CHAPTER XI
C.N. MORSE TURNS OVER A LEAF
The North-West Mounted Police had authority not only to arrest, butto try and to sentence prisoners. The soldierly inspector who sat injudgment on Morse at Fort Macleod heard the evidence and stroked aniron-gray mustache reflectively. As he understood it, his business wasto stop whiskey-running rather than to send men to jail. Beresford'sreport on this young man was in his favor. The inspector adventuredinto psychology.
"Studied the Indians any--the effect of alcohol on them?" he askedMorse.
"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-smugglingbad business all round?"
"Not for the smuggler. Speakin' as an outsider, I reckon he does itbecause he makes money," Morse answered impersonally.
"For the country, I mean. For the trapper, for the breeds, for theIndians."
"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 badbusiness for a big trading firm like his to be smuggling whiskey." Theofficer raised a hand to stop the young man's protest. "Yes, I knowyou'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 badbusiness. You can tell him if you want to that we're here to put anend to it and we're going to do it. But stress the fact that it isn'tgood 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 doit again. You're discharged."
"Barney, too?"
"Hmp! He's a horse of another color. Think we'll send him over theplains."
"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 youwant to be judge and jury as well as prisoner, my lad?"
"Thought perhaps my uncle would understand the spirit of your messagebetter if Barney went along with me, Inspector." The brown eyes wereopen and guileless.
MacLean studied the Montanan deliberately. He began to recognizeunusual qualities in this youth.
"Can't say I care for your friend Barney. He's a bad egg, or I miss myguess."
"Not much taken with him myself. Thought if I'd get him to travelsouth with me it might save you some trouble."
"It might," the Inspector agreed. "It's his first offense so far asI know." Under bristling eyebrows he shot a swift look at thisself-assured youngster. He had noticed that men matured at an earlyage on the frontier. The school of emergency developed them fast.But Morse struck him as more competent even than the other boyishplainsmen he had met. "Will you be responsible for him?"
The Montanan came to scratch reluctantly. He had no desire to be bearleader 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 toldthe story of the whiskey cargo and its fate, together with his ownadventures subsequent to that time.
The head of the trading firm was a long, loose-jointed Yankee who haddrifted West in his youth. Since then he had acquired gray hairs andlarge 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, cutoff a liberal chew, and stowed this in his cheek. Then, lounging backin 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 offishing in other people's minds for confirmation of what was in hisown.
"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 somefirm in Benton as a clearin' house. He's servin' notice that unlessC.N. Morse & Company mends its ways, it can't do business with theN.W.M.P."
"That all?" asked the head of the firm.
"That's only half of it. The other half is that no firm ofwhiskey-runners will be allowed to trade across the line."
C.N. gave another little chirrup of mirth. "Keep your brains whittledup, 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 openedthis trip. You haven't been on the ground like I have. If you want aplain word for it, Uncle Newt--"
"Speak right out in meetin', Tom. Shouldn't wonder but what I canstand it." The transplanted Yankee slanted at his nephew a quizzicalsmile. "I been hearin' more or less plain language for quite a spell,son."
Tom gave it to him straight from the shoulder, quietly but withoutapology. "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. Theplains tribes up there go crazy over fire-water an' start killin' eachother. It's a crime to let 'em have it."
Young Morse began to tell stories of instances that had come under hisown observation, of others that he had heard from reliable sources.Presently he found himself embarked on the tale of his adventures withSleeping Dawn.
The fur-trader heard him patiently. The dusty wrinkled boots of themerchant rested on the desk. His chair was tilted back in such a waythat the weight of his body was distributed between the back of hisneck, the lower end of the spine, and his heels. He looked a pictureof sleepy, indolent ease, but Tom knew he was not missing the leastdetail.
A shadow darkened the doorway of the office. Behind it straddled ahuge, ungainly figure.
"'Lo, West! How're tricks?" C.N. Morse asked in his lazy way. He didnot rise from the chair or offer to shake hands, but that might bebecause it was not his custom to exert himself.
West stopped in his stride, choking with wrath. He had caught sight ofTom and was glaring at him. "You're here, eh? Sneaked home to try tosquare yourself with the old man, did ya?" The trail foreman turned tothe uncle. "I wanta tell you he double-crossed you for fair, C.N. He'sgot a heluva nerve to come back here after playin' in with the policethe 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 hispronouncement 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 oldman'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 wasdefendin' myself, he jumped me too. My notion is from the way he actedthat he let on to the red-coat where the c
ache was. Finally when Irode out to rescue him, he sided in with the other fellow. Hadn't beenfor him I'd never 'a' had this slug in my leg." The big smugglerspoke with extraordinary vehemence, spicing his speech liberally withsulphurous language.
The grizzled Yankee accepted the foreman's attitude with a wave of thehand that dismissed any counterargument. But there was an ironic gleamin his eye.
"'Nough said, West. If you're that sot on it, the boy quits thecompany 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 asmall bomb had exploded at his feet and numbed his brains. But he wasno more surprised than Tom, whose wooden face was expressionless.
"Goddlemighty! Ain't I jus' been tellin' you how he wrecked the wholeshow--how he sold out to that bunch of spies the Canadian Gov'ment hasdone sent up there?" exploded West.
"Oh, I don't guess he did that," Morse, Senior, said lightly. "Wegot to remember that times are changin', West. Law's comin' into thecountry 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. Ifigure 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'vegot a hankerin' for respectability--want the firm to stand well withthe 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 pensjumped. "All I got to say is that this new Sunday-school outfit youaim to run won't have no use for a he-man. I'm quittin' you rightnow."
The foreman made the threat as a bluff. He was the most surprised manin Montana when his employer called it quietly, speaking still in theslow, nasal voice of perfect good-nature.
"Maybe you're right, West. That's for you to say, of course. You knowyour own business best. Figure out your time an' I'll have Bensonwrite you a check. Hope you find a good job."
The sense of baffled anger in West foamed up. His head dropped downand forward threateningly.
"You do, eh? Lemme tell you this, C.N. I don't ask no odds of you orany other guy. Jes' because you're the head of a big outfit you can'trun on me. I won't stand for it a minute."
"Of course not. I'd know better'n to try that with you. No hardfeelings even if you quit us." It was a characteristic of the NewEnglander 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 ofyours because he's yore kin. Not anymore. Different now. He's liableto have a heluva time an' don't you forget it for a minute."
The fur-trader chewed his cud imperturbably. When he spoke it Wasstill without a trace of acrimony.
"Guess you'll think better of that maybe, West. Guess you're a littlehot under the collar, ain't you? Don't hardly pay to hold grudges,does it? There was Rhinegoldt now. Kept nursin' his wrongs an' finallylanded in the pen. Bad medicine, looks like to me."
West was no imbecile. He understood the threat underneath the suavewords of the storekeeper. Rhinegoldt had gone to the penitentiarybecause C.N. Morse had willed it so. The inference was that anotherlawbreaker might go for the same reason. The trail boss knew that thiswas no idle threat. Morse could put him behind the bars any time hechose. 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 bettergo 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. Helooked from the smiling, steady-eyed trader to the brown-faced youthwho watched the scene with such cool, alert attention. He fought witha wild, furious impulse in himself to go through with his threat,to clean up and head out into the wilds. But some saving sense ofprudence held his hand. C.N. Morse was too big game for him.
"To hell with the check," he snarled, and swinging on his heel jingledout 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 usualindirect way.
"Why?"
"Guess you'd say it was because he won't fit into the new policy ofthe firm. Guess you'd say he'd always be gettin' us into trouble withhis overbearin' and crooked ways."
"That's true. He would."
"Maybe it would be a good idee to watch him mighty close. They sayhe'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. Legitimatetrade only. That the idee you're figurin' on makin' me live up to?"
"Suits me if it does you," Tom answered cheerfully, "But where doI 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 tohandle our business north of the line--buy, sell, trade, build upfriendly relations with the Indians and trappers, keep friendly withthe police, and a few little things like that."
Tom grinned.
"Won't have a thing to do, will I?"
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