THE OPENING GUN
The month of November slid day by
day into the limbo of the past. The rains washed
the land unceasingly. Gray veilings of mist and
cloud draped the mountain slopes. As drab a shade
colored Stella Fyfe’s daily outlook. She
was alone a great deal. Even when they were together,
she and her husband, words did not come easily between
them. He was away a great deal, seeking, she
knew, the old panacea of work, hard, unremitting work,
to abate the ills of his spirit. She envied him
that outlet. Work for her there was none.
The two Chinamen and Martha the nurse left her no
tasks. She could not read, for all their great
store of books and magazines; the printed page would
lie idle in her lap, and her gaze would wander off
into vacancy, into that thought-world where her spirit
wandered in distress. The Abbeys were long gone;
her brother hard at his logging. There were no
neighbors and no news. The savor was gone out
of everything. The only bright spot in her days
was Jack Junior, now toddling precociously on his
sturdy legs, a dozen steps at a time, crowing victoriously
when he negotiated the passage from chair to chair.
From the broad east windows of their
house she saw all the traffic that came and went on
the upper reaches of Roaring Lake, Siwashes in dugouts
and fishing boats, hunters, prospectors. But more
than any other she saw the craft of her husband and
Monohan, the powerful, black-hulled Panther,
the smaller, daintier Waterbug.
There was a big gasoline workboat,
gray with a yellow funnel, that she knew was Monohan’s.
And this craft bore past there often, inching its
downward way with swifters of logs, driving fast up-lake
without a tow. Monohan had abandoned work on
the old Abbey-Monohan logging-grounds. The camps
and the bungalow lay deserted, given over to a solitary
watchman. The lake folk had chattered at this
proceeding, and the chatter had come to Stella’s
ears. He had put in two camps at the lake head,
so she heard indirectly: one on the lake shore,
one on the Tyee River, a little above the mouth.
He had sixty men in each camp, and he was getting the
name of a driver. Three miles above his Tyee
camp, she knew, lay the camp her husband had put in
during the early summer to cut a heavy limit of cedar.
Fyfe had only a small crew there.
She wondered a little why he spent
so much time there, when he had seventy-odd men working
near home. But of course he had an able lieutenant
in Lefty Howe. And she could guess why Jack Fyfe
kept away. She was sorry for him and
for herself. But being sorry a mere
semi-neutral state of mind did not help
matters, she told herself gloomily.
Lefty Howe’s wife was at the
camp now, on one of her occasional visits. Howe
was going across the lake one afternoon to see a Siwash
whom he had engaged to catch and smoke a winter’s
supply of salmon for the camps. Mrs. Howe told
Stella, and on impulse Stella bundled Jack Junior into
warm clothing and went with them for the ride.
Halfway across the six-mile span she
happened to look back, and a new mark upon the western
shore caught her eye. She found a glass and leveled
it on the spot. Two or three buildings, typical
logging-camp shacks of split cedar, rose back from
the beach. Behind these again the beginnings
of a cut had eaten a hole in the forest, a
slashing different from the ordinary logging slash,
for it ran narrowly, straight back through the timber;
whereas the first thing a logger does is to cut all
the merchantable timber he can reach on his limit without
moving his donkey from the water. It was not
more than two miles from their house.
“What new camp is that?” she asked Howe.
“Monohan’s,” he answered casually.
“I thought Jack owned all the shore timber to
Medicine Point?” she said.
Howe shook his head.
“Uh-uh. Well, he does too,
all but where that camp is. Monohan’s got
a freak limit in there. It’s half a mile
wide and two miles straight back from the beach.
Lays between our holdin’s like the ham in a sandwich.
Only,” he added thoughtfully, “it’s
a blame thin piece uh ham. About the poorest
timber in a long stretch. I dunno why the Sam
Hill he’s cuttin’ it. But then he’s
doin’ a lot uh things no practical logger would
do.”
Stella laid down the glasses.
It was nothing to her, she told herself. She
had seen Monohan only once since the day Fyfe choked
him, and then only to exchange the barest civilities and
to feel her heart flutter at the message his eyes
telegraphed.
When she returned from the launch
trip, Fyfe was home, and Charlie Benton with him.
She crossed the heavy rugs on the living room floor
noiselessly in her overshoes, carrying Jack Junior
asleep in her arms. And so in passing the door
of Fyfe’s den, she heard her brother say:
“But, good Lord, you don’t
suppose he’ll be sap-head enough to try such
fool stunts as that? He couldn’t make it
stick, and he brings himself within the law first
crack; and the most he could do would be to annoy
you.”
“You underestimate Monohan,”
Fyfe returned. “He’ll play safe,
personally, so far as the law goes. He’s
foxy. I advise you to sell if the offer comes
again. If you make any more breaks at him, he’ll
figure some way to get you. It isn’t your
fight, you know. You unfortunately happen to
be in the road.”
“Damned if I do,” Benton
swore. “I’m all in the clear.
There’s no way he can get me, and I’ll
tell him what I think of him again if he gives me
half a chance. I never liked him, anyhow.
Why should I sell when I’m just getting in real
good shape to take that timber out myself? Why,
I can make a hundred thousand dollars in the next
five years on that block of timber. Besides,
without being a sentimental sort of beggar, I don’t
lose sight of the fact that you helped pull me out
of a hole when I sure needed a pull. And I don’t
like his high-handed style. No, if it comes to
a showdown, I’m with you, Jack, as far as I can
go. What the hell can he do?”
“Nothing that I can
see.” Fyfe laughed unpleasantly. “But
he’ll try. He has dollars to our cents.
He could throw everything he’s got on Roaring
Lake into the discard and still have forty thousand
a year fixed income. Sabe? Money does more
than talk in this country. I think I’ll
pull that camp off the Tyee.”
“Well, maybe,” Benton said. “I’m
not sure
Stella passed on. She wanted
to hear, but it went against her grain to eavesdrop.
Her pause had been purely involuntary. When she
became conscious that she was eagerly drinking in
each word, she hurried by.
Her mind was one urgent question mark
while she laid the sleeping youngster in his bed and
removed her heavy clothes. What sort of hostilities
did Monohan threaten? Had he let a hopeless love
turn to the acid of hate for the man who nominally
possessed her? Stella could scarcely credit that.
It was too much at variance with her idealistic conception
of the man. He would never have recourse to such
littleness. Still, the biting contempt in Fyfe’s
voice when he said to Benton: “You underestimate
Monohan. He’ll play safe ... he’s
foxy.” That stung her to the quick.
That was not said for her benefit; it was Fyfe’s
profound conviction. Based on what? He did
not form judgments on momentary impulse. She
recalled that only in the most indirect way had he
ever passed criticism on Monohan, and then it lay
mostly in a tone, suggested more than spoken.
Yet he knew Monohan, had known him for years.
They had clashed long before she was a factor in their
lives.
When she went into the big room, Benton
and Fyfe were gone outdoors. She glanced into
Fyfe’s den. It was empty, but a big blue-print
unrolled on the table where the two had been seated
caught her eye. She bent over it, drawn by the
lettered squares along the wavy shore line and the
marked waters of creeks she knew.
She had never before possessed a comprehensive
idea of the various timber holdings along the west
shore of Roaring Lake, since it had not been a matter
of particular interest to her. She was not sure
why it now became a matter of interest to her, unless
it was an impression that over these squares and oblongs
which stood for thousands upon thousands of merchantable
logs there was already shaping a struggle, a clash
of iron wills and determined purposes directly involving,
perhaps arising because of her.
She studied the blue-print closely.
Its five feet of length embraced all the west shore
of the lake, from the outflowing of Roaring River to
the incoming Tyee at the head. Each camp was
lettered in with pencil. But her attention focussed
chiefly on the timber limits ranging north and south
from their home, and she noted two details: that
while the limits marked A-M Co. were impartially distributed
from Cottonwood north, the squares marked J.H.
Fyfe lay in a solid block about Cougar Bay, save
for that long tongue of a limit where she had that
day noted the new camp. That thrust like the
haft of a spear into the heart of Fyfe’s timberland.
There was the Abbey-Monohan cottage,
the three limits her brother controlled lying up against
Fyfe’s southern boundary. Up around the
mouth of the Tyee spread the vast checkerboard of Abbey-Monohan
limits, and beyond that, on the eastern bank of the
river, a single block, Fyfe’s cedar
limit, the camp he thought he would close
down.
Why? Immediately the query shaped
in her mind. Monohan was concentrating his men
and machinery at the lake head. Fyfe proposed
to shut down a camp but well-established; established
because cedar was climbing in price, an empty market
clamoring for cedar logs. Why?
Was there aught of significance in
that new camp of Monohan’s so near by; that
sudden activity on ground that bisected her husband’s
property? A freak limit of timber so poor that
Lefty Howe said it could only be logged at a loss.
She sighed and went out to give dinner
orders to Sam Foo. If she could only go to her
husband and talk as they had been able to talk things
over at first. But there had grown up between
them a deadly restraint. She supposed that was
inevitable. Both chafed under conditions they
could not change or would not for stubbornness and
pride.
It made a deep impression on her,
all these successive, disassociated finger posts,
pointing one and all to things under the surface, to
motives and potentialities she had not glimpsed before
and could only guess at now.
Fyfe and Benton came to dinner more
or less preoccupied, an odd mood for Charlie Benton.
Afterwards they went into session behind the closed
door of Fyfe’s den. An hour or so later
Benton went home. While she listened to the soft
chuff-a-chuff-a-chuff of the Chickamin
dying away in the distance, Fyfe came in and slumped
down in a chair before the fire where a big fir stick
crackled. He sat there silent, a half-smoked cigar
clamped in one corner of his mouth, the lines of his
square jaw in profile, determined, rigid. Stella
eyed him covertly. There were times, in those
moods of concentration, when sheer brute power seemed
his most salient characteristic. Each bulging
curve of his thick upper arm, his neck rising like
a pillar from massive shoulders, indicated his power.
Yet so well-proportioned was he that the size and strength
of him was masked by the symmetry of his body, just
as the deliberate immobility of his face screened
the play of his feelings. Often Stella found herself
staring at him, fruitlessly wondering what manner of
thought and feeling that repression overlaid.
Sometimes a tricksy, half-provoked desire to break
through the barricade of his stoicism tempted her.
She told herself that she ought to be thankful for
his aloofness, his acquiescence in things as they
stood. Yet there were times when she would almost
have welcomed an outburst, a storm, anything rather
than that deadly chill, enduring day after day.
He seldom spoke to her now except of most matter-of-fact
things. He played his part like a gentleman before
others, but alone with her he withdrew into his shell.
Stella was sitting back in the shadow,
still studying him, measuring him in spite of herself
by the Monohan yardstick. There wasn’t much
basis for comparison. It wasn’t a question
of comparison; the two men stood apart, distinctive,
in every attribute. The qualities in Fyfe that
she understood and appreciated, she beheld glorified
in Monohan. Yet it was not, after all, a question
of qualities. It was something more subtle, something
of the heart which defied logical analysis.
Fyfe had never been able to set her
pulse dancing. She had never craved physical
nearness to him, so that she ached with the poignancy
of that craving. She had been passively contented
with him, that was all. And Monohan had swept
across her horizon like a flame. Why couldn’t
Jack Fyfe have inspired in her that headlong sort
of passion? She smiled hopelessly. The tears
were very close to her eyes. She loved Monohan;
Monohan loved her. Fyfe loved her in his deliberate,
repressed fashion and possessed her, according to
the matrimonial design. And although now his
possession was a hollow mockery, he would never give
her up not to Walter Monohan. She
had that fatalistic conviction.
How would it end in the long run?
She leaned forward to speak.
Words quivered on her lips. But as she struggled
to shape them to utterance, the blast of a boat whistle
came screaming up from the water, near and shrill
and imperative.
Fyfe came out of his chair like a
shot. He landed poised on his feet, lips drawn
apart, hands clenched. He held that pose for an
instant, then relaxed, his breath coming with a quick
sigh.
Stella stared at him. Nerves!
She knew the symptoms too well. Nerves at terrible
tension in that big, splendid body. A slight quiver
seemed to run over him. Then he was erect and
calmly himself again, standing in a listening attitude.
“That’s the Panther?”
he said. “Pulling in to the Waterbug’s
landing. Did I startle you when I bounced up like
a cougar, Stella?” he asked, with a wry smile.
“I guess I was half asleep. That whistle
jolted me.”
Stella glanced out the shaded window.
“Some one’s coming up
from the float with a lantern,” she said.
“Is there is there likely to be anything
wrong, Jack?”
“Anything wrong?” He shot
a quick glance at her. Then casually: “Not
that I know of.”
The bobbing lantern came up the path
through the lawn. Footsteps crunched on the gravel.
“I’ll go see what he wants,”
Fyfe remarked, “Calked boots won’t be good
for the porch floor.”
She followed him.
“Stay in. It’s cold.”
He stopped in the doorway.
“No. I’m coming,” she persisted.
They met the lantern bearer at the foot of the steps.
“Well, Thorsen?” Fyfe
shot at him. There was an unusual note of sharpness
in his voice, an irritated expectation.
Stella saw that it was the skipper
of the Panther, a big and burly Dane.
He raised the lantern a little. The dim light
on his face showed it bruised and swollen. Fyfe
grunted.
“Our boom is hung up,”
he said plaintively. “They’ve blocked
the river. I got licked for arguin’ the
point.”
“How’s it blocked?” Fyfe asked.
“Two swifters uh logs strung
across the channel. They’re drivin’
piles in front. An’ three donkeys buntin’
logs in behind.”
“Swift work. There wasn’t
a sign of a move when I left this morning,”
Fyfe commented drily. “Well, take the Panther
around to the inner landing. I’ll be there.”
“What’s struck that feller
Monohan?” the Dane sputtered angrily. “Has
he got any license to close the Tyee? He says
he has an’ backs his argument strong,
believe me. Maybe you can handle him. I couldn’t.
Next time I’ll have a cant-hook handy.
By jingo, you gimme my pick uh Lefty’s crew,
Jack, an’ I’ll bring that cedar out.”
“Take the Panther ’round,”
Fyfe replied. “We’ll see.”
Thorsen turned back down the slope.
In a minute the thrum of the boat’s exhaust
arose as she got under way.
“Come on in. You’ll
get cold standing here,” Fyfe said to Stella.
She followed him back into the living
room. He sat on the arm of a big leather chair,
rolling the dead cigar thoughtfully between his lips,
little creases gathering between his eyes.
“I’m going up the lake,”
he said at last, getting up abruptly.
“What’s the matter, Jack?”
she asked. “Why, has trouble started up
there?”
“Part of the logging game,”
he answered indifferently. “Don’t
amount to much.”
“But Thorsen has been fighting.
His face was terrible. And I’ve heard you
say he was one of the most peaceable men alive.
Is it is Monohan
“We won’t discuss Monohan,”
Fyfe said curtly. “Anyway, there’s
no danger of him getting hurt.”
He went into his den and came out
with hat and coat on. At the door he paused a
moment.
“Don’t worry,” he
said kindly. “Nothing’s going to happen.”
But she stood looking out the window
after he left, uneasy with a prescience of trouble.
She watched with a feverish interest the stir that
presently arose about the bunkhouses. That summer
a wide space had been cleared between bungalow and
camp. She could see moving lanterns, and even
now and then hear the voices of men calling to each
other. Once the Panther’s dazzling
eye of a searchlight swung across the landing, and
its beam picked out a file of men carrying their blankets
toward the boat. Shortly after that the tender
rounded the point. Close behind her went the
Waterbug, and both boats swarmed with men.
Stella looked and listened until there
was but a faint thrum far up the lake. Then she
went to bed, but not to sleep. What ugly passions
were loosed at the lake head she did not know.
But on the face of it she could not avoid wondering
if Monohan had deliberately set out to cross and harass
Jack Fyfe. Because of her? That was the question
which had hovered on her lips that evening, one she
had not brought herself to ask. Because of her,
or because of some enmity that far preceded her?
She had thought him big enough to do as she had done,
as Fyfe was tacitly doing, make the best
of a grievous matter.
But if he had allowed his passions
to dictate reprisals, she trembled for the outcome.
Fyfe was not a man to sit quiet under either affront
or injury. He would fight with double rancor
if Monohan were his adversary.
“If anything happens up there,
I’ll hate myself,” she whispered, when
the ceaseless turning of her mind had become almost
unendurable. “I was a silly, weak fool
to ever let Walter Monohan know I cared. And I’ll
hate him too if he makes me a bone of contention.
I elected to play the game the only decent way there
is to play it. So did he. Why can’t
he abide by that?”
Noon of the next day saw the Waterbug
heave to a quarter mile abeam of Cougar Point to let
off a lone figure in her dinghy, and then bore on,
driving straight and fast for Roaring Springs.
Stella flew to the landing. Mother Howe came
puffing at her heels.
“Land’s sake, I been worried
to death,” the older woman breathed. “When
men git to quarrellin’ about timber, you never
can tell where they’ll stop, Mrs. Jack.
I’ve knowed some wild times in the woods in the
past.”
The man in the dink was Lefty Howe.
He pulled in beside the float. When he stepped
up on the planks, he limped perceptibly.
“Land alive, what happened yuh, Lefty?”
his wife cried.
“Got a rap on the leg with a peevy,” he
said. “Nothin’ much.”
“Why did the Waterbug
go down the lake?” Stella asked breathlessly.
The man’s face was serious. “What
happened up there?”
“There was a fuss,” he
answered quietly. “Three or four of the
boys got beat up so they need patchin’.
Jack’s takin’ ’em down to the hospital.
Damn that yeller-headed Monohan!” his voice lifted
suddenly in uncontrollable anger. “Billy
Dale was killed this mornin’, mother.”
Stella felt herself grow sick.
Death is a small matter when it strikes afar, among
strangers. When it comes to one’s door!
Billy Dale had piloted the Waterbug for a year,
a chubby, round-faced boy of twenty, a foster-son,
of Mother Howe’s before she had children of her
own. Stella had asked Jack to put him on the
Waterbug because he was such a loyal, cheery
sort of soul, and Billy had been a part of every expedition
they had taken around the lake. She could not
think of him as a rigid, lifeless lump of clay.
Why, only the day before he had been laughing and
chattering aboard the cruiser, going up and down the
cabin floor on his hands and knees, Jack Junior perched
triumphantly astride his back.
“What happened?” she cried wildly.
“Tell me, quick.”
“It’s quick told,”
Howe said grimly. “We were ready at daylight.
Monohan’s got a hard crew, and they jumped us
as soon as we started to clear the channel. So
we cleared them, first. It didn’t take so
long. Three of our men was used bad, and there’s
plenty of sore heads on both sides. But we did
the job. After we got them on the run, we blowed
up their swifters an’ piles with giant.
Then we begun to put the cedar through. Billy
was on the bank when somebody shot him from across
the river. One mercy, he never knew what hit
him. An’ you’ll never come so close
bein’ a widow again, Mrs. Fyfe, an’ not
be. That bullet was meant for Jack, I figure.
He was sittin’ down. Billy was standin’
right behind him watchin’ the logs go through.
Whoever he was, he shot high, that’s all.
There, mother, don’t cry. That don’t
help none. What’s done’s done.”
Stella turned and walked up to the
house, stunned. She could not credit bloodshed,
death. Always in her life both had been things
remote. And as the real significance of Lefty
Howe’s story grew on her, she shuddered.
It lay at her door, equally with her and Monohan, even
if neither of their hands had sped the bullet, an
indirect responsibility but gruesomely real to her.
God only knows to what length she
might have gone in reaction. She was quivering
under that self-inflicted lash, bordering upon hysteria
when she reached the house. She could not shut
out a too-vivid picture of Billy Dale lying murdered
on the Tyee’s bank, of the accusing look with
which Fyfe must meet her. Rightly so, she held.
She did not try to shirk. She had followed the
line of least resistance, lacked the dour courage
to pull herself up in the beginning, and it led to
this. She felt Billy Dale’s blood wet on
her soft hands. She walked into her own house
panting like a hunted animal.
And she had barely crossed the threshold
when back in the rear Jack Junior’s baby voice
rose in a shrill scream of pain.
Stella scarcely heard her husband
and the doctor come in. For a weary age she had
been sitting in a low rocker, a pillow across her lap,
and on that the little, tortured body swaddled with
cotton soaked in olive oil, the only dressing she
and Mrs. Howe could devise to ease the pain.
All those other things which had so racked her, the
fight on the Tyee, the shooting of Billy Dale, they
had vanished somehow into thin air before the dread
fact that her baby was dying slowly before her anguished
eyes. She sat numbed with that deadly assurance,
praying without hope for help to come, hopeless that
any medical skill would avail when it did come.
So many hours had been wasted while a man rowed to
Benton’s camp, while the Chickamin steamed
to Roaring Springs, while the Waterbug came
driving back. Five hours! And the skin, yes,
even shreds of flesh, had come away in patches with
Jack Junior’s clothing when she took it off.
She bent over him, fearful that every feeble breath
would be his last.
She looked up at the doctor.
Fyfe was beside her, his calked boots biting into
the oak floor.
“See what you can do, doc,”
he said huskily. Then to Stella: “How
did it happen?”
“He toddled away from Martha,”
she whispered. “Sam Foo had set a pan of
boiling water on the kitchen floor. He fell into
it. Oh, my poor little darling.”
They watched the doctor bare the terribly
scalded body, examine it, listen to the boy’s
breathing, count his pulse. In the end he re-dressed
the tiny body with stuff from the case with which a
country physician goes armed against all emergencies.
He was very deliberate and thoughtful. Stella
looked her appeal when he finished.
“He’s a sturdy little
chap,” he said, “and we’ll do our
best. A child frequently survives terrific shock.
It would be mistaken kindness for me to make light
of his condition simply to spare your feelings.
He has an even chance. I shall stay until morning.
Now, I think it would be best to lay him on a bed.
You must relax, Mrs. Fyfe. I can see that the
strain is telling on you. You mustn’t allow
yourself to get in that abnormal condition. The
baby is not conscious of pain. He is not suffering
half so much in his body as you are in your mind, and
you mustn’t do that. Be hopeful. We’ll
need your help. We should have a nurse, but there
was no time to get one.”
They laid Jack Junior amid downy pillows
on Stella’s bed. The doctor stood looking
at him, then drew a chair beside the bed.
“Go and walk about a little,
Mrs. Fyfe,” he advised, “and have your
dinner. I’ll want to watch the boy a while.”
But Stella did not want to walk.
She did not want to eat. She was scarcely aware
that her limbs were cramped and aching from her long
vigil in the chair. She was not conscious of herself
and her problems, any more. Every shift of her
mind turned on her baby, the little mite she had nursed
at her breast, the one joy untinctured with bitterness
that was left her. The bare chance that those
little feet might never patter across the floor again,
that little voice never wake her in the morning crying
“Mom-mom,” drove her distracted.
She went out into the living room,
walked to a window, stood there drumming on the pane
with nervous fingers. Dusk was falling outside;
a dusk was creeping over her. She shuddered.
Fyfe came up behind her, put his hands
on her shoulders, and turned her so that she faced
him.
“I wish I could help, Stella,”
he whispered. “I wish I could make you
feel less forlorn. Poor little kiddies both
of you.”
She shook off his hands, not because
she rebelled against his touch, against his sympathy,
merely because she had come to that nervous state
where she scarce realized what she did.
“Oh,” she choked, “I
can’t bear it. My baby, my little baby boy.
The one bright spot that’s left, and he has
to suffer like that. If he dies, it’s the
end of everything for me.”
Fyfe stared at her. The warm,
pitying look on his face ebbed away, hardened into
his old, mask-like absence of expression.
“No,” he said quietly,
“it would only be the beginning. Lord God,
but this has been a day.”
He whirled about with a quick gesture
of his hands, a harsh, raspy laugh that was very near
a sob, and left her. Twenty minutes later, when
Stella was irresistibly drawn back to the bedroom,
she found him sitting sober and silent, looking at
his son.
A little past midnight Jack Junior died.