DURANCE VILE
By September first a growing uneasiness
hardened into distasteful certainty upon Stella.
It had become her firm resolve to get what money was
due her when Charlie marketed his logs and try another
field of labor. That camp on Roaring Lake was
becoming a nightmare to her. She had no inherent
dislike for work. She was too vibrantly alive
to be lazy. But she had had an overdose of unaccustomed
drudgery, and she was growing desperate. If there
had been anything to keep her mind from continual
dwelling on the manifold disagreeableness she had to
cope with, she might have felt differently, but there
was not. She ate, slept, worked, ate,
slept, and worked again, till every fibre
of her being cried out in protest against the deadening
round. She was like a flower striving to attain
its destiny of bloom in soil overrun with rank weeds.
Loneliness and hard, mean work, day after day, in which
all that had ever seemed desirable in life had neither
place nor consideration, were twin evils of isolation
and flesh-wearying labor, from which she felt that
she must get away, or go mad.
But she did not go. Benton left
to make his delivery to the mill company, the great
boom of logs gliding slowly along in the wake of a
tug, the Chickamin in attendance. Benton’s
crew accompanied the boom. Fyfe’s gang
loaded their donkey and gear aboard the scow and went
home. The bay lay all deserted, the woods silent.
For the first time in three months she had all her
hours free, only her own wants to satisfy. Katy
John spent most of her time in the smoky camp of her
people. Stella loafed. For two days she
did nothing, gave herself up to a physical torpor
she had never known before. She did not want to
read, to walk about, or even lift her eyes to the
bold mountains that loomed massive across the lake.
It was enough to lie curled among pillows under the
alder and stare drowsily at the blue September sky,
half aware of the drone of a breeze in the firs, the
flutter of birds’ wings, and the lap of water
on the beach.
Presently, however, the old restless
energy revived. The spring came back to her step
and she shed that lethargy like a cast-off garment.
And in so doing her spirit rose in hot rebellion against
being a prisoner to deadening drudgery, against being
shut away from all the teeming life that throve and
trafficked beyond the solitude in which she sat immured.
When Charlie came back, there was going to be a change.
She repeated that to herself with determination.
Between whiles she rambled about in the littered clearing,
prowled along the beaches, and paddled now and then
far outside the bay in a flat-bottomed skiff, restless,
full of plans. So far as she saw, she would have
to face some city alone, but she viewed that prospect
with a total absence of the helpless feeling which
harassed her so when she first took train for her brother’s
camp. She had passed through what she termed
a culinary inferno. Nothing, she considered,
could be beyond her after that unremitting drudgery.
But Benton failed to come back on
the appointed day. The four days lengthened to
a week. Then the Panther, bound up-lake,
stopped to leave a brief note from Charlie, telling
her business had called him to Vancouver.
Altogether it was ten days before
the Chickamin whistled up the bay. She
slid in beside the float, her decks bristling with
men like a passenger craft. Stella, so thoroughly
sated with loneliness that she temporarily forgot
her grievances, flew to meet her brother. But
one fair glimpse of the disembarking crew turned her
back. They were all in varying stages of liquor from
two or three who had to be hauled over the float and
up to the bunkhouse like sacks of bran, to others who
were so happily under the influence of John Barleycorn
that every move was some silly antic. She retreated
in disgust. When Charlie reached the cabin, he
himself proved to be fairly mellow, in the best of
spirits speaking truly in the double sense.
“Hello, lady,” he hailed
jovially. “How did you fare all by your
lonesome this long time? I didn’t figure
to be gone so long, but there was a lot to attend
to. How are you, anyway?”
“All right,” she answered
coolly. “You evidently celebrated your log
delivery in the accepted fashion.”
“Don’t you believe it,”
he grinned amiably. “I had a few drinks
with the boys on the way up, that’s all.
No, sir, it was straight business with a capital B
all the time I was gone. I’ve got a good
thing in hand, Sis big money in sight.
Tell you about it later. Think you and Katy can
rustle grub for this bunch by six?”
“Oh, I suppose so,” she
said shortly. It was on the tip of her tongue
to tell him then and there that she was through, like
Matt, the cook, that memorable afternoon, “completely
an’ ab-sho-lutely through.” She refrained.
There was no use in being truculent. But that
drunken crowd looked formidable in numbers.
“How many extra?” she asked mechanically.
“Thirty men, all told,”
Benton returned briskly. “I tell you I’m
sure going to rip the heart out of this limit before
spring. I’ve signed up a six-million-foot
contract for delivery as soon as the logs’ll
go over Roaring Rapids in the spring. Remember
what I told you when you came? You stick with
me, and you’ll wear diamonds. I stand to
clean up twenty thousand on the winter’s work.”
“In that case, you should be
able to hire a real cook,” she suggested, a
spice of malice in her tone.
“I sure will, when it begins
to come right,” he promised largely. “And
I’ll give you a soft job keeping books then.
Well, I’ll lend you a hand for to-night.
Where’s the Siwash maiden?”
“Over at the camp; there she
comes now,” Stella replied. “Will
you start a fire, Charlie, while I change my dress?”
“You look like a peach in that
thing.” He stood off a pace to admire.
“You’re some dame, Stell, when you get
on your glad rags.”
She frowned at her image in the glass
behind the closed door of her room as she set about
unfastening the linen dress she had worn that afternoon.
Deep in her trunk, along with much other unused finery,
it had reposed all summer. That ingrained instinct
to be admired, to be garbed fittingly and well, came
back to her as soon as she was rested. And though
there were none but squirrels and bluejays and occasionally
Katy John to cast admiring eyes upon her, it had pleased
her for a week to wear her best, and wander about
the beaches and among the dusky trunks of giant fir,
a picture of blooming, well-groomed womanhood.
She took off the dress and threw it on the bed with
a resentful rush of feeling. The treadmill gaped
for her again. But not for long. She was
through with that. She was glad that Charlie’s
prospects pleased him. He could not call on her
to help him out of a hole now. She would tell
him her decision to-night. And as soon as he
could get a cook to fill her place, then good-by to
Roaring Lake, good-by to kitchen smells and flies
and sixteen hours a day over a hot stove.
She wondered why such a loathing of
the work afflicted her; if all who earned their bread
in the sweat of their brow were ridden with that feeling, woodsmen,
cooks, chauffeurs, the slaves of personal service
and the great industrial mills alike? Her heart
went out to them if they were. But she was quite
sure that work could be otherwise than repellent,
enslaving. She recalled that cooks and maids had
worked in her father’s house with no sign of
the revolt that now assailed her. But it seemed
to her that their tasks had been light compared with
the job of cooking in Charlie Benton’s camp.
Curiously enough, while she changed
her clothes, her thoughts a jumble of present things
she disliked and the unknown that she would have to
face alone in Vancouver, she found her mind turning
on Jack Fyfe. During his three weeks’ stay,
they had progressed less in the direction of acquaintances
than she and Paul Abbey had done in two meetings.
Fyfe talked to her now and then briefly, but he looked
at her more than he talked. Where his searching
gaze disturbed, his speech soothed, it was so coolly
impersonal. That, she deemed, was merely another
of his odd contradictions. He was contradictory.
Stella classified Jack Fyfe as a creature of unrestrained
passions. She recognized, or thought she recognized,
certain dominant, primitive characteristics, and they
did not excite her admiration. Men admired him those
who were not afraid of him. If he had been of
more polished clay, she could readily have grasped
this attitude. But in her eyes he was merely a
rude, masterful man, uncommonly gifted with physical
strength, dominating other rude, strong men by sheer
brute force. And she herself rather despised sheer
brute force. The iron hand should fitly be concealed
beneath the velvet glove.
Yet in spite of the bold look in his
eyes that always confused and irritated her, Fyfe
had never singled her out for the slightest attention
of the kind any man bestows upon an attractive woman.
Stella was no fool. She knew that she was attractive,
and she knew why. She had been prepared to repulse,
and there had been nothing to repulse. Once during
Charlie’s absence he had come in a rowboat, hailed
her from the beach, and gone away without disembarking
when she told him Benton was not back. He was
something of an enigma, she confessed to herself, after
all. Perhaps that was why he came so frequently
into her mind. Or perhaps, she told herself,
there was so little on Roaring Lake to think about
that one could not escape the personal element.
As if any one ever could. As if life were made
up of anything but the impinging of one personality
upon another. That was something Miss Stella Benton
had yet to learn. She was still mired in the
rampant egotism of untried youth, as yet the sublime
individualist.
That side of her suffered a distinct
shock later in the evening. When supper was over,
the work done, and the loggers’ celebration was
slowly subsiding in the bunkhouse, she told Charlie
with blunt directness what she wanted to do.
With equally blunt directness he declared that he
would not permit it. Stella’s teeth came
together with an angry little click.
“I’m of age, Charlie,”
she said to him. “It isn’t for you
to say what you will or will not permit me
to do. I want that money of mine that you used and
what I’ve earned. God knows I have
earned it. I can’t stand this work, and
I don’t intend to. It isn’t work;
it’s slavery.”
“But what can you do in town?”
he countered. “You haven’t the least
idea what you’d be going up against, Stell.
You’ve never been away from home, and you’ve
never had the least training at anything useful.
You’d be on your uppers in no time at all.
You wouldn’t have a ghost of a chance.”
“I have such a splendid chance
here,” she retorted ironically. “If
I could get in any position where I’d be more
likely to die of sheer stagnation, to say nothing
of dirty drudgery, than in this forsaken hole, I’d
like to know how. I don’t think it’s
possible.”
“You could be a whole lot worse
off, if you only knew it,” Benton returned grumpily.
“If you haven’t got any sense about things,
I have. I know what a rotten hole Vancouver or
any other seaport town is for a girl alone. I
won’t let you make any foolish break like that.
That’s flat.”
From this position she failed to budge
him. Once angered, partly by her expressed intention
and partly by the outspoken protest against the mountain
of work imposed on her, Charlie refused point-blank
to give her either the ninety dollars he had taken
out of her purse or the three months’ wages
due. Having made her request, and having met with
this to her amazing refusal,
Stella sat dumb. There was too fine a streak in
her to break out in recrimination. She was too
proud to cry.
So that she went to bed in a ferment
of helpless rage. Virtually she was a prisoner,
as much so as if Charlie had kidnaped her and held
her so by brute force. The economic restraint
was all potent. Without money she could not even
leave the camp. And when she contemplated the
daily treadmill before her, she shuddered.
At least she could go on strike.
Her round cheek flushed with the bitterest anger she
had ever known, she sat with eyes burning into the
dark of her sordid room, and vowed that the thirty
loggers should die of slow starvation if they did
not eat until she cooked another meal for them.