THE FIRE BEHIND THE SMOKE
This is no intimate chronicle of Charlie
Benton and Linda Abbey, save in so far as they naturally
furnish a logical sequence in what transpired.
Therefore the details of their nuptials is of no particular
concern. They were wedded, ceremonially dined
as befitted the occasion, and departed upon their
hypothetical honeymoon, surreptitiously abbreviated
from an extravagant swing over half of North America
to seventy miles by rail and twenty by water, and
a month of blissful seclusion, which suited those
two far better than any amount of Pullman touring,
besides leaving them money in pocket.
When they were gone, Stella caught
the next boat for Seattle. She had drawn fresh
breath in the meantime, and while she felt tenderly,
almost maternally, sorry for Jack Fyfe, she swung
back to the old attitude. Even granting, she
argued, that she could muster courage to take up the
mantle of wifehood where she laid it off, there was
no surety that they could do more than compromise.
There was the stubborn fact that she had openly declared
her love for another man, that by her act she had
plunged her husband into far-reaching conflict.
Such a conflict existed. She could put her finger
on no concrete facts, but it was in the air.
She heard whispers of a battle between giants a
financial duel to the death with all the
odds against Jack Fyfe.
Win or lose, there would be scars.
And the struggle, if not of and by her deed, had at
least sprung into malevolent activity through her.
Men, she told herself, do not forget these things;
they rankle. Jack Fyfe was only human. No,
Stella felt that they could only come safe to the old
port by virtue of a passion that could match Fyfe’s
own. And she put that rather sadly beyond her,
beyond the possibilities. She had felt stirrings
of it, but not to endure. She was proud and sensitive
and growing wise with bitterly accumulated experience.
It had to be all or nothing with them, a cleaving
together complete enough to erase and forever obliterate
all that had gone before. And since she could
not see that as a possibility, there was nothing to
do but play the game according to the cards she held.
Of these the trump was work, the inner glow that comes
of something worth while done toward a definite, purposeful
end. She took up her singing again with a distinct
relief.
Time passed quickly and uneventfully
enough between the wedding day and the date of her
Granada engagement. It seemed a mere breathing
space before the middle of July rolled around, and
she was once more aboard a Vancouver boat. In
the interim, she had received a letter from the attorney
who had wound up her father’s estate, intimating
that there was now a market demand for that oil stock,
and asking if he should sell or hold for a rise in
price which seemed reasonably sure? Stella telegraphed
her answer. If that left-over of a speculative
period would bring a few hundred dollars, it would
never be of greater service to her than now.
All the upper reach of Puget Sound
basked in its normal midsummer haze, the day Stella
started for Vancouver. That great region of island-dotted
sea spread between the rugged Olympics and the foot
of the Coast range lay bathed in summer sun, untroubled,
somnolent. But nearing the international boundary,
the Charlotte drove her twenty-knot way into
a thickening atmosphere. Northward from Victoria,
the rugged shores that line those inland waterways
began to appear blurred. Just north of Active
Pass, where the steamers take to the open gulf again,
a vast bank of smoke flung up blue and gray, a rolling
mass. The air was pungent, oppressive. When
the Charlotte spanned the thirty-mile gap between
Vancouver Island and the mainland shore, she nosed
into the Lion’s Gate under a slow bell, through
a smoke pall thick as Bering fog. Stella’s
recollection swung back to Charlie’s uneasy growl
of a month earlier. Fire! Throughout the
midsummer season there was always the danger of fire
breaking out in the woods. Not all the fire-ranger
patrols could guard against the carelessness of fishermen
and campers.
“It’s a tough Summer over
here for the timber owners,” she heard a man
remark. “I’ve been twenty years on
the coast and never saw the woods so dry.”
“Dry’s no name,”
his neighbor responded. “It’s like
tinder. A cigarette stub’ll start a blaze
forty men couldn’t put out. It’s me
that knows it. I’ve got four limits on
the North Arm, and there’s fire on two sides
of me. You bet I’m praying for rain.”
“They say the country between
Chehalis and Roaring Lake is one big blaze,”
the first man observed.
“So?” the other replied.
“Pity, too. Fine timber in there. I
came near buying some timber on the lake this spring.
Some stuff that was on the market as a result of that
Abbey-Monohan split. Glad I didn’t now.
I’d just as soon have all my money out
of timber this season.”
They moved away in the press of disembarking,
and Stella heard no more of their talk. She took
a taxi to the Granada, and she bought a paper in the
foyer before she followed the bell boy to her room.
She had scarcely taken off her hat and settled down
to read when the telephone rang. Linda’s
voice greeted her when she answered.
“I called on the chance that
you took the morning boat,” Linda said.
“Can I run in? I’m just down for the
day. I won’t be able to hear you sing,
but I’d like to see you, dear.”
“Can you come right now?”
Stella asked. “Come up, and we’ll
have something served up here. I don’t
feel like running the gauntlet of the dining room
just now.”
“I’ll be there in a few minutes,”
Linda answered.
Stella went back to her paper.
She hadn’t noticed any particular stress laid
on forest fires in the Seattle dailies, but she could
not say that of this Vancouver sheet. The front
page reeked of smoke and fire. She glanced through
the various items for news of Roaring Lake, but found
only a brief mention. It was “reported”
and “asserted” and “rumored”
that fire was raging at one or two points there, statements
that were overshadowed by positive knowledge of greater
areas nearer at hand burning with a fierceness that
could be seen and smelled. The local papers had
enough feature stuff in fires that threatened the very
suburbs of Vancouver without going so far afield as
Roaring Lake.
Linda’s entrance put a stop
to her reading, without, however, changing the direction
of her thought. For after an exchange of greetings,
Linda divulged the source of her worried expression,
which Stella had immediately remarked.
“Who wouldn’t be worried,”
Linda said, “with the whole country on fire,
and no telling when it may break out in some unexpected
place and wipe one out of house and home.”
“Is it so bad as that at the
lake?” Stella asked uneasily. “There’s
not much in the paper. I was looking.”
“It’s so bad,” Linda
returned, with a touch of bitterness, “that I’ve
been driven to the Springs for safety; that every able-bodied
man on the lake who can be spared is fighting fire.
There has been one man killed, and there’s half
a dozen loggers in the hospital, suffering from burns
and other hurts. Nobody knows where it will stop.
Charlie’s limits have barely been scorched,
but there’s fire all along one side of them.
A change of wind and there you are.
Jack Fyfe’s timber is burning in a dozen places.
We’ve been praying for rain and choking in the
smoke for a week.”
Stella looked out the north window.
From the ten-story height she could see ships lying
in the stream, vague hulks in the smoky pall that
shrouded the harbor.
“I’m sorry,” she whispered.
“It’s devilish,”
Linda went on. “Like groping in the dark
and being afraid for me. I’ve
been married a month, and for ten days I’ve only
seen my husband at brief intervals when he comes down
in the launch for supplies, or to bring an injured
man. And he doesn’t tell me anything except
that we stand a fat chance of losing everything.
I sit there at the Springs, and look at that smoke
wall hanging over the water, and wonder what goes
on up there. And at night there’s the red
glow, very faint and far. That’s all.
I’ve been doing nursing at the hospital to help
out and to keep from brooding. I wouldn’t
be down here now, only for a list of things the doctor
needs, which he thought could be obtained quicker
if some one attended to it personally. I’m
taking the evening train back.”
“I’m sorry,” Stella repeated.
She said it rather mechanically.
Her mind was spinning a thread, upon which, strung
like beads, slid all the manifold succession of things
that had happened since she came first to Roaring Lake.
Linda’s voice, continuing, broke into her thoughts.
“I suppose I shouldn’t
be croaking into your ear like a bird of ill omen,
when you have to throw yourself heart and soul into
that concert to-morrow,” she said contritely.
“I wonder why that Ancient Mariner way of seeking
relief from one’s troubles by pouring them into
another ear is such a universal trait? You aren’t
vitally concerned, after all, and I am. Let’s
have that tea, dear, and talk about less grievous things.
I still have one or two trifles to get in the shops
too.”
After they had finished the food that
Stella ordered sent up, they went out together.
Later Stella saw her off on the train.
“Good-by, dear,” Linda
said from the coach window. “I’m just
selfish enough to wish you were going back with me;
I wish you could sit with me on the bank of the lake,
aching and longing for your man up there in the smoke
as I ache and long for mine. Misery loves company.”
Stella’s eyes were clouded as
the train pulled out. Something in Linda Benton’s
parting words made her acutely lonely, dispirited,
out of joint with the world she was deliberately fashioning
for herself. Into Linda’s life something
big and elemental had come. The butterfly of yesterday
had become the strong man’s mate of to-day.
Linda’s heart was unequivocally up there in
the smoke and flame with her man, fighting for their
mutual possessions, hoping with him, fearing for him,
longing for him, secure in the knowledge that if nothing
else was left them, they had each other. It was
a rare and beautiful thing to feel like that.
And beyond that sorrowful vision of what she lacked
to achieve any real and enduring happiness, there
loomed also a self-torturing conviction that she herself
had set in motion those forces which now threatened
ruin for her brother and Jack Fyfe.
There was no logical proof of this.
Only intuitive, subtle suggestions gleaned here and
there, shadowy finger-posts which pointed to Monohan
as a deadly hater and with a score chalked up against
Fyfe to which she had unconsciously added. He
had desired her, and twice Fyfe had treated him like
an urchin caught in mischief. She recalled how
Monohan sprang at him like a tiger that day on the
lake shore. She realized how bitter a humiliation
it must have been to suffer that sardonic cuffing at
Fyfe’s hands. Monohan wasn’t the type
of man who would ever forget or forgive either that
or the terrible grip on his throat.
Even at the time she had sensed this
and dreaded what it might ultimately lead to.
Even while her being answered eagerly to the physical
charm of him, she had fought against admitting to herself
what desperate intent might have lain back of the
killing of Billy Dale, a shot that Lefty
Howe declared was meant for Fyfe. She had long
outgrown Monohan’s lure, but if he had come
to her or written to make out a case for himself when
she first went to Seattle, she would have accepted
his word against anything. Her heart would have
fought for him against the logic of her brain.
But she had had a long
time to think, to compare, to digest all that she
knew of him, much that was subconscious impression
rising late to the surface, a little that she heard
from various sources. The sum total gave her
a man of rank passions, of rare and merciless finesse
where his desires figured, a man who got what he wanted
by whatever means most fitly served his need.
Greater than any craving to possess a woman would
be the measure of his rancor against a man who humiliated
him, thwarted him. She could understand how a
man like Monohan would hate a man like Jack Fyfe,
would nurse and feed on the venom of his hate until
setting a torch to Fyfe’s timber would be a
likely enough counterstroke.
She shrank from the thought.
Yet it lingered until she felt guilty. Though
it made no material difference to her that Fyfe might
or might not face ruin, she could not, before her
own conscience, evade responsibility. The powder
might have been laid, but her folly had touched spark
to the fuse, as she saw it. That seared her like
a pain far into the night. For every crime a
punishment; for every sin a penance. Her world
had taught her that. She had never danced; she
had only listened to the piper and longed to dance,
as nature had fashioned her to do. But the piper
was sending his bill. She surveyed it wearily,
emotionally bankrupt, wondering in what coin of the
soul she would have to pay.