A CLOSE CALL AND A NEW ACQUAINTANCE
With the recurrence of spring, Fyfe’s
household transferred itself to the Roaring Lake bungalow
again. Stella found the change welcome, for Vancouver
wearied her. It was a little too crude, too much
as yet in the transitory stage, in that civic hobbledehoy
period which overtakes every village that shoots up
over-swiftly to a city’s dimensions. They
knew people, to be sure, for the Abbey influence would
have opened the way for them into any circle.
Stella had made many friends and pleasant acquaintances
that summer on the lake, but part of that butterfly
clique sought pleasanter winter grounds before she
was fit for social activity. Apart from a few
more or less formal receptions and an occasional auction
party, she found it pleasanter to stay at home.
Fyfe himself had spent only part of his time in town
after their boy was born. He was extending his
timber operations. What he did not put into words,
but what Stella sensed because she experienced the
same thing herself, was that town bored him to death, such
town existence as Vancouver afforded. Their first
winter had been different, because they had sought
places where there was manifold variety of life, color,
amusement. She was longing for the wide reach
of Roaring Lake, the immense amphitheater of the surrounding
mountains, long before spring.
So she was quite as well pleased when
a mild April saw them domiciled at home again.
In addition to Sam Foo and Feng Shu, there was a nurse
for Jack Junior. Stella did not suggest that;
Fyfe insisted on it. He was quite proud of his
boy, but he did not want her chained to her baby.
“If the added expense doesn’t
count, of course a nurse will mean a lot more personal
freedom,” Stella admitted. “You see,
I haven’t the least idea of your resources,
Jack. All I know about it is that you allow me
plenty of money for my individual expenses. And
I notice we’re acquiring a more expensive mode
of living all the time.”
“That’s so,” Fyfe
responded. “I never have gone into any details
of my business with you. No reason why you shouldn’t
know what limits there are to our income. You
never happened to express any curiosity before.
Operating as I did up till lately, the business netted
anywhere from twelve to fifteen thousand a year.
I’ll double that this season. In fact,
with the amount of standing timber I control, I could
make it fifty thousand a year by expanding and speeding
things up. I guess you needn’t worry about
an extra servant or two.”
So, apart from voluntary service on
behalf of Jack Junior, she was free as of old to order
her days as she pleased. Yet that small morsel
of humanity demanded much of her time, because she
released through the maternal floodgates a part of
that passionate longing to bestow love where her heart
willed. Sometimes she took issue with herself
over that wayward tendency. By all the rules
of the game, she should have loved her husband.
He was like a rock, solid, enduring, patient, kind,
and generous. He stood to her in the most intimate
relation that can exist between a man and a woman.
But she never fooled herself; she never had so far
as Jack Fyfe was concerned. She liked him, but
that was all. He was good to her, and she was
grateful.
Sometimes she had a dim sense that
under his easy-going exterior lurked a capacity for
tremendously passionate outbreak. If she had been
compelled to modify her first impression of him as
an arrogant, dominant sort of character, scarcely
less rough than the brown firs out of which he was
hewing a fortune, she knew likewise that she had never
seen anything but the sunny side of him. He still
puzzled her a little at times; there were odd flashes
of depths she could not see into, a quality of unexpectedness
in things he would do and say. Even so, granting
that in him was embodied so much that other men she
knew lacked, she did not love him; there were indeed
times when she almost resented him.
Why, she could not perhaps have put
into words. It seemed too fantastic for sober
summing-up, when she tried. But lurking always
in the background of her thoughts was the ghost of
an unrealized dream, a nebulous vision which once
served to thrill her in secret. It could never
be anything but a vision, she believed now, and believing,
regretted. The cold facts of her existence couldn’t
be daydreamed away. She was married, and marriage
put a full stop to the potential adventuring of youth.
Twenty and maidenhood lies at the opposite pole from
twenty-four and matrimony. Stella subscribed to
that. She took for her guiding-star theoretically the
twin concepts of morality and duty as she had been
taught to construe them. So she saw no loophole,
and seeing none, felt cheated of something infinitely
precious. Marriage and motherhood had not come
to her as the fruits of love, as the passionately
eager fulfilling of her destiny. It had been thrust
upon her. She had accepted it as a last resort
at a time when her powers of resistance to misfortune
were at the ebb.
She knew that this sort of self-communing
was a bad thing, that it was bound to sour the whole
taste of life in her mouth. As much as possible
she thrust aside those vague, repressed longings.
Materially she had everything. If she had foregone
that bargain with Jack Fyfe, God only knew what long-drawn
agony of mind and body circumstances and Charlie Benton’s
subordination of her to his own ends might have inflicted
upon her. That was the reverse of her shield,
but one that grew dimmer as time passed. Mostly,
she took life as she found it, concentrating upon
Jack Junior, a sturdy boy with blue eyes like his father,
and who grew steadily more adorable.
Nevertheless she had recurring periods
when moodiness and ill-stifled discontent got hold
of her. Sometimes she stole out along the cliffs
to sit on a mossy boulder, staring with absent eyes
at the distant hills. And sometimes she would
slip out in a canoe, to lie rocking in the lake swell, just
dreaming, filled with a passive sort of regret.
She could not change things now, but she could not
help wishing she could.
Fyfe warned her once about getting
offshore in the canoe. Roaring Lake, pent in
the shape of a boomerang between two mountain ranges,
was subject to squalls. Sudden bursts of wind
would shoot down its length like blasts from some
monster funnel. Stella knew that; she had seen
the glassy surface torn into whitecaps in ten minutes,
but she was not afraid of the lake nor the lake winds.
She was hard and strong. The open, the clean
mountain air, and a measure of activity, had built
her up physically. She swam like a seal.
Out in that sixteen-foot Peterboro she could detach
herself from her world of reality, lie back on a cushion,
and lose herself staring at the sky. She paid
little heed to Fyfe’s warning beyond a smiling
assurance that she had no intention of courting a
watery end.
So one day in mid-July she waved a
farewell to Jack Junior, crowing in his nurse’s
lap on the bank, paddled out past the first point to
the north, and pillowing her head on a cushioned thwart,
gave herself up to dreamy contemplation on the sky.
There was scarce a ripple on the lake. A faint
breath of an offshore breeze fanned her, drifting the
canoe at a snail’s pace out from land.
Stella luxuriated in the quiet afternoon. A party
of campers cruising the lake had tarried at the bungalow
till after midnight. Jack Fyfe had risen at dawn
to depart for some distant logging point. Stella,
once wakened, had risen and breakfasted with him.
She was tired, drowsy, content to lie there in pure
physical relaxation. Lying so, before she was
aware of it, her eyes closed.
She wakened with a start at a cold
touch of moisture on her face, rain, great
pattering drops. Overhead an ominously black cloud
hid the face of the sun. The shore, when she
looked, lay a mile and a half abeam. To the north
and between her and the land’s rocky line was
a darkening of the lake’s surface. Stella
reached for her paddle. The black cloud let fall
long, gray streamers of rain. There was scarcely
a stirring of the air, but that did not deceive her.
There was a growing chill, and there was that broken
line sweeping down the lake. Behind that was wind,
a summer gale, the black squall dreaded by the Siwashes.
She had to buck her way to shore through
that. She drove hard on the paddle. She
was not afraid, but there rose in her a peculiar tensed-up
feeling. Ahead lay a ticklish bit of business.
The sixteen-foot canoe dwarfed to pitiful dimensions
in the face of that snarling line of wind-harried
water. She could hear the distant murmur of it
presently, and gusty puffs of wind began to strike
her.
Then it swept up to her, a ripple,
a chop, and very close behind that the short, steep,
lake combers with a wind that blew off the tops as
each wave-head broke in white, bubbling froth.
Immediately she began to lose ground. She had
expected that, and it did not alarm her. If she
could keep the canoe bow on, there was an even chance
that the squall would blow itself out in half an hour.
But keeping the canoe bow on proved a task for stout
arms. The wind would catch all that forward part
which thrust clear as she topped a sea and twist it
aside, tending always to throw her broadside into
the trough. Spray began to splash aboard.
The seas were so short and steep that the Peterboro
would rise over the crest of a tall one and dip its
bow deep in the next, or leap clear to strike with
a slap that made Stella’s heart jump. She
had never undergone quite that rough and tumble experience
in a small craft. She was being beaten farther
out and down the lake, and her arms were growing tired.
Nor was there any slackening of the wind.
The combined rain and slaps of spray
soaked her thoroughly. A puddle gathered about
her knees in the bilge, sloshing fore and aft as the
craft pitched, killing the natural buoyancy of the
canoe so that she dove harder. Stella took a
chance, ceased paddling, and bailed with a small can.
She got a tossing that made her head swim while she
lay in the trough. And when she tried to head
up into it again, one comber bigger than its fellows
reared up and slapped a barrel of water inboard.
The next wave swamped her.
Sunk to the clamps, Stella held fast
to the topsides, crouching on her knees, immersed
to the hips in water that struck a chill through her
flesh. She had the wit to remember and act upon
Jack Fyfe’s coaching, namely, to sit tight and
hang on. No sea that ever ran can sink a canoe.
Wood is buoyant. So long as she could hold on,
the submerged craft would keep her head and shoulders
above water. But it was numbing cold. Fed
by glacial streams, Roaring Lake is icy in hottest
midsummer.
What with paddling and bailing and
the excitement of the struggle, Stella had wasted
no time gazing about for other boats. She knew
that if any one at the camp saw her, rescue would
be speedily effected. Now, holding fast and sitting
quiet, she looked eagerly about as the swamped canoe
rose loggily on each wave. Almost immediately
she was heartened by seeing distinctly some sort of
craft plunging through the blow. She had not
long to wait after that, for the approaching launch
was a lean-lined speeder, powerfully engined, and
she was being forced. Stella supposed it was
one of the Abbey runabouts. Even with her teeth
chattering and numbness fastening itself upon her,
she shivered at the chances the man was taking.
It was no sea for a speed boat to smash into at thirty
miles an hour. She saw it shoot off the top of
one wave and disappear in a white burst of spray,
slash through the next and bury itself deep again,
flinging a foamy cloud far to port and starboard.
Stella cried futilely to the man to slow down.
She could hang on a long time yet, but her voice carried
no distance.
After that she had not long to wait.
In four minutes the runabout was within a hundred
yards, open exhausts cracking like a machine gun.
And then the very thing she expected and dreaded came
about. Every moment she expected to see him drive
bows under and go down. Here and there at intervals
uplifted a comber taller than its fellows, standing,
just as it broke, like a green wall. Into one
such hoary-headed sea the white boat now drove like
a lance. Stella saw the spray leap like a cascade,
saw the solid green curl deep over the forward deck
and engine hatch and smash the low windshield.
She heard the glass crack. Immediately the roaring
exhausts died. Amid the whistle of the wind and
the murmur of broken water, the launch staggered like
a drunken man, lurched off into the trough, deep down
by the head with the weight of water she had taken.
The man in her stood up with hands cupped over his
mouth.
“Can you hang on a while longer?”
he shouted. “Till I can get my boat bailed?”
“I’m all right,” she called back.
She saw him heave up the engine hatch.
For a minute or two he bailed rapidly. Then he
spun the engine, without result. He straightened
up at last, stood irresolute a second, peeled off
his coat.
The launch lay heavily in the trough.
The canoe, rising and clinging on the crest of each
wave, was carried forward a few feet at a time, taking
the run of the sea faster than the disabled motorboat.
So now only a hundred-odd feet separated them, but
they could come no nearer, for the canoe was abeam
and slowly drifting past.
Stella saw the man stoop and stand
up with a coil of line in his hand. Then she
gasped, for he stepped on the coaming and plunged overboard
in a beautiful, arching dive. A second later
his head showed glistening above the gray water, and
he swam toward her with a slow, overhand stroke.
It seemed an age although the actual time
was brief enough before he reached her.
She saw then that there was method in his madness,
for the line strung out behind him, fast to a cleat
on the launch. He laid hold of the canoe and
rested a few seconds, panting, smiling broadly at
her.
“Sorry that whopping wave put
me out of commission,” he said at last.
“I’d have had you ashore by now. Hang
on for a minute.”
He made the line fast to a thwart
near the bow. Holding fast with one hand, he
drew the swamped canoe up to the launch. In that
continuous roll it was no easy task to get Stella
aboard, but they managed it, and presently she sat
shivering in the cockpit, watching the man spill the
water out of the Peterboro till it rode buoyantly again.
Then he went to work at his engine methodically, wiping
dry the ignition terminals, all the various connections
where moisture could effect a short circuit. At
the end of a few minutes, he turned the starting crank.
The multiple cylinders fired with a roar.
He moved back behind the wrecked windshield
where the steering gear stood.
“Well, Miss Ship-wrecked Mariner,”
said he lightly, “where do you wish to be landed?”
“Over there, if you please.”
Stella pointed to where the red roof of the bungalow
stood out against the green. “I’m
Mrs. Fyfe.”
“Ah!” said he. An
expression of veiled surprise flashed across his face.
“Another potential romance strangled at birth.
You know, I hoped you were some local maiden before
whom I could pose as a heroic rescuer. Such is
life. Odd, too. Linda Abbey I’m
the Monohan tail to the Abbey business kite, you see impressed
me as pilot for a spin this afternoon and backed out
at the last moment. I think she smelled this blow.
So I went out for a ride by myself. I was glowering
at that new house through a glass when I spied you
out in the thick of it.”
He had the clutch in now, and the
launch was cleaving the seas, even at half speed throwing
out wide wings of spray. Some of this the wind
brought across the cockpit. “Come up into
this seat,” Monohan commanded. “I
don’t suppose you can get any wetter, but if
you put your feet through this bulkhead door, the
heat from the engine will warm you. By Jove,
you’re fairly shivering.”
“It’s lucky for me you
happened along,” Stella remarked, when she was
ensconced behind the bulkhead. “I was getting
so cold. I don’t know how much longer I
could have stood it.”
“Thank the good glasses that
picked you out. You were only a speck on the
water, you know, when I sighted you first.”
He kept silent after that. All
his faculties were centered on the seas ahead which
rolled up before the sharp cutwater of the launch.
He was making time and still trying to avoid boarding
seas. When a big one lifted ahead, he slowed
down. He kept one hand on the throttle control,
whistling under his breath disconnected snatches of
song. Stella studied his profile, clean-cut as
a cameo and wholly pleasing. He was almost as
big-bodied as Jack Fyfe, and full four inches taller.
The wet shirt clinging close to his body outlined
well-knit shoulders, ropy-muscled arms. He could
easily have posed for a Viking, so strikingly blond
was he, with fair, curly hair. She judged that
he might be around thirty, yet his face was altogether
boyish.
Sitting there beside him, shivering
in her wet clothes, she found herself wondering what
magnetic quality there could be about a man that focussed
a woman’s attention upon him whether she willed
it or no. Why should she feel an oddly-disturbing
thrill at the mere physical nearness of this fair-haired
stranger? She did. There was no debating
that. And she wondered wondered if
a bolt of that lightning she had dreaded ever since
her marriage was about to strike her now. She
hoped not. All her emotions had lain fallow.
If Jack Fyfe had no power to stir her, and
she told herself Jack had so failed, without asking
herself why, then some other man might
easily accomplish that, to her unutterable grief.
She had told herself many a time that no more terrible
plight could overtake her than to love and be loved
and sit with hands folded, foregoing it all.
She shrank from so tragic an evolution. It meant
only pain, the ache of unfulfilled, unattainable desires.
If, she reflected cynically, this man beside her stood
for such a motif in her life, he might better have
left her out in the swamped canoe.
While she sat there, drawn-faced with
the cold, thinking rather amazedly these things which
she told herself she had no right to think, the launch
slipped into the quiet nook of Cougar Bay and slowed
down to the float.
Monohan helped her out, threw off
the canoe’s painter, and climbed back into the
launch.
“You’re as wet as I am,”
Stella said. “Won’t you come up to
the house and get a change of clothes? I haven’t
even thanked you.”
“Nothing to be thanked for,”
he smiled up at her. “Only please remember
not to get offshore in a canoe again. I mightn’t
be handy the next time and Roaring Lake’s
as fickle as your charming sex. All smiles one
minute, storming the next. No, I won’t stay
this time, thanks. A little wet won’t hurt
me. I wasn’t in the water long enough to
get chilled, you know. I’ll be home in
half an hour. Run along and get dressed, Mrs.
Fyfe, and drink something hot to drive that chill away.
Good-by.”
Stella went up to the house, her hand
tingling with his parting grip. Over and above
the peril she had escaped rose an uneasy vision of
a greater peril to her peace of mind. The platitudes
of soul-affinity, of irresistible magnetic attraction,
of love that leaped full-blown into reality at the
touch of a hand or the glance of an eye, she had always
viewed with distrust, holding them the weaknesses of
weak, volatile natures. But there was something
about this man which had stirred her, nothing that
he said or did, merely some elusive, personal attribute.
She had never undergone any such experience, and she
puzzled over it now. A chance stranger, and his
touch could make her pulse leap. It filled her
with astonished dismay.
Afterward, dry-clad and warm, sitting
in her pet chair, Jack Junior cooing at her from a
nest among cushions on the floor, the natural reaction
set in, and she laughed at herself. When Fyfe
came home, she told him lightly of her rescue.
He said nothing at first, only sat
drumming on his chair-arm, his eyes steady on her.
“That might have cost you your
life,” he said at last. “Will you
remember not to drift offshore again?”
“I rather think I shall,”
she responded. “It wasn’t a pleasant
experience.”
“Monohan, eh?” he remarked
after another interval. “So he’s on
Roaring Lake again.”
“Do you know him?” she asked.
“Yes,” he replied briefly.
For a minute or so longer he sat there,
his face wearing its habitual impassiveness.
Then he got up, kissed her with a queer sort of intensity,
and went put. Stella gazed after him, mildly surprised.
It wasn’t quite in his usual manner.