winter days. + +She skirted a morass, climbed a long hill, and saw before her another +lake. On the shore was a camp. A fire was burning, and over this a man +stooping. + +At the sound of her call, the man looked up. He rose and began to run +toward her. She snowshoed down the hill, a little blindly, for the +mist of glad tears brimmed her eyes. + +Straight into Beresford's arms she went. Safe at last, she began to +cry. The soldier petted her, with gentle words of comfort. + +"It's all right now, little girl. All over with. Your father's here. +See! He's coming. We'll not let anything harm you." + +McRae took the girl into his arms and held her tight. His rugged face +was twisted with emotion. A dam of ice melted in his heart. The voice +with which he spoke, broken with feeling, betrayed how greatly he was +shaken. + +"My bairn! My wee dawtie! To God be the thanks." + +She clung to him, trying to control her sobs. He stroked her hair and +kissed her, murmuring Gaelic words of endearment. A thought pierced +him, like a sword-thrust. + +He held her at arm's length, a fierce anxiety in his haggard face. "Is +a' well wi' you, lass?" he asked, almost harshly. + +She understood his question. Her level eyes met his. They held no +reservations of shame. "All's well with me, Father. Mr. Whaley was +there the whole time. He stood out against West. He was my friend." +She stopped, enough said. + +"The Lord be thankit," he repeated again, devoutly. + +Tom Morse, rifle in hand, had come from the edge of the woods and was +standing near. He had heard her first call, had seen her go to the +arms of Beresford direct as a hurt child to those of its mother, and +he had drawn reasonable conclusions from that. For under stress +the heart reveals itself, he argued, and she had turned simply and +instinctively to the man she loved. He stood now outside the group, +silent. Inside him too a river of ice had melted. His haunted, sunken +eyes told the suffering he had endured. The feeling that flooded him +was deeper than joy. She had been dead and was alive again. She had +been lost and was found. + +"Where have you been?" asked Beresford. "We've been looking for days." + +"In a cabin on Bull Creek. Mr. Whaley took me there, but West +followed." + +"How did you get away?" + +"We were out of food. They went hunting. West took my snowshoes. +Onistah came. He saw them coming back and gave me his shoes. He went +and hid in the woods. But they'll see his tracks. They'll find him. We +must hurry back." + +"Yes," agreed McRae. "I'm thinkin' if West finds the lad, he'll do him +ill." + +Morse spoke for the first time, his voice dry as a chip. "We'd better +hurry on, Beresford and I. You and Miss McRae can bring the sled." + +McRae hesitated, but assented. There might be desperate need of haste. +"That'll be the best way. But you'll be carefu', lad. Yon West's a +wolf. He'd as lief kill ye baith as look at ye." + +The younger men were out of sight over the brow of the hill long +before McRae and Jessie had the dogs harnessed. + +"You'll ride, lass," the father announced. + +She demurred. "We can go faster if I walk. Let me drive. Then you can +break trail where the snow's soft." + +"No. You'll ride, my dear. There's nae sic a hurry. The lads'll do +what's to be done. On wi' ye." + +Jessie got into the cariole and was bundled up to the tip of the nose +with buffalo robes, the capote of her own fur being drawn over the +head and face. For riding in the sub-Arctic winter is a freezing +business. + +"Marche,"[6] ordered McRae. + +[Footnote: Most of the dogs of the North were trained by trappers +who talked French and gave commands in that language. Hence even +the Anglo-Saxon drivers used in driving a good many words of that +language. (W.M.R.)] + +Cuffy led the dogs up the hill, following the trail already broken. +The train made good time, but to Jessie it seemed to crawl. She was +tortured with anxiety for Onistah. An express could not have carried +her fast enough. It was small comfort to tell herself that Onistah was +a Blackfoot and knew every ruse of the woods. His tracks would lead +straight to him and the veriest child could follow them. Nor could she +persuade herself that Whaley would stand between him and West's anger. +To the gambler Onistah was only a nitchie. + +The train passed out of the woods to the shore of the lake. Here the +going was better. The sun was down and the snow-crust held dogs and +sled. A hundred fifty yards from the cabin McRae pulled up the team. +He moved forward and examined the snow. + +With a heave Jessie flung aside the robes that wrapped her and jumped +from the cariole. An invisible hand seemed to clutch tightly at her +throat. For what she and her father had seen were crimson splashes +in the white. Some one or something had been killed or wounded here. +Onistah, of course! He must have changed his mind, tried to follow +her, and been shot by West as he was crossing the lake. + +She groaned, her heart heavy. + +McRae offered comfort. "He'll likely be only wounded. The lads wouldna +hae moved him yet if he'd no' been livin'." + +The train moved forward, Jessie running beside Angus. + +Morse came to the door. He closed it behind him. + +"Onistah?" cried Jessie. + +"He's been--hurt. But we were in time. He'll get well." + +"West shot him? We saw stains in the snow." + +"No. He shot Whaley." + +"Whaley?" echoed McRae. + +"Yes. Wanted to get rid of him. Thought your daughter was hidden in +the woods here. Afraid, too, that Whaley would give him up to the +North-West Mounted." + +"Then Whaley's dead?" the Scotchman asked. + +"No. West hadn't time right then to finish the job. Pretty badly hurt, +though. Shot in the side and in the thigh." + +"And West?" + +"We came too soon. He couldn't finish his deviltry. He lit out over +the hill soon as he saw us." + +They went into the house. + +Jessie walked straight to where Onistah lay on the balsam boughs and +knelt beside him. Beresford was putting on one of his feet a cloth +soaked in caribou oil. + +"What did he do to you?" she cried, a constriction of dread at her +heart. + +A ghost of a smile touched the immobile face of the native. "Apache +stuff, he called it." + +"But--" + +"West burned his feet to make him tell where you were," Beresford told +her gently. + +"Oh!" she cried, in horror. + +"Good old Onistah. He gamed it out. Wouldn't say a word. West saw us +coming and hit the trail." + +"Is he--is he--?" + +"He's gone." + +"I mean Onistah." + +"Suffering to beat the band, but not a whimper out of him. He's not +permanently hurt--be walking around in a week or two." + +"You poor boy!" the girl cried softly, and she put her arm under the +Indian's head to lift it to an easier position. + +The dumb lips of the Blackfoot did not thank her, but the dark eyes +gave her the gratitude of a heart wholly hers. + +All that night the house was a hospital. The country was one where men +had learned to look after hurts without much professional aid. In a +rough way Angus McRae was something of a doctor. He dressed the wounds +of both the injured, using the small medical kit he had brought with +him. + +Whaley was a bit of a stoic himself. The philosophy of his class was +to take good fortune or ill undemonstratively. He was lucky to be +alive. Why whine about what must be? + +But as the fever grew on him with the lengthening hours, he passed +into delirium. Sometimes he groaned with pain. Again he fell into +disconnected babble of early days. He was back again with his father +and mother, living over his wild and erring youth. + +"... Don't tell Mother. I'll square it all right if you keep it from +her.... Rotten run of cards. Ninety-seven dollars. You'll have to +wait, I tell you.... Mother, Mother, if you won't cry like that ..." + +McRae used the simple remedies he had. In themselves they were, he +knew, of little value. He must rely on good nursing and the man's +hardy constitution to pull him through. + +With Morse and Beresford he discussed the best course to follow. It +was decided that Morse should take Onistah and Jessie back to Faraway +next day and return with a load of provisions. Whaley's fever must run +its period. It was impossible to tell yet whether he would live or +die, but for some days at least it would not be safe to move him. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIX + +NOT GOING ALONE + + +"Morse, I've watched ye through four-five days of near-hell. I ken +nane I'd rather tak wi' me as a lone companion on the long traverse. +You're canny an' you're bold. That's why I'm trustin' my lass to your +care. It's a short bit of a trip, an' far as I can see there's nae +danger. But the fear's in me. That's the truth, man. Gie me your word +you'll no' let her oot o' your sight till ye hand her ower to my wife +at Faraway." + +Angus clamped a heavy hand on the young man's shoulder. His blue eyes +searched steadily those of the trader. + +"I'll not let her twenty yards from me any time. That's a promise, +McRae," the trader said quietly. + +Well wrapped from the wind, Onistah sat in the cariole. + +Jessie kissed the Scotchman fondly, laughing at him the while. "You're +a goose, Father. I'm all right. You take good care of yourself. That +West might come back here." + +"No chance of that. West will never come back except at the end of +a rope. He's headed for the edge of the Barrens, or up that way +somewhere," Beresford said. "And inside of a week I'll be north-bound +on his trail myself." + +Jessie was startled, a good deal distressed. "I'd let him go. He'll +meet a bad end somewhere. If he never comes back, as you say he won't, +then he'll not trouble us." + +The soldier smiled grimly. "That's not the way of the Mounted. Get the +fellow you're sent after. That's our motto. I've been assigned the job +of bringing in West and I've got to get him." + +"You don't mean you're going up there alone to bring back that--that +wolf-man?" + +"Oh, no," the trooper answered lightly. "I'll have a Cree along as a +guide." + +"A Cree," she scoffed. "What good will he be if you find West? He'll +not help you against him at all." + +"Not what he's with me for. I'm not supposed to need any help to bring +back one man." + +"It's--it's just suicide to go after him alone," she persisted. "Look +what he did to the guard at the prison, to Mr. Whaley, to Onistah! +He's just awful--hardly human." + +"The lad's under orders, lass," McRae told her. "Gin they send him +into the North after West, he'll just have to go. He canna argy-bargy +aboot it." + +Jessie gave up, reluctantly. + +The little cavalcade started. Morse drove. The girl brought up the +rear. + +Her mind was still on the hazard of the journey Beresford must take. +When Morse stopped to rest the dogs for a few moments, she tucked up +Onistah again and recurred to the subject. + +"I don't think Win Beresford should go after West alone except for a +Cree guide. The Inspector ought to send another constable with him. Or +two more. If he knew that man--how cruel and savage he is--" + +Tom Morse spoke quietly. "He's not going alone. I'll be with him." + +She stared. "You?" + +"Yes. Sworn in as a deputy constable." + +"But--he didn't say you were going when I spoke to him about it a +little while ago." + +"He didn't know. I've made up my mind since." + +In point of fact he had come to a decision three seconds before he +announced it. + +Her soft eyes applauded him. "That'll be fine. His friends won't +worry so much if you're with him. But--of course you know it'll be a +horrible trip--and dangerous." + +"No picnic," he admitted. + +She continued to look at him, her cheeks flushed and her face vivid. +"You must like Win a lot. Not many men would go." + +"We're good friends," Morse answered dryly. "Anyhow, I owe West +something on my own account." + +The real reason why he was going he had not given. During the days she +had been lost he had been on the rack of torture. He did not want her +to suffer months of such mental distress while the man she loved was +facing alone the peril of his grim work in the white Arctic desert. + +They resumed the journey. + +Jessie said no more. She would not mention the subject again probably. +But it would be a great deal in her thoughts. She lived much of the +time inside herself with her own imagination. This had the generosity +and the enthusiasm of youth. She wanted to believe people fine and +good and true. It warmed her to discover unexpected virtues in them. + +Mid-afternoon brought them to Faraway. They drove down the main street +of the village to McRae's house while the half-breeds cheered from the +door of the Morse store. + +Jessie burst into the big family room where Matapi-Koma sat bulging +out from the only rocking-chair in the North woods. + +"Oh, Mother--Mother!" the girl cried, and hugged the Cree woman with +all the ardent young savagery of her nature. + +The Indian woman's fat face crinkled to an expansive smile. She had +stalwart sons of her own, but no daughters except this adopted child. +Jessie was very dear to her. + +In a dozen sentences the girl poured out her story, the words tumbling +pell-mell over each other in headlong haste. + +Matapi-Koma waddled out to the sled. "Onistah stay here," she said, +and beamed on him. "Blackfoot all same Cree to Matapi-Koma when he +friend Jessie. Angus send word nurse him till he well again." + +Tom carried the Indian into the house so that his feet would not touch +the ground. Jessie had stayed in to arrange the couch where Fergus +usually slept. + +She followed Morse to the door when he left. "We'll have some things +to send back to Father when you go. I'll bring them down to the store +to-morrow morning," she said. "And Mother wants you to come to supper +to-night. Don't you dare say you're too busy." + +He smiled at the intimate feminine fierceness of the injunction. The +last few hours had put them on a somewhat different footing. He would +accept such largesse as she was willing to offer. He recognized the +spirit in which it was given. She wanted to show her appreciation of +what he had done for her and was about to do for the man she loved. +Nor would Morse meet her generosity in a churlish spirit. + +"I'll be here when the gong rings," he told her heartily. + +"Let's see. It's nearly three now. Say five o'clock," she decided. + +"At five I'll be knockin' on the door." + +She flashed at him a glance both shy and daring. "And I'll open it +before you break through and bring it with you." + +The trader went away with a queer warmth in his heart he had not known +for many a day. The facts did not justify this elation, this swift +exhilaration of blood, but to one who has starved for long any food is +grateful. + +Jessie flew back into the house. She had a busy two hours before her. +"Mother, Mr. Morse is coming to dinner. What's in the house?" + +"Fergus brought a black-tail in yesterday." + +"Good. I know what I'll have. But first off, I want a bath. Lots of +hot water, and all foamy with soap. I've got to hurry. You can peel +the potatoes if you like. And fix some of those young onions. They're +nice. And Mother--I'll let you make the biscuits. That's all. I'll do +the rest." + +The girl touched a match to the fire that was set in her room. She +brought a tin tub and hot water and towels. Slim and naked she +stood before the roaring logs and reveled in her bath. The sense of +cleanliness was a luxury delicious. When she had dressed herself +from the soles of her feet up in clean clothes, she felt a new and +self-respecting woman. + +She did not pay much attention to the psychology of dress, but she +knew that when she had on the pretty plaid that had come from Fort +Benton, and when her heavy black hair was done up just right, she +had twice the sex confidence she felt in old togs. Jessie would have +denied indignantly that she was a coquette. None the less she was +intent on conquest. She wanted this quiet, self-contained American to +like her. + +The look she had seen in his red-brown eyes at times tantalized her. +She could not read it. That some current of feeling about her raced +deep in him she divined, but she did not know what it was. He had a +way of letting his steady gaze rest on her disturbingly. What was he +thinking? Did he despise her? Was he, away down out of sight, the kind +of man toward women that West and Whaley were? She wouldn't believe +it. He had never taken an Indian woman to live with him. There was not +even a rumor that he had ever taken an interest in any Cree girl. Of +course she did not like him--not the way she did Win Beresford or even +Onistah--but she was glad he held himself aloof. It would have greatly +disappointed her to learn of any sordid intrigue involving him. + +Jessie rolled up her sleeves and put on a big apron. She saw that +the onions and the potatoes were started and the venison ready for +broiling. From a chest of drawers she brought one of the new white +linen tablecloths of which she was inordinately proud. She would not +trust any one but herself to set the table. Morse had come from a good +family. He knew about such things. She was not going to let him go +away thinking Angus McRae's family were barbarians, even though his +wife was a Cree and his children of the half-blood. + +On the table she put a glass dish of wild-strawberry jam. In the +summer she had picked the fruit herself, just as she had gathered the +saskatoon berries sprinkled through the pemmican she was going to use +for the rubaboo. + + + + +CHAPTER XXX + +"M" FOR MORSE + + +Two in the village bathed that day. The other was Tom Morse. He +discarded his serviceable moccasins, his caribou-skin capote with the +fur on, his moose-skin trousers, and his picturesque blanket shirt. +For these he substituted the ungainly clothes of civilization, a pair +of square-toed boots, a store suit, a white shirt. + +This was not the way Faraway dressed for gala occasions, but in +several respects the trader did not choose to follow the habits of the +North. At times he liked to remind himself that he was an American and +not a French half-breed born in the woods. + +As he had promised, he was at the McRaes' by the appointed hour. +Jessie opened to his knock. + +The girl almost took his breath. He had not realized how attractive +she was. In her rough outdoor costumes she had a certain naive +boyishness, a very taking quality of vital energy that was sexless. +But in the house dress she was wearing now, Jessie was wholly +feminine. The little face, cameo-fine and clear-cut, the slender body, +willow-straight, had the soft rounded curves that were a joy to the +eye. He had always thought of her as dark, but to his surprise he +found her amazingly fair for one of the metis blood. + +A dimpled smile flashed him welcome. "You did come, then?" + +"Is it the wrong night? Weren't you expectin' me?" he asked in +pretended alarm. + +"I was and I wasn't. It wouldn't have surprised me if you had decided +you were too busy to come." + +"Not when Miss Jessie McRae invites me." + +"She invited you once before," the girl reminded him. + +"Then she asked me because she thought she ought. Is that why I'm +asked this time?" + +She laughed. "You mustn't look a gift dinner in the mouth." + +They were by this time in the big family room. She relieved him of his +coat. He walked over to the couch upon which Onistah lay. + +"How goes it? Tough sleddin'?" he asked. + +The bronze face of the Blackfoot was immobile. He must still have been +in great pain from the burnt feet, but he gave no sign of it. + +"Onistah find good friends," he answered simply. + +Tom looked round the room, and again there came to him the sense of +home. Logs roared and snapped in the great fireplace. The table, set +with the dishes and the plated silver McRae had imported from the +States, stirred in him a pleasure that was almost poignant. The books, +the organ, the quaint old engravings Angus had brought with him when +he crossed the ocean: all of these touched the trader nearly. He was +in exile, living a bachelor life under the most primitive conditions. +The atmosphere of this house penetrated to every fiber of his being. +It filled him with an acute hunger. Here were love and friendly +intercourse and all the daily, homely routine that made life +beautiful. + +And here was the girl that he loved, vivid, vital, full of charm. The +swift deftness and grace of her movements enticed him. The inflections +of her warm, young voice set his pulses throbbing as music sometimes +did. An ardent desire of her flooded him. She was the most winsome +creature under heaven--but she was not for him. + +Matapi-Koma sat at the head of the table, a smiling and benignant +matron finished in copper. She had on her best dress, a beaded +silk with purple satin trimmings, brought by a Red River cart from +Winnipeg, accompanied with a guarantee from the trader that Queen +Victoria had none better. The guarantee was worth what it was worth, +but Matapi-Koma was satisfied. Never had she seen anything so grand. +That Angus McRae could afford to buy it for her proved him a great +chief. + +Jessie waited on the table herself. She set upon it such a dinner as +neither of her guests had eaten in years. Venison broiled to a turn, +juicy, succulent mallard ducks from the cold storage of their larder, +mashed potatoes with gravy, young boiled onions from Whoop-Up, +home-made rubaboo of delicious flavor, hot biscuits and +wild-strawberry jam! And finally, with the tea, a brandy-flavored plum +pudding that an old English lady at Winnipeg had taught Jessie how to +make. + +Onistah ate lying on the couch. Afterward, filled to repletion, with +the sense of perfect contentment a good dinner brings, the two young +men stuffed their pipes and puffed strata of smoke toward the log +rafters of the room. Jessie cleared the table, then sat down and +put the last stitches in the gun-case she had been working at +intermittently for a month. It was finished, but she had not till now +stitched the initials into the cloth. + +As the swift fingers of the girl flashed back and forth, both men +watched, not too obviously, the profile shadowed by the dark, +abundant, shining hair. The picture of her was an intimate one, but +Tom's tricky imagination tormented him with one of still nearer +personal association. He saw her in his own house, before his own +fireside, a baby clinging to her skirt. Then, resolutely, he put the +mental etching behind him. She loved his friend Beresford, a man out +of a thousand, and of course he loved her. Had he not seen her go +straight to his arms after her horrible experience with West? + +Matapi-Koma presently waddled out of the room and they could hear the +clatter of dishes. + +"I told her I'd help her wash them if she'd wait," explained Jessie. +"But she'd rather do them now and go to bed. My conscience is clear, +anyhow." She added with a little bubble of laughter, "And I don't have +to do the work. Is that the kind of a conscience you have, Mr. Morse?" + +"If I were you my conscience would tell me that I couldn't go and +leave my guests," he answered. + +She raked him with a glance of merry derision. "Oh, I know how yours +works. I wouldn't have it for anything. It's an awf'lly bossy one. +It's sending you out to the Barrens with Win Beresford just because +he's your friend." + +"Not quite. I have another reason too," he replied. + +"Yes, I know. You don't like West. Nobody does. My father doesn't--or +Fergus--or Mr. Whaley--but they're not taking the long trail after him +as you are. You can't get out of it that way." + +She had not, of course, hit on the real reason for going that +supplemented his friendship for the constable and he did not intend +that she should. + +"It doesn't matter much why I'm going. Anyhow, it'll be good for me. +I'm gettin' soft and fat. After I've been out in the deep snows a +month or so, I'll have taken up my belt a notch or two. It's time I +wrestled with a blizzard an' tried livin' on lean rabbit.[7]" + +[Footnote 7: Rabbit is about the poorest meat in the North. It is lean +and stringy, furnishes very little nourishment and not much fat, +and is not a muscle-builder. In a country where, oil and grease +are essentials, such food is not desirable. The Indians ate great +quantities of them. (W.M.R.)] + +Her gaze swept his lean, hard, compact body. "Yes, you look soft," she +mocked. "Father said something of that sort when he looked at that +door there you came through." + +Tom had been watching her stitching. He offered a comment now, +perhaps, to change the subject. It is embarrassing for a modest man to +talk about himself. + +"You're workin' that 'W' upside down," he said. + +"Am I? Who said, it was a 'W'?" + +"I guessed it might be." + +"You're a bad guesser. It's an 'M.' 'M' stands for McRae, doesn't it?" + +"Yes, and 'W' for Winthrop," he said with a little flare of boldness. + +A touch of soft color flagged her cheeks. "And 'I' for impudence," she +retorted with a smile that robbed the words of offense. + +He was careful not to risk outstaying his welcome. After an hour he +rose to go. His good-bye to Matapi-Koma and Onistah was made in the +large living-room. + +Jessie followed him to the outside door. + +He gave her a word of comfort as he buttoned his coat, "Don't you +worry about Win. I'll keep an eye on him." + +"Thank you. And he'll keep one on you, I suppose." + +He laughed. That reversal of the case was a new idea to him. The +prettiest girl in the North was not holding her breath till he +returned safely. "I reckon," he said. "We'll team together fine." + +"Don't be foolhardy, either of you," she cautioned. + +"No," he promised, and held out his hand. "Good-bye, if I don't see +you in the mornin'." + +He did not know she was screwing up her courage and had been for half +an hour to do something she had never done before. She plunged at it, +a tide of warm blood beating into her face beneath the tan. + +"'M' is for Morse too, and 'T' for Tom," she said. + +With the same motion she thrust the gun-case into his hand and him out +of the door. + +He stood outside, facing a closed door, the bit of fancy-work in his +mittens. An exultant electric tingle raced through his veins. She had +given him a token of friendship he would cherish all his life. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXI + +THE LONG TRAIL + + +For four days Whaley lay between life and death. There were hours when +the vital current in him ebbed so low that McRae thought it was the +beginning of the end. But after the fifth day he began definitely to +mend. His appetite increased. The fever in him abated. The delirium +passed away. Just a week from the time he had been wounded, McRae put +him on the cariole and took him to town over the hard crust of the +snow. + +Beresford returned from Fort Edmonton a few hours later, carrying with +him an appointment for Morse as guide and deputy constable. + +"Maintiens le droit," said the officer, clapping his friend on the +shoulder. "You're one of us now. A great chance for a short life you've +got. Time for the insurance companies to cancel any policies they may +have on you." + +Morse smiled. He was only a deputy, appointed temporarily, but it +pleased him to be chosen even in this capacity as a member of the most +efficient police force in the world. "Maintiens le droit" was the +motto of the Mounted. Tom did not intend that the morale of that body +should suffer through him if he could help it. + +Angus McRae had offered his dog-train for the pursuit and Beresford +had promptly accepted. The four dogs of the Scotch trapper were far +and away better than any others that could be picked up in a hurry. +They had stamina, and they were not savage and wolfish like most of +those belonging to the Indians and even to the Hudson's Bay Company. + +Supplies for the trip had been gathered by Morse. From the Crees he +had bought two hundred pounds of dried fish for the dogs. Their own +provisions consisted of pemmican, dried caribou meat, flour, salt, +tea, and tobacco. + +All Faraway was out to see the start. The travelers would certainly +cover hundreds and perhaps thousands of miles before their return. +Even in that country of wide spaces, where men mushed far when the +rivers and lakes were closed, this was likely to prove an epic trip. + +Beresford cracked the long lash and Cuffy leaned forward in the +traces. The tangle of dogs straightened out and began to move. A +French voyageur lifted his throat in a peculiar shout that was half +a bark. Indians and half-breeds snowshoed down the street beside +the sled. At the door of the McRae house stood Angus, his wife, and +daughter. + +"God wi' you haith," the trapper called. + +Jessie waved a scarf, and Beresford, who had spent the previous +evening with her, threw up a hand in gay greeting. + +The calvacade drew to the edge of the woods. Morse looked back. A slim +figure, hardly distinguishable in the distance, still stood in front +of the McRae house fluttering the scarf. + +A turn in the trail hid her. Faraway was shut out of view. + +For four or five miles the trappers stayed with them. It was rather a +custom of the North to speed travelers on their way in this fashion. +At the edge of the first lake the Indians and half-breeds said +good-bye and turned back. + +Morse moved onto the ice and broke trail. The dogs followed in +tandem--Cuffy, Koona, Bull, and Caesar. They traveled fast over the +ice and reached the woods beyond. The timber was not thick. Beyond +this was a second lake, a larger one. By the time they had crossed +this, the sun was going down. + +The men watched for a sheltered place to camp and as soon as they +found one, they threw off the trail to the edge of the woods, drawing +up the sledge back of them as a wind-break. They gathered pine for +fuel and cut balsam boughs for beds. It had come on to snow, and they +ate supper with their backs to the drive of the flakes, the hoods of +their furs drawn over their heads. + +The dogs sat round in a half-circle watching them and the frozen fish +thawing before the fire. Their faces, tilted a little sideways, ears +cocked and eyes bright, looked anxiously expectant. When the fish were +half-thawed, Morse tossed them by turn to the waiting animals, who +managed to get rid of their supper with a snap and a gulp. Afterward +they burrowed down in the snow and fell asleep. + +On the blazing logs Beresford had put two kettles filled with snow. +These he refilled after the snow melted, until enough water was in +them. Into one kettle he put a piece of fat caribou meat. The other +was to make tea. + +Using their snowshoes as shovels, they scraped a place clear and +scattered balsam boughs on it. On this they spread an empty flour +sack, cut open at the side. Tin plates and cups served as dish. + +Their supper consisted of soggy bannocks, fat meat, and tea. While +they ate, the snow continued to fall. It was not unwelcome, for so +long as this lasted the cold could not be intolerable. Moreover, +snow makes a good white blanket and protects against sudden drops in +temperature. + +They changed their moccasins and duffles and pulled on as night-wear +long buffalo-skin boots, hood, mufflers, and fur mits. A heavy fur +robe and a blanket were added. Into these last they snuggled down, +wrapping themselves up so completely that a tenderfoot would have +smothered for lack of air. + +Before they retired, they could hear the ice on the lake cracking like +distant thunder. The trees back of them occasionally snapped from the +cold with reports that sounded like pistol shots. + +In five minutes both men were asleep. They lay with their heads +entirely covered, as the Indians did. Not once during the night did +they stir. To disarrange their bedding and expose the nose or the +hands to the air would be to risk being frozen. + +Morse woke first. He soon had a roaring fire. Again there were two +kettles on it, one for fat meat and the other for strong tea. No +fish were thawing before the heat, for dogs are fed only once a day. +Otherwise they get sleepy and sluggish, losing the edge of their +keenness. + +They were off to an early start. There was a cold head wind that was +uncomfortable. For hours they held to the slow, swinging stride of the +webs. Sometimes the trail was through the forest, sometimes in and out +of brush and small timber. Twice during the day they crossed lakes and +hit up a lively pace. Once they came to a muskeg, four miles across, +and had to plough over the moss hags while brush tangled their feet +and slapped their faces. + +Cuffy was a prince of leaders. He seemed to know by some sixth sense +the best way to wind through underbrush and over swamps. He was +master of the train and ruled by strength and courage as well as +intelligence. Bull had ideas of his own, but after one sharp brush +with Cuffy, from which he had emerged ruffled and bleeding, the native +dog relinquished claim to dominance. + +The travelers made about fifteen miles before noon. They came to a +solitary tepee, built on the edge of a lake with a background of +snow-burdened spruce. This lodge was constructed of poles arranged +cone-shaped side by side, the chinks between plastered with moss +wedged in to fill every crevice. A thin wisp of smoke rose from an +open space in the top. + +At the sound of the yelping dogs a man lifted the moose-skin curtain +that served as a door. He was an old and wrinkled Cree. His face was +so brown and tough and netted with seams that it resembled a piece of +alligator leather. From out of it peered two very small bright eyes. + +"Ugh! Ugh!" he grunted. + +This appeared to be all the English that he knew. Beresford tried him +in French and discovered he had a smattering of it. After a good many +attempts, the soldier found that he had seen no white man with a +dog-train in many moons. The Cree lived there alone, it appeared, and +trapped for a living. Why he was separated from all his kin and tribal +relations the young Canadian could not find out at the time. Later he +learned that the old fellow was an outcast because he had once shown +the white feather in a battle with Blackfeet fifty years earlier. + +Before they left, the travelers discovered that he knew two more words +of English. One was rum, the other tobacco. He begged for both. They +left him a half-foot of tobacco. The scant supply of whiskey they had +brought was for an emergency. + +Just before night fell, Morse shot two ptarmigan in the woods. These +made a welcome addition to their usual fare. + +Though both the men were experienced in the use of snowshoes, their +feet were raw from the chafing of the thongs. Before the camp-fire +they greased the sore places with tallow. In a few days the irritation +due to the webs would disappear and the leg muscles brought into +service by this new and steady shuffle would harden and grow fit. + +They had built a wind-break of brush beside the sled and covered the +ground with spruce boughs after clearing away the snow. Here they +rested after supper, drying socks, duffles, and moccasins, which were +wet with perspiration, before the popping fire. + +Beresford pulled out his English briar pipe and Tom one picked from +the Company stock. Smoke wreathed their heads while they lounged +indolently on the spruce bed and occasionally exchanged a remark. They +knew each other well enough for long silences. When they talked, it +was because they had something to say. + +The Canadian looked at his friend's new gun-case and remarked with a +gleam in his eye: + +"I spoke for that first, Tom. Had miners on it, I thought." + +The American laughed sardonically. "It was a present for a good boy," +he explained. "I've a notion somebody was glad I was mushin' with you +on this trip. Maybe you can guess why. Anyhow, I drew a present out of +it." + +"I see you did," Beresford answered, grinning. + +"I'm to look after you proper an' see you're tucked up." + +"Oh, that's it?" + +"That's just it." + +The constable looked at him queerly, started to say something, then +changed his mind. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXII + +A PICTURE IN A LOCKET + + +It was characteristic of McRae that he had insisted on bringing Whaley +to his own home to recuperate. "It's nursin' you need, man, an' guid +food. Ye'll get baith at the hoose." + +The trader protested, and was overruled. His Cree wife was not just +now able to look after him. McRae's wife and daughter made good his +promise, and the wounded man thrived under their care. + +On an afternoon Whaley lay on the bed in his room smoking. Beside him +sat Lemoine, also puffing at a pipe. The trapper had brought to the +ex-gambler a strange tale of a locket and a ring he had seen bought +by a half-breed from a Blackfoot squaw who claimed to have had it +eighteen years. He had just finished telling of it when Jessie knocked +at the door and came into the room with a bowl of caribou broth. + +Whaley pretended to resent this solicitude, but his objection was a +fraud. He liked this girl fussing over him. His attitude toward her +was wholly changed. Thinking of her as a white girl, he looked at her +with respect. + +"No more slops," he said. "Bring me a good caribou steak and I'll say +thank you." + +"You're to eat what Mother sends," she told him. + +Lemoine had risen from the chair on which he had been sitting. He +stared at her, a queer look of puzzled astonishment in his eyes. +Jessie became aware of his gaze and flashed on him a look of +annoyance. + +"Have you seen a ghost, Mr. Lemoine?" she asked. + +"By gar, maybeso, Miss Jessie. The picture in the locket, it jus' lak +you--same hair, same eyes, same smile." + +"What picture in what locket?" + +"The locket I see at Whoop-Up, the one Pierre Roubideaux buy from old +Makoye-kin's squaw." + +"A picture of a Blackfoot?" + +"No-o. Maybe French--maybe from the 'Merican country. I do not know." + +Whaley took the pipe from his mouth and sat up, the chill eyes in his +white face fixed and intent. "Go back to Whoop-Up, Lemoine. Buy +that locket and that ring for me from Pierre Roubideaux. See +Makoye-kin--and his squaw. Find out where she got it--and when. Run +down the whole story." + +The trapper took off a fur cap and scratched his curly poll. +"Mais--pourquois? All that will take money, is it not so?" + +"I'll let you have the money. Spend what you need, but account for it +to me afterward." + +Jessie felt the irregular beat of a hammer inside her bosom. "What is +it you think, Mr. Whaley?" she cried softly. + +"I don't know what I think. Probably nothing to it. But there's a +locket. We know that. With a picture that looks like you, Lemoine here +thinks. We'd better find out whose picture it is, hadn't we?" + +"Yes, but--Do you mean that maybe it has something to do with me? How +can it? The sister of Stokimatis was my mother. Onistah is my cousin. +Ask Stokimatis. She knows. What could this woman of the picture be to +me?" + +Jessie could not understand the fluttering pulse in her throat. She +had not doubted that her mother was a Blackfoot. All the romance of +her clouded birth centered around the unknown father who had died when +she was a baby. Stokimatis had not been very clear about that. She had +never met the man, according to the story she had told Sleeping Dawn. +Neither she nor those of her tribal group knew anything of him. Was +there a mystery about his life? In her childish dreams Jessie had +woven one. He was to her everything desirable, for he was the tie that +bound her to all the higher standards of life she craved. + +"I don't know. Likely it's all a mare's nest. Find Stokimatis, +Lemoine, and bring her back with you. Well see what she can tell us. +And get the locket and the ring, with the story back of them." + +Again Lemoine referred to the cost. He would have to take his +dog-train to Whoop-Up, and from there out to the creek where Pierre +Roubideaux was living. Makoye-kin and his family might be wintering +anywhere within a radius of a hundred miles. Was there any use in +going out on such a wild-hare chase? + +Whaley thought there was and said so with finality. He did not give +his real reason, which was that he wanted to pay back to McRae and his +daughter the debt he owed. They had undoubtedly saved his life after +he had treated her outrageously. There was already one score to his +credit, of course. He had saved her from West. But he felt the balance +still tipped heavily against him. And he was a man who paid his debts. + +It was this factor of his make-up--the obligation of old associations +laid upon him--that had taken him out to West with money, supplies, +and a dog-train to help his escape. + +Jessie went out to find her father. Her eagerness to see him outflew +her steps. This was not a subject she could discuss with Matapi-Koma. +The Cree woman would not understand what a tremendous difference it +made if she could prove her blood was wholly of the superior race. Nor +could Jessie with tact raise such a point. It involved not only the +standing of Matapi-Koma herself, but also of her sons. + +The girl found McRae in the storeroom looking over a bundle of +assorted pelts--marten, fox, mink, and beaver. The news tumbled from +her lips in excited exclamations. + +"Oh, Father, guess! Mr. Lemoine saw a picture--a Blackfoot woman had +it--old Makoye-kin's wife--and she sold it. And he says it was like +me--exactly. Maybe it was my aunt--or some one. My father's sister! +Don't you think?" + +"I'll ken what I think better gin ye'll just quiet doon an' tell me a' +aboot it, lass." + +She told him. The Scotchman took what she had to say with no outward +sign of excitement. None the less his blood moved faster. He wanted +no change in the relations between them that would interfere with the +love she felt for him. To him it did not matter whether she was of the +pure blood or of the metis. He had always ignored the Indian in her. +She was a precious wildling of beauty and delight. By nature she was +of the ruling race. There was in her nothing servile or dependent, +none of the inertia that was so marked a mental characteristic of +the Blackfoot and the Cree. Her slender body was compact of fire and +spirit. She was alive to her finger-tips. + +None the less he was glad on her account. Since it mattered to her +that she was a half-blood, he would rejoice, too, if she could prove +the contrary. Or, if she could trace her own father's family, he would +try to be glad for her. + +With his rough forefinger he touched gently the tender curve of the +girl's cheek. "I'm thinkin' that gin ye find relatives across the +line, auld Angus McRae will be losin' his dawtie." + +She flew into his arms, her warm, young face pressed against his +seamed cheek. + +"Never--never! You're my father--always that no matter what I find. +You taught me to read and nursed me when I was sick. Always you've +cared for me and been good to me. I'll never have any real father but +you," she cried passionately. + +He stroked her dark, abundant hair fondly. "My lass, I've gi'en ye all +the love any yin could gi'e his ain bairn. I doot I've been hard on ye +at times, but I'm a dour auld man an' fine ye ken my heart was woe for +ye when I was the strictest." + +She could count on the fingers of one hand the times when he had said +as much. Of nature he was a bit of Scotch granite externally. He was +sentimental. Most of his race are. But he guarded the expression of it +as though it were a vice. + +"Maybe Onistah has heard his mother say something about it," Jessie +suggested. + +"Like enough. There'll be nae harm in askin' the lad." + +But the Blackfoot had little to tell. He had been told by Stokimatis +that Sleeping Dawn was his cousin, but he had never quite believed it. +Once, when he had pressed his mother with questions, she had smiled +deeply and changed the subject. His feeling was, and had always been, +that there was some mystery about the girl's birth. Stokimatis either +knew what it was or had some hint of it. + +His testimony at least tended to support the wild hopes flaming in the +girl's heart. + +Lemoine started south for Whoop-Up at break of day. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIII + +INTO THE LONE LAND + + +Into Northern Lights the pursuers drove after a four-day traverse. +Manders, of the Mounted, welcomed them with the best he had. No news +had come to him from the outside for more than two months, and after +his visitors were fed and warmed, they lounged in front of a roaring +log fire while he flung questions at them of what the world and its +neighbor were doing. + +Manders was a dark-bearded man, big for the North-West Police. He +had two hobbies. One was trouble in the Balkans, which he was always +prophesying. The other was a passion for Sophocles, which he read in +the original from a pocket edition. Start him on the chariot race in +"Elektra" and he would spout it while he paced the cabin and gestured +with flashing eyes. For he was a Rugby and an Oxford man, though born +with the wanderlust in his heart. Some day he would fall heir to a +great estate in England, an old baronetcy which carried with it manors +and deer parks and shaven lawns that had taken a hundred years to +grow. Meanwhile he lived on pemmican and sour bannocks. Sometimes +he grumbled, but his grumbling was a fraud. He was here of choice, +because he was a wild ass of the desert and his ears heard only the +call of adventure. Of such was the North-West Mounted. + +Presently, when the stream of his curiosity as to the outside began to +dry, Beresford put a few questions of his own. Manders could give him +no information. He was in touch with the trappers for a radius of a +hundred miles of which Northern Lights was the center, but no word had +come to him of a lone traveler with a dog-train passing north. + +"Probably striking west of here," the big black Englishman suggested. + +Beresford's face twisted to a wry, humorous grimace. East, west, or +north, they would have to find the fellow and bring him back. + +The man-hunters spent a day at Northern Lights to rest the dogs and +restock their supplies. They overhauled their dunnage carefully, +mended the broken moose-skin harness, and looked after one of the +animals that had gone a little lame from a sore pad. From a French +half-breed they bought additional equipment much needed for the trail. +He was a gay, good-looking youth in new fringed leather hunting-shirt, +blue Saskatchewan cap trimmed with ribbons, and cross belt of scarlet +cloth. His stock in trade was dog-shoes, made of caribou-skin by his +wife, and while in process of tanning soaked in some kind of liquid +that would prevent the canines from eating them off their feet. + +The temperature was thirty-five below zero when they left the post and +there were sun dogs in the sky. Manders had suggested that they had +better wait a day or two, but the man-hunters were anxious to be on +the trail. They had a dangerous, unpleasant job on hand. Both of them +wanted it over with as soon as possible. + +They headed into the wilds. The road they made was a crooked +path through the white, unbroken forest. They saw many traces of +fur-bearing animals, but did not stop to do any hunting. The intense +cold and the appearance of the sky were whips to drive them fast. In +the next two or three days they passed fifteen or twenty lakes. Over +these they traveled rapidly, but in the portages and the woods they +had to pack the snow, sometimes cut out obstructing brush, and again +help the dogs over rough or heavy places. + +The blizzard caught them the third day. They fought their way through +the gathering storm across a rather large lake to the timber's +edge. Here they cleared away a space about nine feet square and cut +evergreen boughs from the trees to cover it. At one side of this, +Morse built the fire while Beresford unharnessed the dogs and thawed +out a mess of frozen fish for them. Presently the kettles were +bubbling on the fire. The men ate supper and drew the sled up as a +barricade against the wind. + +The cold had moderated somewhat and it had come on to snow. All night +a sleety, wind-driven drizzle beat upon them. They rose from an +uncomfortable night to a gloomy day. + +They consulted about what was best to do. Their camp was in a poor +place, among a few water-logged trees that made a poor, smoky fire. It +had little shelter from the storm, and there was no evidence of fair +weather at hand. + +"Better tackle the next traverse," Morse advised. "Once we get across +the lake we can't be worse off than we are here." + +"Righto!" assented Beresford. + +They packed their supplies, harnessed the dogs, and were off. Into the +storm they drove, head down, buffeted by a screaming wind laden with +stinging sleet that swept howling across the lake. All about them they +heard the sharp reports of cracking ice. At any moment a fissure might +open, and its width might be an inch or several yards. In the blinding +gale they could see nothing. Literally, they had to feel their way. + +Morse went ahead to test the ice, Cuffy following close at his heels. +The water rushes up after a fissure and soon freezes over. The danger +is that one may come to it too soon. + +This was what happened. Morse, on his snowshoes, crossed the thinly +frozen ice safely. Cuffy, a step or two behind the trail-breaker, +plunged through into the water. The prompt energy of Beresford saved +the other dogs. He stopped them instantly and threw his whole weight +back to hold the sled. The St. Bernard floundered in the water for a +few moments and tried to reach Morse. The harness held Cuffy back. +Beresford ran to the edge of the break and called him. A second or two +later he was helping to drag the dog back upon the firm ice. + +In the bitter cold the matted coat of the St. Bernard, froze stiff. +Cuffy knew his danger. The instant the sled, was across the crack, he +plunged at the load and went forward with such speed that he seemed +almost to drag the other dogs with him. + +Fortunately the shore was near, not more than three or four miles +away. Within half an hour land was reached. A forest came down to the +edge of the lake. From the nearer trees Morse sliced birch bark. An +abundance of fairly dry wood was at hand. Before a roaring fire Cuffy +lay on a buffalo robe and steamed. Within an hour he was snuggling a +contented nose up to Beresford's caressing hand. + +Fagged out, the travelers went to bed early. Long before daybreak they +were up. The blizzard had died down during the night. It left behind +a crusted trail over which the dogs moved fast. The thermometer had +again dropped sharply and the weather was bitter cold. Before the +lights of an Indian village winked at them through the trees, they +had covered nearly forty miles. In the wintry afternoon darkness they +drove up. + +The native dogs were barking a welcome long before they came jingling +into the midst of the tepees. Bucks, squaws, and papooses tumbled +out to see them with guttural exclamations of greeting. Some of the +youngsters and one or two of the maidens had never before seen a white +man. + +A fast and furious melee interrupted conversation. The wolfish dogs +of the village were trying out the mettle of the four strangers. The +snarling and yelping drowned all other sounds until the gaunt horde +of sharp-muzzled; stiff-haired brutes had been beaten back by savage +blows from the whip and by quick thrusts of a rifle butt. + +The head man of the group invited the two whites into the largest hut. +Morse and Beresford sat down before a smoky fire and carried on a +difficult dialogue. They divided half a yard of tobacco among the men +present and gave each of the women a small handful of various-colored +beads. + +They ate sparingly of a stew made of fish, the gift of their hosts. +In turn the officers had added to the menu a large piece of fat moose +which was devoured with voracity. + +The Indians, questioned, had heard a story of a white man traveling +alone through the Lone Lands with a dog-train. He was a giant of a +fellow and surly, the word had gone out. Who he was or where he was +going they did not know, but he seemed to be making for the great +river in the north. That was the sum and substance of what Beresford +learned from them about West by persistent inquiry. + +After supper, since it was so bitterly cold outside, the man-hunters +slept in the tepee of the chief. Thirteen Indians too slept there. Two +of them were the head man's wives, six were his children, one was a +grandchild. Who the rest of the party were or what relation they bore +to him, the guests did not learn. + +The place was filthy and the air was vile. Before morning both the +young whites regretted they had not taken chances outside. + +"Not ever again," Beresford said with frank disgust after they had set +out next day. "I'll starve if I have to. I'll freeze if I must. But, +by Jove! I'll not eat Injun stew or sleep in a pot-pourri of nitchies. +Not good enough." + +Tom grinned. "While I was eatin' the stew, I thought I could stand +sleepin' there even if I gagged at the eats, and while I was tryin' to +sleep, I made up my mind if I had to choose one it would be the stew. +Next time we're wrastlin' with a blizzard, we'll know enough to be +thankful for our mercies. We'll be able to figure it might be a lot +worse." + +That afternoon they killed a caribou and got much-needed fresh meat +for themselves and the dogs. Unfortunately, while carrying the +hind-quarters to the sled, Beresford slipped and strained a tendon +in the left leg. He did not notice it much at the time, but after an +hour's travel the pain increased. He found it difficult to keep pace +with the dogs. + +They were traversing a ten-mile lake. Morse proposed that they camp as +soon as they reached the edge of it. + +"Better get on the sled and ride till then," he added. + +Beresford shook his head. "No, I'll carry on all right. Got to grin +and bear it. The sled's overloaded anyhow. You trot along and I'll +tag. Time you've got the fires built and all the work done, I'll loaf +into camp." + +Tom made no further protest. "All right. Take it easy. I'll unload and +run back for you." + +The Montanan found a good camp-site, dumped the supplies, and left +Cuffy as a guard. With the other dogs he drove back and met the +officer. Beresford was still limping doggedly forward. Every step sent +a shoot of pain through him, but he set his teeth and kept moving. + +None the less he was glad to see the empty sled. He tumbled on and let +the others do the work. + +At camp he scraped the snow away with a shoe while Morse cut spruce +boughs and chopped wood for the fire. + +Beresford suffered a good deal from his knee that night. He did not +sleep much, and when day came it was plain he could not travel. The +camp-site was a good one. There was plenty of wood, and the shape of +the draw in which they were located was a protection from the cold +wind. The dogs would be no worse for a day or two of rest. The +travelers decided to remain here as long as might be necessary. + +Tom went hunting. He brought back a bag of four ptarmigan late in +the afternoon. Fried, they were delicious. The dogs stood round in +a half-circle and caught the bones tossed to them. Crunch-- +crunch--crunch. The bones no longer were. The dogs, heads cocked +on one side, waited expectantly for more tender tidbits. + +"Saw deer tracks. To-morrow I'll have a try for one," Morse said. + +The lame man hobbled down to the lake next day, broke the ice, and +fished for jack pike. He took back to camp with him all he could +carry. + +On the fourth day his knee was so much improved that he was able to +travel slowly. They were glad to see that night the lights of Fort +Desolation, as one of the Mounted had dubbed the post on account of +its loneliness. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIV + +THE MAN-HUNTERS READ SIGN + + +In the white North travelers are few and far. It is impossible for one +to pass through the country without leaving a record of his progress +written on the terrain and in the minds of the natives. The fugitive +did not attempt concealment. He had with him now an Indian guide and +was pushing into the Barren Lands. There was no uncertainty about his +movements. From Fort Chippewayan he had swung to the northwest in the +line of the great frozen lakes, skirting Athabasca and following the +Great Slave River to the lake of the same name. This he crossed at the +narrowest point, about where the river empties into it, and headed for +the eastern extremity of Lake La Martre. + +On his heels, still far behind, trod the two pursuers, patient, +dogged, and inexorable. They had left far in the rear the out-forts of +the Mounted and the little settlements of the free traders. Already +they were deep in the Hudson's Bay Company trapping-grounds. Ahead of +them lay the Barrens, stretching to the inlets of the Arctic Ocean. + +The days were drawing out and the nights getting shorter. The +untempered sun of the Northland beat down on the cold snow crystals +and reflected a million sparks of light. In that white field the glare +was almost unbearable. Both of them wore smoked glasses, but even with +these their eyes continually smarted. They grew red and swollen. If +time had not been so great an element in their journey, they would +have tried to travel only after sunset. But they could not afford +this. West would keep going as long and as fast as he could. + +Each of them dreaded snow-blindness. They knew the sign of it--a +dreadful pain, a smarting of the eyeballs as though hot burning sand +were being flung against them. In camp at night they bathed their +swollen lids and applied a cool and healing salve. + +Meanwhile the weeks slipped into months and still they held like +bulldogs to the trail of the man they were after. + +The silence of the wide, empty white wastes surrounded them, except +for an occasional word, the whine of a dog, and the slithering crunch +of the sled-runners. From unfriendly frozen deserts they passed, +through eternal stillness, into the snow wilderness that seemed to +stretch forever. When they came to forests, now thinner, smaller, and +less frequent, they welcomed them as they would an old friend. + +"He's headin' for Great Bear, looks like," Morse suggested one morning +after an hour in which neither of them had spoken. + +"I was wondering when you'd chirp up, Tom," Beresford grinned +cheerfully. "Sometimes I think I'm fed up for life on the hissing of +snowshoe runners. The human voice sure sounds good up here. Yes, Great +Bear Lake. And after that, where?" + +"Up the lake, across to the Mackenzie, and down it to the ocean, I'd +say. He's makin' for the whaling waters. Herschel Island maybe. He's +hoping to bump into a whaler and get down on it to 'Frisco." + +"Your guess is just as good as any," the Canadian admitted. "He's +cut out a man-sized job for himself. I'll say that for him. It's a +five-to-one bet he never gets through alive, even if we don't nab +him." + +"What else can he do? He's got to keep going or be dragged back to be +hanged. I'd travel too if I were in his place." + +"So would I. He's certainly hitting her up. Wish he'd break his leg +for a week or two," the constable said airily. + +They swung into a dense spruce swamp and jumped up a half-grown bear. +He was so close to them that Tom, who was breaking trail, could see +his little shining eyes. Morse was carrying his rifle, in the hope +that he might see a lynx or a moose. The bear turned to scamper away, +but the intention never became a fact. A bullet crashed through the +head and brought the animal down. + +An hour later they reached an Indian camp on the edge of a lake. On +stages, built well up from the ground, drying fish were hanging out of +reach of the dogs. These animals came charging toward the travelers +as usual, lean, bristling, wolfish creatures that never had been +half-tamed. + +Beresford lashed them back with the whip. Indians came out from the +huts, matted hair hanging over their eyes. After the usual greetings +and small presents had been made, the man-hunters asked questions. + +"Great Bear Lake--wah-he-o-che (how far)?" + +The head man opened his eyes. Nobody in his right mind went to the +great water at this time of year. It was maybe fifteen, maybe twenty +days' travel. Who could tell? Were all the fair skins mad? Only three +days since another dog-train had passed through driven by a big shaggy +man who had left them no presents after he had bought fish. Three +whites in as many days, and before that none but voyageur half-breeds +in twice that number of years. + +The trooper let out a boyish whoop. "Gaining fast. Only three days +behind him, Tom. If our luck stands up, he'll never reach the Great +Bear." + +There was reason back of Beresford's exultant shout. At least one of +West's dogs had bleeding feet. This the stained snow on the trail +told them. Either the big man had no shoes for the animals or was too +careless to use them when needed, the constable had suggested to his +friend. + +"It's not carelessness," Morse said. "It's his bullying nature. Likely +he's got the shoes, only he won't put 'em on. He'll beat the poor +brute over the head instead and curse his luck when he breaks down. +He's too bull-headed to be a good driver." + +On the fourth day after this they came upon one of the minor tragedies +of sub-Arctic travel. The skeleton of a dog lay beside the trail. Its +bones had been picked clean by its ravenous cannibal companions. + +"Three left," Beresford commented. "He'll be figuring on picking up +another when he meets any Indians or Eskimos." + +"If he does it won't be any good to work with his train. I believe +we've got him. He isn't twenty-five miles ahead of us right now." + +"I'd put it at twenty. In about three days now the fireworks will +begin." + +It was the second day after this that they began to notice something +peculiar about the trail they were following. Hitherto it had taken +a straight line, except when the bad terrain had made a detour +advisable. Now it swayed uncertainly, much as a drunken man staggers +down a street. + +"What's wrong with him? It can't be liquor. Yet if he's not drunk, +what's got into him?" the soldier asked aloud, expecting no answer +that explained this phenomenon. + +Tom shook his head. "See. The Indian's drivin' now. He follows a +straight enough line. You can tell he's at the tail line by the shape +of the webs. And West's still lurchin' along in a crazy way. He fell +down here. Is he sick, d' you reckon?" + +"Give it up. Anyhow, he's in trouble. We'll know soon enough what it +is. Before night now we'll maybe see them." + +Before they had gone another mile, the trail in the snow showed +another peculiarity. It made a wide half-circle and was heading south +again. + +"He's given up. What's that mean? Out of grub, d' you think?" +Beresford asked. + +"No. If they had been, he'd have made camp and gone hunting. We +crossed musk-ox sign to-day, you know." + +"Righto. Can't be that. He must be sick." + +They kept their eyes open. At any moment now they were likely to make +a discovery. Since they were in a country of scrubby brush they moved +cautiously to prevent an ambush. There was just a possibility that the +fugitive might have caught sight of them and be preparing an +unwelcome surprise. But it was a possibility that did not look like a +probability. + +"Something gone 'way off in his plans," Morse said after they had +mushed on the south trail for an hour. "Looks like he don't know what +he's doing. Has he gone crazy?" + +"Might be that. Men do in this country a lot. We don't know what a +tough time he's been through." + +"I'll bet he's bucked blizzards aplenty in the last two months. Notice +one thing. West's trailin' after the guide like a lamb. He's makin' a +sure-enough drunk track. See how the point of his shoe caught the snow +there an' flung him down. The Cree stopped the sled right away so West +could get up. Why did he do that? And why don't West ever stray a foot +outa the path that's broke? That's not like him. He's always boss o' +the outfit--always leadin'." + +Beresford was puzzled, too. "I don't get the situation. It's been +pretty nearly a thousand miles that we've been following this +trail--eight hundred, anyhow. All the way Bully West has stamped his +big foot on it as boss. Now he takes second place. The reason's beyond +me." + +His friend's mind jumped at a conclusion. "I reckon I know why he's +followin' the straight and narrow path. The guide's got a line round +his waist and West's tied to it." + +"Why?" + +The sun's rays, reflected from the snow in a blinding, brilliant +glare, smote Morse full in the eyes. For days the white fields had +been very trying to the sight. There had been moments when black spots +had flickered before him, when red-hot sand had been flung against his +eyeballs if he could judge by the burning sensation. + +He knew now, in a flash, what was wrong with West. + +To Beresford he told it in two words. + +The constable slapped his thigh. "Of course. That's the answer." + +Night fell, the fugitives still not in sight. The country was so rough +that they might be within a mile or two and yet not be seen. + +"Better camp, I reckon," Morse suggested. + +"Yes. Here. We'll come up with them to-morrow." + +They were treated that evening to an indescribably brilliant +pyrotechnic display in the heavens. An aurora flashed across the sky +such as neither of them had ever seen before. The vault was aglow with +waves of red, violet, and purple that danced and whirled, with fickle, +inconstant flashes of gold and green and yellow bars. A radiant +incandescence of great power lit the arch and flooded it with light +that poured through the cathedral windows of the Most High. + +At daybreak they were up. Quickly they breakfasted and loaded. The +trail they followed was before noon a rotten one, due to a sudden rise +in the temperature, but it still bore south steadily. + +They reached the camp where West and his guide had spent the night. +Another chapter of the long story of the trail was written here. The +sled and the guide had gone on south, but West had not been with them. +His webs went wandering off at an angle, hesitant and uncertain. +Sometimes they doubled across the track he had already made. + +Beresford was breaking trail. His hand shot straight out. In the +distance there was a tiny black speck in the waste of white. It moved. + +Even yet the men who had come to bring the law into the Lone Lands did +not relax their vigilance. They knew West's crafty, cunning mind. +This might be a ruse to trap them. When they left the sled and moved +forward, it was with rules ready. The hunters stalked their prey as +they would have done a musk ox. Slowly, noiselessly, they approached. + +The figure was that of a huge man. He sat huddled in the snow, his +back to them. Despair was in the droop of the head and the set of the +bowed shoulders. + +One of the dogs howled. The big torso straightened instantly. The +shaggy head came up. Bully West was listening intently. He turned and +looked straight at them, but he gave no sign of knowing they were +there. The constable took a step and the hissing of the shoe-runner +sounded. + +"I'm watchin' you, Stomak-o-sox," the heavy voice of the convict +growled. "Can't fool me. I see every step you're takin'." + +It was an empty boast, almost pathetic in its futility. Morse and +Beresford moved closer, still without speech. + +West broke into violent, impotent cursing. "You're there, you damned +wood Cree! Think I don't know? Think I can't see you? Well, I can. +Plain as you can see me. You come here an' get me, or I'll skin you +alive like I done last week. Hear me?" + +The voice rose to a scream. It betrayed terror--the horrible deadly +fear of being left alone to perish in the icy wastes of the North. + +Beresford crept close and waved a hand in front of the big man's eyes. +West did not know it. He babbled vain and foolish threats at his +guide. + +The convict had gone blind--snow-blind, and Stomak-o-sox had left him +alone to make a push for his own life while there was still time. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXV + +SNOW-BLIND + + +West grinned up at the officer, his yellow canines showing like +tusks. His matted face was an unlovely sight. In it stark, naked fear +struggled with craftiness and cruelty. + +"Good you came back--good for you. I ain't blind. I been foolin' you +all along. Wanted, to try you out. Now we'll mush. Straight for the +big lake. North by west like we been going. Un'erstand, Stomak-o-sox? +I'll not beat yore head off this time, but if you ever try any monkey +tricks with Bully West again--" He let the threat die out in a sound +of grinding teeth. + +Beresford spoke. His voice was gentle. Vile though this murderer +was, there was something pitiable in his condition. One cannot see a +Colossus of strength and energy stricken to helplessness without some +sense of compassion. + +"It's not Stomak-o-sox. We're two of the North-West Mounted. You're +under arrest for breaking prison and for killing Tim Kelly." + +The information stunned West. He stared up out of sightless eyes. So +far as he had known, no member of the Mounted was within five hundred +miles of him. Yet the law had stretched out its long arm to snatch +him back from this Arctic waste after he had traveled nearly fifteen +hundred miles. It was incredible that there could exist such a police +force on earth. + +"Got me, did you?" he growled. He added the boast that he could not +keep back. "Well, you'd never 'a' got me if I hadn't gone blind--never +in this world. There ain't any two of yore damned spies could land +Bully West when he's at himself." + +"Had breakfast?" + +He broke into a string of curses. "No, our grub's runnin' low. That +wood Cree slipped away with all we had. Wish I'd killed him last week +when I skinned him with the dog-whip." + +"How long have you been blind?" + +"It's been comin' on two-three days. This damned burnin' glare from +the snow. Yesterday they give out completely. I tied myself by a line +to the Injun. Knew I couldn't trust him. After all I done for him +too." + +"Did you know he was traveling south with you--had been since +yesterday afternoon?" + +"No, was he?" Again West fell into his natural speech of invective. +"When I meet up with him, I'll sure enough fill him full o' slugs," he +concluded savagely. + +"You're not likely to meet him again. We've come to take you back to +prison." + +Morse brought the train up and the hungry man was fed. They treated +his eyes with the simple remedies the North knows and bound them with +a handkerchief to keep out the fierce light reflected from the snow. + +Afterward, they attached him by a line to the driver. He stumbled +along behind. Sometimes he caught his foot or slipped and plunged down +into the snow. Nobody had ever called him a patient man. Whenever any +mishap occurred, he polluted the air with his vile speech. + +They made slow progress, for the pace had to be regulated to suit the +prisoner. + +Day succeeded day, each with its routine much the same as the one +before. They made breakfast, broke camp, packed, and mushed. The swish +of the runners sounded from morning till night fell. Food began to run +scarce. Once they left the blind man at the camp while they +hunted wood buffalo. It was a long, hard business. They came back +empty-handed after a two-day chase, but less than a mile from camp +they sighted a half-grown polar bear and dropped it before the animal +had a chance to move. + +One happy hour they got through the Land of Little Sticks and struck +the forests again. + +They had a blazing fire again for the first time in six weeks. Brush +and sticks and logs went into it till it roared furiously. + +Morse turned from replenishing it to notice that West had removed the +bandage from his eyes. + +"Better keep it on," the young man advised. + +"I was changin' it. Too tight. Gives me a headache," the convict +answered sulkily. + +"Can you see anything at all yet?" + +"Not a thing. Looks to me like I never would." + +Tom turned his head for him, so that he faced the blaze squarely. "No +light at all?" + +"Nope. Don't reckon I ever will see." + +"Maybe you will. I've known' cases of snow-blindness where they +couldn't see for a month an' came out all right." + +"Hurts like blazes," growled the big fellow. + +"I know. But not as bad as it did, does it? That salve has helped +some." + +The two young fellows took care of the man as though he had been a +brother. They bathed his eyes, fed him, guided him, encouraged him. He +was a bad lot--the worst that either of them had known. But he was +in trouble and filled with self-pity. Never ill before, a giant of +strength and energy, his condition now apparently filled him with +despair. + +He would sit hunched down before the fire, head bowed in his hands, a +mountain of dole and woe. Sometimes he talked, and he blamed every one +but himself for his condition. He never had had a square deal. Every +one was against him. It was a rotten world. Then he would fall to +cursing God and man. + +In some ways he was less trouble than if he had been able to see. He +was helpless and had to trust to them. His safety depended on their +safety. He could not strike at them without injuring himself. No +matter how much he cringed at the thought of being dragged back to +punishment, he shrank still more from the prospect of death in the +snow wastes. The situation galled him. Every decent word he gave them +came grudgingly, and he still snarled and complained and occasionally +bullied as though he had the whip hand. + +"A nice specimen of _ursus horribilis_," Beresford murmured to his +companion one day. "Thought he was game, anyhow, but he's a yellow +quitter. Acts as though we were to blame for his blindness and for +what's waiting for him at the end of the journey. I like a man to +stand the gaff when it's prodding him." + +Morse nodded. "Look out for him. I've got a notion in the back o' my +head that he's beginning to see again. He'd kill us in a holy minute +if he dared. Only his blindness keeps him from it. What do you say? +Shall we handcuff him nights?" + +"Not necessary," the constable said. "He can't see a thing. Watch him +groping for that stick." + +"All his brains run to cunning. Don't forget that. Why should he have +to feel so long for that stick? He laid it down himself a minute ago. +Tryin' to slip one over on us maybe." + +The Canadian looked at the lean, brown face of his friend and grinned. +"I've a notion our imaginations too are getting a bit jumpy. We've had +one bully time on this trip--with the reverse English. It's all in the +day's work to buck blizzards and starve and freeze, though I wouldn't +be surprised if our systems were pretty well fed up with grief before +we caught Mr. Bully West. Since then--well, you couldn't call him a +cheerful traveling companion, could you? A dozen times a day I want to +rip loose and tell him how much I don't think of him." + +"Still--" + +"We'll keep an eye on him. If necessary, it'll be the bracelets for +him. I'd hate to have the Inspector send in a report to headquarters, +'Constable Beresford missing in the line of duty.' I've a prejudice +against being shot in the back." + +"That's one of the reasons I'm here--to see you're not if I can help +it." + +Beresford's boyish face lit up. He understood what his friend meant. +"Say, Faraway isn't New York or London or even Toronto. But how'd you +like to be sitting down to one of Jessie McRae's suppers? A bit of +broiled venison done to a juicy turn, potatoes, turnips, hot biscuits +spread with raspberry jam. By jove, it makes the mouth water." + +"And a slice of plum puddin' to top off with," suggested Morse, +bringing his own memory into play. "Don't ask me how I'd like it. +That's a justifiable excuse for murder. Get busy on that rubaboo. Our +guest's howlin' for his dinner." + +The faint suspicions of Morse made the officers more wary. They +watched their prisoner a little closer. Neither of them quite believed +that he was recovering his sight. It was merely a possibility to be +guarded against. + +But the guess of Morse had been true. It had been a week since flashes +of light had first come to West faintly. He began to distinguish +objects in a hazy way. Every day he could see better. Now he could +tell Morse from Beresford, one dog from another. Give him a few more +days and he would have as good vision as before he had gone blind. + +All this he hid cunningly, as a miser does his gold. For his warped, +cruel brain was planning death to these two men. After that, another +plunge into the North for life and freedom. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVI + +THE WILD BEAST LEAPS + + +Tom Morse was chopping wood. He knew how to handle an axe. His strokes +fell sure and strong, with the full circling sweep of the expert. + +The young tree crashed down and he began to lop off its branches. +Halfway up the trunk he stopped and raised his head to listen. + +No sound had come to him. None came now. But dear as a bell he heard +the voice of Win Beresford calling. + +"_Help! Help!_" + +It was not a cry that had issued from his friend's throat. Tom knew +that. But it was real. It had sprung out of his dire need from the +heart, perhaps in the one instant of time left him, and it had leaped +silently across space straight to the heart of his friend. + +Tom kicked into his snowshoes and began to run. He held the axe in his +hand, gripped near the haft. A couple of hundred yards, perhaps, lay +between him and camp, which was just over the brow of a small hill. +The bushes flew past as he swung to his stride. Never had he skimmed +the crust faster, but his feet seemed to be weighted with lead. Then, +as he topped the rise, he saw the disaster he had dreaded. + +The constable was crumpling to the ground, his body slack and inert, +while the giant slashed at him with a dub of firewood he had snatched +from the ground. The upraised arm of the soldier broke the force of +the blow, but Morse guessed by the way the arm fell that the bone had +snapped. + +At the sound of the scraping runners, West whirled. He lunged +savagely. Even as Tom ducked, a sharp pain shot through his leg from +the force of the glancing blow. The axe-head swung like a circle of +steel. It struck the convict's fur cap. The fellow went down like an +ox in a slaughter-house. + +Tom took one look at him and ran to his friend. Beresford was a sorry +sight. He lay unconscious, head and face battered, the blood from his +wounds staining the snow. + +The man-hunters had come into the wilderness prepared for emergencies. +Jessie McRae had prepared a small medicine case as a present for the +constable. Morse ran to the sled and found this. He unrolled bandages +and after he had washed the wounds bound them. As he was about to +examine the arm, he glanced up. + +For a fraction of a second West's wolfish eyes glared at him before +they took on again the stare of blindness. The man had moved. He had +hitched himself several yards nearer a rifle which stood propped +against a balsam. + +The revolver of the deputy constable came to light. "Stop right where +you're at. Don't take another step." + +The convict snarled rage, but he did not move. Some sure instinct +warned him what the cold light in the eyes of his captor meant, that +if he crept one inch farther toward the weapon he would die in his +tracks. + +"He--he jumped me," the murderer said hoarsely. + +"Liar! You've been shammin' for a week to get a chance at us. I'd like +to gun you now and be done with it." + +"Don't." West moistened dry lips. "Honest to God he jumped me. Got mad +at somethin' I said. I wouldn't lie to you, Tom." + +Morse kept him covered, circled round him to the rifle, and from there +to the sled. One eye still on the desperado, he searched for the steel +handcuffs. They were gone. He knew instantly that some time within the +past day or two West had got a chance to drop them in the snow. + +He found rawhide thongs. + +"Lie in the snow, face down," he ordered. "Hands behind you and +crossed at the wrists." + +Presently the prisoner was securely tied. Morse fastened him to the +sled and returned to Beresford. + +The arm was broken above the wrist, just as he had feared. He set it +as best he could, binding it with splints. + +The young officer groaned and opened his eyes. He made a motion to +rise. + +"Don't get up," said Morse. "You've been hurt." + +"Hurt?" Beresford's puzzled gaze wandered to the prisoner. A flash +of understanding lit it. "He asked me--to light--his pipe--and when +I--turned--he hit--me--with a club," the battered man whispered. + +"About how I figured it." + +"Afraid--I'm--done--in." + +"Not yet, old pal. We'll make a fight for it," the Montanan answered. + +"I'm sick." The soldier's head sank down. His eyes closed. + +All the splendid, lithe strength of his athletic youth had been beaten +out of him. To Morse it looked as though he were done for. Was it +possible for one to take such a terrific mauling and not succumb? If +he were at a hospital, under the care of expert surgeons and nurses, +with proper food and attention, he might have a chance in a hundred. +But in this Arctic waste, many hundred miles from the nearest doctor, +no food but the coarsest to eat, it would be a miracle if he survived. + +The bitter night was drawing in. Morse drove West in front of him to +bring back the wood he had been cutting. He made the man prepare the +rubaboo for their supper. After the convict had eaten, he bound his +hands again and let him lie down in his blankets beside the fire. + +Morse did not sleep. He sat beside his friend and watched the fever +mount in him till he was wildly delirious. Such nursing as was +possible he gave. + +The prisoner, like a chained wild beast, glowered at him hungrily. Tom +knew that if West found a chance to kill, he would strike. No scruple +would deter him. The fellow was without conscience, driven by the fear +of the fate that drew nearer with every step southward. His safety and +the desire of revenge marched together. Beresford was out of the way. +It would be his companion's turn next. + +After a time the great hulk of a man fell asleep and snored +stertorously. But Tom did not sleep. He dared not. He had to keep +vigilant guard to save both his friend's life and his own. For though +West's hands were tied, it would be the work of only a minute to burn +away with a live coal the thongs that bound them. + +The night wore away. There was no question of travel. Beresford was +in the grip of a raging fever and could not be moved. Morse made West +chop wood while he stood over him, rifle in hand. They were short of +food and had expected to go hunting next day. The supplies might last +at best six or seven more meals. What was to be done then? Morse could +not go and leave West where he could get at the man who had put him in +prison and with a dog-train to carry him north. Nor could he let West +have a rifle with which to go in search of game. + +There were other problems that made the situation impossible. Another +night was at hand, and again Tom must keep awake to save himself and +his friend from the gorilla-man who watched him, gloated over him, +waited for the moment to come when he could safely strike. And after +that there would be other nights--many of them. + +What should he do? What could he do? While he sat beside the delirious +officer, Tom pondered that question. On the other side of the fire lay +the prisoner. Triumph--a horrible, cruel, menacing triumph--rode in +his eye and strutted in his straddling walk when he got up. His hour +was coming. It was coming fast. + +Once Tom fell asleep for a cat-nap. He caught himself nodding, and +with a jerk flung back his head and himself to wakefulness. In the air +was a burning odor. + +Instinct told him what it was. West had been tampering with the +rawhide thongs round his wrists, had been trying to burn them away. + +He made sure that the fellow was still fast, then drank a tin cup of +strong tea. After he had fed the sick man a little caribou broth, +persuading him with infinite patience to take it, a spoonful at a +time, Morse sat down again to wear out the hours of darkness. + +The problem that pressed on him could no longer be evaded. A stark +decision lay before him. To postpone it was to choose one of the +alternatives. He knew now, almost beyond any possibility of doubt, +that either West must die or else he and his friend. If he had not +snatched himself awake so promptly an hour ago, Win and he would +already be dead men. It might be that the constable was going to die, +anyhow, but he had a right to his chance of life. + +On the other hand there was one rigid rule of the North-West Mounted. +The Force prided itself on living up to it literally. When a man +was sent out to get a prisoner, _he brought him in alive_. It was +a tradition. The Mounted did not choose the easy way of killing +lawbreakers because of the difficulty of capturing them. They walked +through danger, usually with aplomb, got their man, and brought him +in. + +That was what Beresford had done with Pierre Poulette after the +Frenchman had killed Buckskin Jerry. He had followed the man for +months, captured him, lived with him alone for a fourth of a year in +the deep snows, and brought him back to punishment. It was easy enough +to plead that this situation was a wholly different one. Pierre +Poulette was no such dangerous wild beast as Bully West. Win did not +have with him a companion wounded almost to death who had to be nursed +back to health, one struck down by the prisoner treacherously. There +was just a fighting chance for the officers to get back to Desolation +if West was eliminated from the equation. Tom knew he would have a +man's work cut out for him to win through--without the handicap of the +prisoner. + +Deep in his heart he believed that it was West's life or theirs. It +wasn't humanly possible, in addition to all the other difficulties +that pressed on him, to guard this murderer and bring him back for +punishment. There was no alternative, it seemed to Tom. Thinking could +not change the conditions. It might be sooner, it might be later, but +under existing circumstances the desperado would find his chance to +attack, _if he were alive to take it_. + +The fellow's life was forfeit. As soon as he was turned over to the +State, it would be exacted of him. Since his assault on Beresford, +surely he had lost all claim to consideration as a human being. + +Just now there were only three men in the world so far as they were +concerned. These three constituted society. Beresford, his mind still +wandering with incoherent mutterings, was a non-voting member. He, +Tom Morse, must be judge and jury. He must, if the prisoner were +convicted, play a much more horrible role. In the silence of the cold +sub-Arctic night he fought the battle out while automatically he +waited on his friend. + +West snored on the other side of the fire. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVII + +NEAR THE END OF A LONG CROOKED TRAIL + + +When West awoke, Morse was whittling on a piece of wood with his sharp +hunting-knife. It was a flat section from a spruce, and it had been +trimmed with an axe till it resembled a shake in shape. + +The outlaw's curiosity overcame his sullenness at last. It made him +jumpy, anyhow, to sit there in silence except for the muttering of the +sick man. + +"Whajamakin'?" he demanded. + +Morse said nothing. He smoothed the board to his satisfaction, then +began lettering on it with a pencil. + +"I said whajadoin'," growled West, after another silence. + +The special constable looked at him, and in the young man's eyes there +was something that made the murderer shiver. + +"I'm making a tombstone." + +"What?" West felt a drench of ice at his heart. + +"A marker for a grave." + +"For--for him? Maybe he won't die. Looks better to me. Fever ain't so +high." + +"It's not for him." + +West moistened his dry lips with his tongue. "You will have yore li'l +joke, eh? Who's it for?" + +"For you." + +"For me?" The man's fear burst from him in a shriek. "Whajamean for +me?" + +From the lettering Morse read aloud. "'Bully West, Executed, Some +Time late in March, 1875.'" And beneath it, "'May God Have Mercy on +His Soul.'" + +Tiny beads of sweat gathered on the convict's clammy forehead. "You +aimin' to--to murder me?" he asked hoarsely. + +"To execute you." + +"With--without a trial? My God, you can't do that! I got a right to a +trial." + +"You've been tried--and condemned. I settled all that in the night." + +"But--it ain't legal. Goddlemighty, you got no _right_ to act +thataway. All you can do is to take me back to the courts." The heavy +voice broke again to a scream. + +Morse slipped the hunting-knife back into its case. He looked steadily +at the prisoner. In his eyes there was no anger, no hatred. But back +of the sadness in them was an implacable resolution. + +"Courts and the law are a thousand miles away," he said. "You know +your crimes. You murdered Tim Kelly treacherously. You planned to +spoil an innocent girl's life by driving her to worse than death. +You shot your partner in the back after he did his best to help you +escape. You tortured Onistah and would have killed him if we hadn't +come in time. You assaulted my friend here and he'll probably die from +his wounds. It's the end of the long trail for you, Bully West. Inside +of half an hour you will be dead. If you've anything to say--if you +can make your peace with heaven--don't waste a moment." + +The face of West went gray. He stared at the other man, the +horror-filled eyes held fascinated. "You--you're tryin' to scare me," +he faltered. "You wouldn't do that. You couldn't. It ain't allowed by +the Commissioner." One of the bound arms twitched involuntarily. The +convict knew that he was lost. He had a horrible conviction that this +man meant to do as he had said. + +The face of Morse was inexorable as fate itself, but inside he was a +river of rushing sympathy. This man was bad. He himself had forced the +circumstances that made it impossible to let him live. None the less +Tom felt like a murderer. The thing he had to do was so horribly +cold-blooded. If this had been a matter between the two of them, he +could at least have given the fellow a chance for his life. But not +now--not with Win Beresford in the condition he was. If he were going +to save his friend, he could not take the chances of a duel. + +"Ten minutes now," Morse said. His voice was hoarse and low. He felt +his nerves twitching, a tense aching in the throat. + +"I always liked you fine, Tom," the convict pleaded desperately. "Me +'n' you was always good pals. You wouldn't do me dirt thataway now. If +you knew the right o' things--how that Kelly kep' a-devilin' me, how +Whaley was layin' to gun me when he got a chanct, how I stood up for +the McRae girl an' protected her against him. Goddlemighty, man, you +ain't aimin' to kill me like a wolf!" The shriek of uncontrollable +terror lifted into his voice once more. "I ain't ready to die. Gimme a +chance, Tom. I'll change my ways. I swear I will. I'll do like you say +every minute. I'll nurse Beresford. Me, I'm a fine nurse. If you'll +gimme a week--jus' one more week. That ain't much to ask. So's I can +git ready." + +The man slipped to his knees and began to crawl toward Morse. The +young man got up, his teeth set. He could not stand much of this sort +of thing without collapsing himself. + +"Get up," he said. "We're going over the hill there." + +"No--no--no!" + +It took Morse five minutes to get the condemned man to his feet. The +fellow's face was ashen. His knees shook. + +Tom was in almost as bad a condition himself. + +Beresford's high voice cut in. In his delirium he was perhaps living +over again his experience with Pierre Poulette. + +"Maintiens le droit. Get your man and bring him in. Tough sledding. +Never mind. Go through, old fellow. Bring him in. That's what you're +sent for. Hogtie him. Drag him with a rope around his neck. Get him +back somehow." + +The words struck Tom motionless. It was as though some voice were +speaking to him through the sick man's lips. He waited. + +"Righto, sir," the soldier droned on. "See what I can do, sir. Have +a try at it, anyhow." And again he murmured the motto of the Mounted +Police. + +Tom had excused himself for what he thought it was his duty to do on +the ground that it was not humanly possible to save his friend and +bring West back. It came to him in a flash that the Mounted Police +were becoming so potent a power for law and order because they never +asked whether the job assigned them was possible. They went ahead and +did it or died trying to do it. It did not matter primarily whether +Beresford and he got back alive or not. If West murdered them, other +red-coats would take the trail and get him. + +What he, Tom Morse, had to do was to carry on. He could not choose the +easy way, even though it was a desperately hard one for him. He could +not make himself a judge over this murderer, with power of life and +death. The thing that had been given him to do was to bring West to +Faraway. He had no choice in the matter. Win or lose, he had to play +the hand out as it was dealt him. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVIII + +OVER A ROTTING TRAIL + + +Tom believed that Beresford's delirious words had condemned them both +to death. He could not nurse his friend, watch West night and day, +keep the camp supplied with food, and cover the hundreds of miles +of bleak snow fields which stretched between them and the nearest +settlement. He did not think that any one man lived who was capable of +succeeding in such a task. + +Yet his first feeling was of immediate relief. The horrible duty that +had seemed to be laid upon him was not a duty at all. He saw his +course quite simply. All he had to do was to achieve the impossible. +If he failed in it, he would go down like a soldier in the day's work. +He would have, anyhow, no torturings of conscience, no blight resting +upon him till the day of his death. + +"You're reprieved, West," he announced simply. + +The desperado staggered to the sled and leaned against it faintly. His +huge body swayed. The revulsion was almost too much for him. + +"I--I--knowed you couldn't treat an old pardner thataway, Tom," he +murmured. + +Morse took the man out to a fir tree. He carried with him a blanket, a +buffalo robe, and a part of the dog harness. + +"Whad you aimin' to do?" asked West uneasily. He was not sure yet that +he was out of the woods. + +"Roll up in the blankets," ordered Morse. + +The fellow looked at his grim face and did as he was told. Tom tied +him to the tree, after making sure that his hands were fast behind +him. + +"I'll freeze here," the convict complained. + +The two officers were lean and gaunt from hard work and insufficient +nourishment, but West was still sleek and well padded with flesh. +He had not missed a meal, and during the past weeks he had been a +passenger. All the hard work, the packing at portages, the making of +camp, the long, wearing days of hunting, had fallen upon the two whose +prisoner he was. He could stand a bit of hardship, Tom decided. + +"No such luck," he said brusquely. "And I wouldn't try to break away +if I were you. I can't kill you, but I'll thrash you with the dog-whip +if you make me any trouble." + +Morse called Cuffy and set the dog to watch the bound man. He did not +know whether the St. Bernard would do this, but he was glad to see +that the leader of the train understood at once and settled down in +the snow to sleep with one eye watchful of West. + +Tom returned to his friend. He knew he must concentrate his efforts to +keep life in the battered body of the soldier. He must nurse and feed +him judiciously until the fever wore itself out. + +While he was feeding Win broth, he fell asleep with the spoon in his +hand. He jerkily flung back his head and opened his eyes. Cuffy still +lay close to the prisoner, evidently prepared for an all-night vigil +with short light naps from which the least movement would instantly +arouse him. + +"I'm all in. Got to get some sleep," Morse said to himself, half +aloud. + +He wrapped in his blankets. When his eyes opened, the sun was beating +down from high in the heavens. He had slept from one day into the +next. Even in his sleep he had been conscious of some sound drumming +at his ears. It was the voice of West. + +"You gonna sleep all day? Don't we get any grub? Have I gotta starve +while you pound yore ear?" + +Hurriedly Tom flung aside his wraps. He leaped to his feet, a new man, +his confidence and vitality all restored. + +The fire had died to ashes. He could hear the yelping of the dogs in +the distance. They were on a private rabbit hunt of their own, all of +them but Cuffy. The St. Bernard still lay in the snow watching West. + +Beresford's delirium was gone and his fever was less. He was very +weak, but Tom thought he saw a ghost of the old boyish grin flicker +indomitably into his eyes. As Tom looked at the swathed and bandaged +head, for the first time since the murderous attack he allowed +himself to hope. The never-say-die spirit of the man and the splendid +constitution built up by a clean outdoor life might pull him through +yet. + +"West was afraid you never were going to wake up, Tom. It worried him. +You know how fond of you he is," the constable said weakly. + +Morse was penitent. "Why didn't you wake me, Win? You must be dying of +thirst." + +"I could do with a drink," he admitted. "But you needed that sleep. +Every minute of it." + +Tom built up the fire and thawed snow. He gave Beresford a drink and +then fed more of the broth to him. He made breakfast for the prisoner +and himself. + +Afterward, he took stock of their larder. It was almost empty. "Enough +flour and pemmican for another mess of rubaboo. Got to restock right +away or our stomachs will be flat as a buffalo bull's after a long +stampede." + +He spoke cheerfully, yet he and Beresford both knew a hunt for game +might be unsuccessful. Rabbits would not do. He had to provide enough +to feed the dogs as well as themselves. If he did not get a moose, a +bear, or caribou, they would face starvation. + +Tom redressed the wounds of the trooper and examined the splints on +the arm to make sure they had not become disarranged during the night +in the delirium of the sick man. + +"Got to leave you, Win. Maybe for a day or more. I'll have plenty of +wood piled handy for the fire--and broth all ready to heat. Think you +can make out?" + +The prospect could not have been an inviting one for the wounded man, +but he nodded quite as a matter of course. + +"I'll be all right. Take your time. Don't spoil your hunt worrying +about me." + +Yet it was with extreme reluctance Tom had made up his mind to go. He +would take the dog-train with him--and West, unarmed, of course. He +had to take him on Beresford's account, because he dared not leave +him. But as he looked at his friend, all the supple strength stricken +out of him, weak and helpless as a sick child, he felt a queer tug at +the heart. What assurance had he that he would find him still alive on +his return? + +Beresford knew what he was thinking. He smiled, the gentle, +affectionate smile of the very ill. "It's all right, old fellow. Got +to buck up and carry on, you know. Look out--for West. Don't give him +any show at you. Never trust him--not for a minute. Remember he's--a +wolf." His weak hand gripped Tom's in farewell. + +The American turned away hurriedly, not to show the tears that +unexpectedly brimmed his lids. Though he wore the hard surface of the +frontier, his was a sensitive soul. He was very fond of this gay, +gallant youth who went out to meet adventure as though it were a lover +with whom he had an appointment. They had gone through hell together, +and the fires of the furnace had proved the Canadian true gold. After +all, Tom was himself scarcely more than a boy in years. He cherished, +deep hidden in him, the dreams and illusions that long contact with +the world is likely to dispel. At New Haven and Cambridge lads of his +age were larking beneath the elms and playing childish pranks on each +other. + +West drove the team. Tom either broke trail or followed. He came +across plenty of tracks, but most of them were old ones. He recognized +the spoor of deer, bear, and innumerable rabbits. Toward noon fresh +caribou tracks crossed their path. The slot pointed south. Over a soft +and rotting trail Morse swung round in pursuit. + +They made heavy going of it. He had to break trail through slushy +snow. His shoes broke through the crust and clogged with the sludgy +stuff so that his feet were greatly weighted. Fatigue pressed like a +load on his shoulders. The dogs and West wallowed behind. + +By night probably the trail would be much better, but they dared not +wait till then. The caribou would not stop to suit the convenience of +the hunters. This might be the last shot in the locker. Every dragging +lift of the webs carried Morse farther from camp, but food had to be +found and in quantity. + +It was close to dusk when Tom guessed they were getting near the herd. +He tied the train to a tree and pushed on with West. Just before +nightfall he sighted the herd grazing on muskeg moss. There were about +a dozen in all. The wind was fortunately right. + +Tom motioned to West not to follow him. On hands and knees the hunter +crept forward, taking advantage of such cover as he could find. It was +a slow, cold business, but he was not here for pleasure. A mistake +might mean the difference between life and death for him and Win +Beresford. + +For a stalker to determine the precise moment when to shoot is usually +a nice decision. Perhaps he can gain another dozen yards on his prey. +On the other hand, by moving closer he may startle them and lose his +chance. With so much at stake Tom felt for the second time in his life +the palsy that goes with buck fever. + +A buck flung up his head and sniffed toward the hidden danger. Tom +knew the sign of startled doubt. Instantly his trembling ceased. He +aimed carefully and fired. The deer dropped in its tracks. Again he +fired--twice--three times. The last shot was a wild one, sent on a +hundredth chance. The herd vanished in the gathering darkness. + +Tom swung forward exultant, his webs swishing swiftly over the snow. +He had dropped two. A second buck had fallen, risen, run fifty yards, +and come to earth again. The hunter's rifle was ready in case either +of the caribou sprang up. He found the first one dead, the other badly +wounded. At once he put the buck out of its pain. + +West came slouching out of the woods at Tom's signal. Directed by the +officer, he made a fire and prepared for business. The stars were +out as they dressed the meat and cooked a large steak on the coals. +Afterward they hung the caribou from the limb of a spruce, drawing +them high enough so that no prowling wolves could reach the game. + +With the coming of night the temperature had fallen and the snow +hardened. The crust held beneath their webs as they returned to +the sled. West wanted to camp where the deer had been killed. He +protested, with oaths, in his usual savage growl, that he was dead +tired and could not travel another step. + +But he did. Beneath the stars the hunters mushed twenty miles back to +camp. They made much better progress by reason of the frozen trail and +the good meal they had eaten. + +It was daybreak when Morse sighted the camp-fire smoke. His heart +leaped. Beresford must have been able to keep it alive with fuel. +Therefore he had been alive an hour or two ago at most. + +Dogs and men trudged into camp ready to drop with fatigue. + +Beresford, from where he lay, waved a hand at Tom. "Any luck?" he +asked. + +"Two caribou." + +"Good. I'll be ready for a steak to-morrow." + +Morse looked at him anxiously. The glaze had left his eyes. He was no +longer burning up with fever. Both voice and movements seemed stronger +than they had been twenty-four hours earlier. + +"Bully for you, Win," he answered. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIX + +A CREE RUNNER BRINGS NEWS + + +"Don't you worry about that lad, Jessie. He's got as many lives as a +cat--and then some. I've knew him ever since he was knee-high to a +grasshopper." + +Brad Stearns was talking. He sat in the big family room at the McRae +house and puffed clouds of tobacco, smoke to the rafters. + +"Meaning Mr. Beresford?" asked Jessie demurely. She was patching a +pair of leather trousers for Fergus and she did not raise her eyes +from the work. + +"Meanin' Tom Morse," the old-timer said. "Not but what Beresford's a +good lad too. Sand in his craw an' a kick like a mule in his fist. But +he was brought up somewheres in the East, an' o' course he's a leetle +mite less tough than Tom. No, sir. Tom'll bob up one o' these here +days good as ever. Don't you worry none about that. Why, he ain't been +gone but--lemme see, a week or so better'n four months. When a man's +got to go to the North Pole an' back, four months--" + +Beneath her long lashes the girl slanted a swift look at Brad. "That +makes twice you've told me in two minutes not to worry about Mr. +Morse. Do I look peaked? Am I lying awake nights thinking about him, +do you think?" She held up the renewed trousers and surveyed her +handiwork critically. + +Brad gazed at her through narrowed lids. "I'll be doggoned if I know +whether you are or you ain't. I'd bet a pair o' red-topped boots it's +one of them lads. 'Course Beresford's got a red coat an' spurs that +jingle an' a fine line o' talk. Tom he ain't got ary one o' the three. +But if it's a man you're lookin' for, a two-fisted man who--" + +A wave of mirth crossed Jessie's face like a ripple on still water. +Her voice mimicked his. "Why do you want to saw off an old maid on +that two-fisted man you've knew ever since he was knee-high to a +grasshopper? What did he ever do to you that was so doggoned mean?" + +"Now looky here, you can laugh at me all you've a mind to. All I'm +sayin' is--" + +"Oh, I'm not laughing at you," she interposed hurriedly with an +assumption of anxiety her bubbling eyes belied. "If you could show me +how to get your two-fisted man when he comes back--or even the one +with the red coat and the spurs and the fine line of talk--" + +"I ain't sayin' he ain't a man from the ground up too," Brad broke in. +"Considerin' his opportunities he's a right hefty young fellow. But +Tom Morse he--" + +"That's it exactly. Tom Morse he--" + +"Keep right on makin' fun o' me. Tom Morse he's a man outa ten +thousand, an' I don't know as I'm coverin' enough population at that." + +"And you're willing to make a squaw-man of him. Oh, Mr. Stearns!" + +He looked at her severely. "You got no license to talk thataway, +Jessie McRae. You're Angus McRae's daughter an' you been to Winnipeg +to school. Anyways, after what Lemoine found out--" + +"What did he find out? Pierre Roubideaux couldn't tell him anything +about the locket and the ring. Makoye-kin said he got it from his +brother who was one of a party that massacred an American outfit of +trappers headed for Peace River. He doesn't know whether the picture +of the woman in the locket was that of one of the women in the camp. +All we've learned is that I look like a picture of a white woman found +in a locket nearly twenty years ago. That doesn't take us very far, +does it?" + +"Well, Stokimatis may know something. When Onistah comes back with +her, we'll get the facts straight." + +McRae came into the room. "News, lass," he cried, and his voice rang. +"A Cree runner's just down frae Northern Lights. He says the lads were +picked up by some trappers near Desolation. One o' them's been badly +hurt, but he's on the mend. Which yin I dinna ken. What wi' starvation +an' blizzards an' battles they've had a tough time. But the word is +they're doing fine noo." + +"West?" asked Brad. "Did they get him?" + +"They got him. Dragged him back to Desolation with a rope round his +neck. Hung on to him while they were slam-bangin' through blizzards +an' runnin' a race wi' death to get back before they starved. Found +him up i' the Barrens somewhere, the story is. He'll be hangit at the +proper time an' place. It's in the Word. 'They that take the sword +shall perish with the sword.' Matthew 26:52." + +Brad let out the exultant rebel yell he had learned years before in +the Confederate army. "What'd I tell you about that boy? Ain't I +knowed him since he was a li'l' bit of a tad? He's a go-getter, Tom +is. Y'betcha!" + +Jessie's heart was singing too, but she could not forbear a friendly +gibe at him. "I suppose Win Beresford wasn't there at all. He hadn't a +thing to do with it, had he?" + +The old cowpuncher raised a protesting hand. "I ain't said a word +against him. Now have I, McRae? Nothin' a-tall. All I done said was +that I been tellin' everybody Tom would sure enough bring back Bully +West with him." + +The girl laughed. "You're daffy about that boy you brought up by hand. +I'll not argue with you." + +"They're both good lads," the Scotchman summed up, and passed to his +second bit of news. "Onistah and Stokimatis are in frae the Blackfoot +country. They stoppit at the store, but they'll be alang presently. I +had a word wi' Onistah. We'll wait for him here." + +"Did he say what he'd found out?" Jessie cried. + +"Only that he had brought back the truth. That'll be the lad knockin' +at the door." + +Jessie opened, to let in Onistah and his mother. Stokimatis and the +girl gravitated into each other's arms, as is the way with women who +are fond of each other. The Indian is stolid, but Jessie had the habit +of impetuosity, of letting her feelings sweep her into demonstration. +Even the native women she loved were not proof against it. + +McRae questioned Stokimatis. + +Without waste of words the mother of Onistah told the story she had +traveled hundreds of miles to tell. + +Sleeping Dawn was not the child of her sister. When the attack had +been made on the white trappers bound for Peace River, the mother of a +baby had slipped the infant under an iron kettle. After the massacre +her sister had found the wailing little atom of humanity. The Indian +woman had recently lost her own child. She hid the babe and afterward +was permitted to adopt it. When a few months later she died of +smallpox, Stokimatis had inherited the care of the little one. She had +named it Sleeping Dawn. Later, when the famine year came, she had sold +the child to Angus McRae. + +That was all she knew. But it was enough for Jessie. She did not know +who her parents had been. She never would know, beyond the fact that +they were Americans and that her mother had been a beautiful girl +whose eyes laughed and danced. But this knowledge made a tremendous +difference to her. She belonged to the ruling race and not to the +metis, just as much as Win Beresford and Tom Morse did. + +She tried to hide her joy, was indeed ashamed of it. For any +expression of it seemed like a reproach to Matapi-Koma and Onistah and +Stokimatis, to her brother Fergus and in a sense even to her father. +None the less her blood beat fast. What she had just found out meant +that she could aspire to the civilization of the whites, that she +had before her an outlook, was not to be hampered by the limitations +imposed upon her by race. + +The heart in the girl sang a song of sunshine dancing on grass, of +meadowlarks flinging out their carefree notes of joy. Through it like +a golden thread ran for a motif little melodies that had to do with a +man who had staggered into Fort Desolation out of the frozen North, +sick and starved and perhaps wounded, but still indomitably captain of +his soul. + + + + +CHAPTER XL + +"MALBROUCK S'EN VA-T-EN GUERRE" + + +Inspector MacLean was present in person when the two man-hunters of +the North-West Mounted returned to Faraway. Their reception was in the +nature of a pageant. Gayly dressed voyageurs and trappers, singing +old river songs that had been handed down to them from their fathers, +unharnessed the dogs and dragged the cariole into town. In it sat +Beresford, still unfit for long and heavy mushing. Beside it slouched +West, head down, hands tied behind his back, the eyes from the matted +face sending sidling messages of hate at the capering crowd. At his +heels moved Morse, grim and tireless, an unromantic figure of dominant +efficiency. + +Long before the worn travelers and their escort reached the village, +Jessie could hear the gay lilt of the chantey that heralded their +coming: + + "Malbrouck s'en va-t-en guerre, + Mironton-ton-ton, mirontaine." + +The girl hummed it herself, heart athrob with excitement. She found +herself joining in the cheer of welcome that rose joyously when the +cavalcade drew into sight. In her cheeks fluttered eager flags of +greeting. Tears brimmed the soft eyes, so that she could hardly +distinguish Tom Morse and Win Beresford, the one lean and gaunt and +grim, the other pale and hollow-eyed from illness, but scattering +smiles of largesse. For her heart was crying, in a paraphrase of the +great parable, "He was dead, and is alive again; he was lost, and is +found." + +Beresford caught sight of the Inspector's face and chuckled like +a schoolboy caught in mischief. This gay procession, with its +half-breeds in tri-colored woolen coats, its gay-plumed voyageurs +suggesting gallant troubadours of old in slashed belts and tassels, +was not quite the sort of return to set Inspector MacLean cheering. +Externally, at least, he was a piece of military machinery. A trooper +did his work, and that ended it. In the North-West Mounted it was not +necessary to make a gala day of it because a constable brought in his +man. If he didn't bring him in--well, that would be another and a +sadder story for the officer who fell down on the assignment. + +As soon as Beresford and Morse had disposed of their prisoner and +shaken off their exuberant friends, they reported to the Inspector. +He sat at a desk and listened dryly to their story. Not till they had +finished did he make any comment. + +"You'll have a week's furlough to recuperate, Constable Beresford. +After that report to the Writing-on-Stone detachment for orders. +Here's a voucher for your pay, Special Constable Morse. I'll say +to you both that it was a difficult job well done." He hesitated a +moment, then proceeded to free his mind. "As for this Roman triumph +business--victory procession with prisoners chained to your chariot +wheels--quite unnecessary, I call it." + +Beresford explained, smilingly. "We really couldn't help it, sir. They +were bound to make a Roman holiday out of us whether we wanted to or +not. You know how excitable the French are. Had to have their little +frolic out of it." + +"Not the way the Mounted does business. You know that, Beresford. +We don't want any fuss and feathers--any fol-de-rol--this +mironton-ton-ton stuff. Damn it, sir, you liked it. I could see you +eat it up. D'you s'pose I haven't eyes in my head?" + +The veneer of sobriety Beresford imposed on his countenance refused to +stay put. + +MacLean fumed on. "Hmp! Malbrouck s'en va-t-en guerre, eh? Very +pretty. Very romantic, no doubt. But damned sentimental tommyrot, just +the same." + +"Yes, sir," agreed the constable, barking into a cough just in time to +cut off a laugh. + +"Get out!" ordered the Inspector, and there was the glimmer of a +friendly smile in his own eyes. "And I'll expect you both to dine with +me to-night. Six o'clock sharp. I'll hear that wonderful story in more +detail. And take care of yourself, Beresford. You don't look strong +yet. I'll make that week two or three if necessary." + +"Thank you, sir." + +"Hmp! Don't thank me. Earned it, didn't you? What are you hanging +around for? Get out!" + +Constable Beresford had his revenge. As he passed the window, +Inspector MacLean heard him singing. The words that drifted to the +commissioned office! were familiar. + + "Malbrouck s'en va-t-en guerre, + Mironton-ton-ton, mirontaine." + +MacLean smiled at the irrepressible youngster. Like most people, he +responded to the charm of Winthrop Beresford. He could forgive him a +touch of debonair impudence if necessary. + +It happened that his heart was just now very warm toward both these +young fellows. They had come through hell and had upheld the best +traditions of the Force. Between the lines of the story they had told +he gathered that they had shaved the edge of disaster a dozen times. +But they had stuck to their guns like soldiers. They had fought it out +week after week, hanging to their man with bulldog pluck. And when at +last they were found almost starving in camp, they were dividing their +last rabbit with the fellow they were bringing out to be hanged. + +The Inspector walked to the window and looked down the street after +them. His lips moved, but no sound came from them. The rhythmic motion +of them might have suggested, if there had been anybody present to +observe, that his mind was running on the old river song. + + "Malbrouck s'en va-t-en guerre, + Mironton-ton-ton, mirontaine." + + + + +CHAPTER XLI + +SENSE AND NONSENSE + + +Beresford speaking, to an audience of one, who listened with soft dark +eyes aglow and sparkling. + +"He's the best scout ever came over the border, Jessie. Trusty as +steel, stands the gaff without whining, backs his friends to the +limit, and plays the game out till the last card's dealt and the last +trick lost. Tom Morse is a man in fifty thousand." + +"I know another," she murmured. "Every word you've said is true for +him too." + +"He's a wonder, that other." admitted the soldier dryly. "But we're +talking about Tom now. I tell you that iron man dragged West and me +out of the Barrens by the scruff of our necks. Wouldn't give up. +Wouldn't quit. The yellow in West came out half a dozen times. When +the ten-day blizzard caught us, he lay down and yelped like a cur. I +wouldn't have given a plugged six-pence for our chances. But Tom went +out into it, during a little lull, and brought back with him a timber +wolf. How he found it, how he killed it, Heaven alone knows. He was +coated with ice from head to foot. That wolf kept us and the dogs +alive for a week. Each day, when the howling of the blizzard died down +a bit, Tom made West go down with him to the creek and get wood. +It must have been a terrible hour. They'd come back so done up, so +frozen, they could hardly stagger in with their jags of pine for the +fire. I never heard the man complain--not once. He stood up to it the +way Tom Sayers used to." + +The girl felt a warm current of life prickling swiftly through her. "I +love to hear you talk so generously of him." + +"Of my rival?" he said, smiling. "How else can I talk? The scoundrel +has been heaping on me those coals of fire we read about. I haven't +told you half of it--how he nursed me like a woman and looked after me +so that I wouldn't take cold, how he used to tuck me up in the sled +with a hot stone at my feet and make short days' runs in order not to +wear out my strength. By Jove, it was a deucedly unfair advantage he +took of me." + +"Is he your rival?" she asked. + +"Isn't he?" + +"In business?" + +"How demure Miss McRae is," he commented. "Observe those long +eyelashes flutter down to the soft cheeks." + +"In what book did you read that?" she wanted to know. + +"In that book of suffering known as experience," he sighed, eyes +dancing. + +"If you're trying to tell me that you're in love with some girl--" + +"Haven't I been trying to tell you for a year?" + +Her eyes flashed a challenge at him. "Take care, sir. First thing you +know you'll be on thin ice. You might break through." + +"And if I did--" + +"Of course I'd snap you up before you could bat an eye. Is there a +girl living that wouldn't? And I'm almost an old maid. Don't forget +that. I'm to gather rosebuds while I may, because time's flying so +fast, some poet says." + +"Time stands still for you, my dear," he bowed, with a gay imitation +of the grand manner. + +"Thank you." Her smile mocked him. She had flirted a good deal with +this young man and understood him very well. He had no intention +whatever of giving up the gay hazards of life for any adventure so +enduring as matrimony. Moreover, he knew she knew it. "But let's stick +to the subject. While you're proposing--" + +"How you help a fellow along!" he laughed. "Am I proposing?" + +"Of course you are. But I haven't found out yet whether it's for +yourself or Mr. Morse." + +"A good suggestion--novel, too. For us both, let's say. You take your +choice." He flung out a hand in a gay debonair gesture. + +"You've told his merits, but I don't think I ever heard yours +mentioned," she countered. "If you'd recite them, please." + +"It's a subject I can do only slight justice." He bowed again. +"Sergeant Beresford, at your service, of the North-West Mounted." + +"Sergeant! Since when?" + +"Since yesterday. Promoted for meritorious conduct in the line of +duty. My pay is increased to one dollar and a quarter a day. In case +happily your choice falls on me, don't squander it on silks and +satins, on trips to Paris and London--" + +"If I choose you, it won't be for your wealth," she assured him. + +"Reassured, fair lady. I proceed with the inventory of Sergeant +Beresford's equipment as a future husband. Fond, but, alas! fickle. A +family black sheep, or if not black, at least striped. Likely not to +plague you long, if he's sent on many more jobs like the last. Said +to be good-tempered, but not docile. Kind, as men go, but a +ne'er-do-well, a prodigal, a waster. Something whispers in my ear that +he'll make a better friend than a husband." + +"A twin fairy is whispering the same in my ear," the girl nodded. +"At least a better friend to Jessie McRae. But I think he has a poor +advocate in you. The description is not a flattering one. I don't even +recognize the portrait." + +"But Tom Morse--" + +"Exactly, Tom Morse. Haven't you rather taken the poor fellow for +granted?" She felt an unexpected blush burn into her cheek. It stained +the soft flesh to her throat. For she was discovering that the +nonsense begun so lightly was embarrassing. She did not want to talk +about the feelings of Tom Morse toward her. "It's all very well to +joke, but--" + +"Shall I ask him?" he teased. + +She flew into a mild near-panic. "If you dare, Win Beresford!" The +flash in her eyes was no longer mirth. "We'll talk about something +else. I don't think it's very nice of us to--to--" + +"Tom retired from conversational circulation," he announced. "Shall we +talk of cats or kings?" + +"Tell me your plans, now you've been promoted." + +"Plans? Better men make 'em. I touch my hat, say, 'Yes, sir,' and help +work 'em out. Coming back to Tom for a minute, have you heard that +the Colonel has written him a letter of thanks for the distinguished +service rendered by him to the Mounted and suggesting that a permanent +place of importance can be found for him on the Force if he'll take +it?" + +"No. Did he? Isn't that just fine?" The soft glow had danced into her +eyes again. "He won't take it, will he?" + +"What do you think?" His eyes challenged hers coolly. He was willing, +if he could, to discover whether Jessie was in love with his friend. + +"Oh, I don't think he should," she said quickly. "He has a good +business. It's getting better all the time. He's a coming man. And of +course he'd get hard jobs in the Mounted, the way you do." + +"That's a compliment, if it's true," he grinned. + +"I dare say, but that doesn't make it any safer." + +"They couldn't give him a harder one than you did when you sent him +into the Barrens to bring back West." His eyes, touched with humor +and yet disconcertingly intent on information, were fixed steadily on +hers. + +The girl's cheeks flew color signals. "Why do you say that? I didn't +ask him to go. He volunteered." + +"Wasn't it because you wanted him to?" + +"I should think you'd be the last man to say that," she protested +indignantly. "He was your friend, and he didn't want you to run so +great a risk alone." + +"Then you didn't want him to go?" + +"If I did, it was for you. Maybe he blames me for it, but I don't see +how _you_ can. You've just finished telling me he saved your life a +dozen times." + +"Did I say I was blaming you?" His warm, affectionate smile begged +pardon if he had given offense. "I was just trying to get it straight. +You wanted him to go that time, but you wouldn't want him to go again. +Is that it?" + +"I wouldn't want either of you to go again. What are you driving at, +Win Beresford?" + +"Oh, nothing!" He laughed. "But if you think Tom's too good to waste +on the Mounted, you'd better tell him so while there's still time. +He'll make up his mind within a day or two." + +"I don't see him. He never comes here." + +"I wonder why." + +Jessie sometimes wondered why herself. + + + + +CHAPTER XLII + +THE IMPERATIVE URGE + + +The reason why Tom did not go to see Jessie was that he longed to do +so in every fiber of his being. His mind was never freed for a moment +from the routine of the day's work that it did not automatically turn +toward her. If he saw a woman coming down the street with the free +light step only one person in Faraway possessed, his heart would begin +to beat faster. In short, he suffered that torment known as being in +love. + +He dared not go to see her for fear she might discover it. She was the +sweetheart of his friend. It was as natural as the light of day that +she turn to Win Beresford with the gift of her love. Nobody like him +had ever come into her life. His gay courage, his debonair grace, +the good manners of that outer world such a girl must crave, the +affectionate touch of friendliness in his smile: how could any woman +on this forsaken edge of the Arctic resist them? + +She could not, of course, let alone one so full of the passionate +longing for life as Jessie McRae. + +If Tom could have looked on her unmoved, if he could have subdued +or concealed the ardent fire inside him, he would have gone to call +occasionally as though casually. But he could not trust himself. He +was like a volcano ready for eruption. Already he was arranging with +his uncle to put a subordinate here and let him return to Benton. +Until that could be accomplished, he tried to see her as little as +possible. + +But Jessie was a child of the imperative urge. She told herself fifty +times that it was none of her business if he did accept the offer of a +place in the North-West Mounted. He could do as he pleased. Why should +she interfere? And yet--and yet-- + +She found a shadow of excuse for herself in the fact that it had been +through her that he had offered himself as a special constable. He +might think she wanted him to enlist permanently. So many girls were +foolish about the red coats of soldiers. She had noticed that among +her school-girl friends at Winnipeg. If she had any influence with him +at all, she did not want it thrown on that side of the scale. + +But of course he probably did not care what she thought. Very likely +it was her vanity that whispered to her he had gone North with Win +Beresford partly to please her. Still, since she was his friend, ought +she not to just drop an offhand hint that he was a more useful citizen +where he was than in the Mounted? He couldn't very well resent that, +could he? Or think her officious? Or forward? + +She contrived little plans to meet him when he would be alone and she +could talk with him, but she rejected these because she was afraid he +would see through them. It had become of first importance to her that +Tom Morse should not think she had any but a superficial interest in +him. + +When at last she did meet him, it was by pure chance. Dusk was +falling. She was passing the yard where his storehouse was. He wheeled +out and came on her plumply face to face. Both were taken by surprise +completely. Out of it neither could emerge instantly with casual words +of greeting. + +Jessie felt her pulses throb. A queer consternation paralyzed the +faculties that ought to have come alertly to her rescue. She stood, +awkwardly silent, in a shy panic to her pulsing finger-tips. Later she +would flog herself scornfully for her folly, but this did not help in +the least now. + +"I--I was just going to Mr. Whaley's with a little dress Mother made +for the baby," she said at last. + +"It's a nice baby," was the best he could do. + +"Yes. It's funny. You know Mr. Whaley didn't care anything about it +before--while it was very little. But now he thinks it's wonderful. +I'm so glad he does." + +She was beginning to get hold of herself, to emerge from the emotional +crisis into which this meeting had plunged her. It had come to her +consciousness that he was as perturbed as she, and a discovery of this +nature always brings a woman composure. + +"He treats his wife a lot better too." + +"There was room for it," he said dryly. + +"She's a nice little thing." + +"Yes." + +Conversation, which had been momentarily brisk, threatened to die out +for lack of fuel. Anything was better than significant silences in +which she could almost hear the hammering of her heart. + +"Win Beresford told me about the offer you had to go into the +Mounted," she said, plunging. + +"Yes?" + +"Will you accept?" + +He looked at her, surprised. "Didn't Win tell you? I said right away I +couldn't accept. He knew that." + +"Oh! I don't believe he did tell me. Perhaps you hadn't decided +then." Privately she was determining to settle some day with Winthrop +Beresford for leading her into this. He had purposely kept silent, she +knew now, in the hope that she would talk to Tom Morse about it. "But +I'm glad you've decided against going in." + +"Why?" + +"It's dangerous, and I don't think it has much future." + +"Win likes it." + +"Yes, Win does. He'll get a commission one of these days." + +"He deserves one. I--I hope you'll both be very happy." + +He was walking beside her. Quickly her glance flashed up at him. Was +that the reason he had held himself so aloof from her? + +"I think we shall, very likely, if you mean Win and I. He's always +happy, isn't he? And I try to be. I'm sorry he's leaving this part of +the country. Writing-on-Stone is a long way from here. He may never +get back. I'll miss him a good deal. Of course you will too." + +This was plain enough, but Tom could not accept it at face value. +Perhaps she meant that she would miss him until Win got ready to send +for her. An idea lodged firmly in the mind cannot be ejected at an +instant's notice. + +"Yes, I'll miss him. He's a splendid fellow. I've never met one like +him, so staunch and cheerful and game. Sometime I'd like to tell you +about that trip we took. You'd be proud of him." + +"I'm sure all his friends are," she said, smiling a queer little smile +that was lost in the darkness. + +"He was a very sick man, in a great deal of pain, and we had a rather +dreadful time of it. Of course it hit him far harder than it did +either West or me. But never a whimper out of him from first to last. +Always cheerful, always hopeful, with a little joke or a snatch of a +song, even when it looked as though we couldn't go on another day. +He's one out of ten thousand." + +"I heard him say that about another man--only I think he said one in +fifty thousand," she made comment, almost in a murmur. + +"Any girl would be lucky to have such a man for a husband," he added +fatuously. + +"Yes. I hope he'll find some nice one who will appreciate him." + +This left no room for misunderstanding. Tom's brain whirled. "You--you +and he haven't had any--quarrel?" + +"No. What made you think so?" + +"I don't know. I suppose I'm an idiot. But I thought--" + +He stopped. She took up his unfinished sentence. + +"You thought wrong." + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MAN SIZE*** + + +******* This file should be named 10404.txt or 10404.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +https://www.gutenberg.org/1/0/4/0/10404 + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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