The east line of Kent’s limit
butted on the west line of Clancys’, and in
due course MacNutt began to cut along the line.
The snow he had been longing for fell in plenty and
the road already bottomed and made became good.
A constant stream of logs flowed down it on the big-bunked
sleighs, draining the skidways, which were continually
replenished by more logs travoyed out of the woods.
At the banking grounds the big piles grew. The
work was going merrily.
About the time MacNutt began to cut
to his line McCane did the same. The crews fraternized
to some extent, but the bosses had nothing to say to
each other, each keeping to his own side. Hence
Kent’s foreman was surprised when one morning,
after a fresh fall of snow, Rough Shan accompanied
by two other men came to him. He noted, also,
with an eye experienced in reading signs of trouble,
that most of McCane’s crew were working, or
making a pretence of working, just across the line.
“These men is sawyers, MacNutt,”
said Rough Shan. “Yesterday, late on, they
dropped a tree an’ cut her into two lengths.
This morning the logs is gone.”
“What have I got to do with that?” asked
MacNutt.
“That’s what I’ve
come to find out,” retorted McCane. “Our
teamsters never touched them. Logs don’t
get away by themselves.”
MacNutt frowned at him. “If
you think we took your logs there’s our skidways,
and the road is open to the river. Take a look
for yourself.”
McCane and his men went to the nearest
skidway and examined the logs. They passed on
to another, and MacNutt thought it advisable to follow.
At the second skidway one of the sawyers slapped a
stick of timber.
“This is her,” he announced.
“I know her by this here knot. Yes, an’
here’s the other length.”
Jackson, Ward, and Haggarty, cant-hook
men and old employees of the Kents, had been regarding
McCane and his followers with scowling disfavour,
and Haggarty, from his post on top of the pile where
he had been “decking” the logs as they
were sent up to him, asked:
“What’s wrong wid them sticks?”
“We cut them yesterday on our limit,”
the man told him.
“Ye lie!” cried Haggarty
fiercely, dropping his cant-hook and leaping to the
ground. Jackson and Ward sprang forward as one
man.
“You keep out o’ this,”
said Rough Shan. “This is log stealin’,
and a matter for your boss, if he’s man enough
to talk to me face.”
“Man enough? Come over
here an’ say we stole yer logs, ye dirty”
Haggarty’s language became lurid. He was
an iron-fisted old-timer and hated McCane.
MacNutt, when he saw Haggarty drop
his cant-hook and jump, ran across to the skids.
So did other men at hand. A ring of fierce, bearded
faces and level, inquiring eyes gathered about the
intruders.
“Here is the logs, MacNutt,”
said Rough Shan. “Now, I want to know how
they come here.”
MacNutt examined the logs. They
had not yet been branded by the marking-iron with
the big K which proclaimed Kent ownership. They
were in no material particular different from the
rest. It was possible that his teamsters had
made a mistake. His sawyers could not identify
the logs positively; they thought they had cut them,
but were not sure. On the other hand, the two
teamsters, Laviolette and old Ben Watkins, were very
sure they had never drawn those particular sticks to
the pile.
“One o’ yeez must ’a done it,”
asserted McCane.
“Not on your say-so,”
retorted Watkins, whose fighting blood had not cooled
with age. “Don’t you get gay with
the old man, Shan McCane. I’ll
“Shut up, Ben!” MacNutt
ordered. He turned to McCane. “I’ll
give you the logs because your men are sure and mine
ain’t. Break them out o’ that, Haggarty;
and you, Laviolette, hitch on and pull them across
the line to wherever they say they laid. All
the same I want to tell ye it wasn’t my teamsters
snaked them here.”
“An’ do ye think mine
did? a likely t’ing” said Rough
Shan. “Mind this, now, MacNutt, you be
more careful about whose logs ye take.”
MacNutt lit his pipe deliberately before replying.
“The next one ye pull onto our skidways we’ll
keep,” said he.
McCane glowered at him. “Ye’ve
got a gall. Steal our logs, an’ tell me
I done it meself! I want to tell ye, MacNutt,
I won’t take that from you nor anny man.”
“Go back and boss your gang,”
said MacNutt coldly, refusing the evident challenge.
He had made up his mind to give no
provocation; but he had also determined to push the
fight to a finish when it came, as he saw it inevitably
must. The occurrence of the morning’ confirmed
his suspicion that McCane was following out a deliberate
plan. He perceived, too, that the matter of the
logs was a tactical mistake of the latter’s.
For, if Rough Shan had confined his activities to
supplying the men with whiskey and fomenting discontent,
MacNutt would have been forced to discharge half of
them, and good hands were scarce. Thus the camp
would have been practically crippled. But an
accusation of log stealing would weld the men solidly
together for the honour of their employer.
Haggarty, the iron-fisted cant-hook
man, who had drawn Kent pay for years, took up the
matter in the bunk-house that night.
“Nobody knows better nor Rough
Shan hisself who put them logs on our skidway,”
he declared with a tremendous oath. “An’
for why did he do it? To pick a row, no less.
He thought ould Mac would keep the sticks an’
tell him to go to the divil. Mac was too foxy
for him that time.”
“If he wants a row he can have
it,” said Regan; “him or anny of his gang.
It’s the dirty bunch they are. An’
I want to say right here,” he continued, glaring
at the row of men on the “deacon seat,”
“that the man that fills himself up on rotgut
whiskey from McCane’s camp after this is a low-lived
son of a dog, an’ I will beat the head off of
him once when he’s drunk an’ again when
he’s sober.”
A growl of approval ran along the bench.
“That’s right.”
“That’s the talk, Larry!”
“To hell wid McCane an’ his whiskey, both!”
“Mo’ Gee! we pass ourself on hees camp
an’ clean heem out.”
The temperance wave was so strong
that the minority maintained a discreet silence.
Indeed, even those who relished the contraband whiskey
most would have relished no less an encounter with
McCane’s crew, for whom they had little use,
individually or collectively. Save for the first
few bottles to whet their appetites, the whiskey had
not been supplied free. They had paid high for
it, and the mystery of the fatal keg had never been
cleared up. The sufferers were inclined to blame
one or more of McCane’s men, and, not being
able to fasten the responsibility for the outrage
on any individual, saddled it on the entire crew.
At this juncture Joe Kent arrived
in camp, following out a laudable determination to
become acquainted with the woods end of his business.
He came at night, and took up his quarters with MacNutt.
Although he had visited camps before
with his father, it was still fresh and new to Joe the
roomy box stove, the log walls hung with mackinaw
garments, moccasins, and snowshoes, the water pail
on the shelf beside the door, the bunks with their
heavy gray blankets and bearskins all the
raffle that accumulates in a foreman’s winter
quarters. And because his imagination was young
and active and unspoiled he saw in these things the
elements of romance where an older hand would have
seen utility only. He felt that they typified
a life which he had come to learn, that they were
part of a game which he had studied theoretically
from a distance, but was now come to play himself.
MacNutt was silent from habit.
A foreman cannot mingle socially with his men to any
extent and preserve his authority. Hence his life
is lonely and loneliness begets silence. He answered
questions with clear brevity, but did not make conversation.
He was not at all embarrassed by the presence of his
employer; nor would he have been if the latter had
been old and experienced instead of young and green.
He knew very well that Kent had come to learn the
practical side of the woods business. That was
all right and he approved of it. He would tell
him whatever he wanted to know; but as a basis he
must know enough to ask intelligent questions.
Outside of that he must learn by experience. That
was how MacNutt had learned himself, and if Joe had
asked him the best way to obtain practical knowledge
he would have been advised to go into the woods with
another man’s crew and use an axe.
“And now about McCane’s
gang,” said Joe when he had learned what he
could absorb as to the progress of the work. “Are
they giving you any trouble.”
“Not more than I can handle,”
said MacNutt, and for the first time told of the doctored
whiskey.
Joe roared at the recital, and MacNutt
smiled grimly. He was not a humourist, and his
narrative was not at all embellished. He went
on to relate the incident of the logs and his deductions.
Kent thought of Finn Clancy and frowned.
He told the foreman of the contract with the Clancy
firm and of the narrowly averted row with Finn.
“Then they are behind McCane,”
said MacNutt conclusively. “That means he
will make it bad for us yet unless we stop
him.”
“I don’t understand,” said Joe.
“It’s this way,”
MacNutt explained. “McCane has his instructions,
but you can’t prove them. Suppose he claims
a log and doesn’t get it and a fight starts
between the crews why, he’s jobbing
the limit himself and the Clancys ain’t responsible.”
“A bit of a scrap won’t matter,”
said Joe cheerfully.
“It will matter if the woods
ain’t big enough to hold but one crew ours
or theirs,” returned MacNutt. “I’ve
seen it happen before.”
“Tell me about it,” said
Joe. He listened eagerly to the concise narrative
that followed, which was the little-known history of
a logging war in which the casualties were large.
“The dead men were reported
killed by falling timber,” the foreman concluded.
“Five of them there was five lives,
and all for one pine tree that turned out punk when
it was cut.” He tapped his pipe out against
the stove. “You’ll be tired.
I get up before light, but I’ll try not to wake
you, Mr. Kent.”
“I’ll get up when you
do,” said Joe. “I’m going out
on the job with the crew.”
“All right; I’ll wake
you,” said the foreman without comment, but
likewise without conviction.
In the morning or as it
seemed to Joe about midnight he awoke with
a light in his eyes and the foreman’s hand on
his shoulder. The light came from the lamp.
Outside it was pitch dark, and the wind was shouting
through the forest and whining around the cabin.
Now and then a volley of snow pattered against the
window.
By way of contrast never had a bed
seemed so absolutely comfortable. For a moment
he was tempted to exercise his right to sleep.
The ghost of a smile on MacNutt’s face decided
for him. He tumbled out, soused his head in water,
pulled on his heavy clothes, high German socks, and
moccasins, and in five minutes stood, a very solid,
good-looking young lumber jack with a very healthy
appetite for breakfast.
The darkness was lifting when the
crew left camp for the woods. Joe and the foreman
tramped behind. There was little speech.
However excellent early rising may be theoretically
it does not sweeten the temper, especially in mid-winter.
There was a notable absence of laughter, of jest,
even of ordinarily civil conversation. Almost
every man bent his energies to the consumption of
tobacco. They had not shaken off the lethargy
of the night, and their mental processes were not yet
astir. They plodded mechanically, backs humped,
eyes upon the ground, dully resentful of the weather,
the work, of existence itself.
Arrived at the scene of operations,
the lethargy vanished. Men sighed as they lifted
axes for the first blow such a sigh as one
gives when stooping to resume a burden. With
the fall of the blow, and the shock of it running
up the helve through arms and shoulders, they were
completely awake. What remained of the dull,
aimless resentment was directed at the timber that
ringed them around the timber that represented
at once a livelihood and an unending toil.
Joe followed MacNutt, keenly observant.
He knew little about the work how it should
be done, how much each man and team should do, where
odd moments might be saved, and the way in which a
desired object might be accomplished with the least
expenditure of effort. But he was by no means
absolutely ignorant, for, like the average young American,
he had spent considerable time in the woods, which
involves a more or less intimate acquaintance with
the axe, and he had also the average American’s
aptitude for tools and constructive work of any kind.
Then, too, he had absorbed unconsciously much theory
from his father and from the conversation of his father’s
friends, added to which was the study and thought
of the past few months. Thus he possessed a groundwork.
Remained analysis of the actual individual operations
as they were performed before his eyes, and synthesis
into a whole.
With the foreman he went over most
of the job, from the first slashings to the river
rollways, and thus gained a comprehensive idea of what
had been done, what remained to do, and what time
there was to do it in. He drank scalding tea
and ate pork, bread, and doughnuts with the men at
noon, and smoked a pipe, sheltered from the biting
north wind by a thick clump of firs. In the afternoon,
to keep himself warm, he took an axe and trimmed tree
tops with the swampers, showing a fair degree of efficiency
with the implement. Also he took a turn at the
end of the long, flexible cross-cut saw, an exercise
which made a new set of muscles ache; but he learned
the rudiments of it to pull with a long,
smooth, level swing, not to push, but to let the other
man pull on the return motion, to tap in a wedge when
the settling trunk began to bind the thin, rending
ribbon of steel, and to use kerosene on the blade when
it gummed and pulled heavily and stickily. When
the work ceased with the falling darkness he tramped
back to camp with the men, ate a huge supper, spent
an hour in the bunk-house with them, and sang them
a couple of songs which were received with wild applause,
and then rolled into his bunk, dog-tired, and was
asleep as his head settled in the pillow.
Behind him, in the sleeping-camp,
he left a favourable impression.
“He’s good stuff, that
lad,” said Haggarty. “He minds me
of some one a good man, too.”
“Would it be Alec Macnamara,
now?” asked Regan. Macnamara, a famous
“white-water birler,” had met his fate
in the breaking of a log-jam some years before.
“That’s who it is, God
rest his soul,” said Haggarty. “He’s
younger, but he’s the dead spit of Alec in the
eyes an’ mouth. It’s my belief he
laughs when he fights, like him, an’ he’d
die game as Alec died.”
Whether Haggarty’s belief was
right or wrong did not appear. Nothing arose
to put the young boss’s courage to a test.
All went merry as a marriage bell, and the quantity
of logs pouring down to the banking grounds attested
the quality of the work done. Then came trouble
out of a comparatively clear sky.
One day Joe was bossing the job, MacNutt
being in camp. His bossing, truth to tell, lay
more in the moral effect of his presence than in issuing
orders or giving instruction. Having the good
sense to recognize his present limitations, he let
the men alone. The air was soft with a promise
of snow, and he lit his pipe and sauntered up the logging
road.
Before a skidway stood four men in
hot argument. Two of these were Haggarty and
Jackson. One was unknown to Kent. The fourth
he recognized as Rough Shan McCane.
“Here’s Mr. Kent now,”
said Haggarty, catching sight of him.
Rough Shan favored Joe with a contemptuous
stare. “Where’s MacNutt?” he
demanded. “I told him this log stealin’
had got to stop.”
“MacNutt is in camp,”
said Joe. “You can talk to me if you like.
What’s the matter?”
Rough Shan cursed the absent foreman.
“Log stealin’s the matter,” he announced.
“A load of our logs has gone slick an’
clean.”
“Gone where?” asked Joe coldly.
“MacNutt knows where!”
asserted Rough Shan with an oath. “This
is the second time. I’m goin’ to
find them, an’ when I do
“What’ll ye do?”
demanded Haggarty truculently. “It is the
likes of you can come over here an’ say
“Dry up, Haggarty!” Joe
commanded shortly. “Now, look here, Mr.
McCane, we haven’t got your logs.”
“But ye have,” Rough Shan
proclaimed loudly. “I know the dirty tricks
of ye. That’s stealin’ stealin’,
d’ye mind, young felly? I want them logs
an’ I want ’em quick, drawed over an’
decked on our skidways an’ no words about it.
As it is, I’m a good mind to run ye out o’
the woods.”
Joe’s temper began to boil.
Here was an elemental condition confronting him.
Rough Shan was big and hard and tough, but he was not
much awed. To him the big lumber jack was not
more formidable than any one of a score of husky young
giants who had done their several and collective bests
to break his neck on the football field, and he was
not inclined to take any further gratuitous abuse.
“What makes you think we took your logs?”
he asked.
“Who else could ‘a’ done it?”
demanded Rough Shan with elemental logic.
“You might have done it yourself,”
Joe told him. “Now, you listen to me for
a minute and keep a civil tongue in your head.
You’re trying to make trouble for us, and I
know it, and I know who is behind you. If you
want a row you can have it, now or any old time.
You won’t run anybody out of the woods.
As for the logs, you know what MacNutt told you.
Still, if you can prove ownership of any, satisfactorily
to me, you may haul them back with the team you hauled
them in with. But, mind you, this is the last
time. The trick is stale, and you mustn’t
play it again.”
“I’ll find them an’
then I’ll talk to you,” said Rough Shan
with contempt. “Come on, Mike.”
He made for the nearest skidway.
“You two men go along and tell
the boys to let him look till he’s tired,”
said Joe to Haggarty and Jackson. “Don’t
scrap with him, remember.”
“Well, we’ll try not,”
said Haggarty. “That’s Mike Callahan
wid him a divil!”
“You do what I tell you!”
Joe snapped, and Haggarty and Jackson uttered a suddenly
respectful “Yes, sir.”
In half an hour Jackson came for Joe.
He found Rough Shan at the banking grounds. Before
him lay a little pile of thin, round circles of wood;
also sawdust. McCane picked one circle up and
handed it to him.
It was a slice cut from the end of
a saw log. One side was blank. On the other
the letters “CB” proclaiming the ownership
of Clancy Brothers were deeply indented.
“Well, what about it?” asked Joe.
“What about it!” Rough
Shan repeated. “Here’s the ends sawed
from our marked logs. Then ye mark them fresh
for yerself. A nice trick! That’s
jail for some wan.”
“Pretty smooth,” said
Joe. “Saves you the trouble of hauling the
logs in here, doesn’t it? One man could
carry these ends in a sack.”
Rough Shan glared at him. “I
want them logs, an’ I want them now,” he
cried with an oath.
“All right; take them,”
Joe retorted. “Of course you’ll have
to match these ends on the logs they belong to.
Possibly you overlooked that little detail. Haggarty,
you see that he makes a good fit.”
Haggarty grinned. “Then
I’m thinkin’ I’ll be goin’
over onto Clancys’ limit wid him,” he
commented.
Rough Shan took a fierce step forward.
Joe stood his ground and the other paused.
“Our logs is here,” he
exclaimed. “These ends proves it. I’ll
not match them, nor try to. I give ye an hour
to deliver a full load of logs, average twelve-inch
tops, at our skidways.”
“Not a log, unless you prove
ownership of it, and then you do your own delivering,”
said Joe. “Pshaw! McCane, what’s
the use? You can’t bluff me. Let your
employers go to law if they want to.”
“Law!” cried Rough Shan.
“We run our own law in these woods, young felly.
I give ye fair warnin’!”
“You make me tired,” Joe
retorted. “Why don’t you do
something?”
Joe was quick on his feet, but he
was quite unprepared for the sudden blow which Rough
Shan delivered. It caught him on the jaw and staggered
him. Instantly Haggarty hurled himself at McCane,
while Jackson tackled Callahan. The men at the
rollways ran to the scrap. Callahan floored Jackson
and went for Joe, who met him with straight, stiff
punches which surprised the redoubtable Mike.
As reinforcements came up, McCane and his henchman
backed against a pile of timber.
“Come on, ye measly log stealers!”
roared the foreman, thoroughly in his element.
The odds against him had no effect save to stimulate
his language. He poured forth a torrent of the
vilest abuse that ever defiled a pinery. Beside
him Callahan, heavy-set and gorilla-armed, supplemented
his remarks. There was no doubt of the thorough
gameness of the pair.
In went Haggarty, Reese, Ward, and
Chartrand. Others followed. The rush simply
overwhelmed the two. They went down, using fists,
knees, and feet impartially. A dozen men strove
to get at them.
Joe’s sense of fair play was
outraged. He caught the nearest man by the collar
and slung him back twenty feet.
“Quit it!” he shouted.
“Haggarty! Chartrand! White! Let
them alone, do you hear me?” In his anger he
rose to heights of unsuspected eloquence and his words
cut like whips. The men disentangled before his
voice and hands. At the bottom Haggarty and Rough
Shan, locked in a deadly grip, fought like bulldogs,
each trying for room to apply the knee to the other’s
stomach.
“Pull ’em apart!”
Joe ordered sharply, and unwilling hands did so.
They cursed each other with deep hatred. Their
vocabularies were much on a par and highly unedifying.
“That’ll do, Haggarty!”
Joe rasped. “McCane, you shut your dirty
mouth and get out of here.”
“You ” McCane began venomously.
“Don’t say it,” Joe warned him.
“Clear out!”
“A dozen of ye to two!”
cried McCane. “If I had ye alone, Kent,
I’d put ye acrost me knee!”
“Come to my camp any night this
week and I’ll take you with the gloves,”
said Joe. “If you want a scrap for all hands
bring your crew with you. Now, boys, get back
on the job. We’ve wasted enough time.
These men are going.”
He turned away, and the men scattered
unwillingly to their several employments. Rough
Shan and Callahan, left alone, hesitated, shouted a
few perfunctory curses, and finally tramped off.
But every one who knew them knew also that this was
only the beginning.