by Zane Grey
“An Indian, and Renault the quarter-blood,” grunted Adare. “Wonder what they want here in November. They should be on their trap-lines.”
“Perhaps, Mon Pere, they have come to see their friends,” suggested Josephine. “You know, it has been a long time since some of them have seen us. I would be disappointed if our people didn’t show they were glad because of your home-coming!”
“Of course, that’s it!” cried Adare. “Ho, Metoosin!” he roared, turning toward the door. “Metoosin! Paitoo ta! Wawep isewin!”
Metoosin appeared at the door.
“Build a great fire in the una kah house,” commanded Adare. “Feed all who come in from the forests, Metoosin. Open up tobacco and preserves, and flour and bacon. Nothing in the storeroom is too good for them. And send Jean to me! Where is he?”
“Numma tao, ookimow.”
“Gone!” exclaimed Adare.
“He didn’t want to disturb you last night,” explained Philip. “He made an early start for the Pipestone.”
“If he was an ordinary man, I’d say he was in love with one of the Langlois girls,” said Adare, with a shrug of his shoulders. “Neah, Metoosin! Make them comfortable, and we will all see them later.” As Metoosin went Adare turned upon the others: “Shall we all go out now?” he asked.
“Splendid!” accepted Josephine eagerly. “Come, Mikawe, we can be ready in a moment!”
She ran from the room, leading her mother by the hand. Philip and Adare followed them, and shortly the four were ready to leave the house. The una kah, or guest house, was in the edge of the timber. It was a long, low building of logs, and was always open with its accommodations to the Indians and half-breeds—men, women, and children—who came in from the forest trails. Renault and the Indian were helping Metoosin build fires when they entered. Philip thought that Renault’s eyes rested upon him in a curious and searching glance even as Adare shook hands with him. He was more interested in the low words both the Indian and the blood muttered as they stood for a moment with bowed heads before Josephine and Miriam. Then Renault raised his head and spoke direct to Josephine:
“I breeng word for heem of Jan Breuil an’ wewimow over on Jac’ fish ma Kichi Utooskayakun,” he said in a low voice. “Heem lee’l girl so seek she goin’ die.”
“Little Marie? She is sick—dying, you say?” cried Josephine.
“Aha. She ver’ dam’ seek. She burn up lak fire.”
Josephine looked up at Philip.
“I knew she was sick,” she said. “But I didn’t think it was so bad. If she dies it will be my fault. I should have gone.” She turned quickly to Renault. “When did you see her last?” she asked. “Listen! Papak-oo-moo?”
“Aha.”
“It is a sickness the children have each winter,” she explained, looking questioningly into Philip’s eyes again. “It kills quickly when left alone. But I have medicine that will cure it. There is still time. We must go, Philip. We must!”
Her face had paled a little. She saw the gathering lines in Philip’s forehead. He thought of Jean’s words—the warning they carried. She pressed his arm, and her mouth was firm.
“I am going, Philip,” she said softly. “Will you go with me?”
“I will, if you must go,” he said. “But it is not best.”
“It is best for little Marie,” she retorted, and left him to tell Adare and her mother of Renault’s message.
Renault stepped close to Philip. His back was to the others. He spoke in a low voice:
“I breeng good word from Jean Croisset, M’sieur. Heem say Soomin Renault good man lak Pierre Langlois, an’ he fight lak devil when ask. I breeng Indian an’ two team. We be in forest near dog watekan, where Pierre mak his fire an’ tepee. You understand? Aha?”
“Yes—I understand,” whispered Philip, “And Jean has gone on—to see others?”
“He go lak win’ to Francois over on Waterfound. Francois come in one hour—two, t’ree, mebby.”
Josephine and Adare approached them.
“Mignonne is turning nurse again,” rumbled Adare, one of his great arms thrown affectionately about her waist. “You’ll have a jolly run on a clear morning like this, Philip. But remember, if it is the smallpox I forbid her to expose herself!”
“I shall see to that, Mon Pere. When do we start, Josephine?”
“As soon as I can get ready and Metoosin brings the dogs,” replied Josephine. “I am going to the house now. Will you come with me?”
It was an hour before Metoosin had brought the dogs up from the pit and they were ready to start. Philip had armed himself with a rifle and his automatic, and Josephine had packed both medicine and food in a large basket. The new snow was soft, and Metoosin had brought a toboggan instead of a sledge with runners. In the traces were Captain and five of his team-mates.
“Isn’t the pack going with us?” asked Philip.
“I never take them when there is very bad sickness, like this,” explained Josephine. “There is something about the nearness of death that makes them howl. I haven’t been able to train that out of them.”
Philip was disappointed, but he said nothing more. He tucked Josephine among the furs, cracked the long whip Metoosin had given him, and they were off, with Miriam and her husband waving their hands from the door of Adare House. They had scarcely passed out of view in the forest when with a sudden sharp command Josephine stopped the dogs. She sprang out of her furs and stood laughingly beside Philip.
“Father always insists that I ride. He says it’s not good for a woman to run,” she said. “But I do. I love to run. There!”
As she spoke she had thrown her outer coat on the sledge, and stood before him, straight and slim. Her hair was in a long braid.
“Now, are you ready?” she challenged.
“Good Lord, have mercy on me!” gasped Philip. “You look as if you might fly, Josephine!”
Her signal to the dogs was so low he scarcely heard it, and they sped along the white and narrow trail into which Josephine had directed them. Philip fell in behind her. It had always roused a certain sense of humour in him to see a woman run. But in Josephine he saw now the swiftness and lithesome grace of a fawn. Her head was thrown back, her mittened hands were drawn up to her breast as the forest man runs, and her shining braid danced and rippled in the early sun with each quick step she took.
Ahead of her the gray and yellow backs of the dogs rose and fell with a rhythmic movement that was almost music. Their ears aslant, their crests bristling, their bushy tails curling like plumes over their hips, they responded with almost automatic precision to the low words that fell from the lips of the girl behind them.
With each minute that passed Philip wondered how much longer Josephine could keep up the pace. They had run fully a mile and his own breath was growing shorter when the toe of his moccasined foot caught under a bit of brushwood and he plunged head foremost into the snow. When he had brushed the snow out of his eyes and ears Josephine was standing over him, laughing. The dogs were squatted on their haunches, looking back.
“My poor Philip!” she laughed, offering him an assisting hand. “We almost lost you, didn’t we? It was Captain who missed you first, and he almost toppled me over the sled!”
Her face was radiant. Lips, eyes, and cheeks were glowing. Her breast rose and fell quickly.
“It was your fault!” he accused her. “I couldn’t keep my eyes off you, and never thought of my feet. I shall have my revenge—here!”
He drew her into his arms, protesting. Not until he had kissed her parted, half-smiling lips did he release her.
“I’m going to ride now,” she declared. “I’m not going to run the danger of being accused again.”
He wrapped her again in the furs on the toboggan. It was eight miles to Jac Breuil’s, and they re
ached his cabin in two hours. Breuil was not much more than a boy, scarcely older than the dark-eyed little French girl who was his wife, and their eyes were big with terror. With a thrill of wonder and pleasure Philip observed the swift change in them as Josephine sprang from the toboggan. Breuil was almost sobbing as he whispered to Philip:
“Oh, ze sweet Ange, M’sieur! She cam jus’ in time.”
Josephine was bending over little Marie’s cot when they followed her and the girl mother into the cabin. In a moment she looked up with a glad smile.
“It is the same sickness, Marie,” she said to the mother. “I have medicine here that will cure it. The fever isn’t as bad as I thought it would be.”
Noon saw a big change in the cabin. Little Marie’s temperature was falling rapidly. Breuil and his wife were happy. After dinner Josephine explained again how they were to give the medicine she was leaving, and at two o’clock they left on their return journey to Adare House. The sun had disappeared hours before. Gray banks of cloud filled the sky, and it had grown much colder.
“We will reach home only a little before dark,” said Philip. “You had better ride, Josephine.”
He was eager to reach Adare House. By this time he felt that Jean should have returned, and he was confident that there were others of the forest people besides Pierre, Renault, and the Indian in the forest near the pit. For an hour he kept up a swift pace. Later they came to a dense cover of black spruce two miles from Adare House. They had traversed a part of this when the dogs stopped. Directly ahead of them had fallen a dead cedar, barring the trail. Philip went to the toboggan for the trail axe.
“I haven’t noticed any wind, have you?” he asked. “Not enough to topple over a cedar.”
He went to the tree and began cutting. Scarcely had his axe fallen half a dozen times when a scream of terror turned him about like a flash. He had only time to see that Josephine had left the sledge, and was struggling in the arms of a man. In that same instant two others had leaped upon him. He had not time to strike, to lift his axe. He went down, a pair of hands gripping at his throat. He saw a face over him, and he knew now that it was the face of the man he had seen in the firelight, the face of Lang, the Free Trader. Every atom of strength in him rose in a superhuman effort to throw off his assailants. Then came the blow. He saw the club over him, a short, thick club, in the hand of Thoreau himself. After that followed darkness and oblivion, punctuated by the crack, crack, crack of a revolver and the howling of dogs—sounds that grew fainter and fainter until they died away altogether, and he sank into the stillness of night.
It was almost dark when consciousness stirred Philip again. With an effort he pulled himself to his knees, and stared about him. Josephine was gone, the dogs were gone. He staggered to his feet, a moaning cry on his lips. He saw the sledge. Still in the traces lay the bodies of two of the dogs, and he knew what the pistol shots had meant. The others had been cut loose; straight out into the forest led the trails of several men; and the meaning of it all, the reality of what had happened, surged upon him in all its horror. Lang and his cutthroats had carried off Josephine. He knew by the thickening darkness that they had time to get a good start on their way to Thoreau’s.
One thought filled his dizzy brain now. He must reach Jean and the camp near the pit. He staggered as he turned his face homeward. At times the trail seemed to reach up and strike him in the face. There was a blinding pain back of his eyes. A dozen times in the first mile he fell, and each time it was harder for him to regain his feet. The darkness of night grew heavier about him, and now and then he found himself crawling on his hands and knees. It was two hours before his dazed senses caught the glow of a fire ahead of him. Even then it seemed an age before he reached it. And when at last he staggered into the circle of light he saw half a dozen startled faces, and he heard the strange cry of Jean Jacques Croisset as he sprang up and caught him in his arms. Philip’s strength was gone, but he still had time to tell Jean what had happened before he crumpled down into the snow.
And then he heard a voice, Jean’s voice, crying fierce commands to the men about the fire; he heard excited replies, the hurry of feet, the barking of dogs. Something warm and comforting touched his lips. He struggled to bring himself back into life. He seemed to have been fighting hours before he opened his eyes. He pulled himself up, stared into the dark, livid face of Jean, the half-breed.
“The hour—has come—” he murmured.
“Yes, the hour has come, M’sieur!” cried Jean. “The swiftest teams and the swiftest runners in this part of the Northland are on the trail, and by morning the forest people will be roused from here to the Waterfound, from the Cree camp on Lobstick to the Gray Loon waterway! Drink this, M’sieur. There is no time to lose. For it is Jean Jacques Croisset who tells you that not a wolf will howl this night that does not call forth the signal to those who love our Josephine! Drink!”
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
Jean’s thrilling words burned into Philip’s consciousness like fire. They roused him from his stupor, and he began to take in deep breaths of the chill night air, and to see more clearly. The camp was empty now. The men were gone. Only Jean was with him, his face darkly flushed and his eyes burning. Philip rose slowly to his feet. There was no longer the sickening dizziness in his head, He inhaled still deeper breaths, while Jean stood a step back and watched. Far off in the forest he heard the faint barking of dogs.
“They are running like the wind!” breathed Jean. “Those are Renault’s dogs. They are two miles away!”
He took Philip by the arm.
“I have made a comfortable bed for you in Pierre’s tepee, M’sieur. You must lie down, and I will get your supper. You will need all of your strength soon.”
“But I must know what is happening,” protested Philip. “My God, I cannot lie down like a tired dog—with Josephine out there with Lang! I am ready now, Jean. I am not hungry. And the pain is gone. See—I am as steady as you!” he cried excitedly, gripping Jean’s hand. “God in Heaven, who knows what may be happening out there!”
“Josephine is safe for a time, M’sieur,” assured Jean. “Listen to me, Netootam! I feared this. That is why I warned you. Lang is taking her to Thoreau’s. He believes that we will not dare to pursue, and that Josephine will send back word she is there of her own pleasure. Why? Because he has sworn to give Le M’sieur the confession if we make him trouble. Mon Dieu, he thinks we will not dare! and even now, Netootam, six of the fastest teams and swiftest runners within a hundred miles are gone to spread the word among the forest people that L’Ange, our Josephine, has been carried off by Thoreau and his beasts! Before dawn they will begin to gather where the forks meet, twelve miles off there toward the Devil’s Nest, and to-morrow—”
Jean crossed himself.
“Our Lady forgive us, if it is a sin to take the lives of twenty such men,” he said softly. “Not one will live to tell the story. And not a log of Thoreau House will stand to hold the secret which will die forever with to-morrow’s end.”
Philip came near to Jean now. He placed his two hands on the half-breed’s shoulders, and for a moment looked at him without speaking. His face was strangely white.
“I understand—everything, Jean,” he whispered huskily, and his lips seemed parched. “To-morrow, we will destroy all evidence, and kill. That is the one way. And that secret which you dread, which Josephine has told me I could not guess in a thousand years, will be buried forever. But Jean—I Have Guessed It. I Know! It has come to me at last, and—my God!—I understand!”
Slowly, with a look of horror in his eyes, Jean drew back from him. Philip, with bowed head, saw nothing of the struggle in the half-breed’s face. When Jean spoke it was in a strange voice and low.
“M’sieur!”
Philip looked up. In the fire-glow Jean was reaching out his hand to him. In the faces of the two men was a
new light, the birth of a new brotherhood. Their hands clasped. Silently they gazed into each other’s eyes, while over them the beginning of storm moaned in the treetops and the clouds raced in snow-gray armies under the moon.
“Breathe no word of what may have come to you to-night,” spoke Jean then. “You will swear that?”
“Yes.”
“And to-morrow we fight! You see now—you understand what that fight means, M’sieur?”
“Yes. It means that Josephine—”
“Tsh! Even I must not hear what is on your lips, M’sieur! I cannot believe that you have guessed true. I do not want to know. I dare not. And now, M’sieur, will you lie down? I will go to Le M’sieur and tell him I have received word that you and Josephine are to stay at Breuil’s overnight. He must not know what has happened. He must not be at the big fight to-morrow. When it is all over we will tell him that we did not want to terrify him and Miriam over Josephine. If he should be at the fight, and came hand to hand with Lang or Thoreau—”
“He must not go!” exclaimed Philip. “Hurry to him, Jean. I will boil some coffee while you are gone. Bring another rifle. They robbed me of mine, and the pistol.”
Jean prepared to leave.
“I will return soon,” he said. “We should start for the Forks within two hours, M’sieur. In that time you must rest.”
He slipped away into the gloom in the direction of the pit. For several minutes Philip stood near the fire staring into the flames. Then he suddenly awoke into life. The thought that had come to him this night had changed his world for him. And he wondered now if he was right. Jean had said: “I cannot believe that you have guessed true,” and yet in the half-breed’s face, in his horror-filled eyes, in the tense gathering of his body was revealed the fear that he had! But if he had made a mistake! If he had guessed wrong! The hot blood surged in his face. If he had guessed wrong—his thought would be a crime. He had made up his mind to drive the guess out of his head, and he went into the tepee to find food and coffee. When Jean returned, an hour later, supper was waiting in the heat of the fire. The half-breed had brought Philip’s rifle along with his own.