The year drew into September, time
of goldenrod, browning grasses, crisp, clear mornings
and hazy, dreamy days. The shanty lads began to
straggle back to town from little backwoods farms where
they had spent the summer loafing or increasing the
size of the clearings, from mills, from out-of-the-way
holes and corners. They haunted the lumber companies’
offices looking for jobs. There things began to
hum with the bustle of preparation and owners held
long consultations with walking bosses and laid plans
for the winter’s campaign.
Kent’s tender for the choice
Wind River limits was accepted, somewhat to his surprise
and to Crooks’s profane amazement. The latter,
through the good offices of a middleman working for
his rake-off, secured the limits on Rat Lake.
Remained the question of how the logs should be cut,
and when.
Joe, after taking counsel with Crooks,
Wright, and Locke, decided on his course. That
winter he would make a supreme effort to cut every
stick he could, and sell them in the drive, retaining
only enough logs to run his mill on half time or a
little better. This seemed the only thing to do.
Locke had been unable to push his complaint anent the
freight rate to a hearing before the commission.
Kent’s liabilities were piling
up and maturing; the general financial stringency
was increasing, as predicted by Ackerman; his timber
sales, taking into consideration the unprofitable
contract with the Clancys, showed a very narrow margin;
and the consensus of advice he received was to market
his raw product while he could, reduce his liabilities
as much as possible, and then sit tight and hope for
better luck and better times.
For once fortune seemed to play into
his hand, for while he was considering the question
of opening negotiations for the disposal of the surplus
logs the following spring he received a letter from
Wismer & Holden, who were very large millmen and did
little logging, either jobbing out such limits as
they bought or buying their logs from loggers who
had no mills. The letter stated that they wished
to obtain from twenty million feet upward, in the
log, deliverable at their booms not later than July
1st of the following year. They offered a good
price, and were prepared to pay cash on delivery.
And they wished to know if Kent could supply them
with the above quantity of logs, or, if not, what
part of it.
This was too good a proposition to
be neglected, and Joe immediately took train and called
on Wismer & Holden. In half an hour the preliminaries
were settled.
“You understand,” said
Wismer, “that we must have these logs by July
1st. A later date won’t do.”
“I can get them down by then, of course,”
said Joe.
“Then we might as well close
the deal now,” said Wismer, and called his stenographer.
He dictated an agreement from a form which he took
from his desk. In this agreement was a clause
providing a penalty for non-delivery by the date named.
Joe was not versed in legal terminology, but it read
pretty stiff and he took objection to it.
“That’s our ordinary form
of delivery contract,” said Wismer. “We
have to protect ourselves somehow. We give you
ample margin for delivery, you see, but we’ve
got to have some guarantee that you’ll make good,
because we make other contracts in the expectation
of getting the logs by a certain date. If we
didn’t get them we’d be up against it.”
That seemed reasonable enough, and
Joe signed the instrument. But when a few days
afterward he showed it to Locke, the lawyer pounced
on that clause like a hawk, switched over to the last
page, looked at Joe’s signature duly witnessed,
and groaned.
“Boy, what on earth did you
sign that for? Did they chloroform you?”
“What’s the matter with it?” asked
Joe.
“Matter with it?” snorted
Locke. “Why, it’s a man-trap, nothing
short of it. Can’t you read, or didn’t
you read? If you didn’t know what you were
signing there’s a glimmer of hope.”
“I read the thing,” Joe admitted.
“And yet you signed it!
Why, you young come on, if you fail to deliver by
July 1st they may refuse to accept any logs whatever;
and, moreover, you become their debtor and bind yourself
to pay an amount which they say is ascertained damages
for non-performance. Do you get that with any
degree of clarity?”
“Oh, that’s all right,
I guess,” said Joe, and repeated Wismer’s
explanation. “I’m sure to have the
logs down early in June, so it doesn’t matter.”
“Any clause in a contract matters,”
said Locke. “You’re gambling on a
date. The amount they specify as damages is an
arbitrary one, and may be twice as great as the loss
to them. This is another of Nick Ryan’s
deadfalls I recognize the turn of the phrases and
he’s got the little joker tucked inside, as
usual. After this don’t you sign a blame
thing without showing it to me.”
Locke’s words would have caused
Joe some uneasiness but for the fact that he was sure
of making delivery. Having arranged a market for
his logs, or, rather, one having arranged itself for
him, the next thing was to provide the logs themselves.
He and Wright held council with McKenna, Tobin, Deever,
and MacNutt, the former being Kent’s walking
boss and the last three his foremen.
The winter’s work was divided
in this way: Deever and Tobin were to finish
cutting the limits on the Missabini; MacNutt was to
take the Wind River limit, just acquired; Dennis McKenna,
the walking boss, had a general oversight of the camps,
but would divide his time between Tobin’s and
Deever’s, after locating the camp at Wind River,
which limit he had cruised before the purchase.
Immediately on reaching this decision,
the foremen got together the nucleus of crews.
“Why don’t you go up to
the Wind with McKenna and take a look at things?”
said Crooks.
Joe welcomed the suggestion with enthusiasm.
He had been sticking pretty closely to the office,
and the prospect of a couple of weeks in the open
air was attractive.
Three days later saw him trudging
beside McKenna and MacNutt, while behind them a wagon
laden with tents, blankets, food, and tools bumped
and jolted.
They left roads behind, and plunged
into unmarked, uncharted country where the wheels
sank half-way to the hubs in damp, green moss, crashed
through fern to the horses’ bellies, or skidded
perilously on rocky hillsides. Ahead, McKenna
piloted his crew, a light axe in his hand, gashing
the trees with blazes at frequent intervals. He
blazed them both back and front, until the road was
plainly marked so that going and coming the way might
be seen. To Joe the instinct of the old woodsman
was marvellous. He made no mistakes, never hesitated,
never cast back. But always he followed the lines
of the least natural resistance, and somehow these
lines, which he apparently carried in his head, became
a fairly straight route to an objective point.
There were obstacles easier to surmount
than to avoid logs to be cut and thrown
aside, pole bridges to be built, bits of corduroy to
be laid in shaky places; merely temporary things,
these, for the flying column. Later others would
make a road of it, but at present anything that would
carry team and wagon served. So the crew slashed
out a way with double-bitted or two-faced axes “Methodist
axes,” as they were called in an unwarranted
reflection upon that excellent denomination throwing
light, frail bridges together with wonderful celerity,
twisting fallen timber out of the way with peavey-hook
and cant-dog, and doing the work effortlessly and
easily, for they were one and all experts with the
tools of their trade, and such work was child’s
play to them.
In due course they arrived at the
site chosen by McKenna when he had cruised the limit.
It was a natural opening, ringed about with towering,
feathery-headed pines. At one end it sloped down
to alder and willow through which a little stream
slid gently between brown roots and mossy banks.
This meant water supply. Ruffed grouse roared
up from under Joe’s feet as he parted the bushes,
and when he rose to his knees, having drunk his fill
lying flat on the ground, he saw a big, brown swamp
hare, already graying about the ears, watching him
not twenty feet away. Also, in a bare and muddy
place, he saw the pointed tracks of deer, and dog-like
prints which were those of a stray wolf. However,
he had not come to hunt.
Tents came out of the wagon and were
rammed up and made fast in short order. The cook
dug a shallow trench and built his fireplace, drove
forked stakes, laid a stout, green pole between them,
slung his pot-hooks on it and below them his pots,
and so was ready to minister to the needs of the inner
man. With tape-line and pegs McKenna laid out
the ground plans of bunk-house, eating-camp, caboose,
foreman’s quarters, and stables. At a safe
distance he located the dynamite storehouse.
Already the crashing fall of trees
announced that the crew was getting out timbers for
the buildings, and Joe watched the work of axes and
saws with a species of fascination. No sooner
did a tree strike the ground than men were on it,
measuring, trimming, cutting it to length. When
a square timber was required, one man cut notches
three feet apart down the sides of a prostrate trunk
and split off the slabs. Another, a lean, wasp-waisted
tiemaker, stripped to underclothes and moccasins, mounted
one end with a huge, razor-edged broad-axe which was
the pride of his heart. Every stroke fell to
a hair. He hewed a straight line by judgment
of eye alone, and the result was a stick of square
or half-square timber, absolutely straight, and almost
as smooth as if planed.
As fast as the logs were ready the
teamster grappled them with hook and chain, and the
big horses yanked them out into position. Another
wagon and more men arrived. Buildings grew as
if by magic. The wall-logs were mortised and
skidded up into place; the whole was roofed in; the
chinks were stuffed with moss and plastered with wet
clay; bunks in tiers were built around the walls;
tables and benches knocked together in no time; and
the Wind River camp was finished and ready for occupation.
While these preparations were going
forward, Joe, McKenna, and MacNutt prowled the woods
at such times as the last two had to spare from construction
work. The walking boss and the foreman sized up
the situation with the sure rapidity of experts.
They knew just how many feet of timber a given area
held, how long it should take so many men to cut it,
and in how many loads, given good sleigh-roads, it
should be hauled out to the banking grounds at the
river.
“It’ll depend a lot on
the season, of course,” said McKenna. “If
she’s a fair winter a powder of snow
and good frost for a bottom and then snow and hard
weather with odd flurries to make good slippin’ we
can get out all we cut. But if she freezes hard
and dry, and the snow’s late and scanty or hits
us all in a bunch when it comes, it will put us back.
Or if mild weather gets here early and the roads break
it will be bad.”
As the walking boss spoke he and Joe
were standing at the top of a height looking down
a vista of brown tree-trunks which sloped gently away
to a dense cedar swamp. Suddenly Joe’s eye
caught a moving figure and he pointed it out to McKenna.
“It can’t be one of our
men,” said the latter; “we’d better
see who it is.”
As the stranger came into plain view,
heading straight for them, McKenna gave a grunt of
recognition and displeasure.
“That’s Shan McCane!”
“Never heard of him,” said Joe carelessly.
“You don’t miss much,”
the walking boss commented. “‘Rough Shan,’
they call him. The name fits.”
Mr. McCane was no beauty. He
was big, and looked fleshy, but was not. A deceptive
slouchiness of carriage covered the quickness of a
cat when necessary. His cheeks and chin bristled
with a beard of the texture and colour of a worn-out
blacking brush; his nose had a cant to the northeast,
and his left eye was marred by a sinister cast.
Add to these a chronic, ferocious scowl and subtract
two front teeth, and you have the portrait of Rough
Shan McCane, as Joe saw him. For attire he wore
a greasy flannel shirt, open in front so that his
great, mossy chest was bare to the winds, short trousers
held in place by a frayed leather strap, and a pair
of fourteen-inch larrigans. He and McKenna greeted
each other without enthusiasm.
“Cruisin’?” asked the walking boss.
“Nope,” replied McCane.
“I got a camp over here a ways. I’m
cuttin’ Clancys’ limit.”
“Clancys’!” said
Joe in surprise, for Clancy Brothers had purchased
the next limit in the name of a third party a couple
of years before and their interest did not appear.
“Do they own timber here?”
“Their limit butts on your east line,”
McCane told him.
“How do you get your logs out?” asked
McKenna.
“We’ll haul down to Lebret Creek and drive
that to the Wind.”
McKenna nodded. The Kent logs
would be driven down Wind River. Lebret Creek
lay east of it. It was a small stream, but fast
and good driving.
“Well, I must be gettin’
back,” said McCane. “Your timber runs
better than ours. So long!”
He nodded and slouched off. McKenna
looked after him and shook his head.
“I’d rather have any one
else jobbin’ Clancys’ limit,” he
observed. “McCane keeps a bad camp an’
feeds his crew on whiskey. He has a wild bunch
of Callahans, Red McDougals, and Charbonneaus workin’
for him always. No other man could hold ’em
down.”
“How does he get his work done
with whiskey in camp?” Joe asked.
“He can make a man work, drunk
or sober or else he half kills him.
The worst is that with a booze-camp handy our boys
will get it once in awhile. Still, MacNutt can
hold ’em down. McCane laid him out a couple
of years ago with a peavey, and he hates him.
He won’t stand any nonsense. A good man
is Mac!”
MacNutt, the foreman of the Wind River
crew, was a lean, sinewy logger who had spent twenty
years in the camps. He owned a poisonous tongue
and a deadly temper when aroused; but he had also
a cool head, and put his employer’s interests
before all else. He heard the news in silence.
“Of course we can’t stand
for booze in the camp,” said Joe. “If
any man gets drunk on whiskey from McCane’s
camp or elsewhere, fire him at once.” He
thought he was putting the seal of authority on a very
severe measure.
MacNutt smiled sourly. “I
won’t fire a good man the first time I’ll
just knock the daylights out of him,” he said.
“As for McCane, I look for trouble with him.”
Suddenly he swore with venom. “I’ll
split his head with an axe if he crowds me again!”
“Oh, come ” Joe began.
“Sounds like talk, I know,”
MacNutt interrupted. “But he nigh brained
me with a peavey once, when I had only my bare hands.
It’s coming to him, Mr. Kent. I’ll
take nothing from him nor his crew.”
Joe, on his way back to town the following
day, thought of MacNutt’s hard eyes and set
mouth, and felt assured that he would meet any trouble
half-way. His own disposition being rather combative
on occasion, he endorsed his foreman’s attitude
irrespective of the diplomacy of it.