The canoe was coming directly toward
them. In a moment it touched the shore, and as
its occupant stepped lightly out the boys with one
accord exclaimed:
“Injun Jake! ’Tis Injun Jake!”
And so it proved. The greeting
he received was hearty enough to leave no doubt in
his mind that he was a welcome visitor. Perhaps
it was the heartier because of the relief the boys
experienced in the discovery that the lone canoeman
was not, after all, the wraith of Long John, but was
their friend Indian Jake in flesh and blood.
When his packs had been removed, Indian
Jake lifted his canoe from the water, turned it upon
its side and followed the boys to the fire, where
Doctor Joe awaited him.
“Just in time!” welcomed
Doctor Joe, as he shook Indian Jake’s hand.
“We’ve finished eating, but there’s
plenty of stew in the kettle. Andy, pour Jake
some tea.”
Indian Jake, grunting his thanks,
silently picked up David’s empty plate and heaped
it with stew and dumpling from the kettle without the
ceremony of waiting to be served.
He was a tall, lithe, muscular half-breed,
with small, restless, hawk-like eyes and a beaked
nose that was not unlike the beak of a hawk.
He had the copper-hued skin and straight black hair
of the Indian, but otherwise his features might have
been those of a white man. Indian Jake had been
the trapping companion of David and Andy the previous
winter, and, as previously stated, was this year to
be Thomas Angus’s trapping partner on the fur
trails.
The boys were vastly fond of Indian
Jake, and Thomas and Doctor Joe shared their confidence,
but the Bay folk generally looked upon him with distrust
and suspicion. Several years before, he had come
to the Bay a penniless stranger. He soon earned
the reputation of being one of the best trappers in
the region. Then, suddenly, he disappeared owing
the Hudson’s Bay Company a considerable sum for
equipment and provisions sold him on credit.
It was well known that in the winter preceding his
disappearance Indian Jake had had a most successful
hunting season and was in possession of ample means
to pay his debts. His failure to apply his means
to this purpose was looked upon as highly dishonest-akin,
indeed, to theft.
Two years later he reappeared, again
penniless. The Company refused him further credit,
and he had no means of purchasing the supplies necessary
for his support during the trapping season in the interior.
It was at this time that Thomas Angus broke his leg,
and it became necessary for David and Andy to take
his place on the trails. They were too young
to endure the long months of isolation without an older
and more experienced companion. There was none
but Indian Jake to go with them, and he was engaged
to hunt on shares a trail adjacent to theirs.
With his share of the furs captured
by the end of the trapping season, Indian Jake discharged
his old debt with the Company. This was not sufficient,
however, to re-establish confidence in him. There
was a lurking suspicion among them, fostered by Uncle
Ben Rudder of Tuggle Bight, the wiseacre and oracle
of the Bay, that Indian Jake’s payment of the
debt was not prompted by honesty but by some ulterior
motive.
Indian Jake emptied his plate.
He refilled it with the last of the stew and again
emptied it, in the interim swallowing several cups
of hot tea.
“Good stew,” he remarked
in appreciation and praise when his meal was finished.
“When were you gettin’ back?”
“I reached The Jug day before
yesterday,” said Doctor Joe.
“Huh!” Indian Jake grunted
approval, as he puffed industriously at his pipe.
“Where you goin’ now? To see Lem Horn?”
“No,” Doctor Joe answered,
“we’re going to Fort Pelican to get some
things I brought in on the mail boat.”
“I been goose huntin’,”
Indian Jake explained. “Not much goose yet.
Too early. Got four. Goin’ to The Jug
now to give Thomas a hand. Want to start for
Seal Lake soon. Don’t want to be late.”
“Pop’s thinkin’ to start in a fortnight,”
said David.
“Good!” acknowledged Indian
Jake. “Maybe we start sooner. Start
when we’re ready. I want to go quick.
Have plenty time get there before freeze-up.”
Indian Jake had apparently finished
talking. Doctor Joe and the boys made several
attempts to continue the conversation, but only receiving
responsive grunts, turned to a discussion of the flag
and other scout problems, while Indian Jake was absorbed
in his own thoughts. Presently he rose and proceeded
to unroll his bed.
“Plenty of room in the tent,”
Doctor Joe invited. “Better come in with
us, Jake.”
“Goin’ early. Sleep
here,” he declined, as he spread a caribou skin
upon the ground to protect himself from the damp earth.
Then he produced a Hudson’s Bay Company blanket,
once white but now of uncertain shade, and rolling
himself in the blanket, with his feet toward the fire,
was soon snoring peacefully.
“We won’t trouble to douse
the fire,” Doctor Joe suggested presently.
“He wants to sleep by it, and he’ll look
after it. Let’s turn in.”
And with the front of the tent open
that they might enjoy the air and profit by the firelight,
they were soon snug in their sleeping-bags and as
sound asleep as Indian Jake.
“High-o!”
The three boys sat up. It was
broad daylight, and Doctor Joe, on his hands and knees,
was looking out of the tent.
“Our visitor has gone, and there’s
little wonder, for we’ve been sleeping like
bears and it’s broad daylight. Hurry, lads,
or the sun’ll be well up before we get away.”
The boys sprang up and were soon dressed.
The fire had burned low, indicating that Indian Jake
had been gone for a considerable time. A fat
goose was hanging from the limb of a tree. Fastened
to it was a piece of birch bark, and scribbled upon
the birch bark with a piece of charcoal from the fire,
these words:
“cerprize fur the lads bekos they likes Goos.”
Another surprise awaited them.
When they lifted the lid of the large cooking kettle
they found it nearly full of boiled goose.
“That’s the way o’
Indian Jake!” Andy exclaimed. “He’s
always plannin’ fine surprises for folks.”
“It’s surely a fine surprise,”
said Doctor Joe. “Breakfast all ready but
the tea, and a goose for to-night.”
Every one hurried, but the sun was
well up when they put out the fire and hoisted sail.
There was little wind, however, and the light breeze
soon dropped to a dead calm. Doctor Joe unshipped
the rudder and began sculling, while the boys laboured
at the long oars. At length the tide began running
in, and progress was so slow that it was decided to
go ashore and await a turn of the tide or a breeze.
“Lem Horn lives just back o’
that island,” said David, indicating a small
wooded island. “We might stop and bide there
till a breeze comes, and see un.”
In accordance with the suggestion
Doctor Joe turned the boat inside the island, and
there, on the mainland in the edge of a little clearing
and not a hundred yards distant, stood Lem Horn’s
cabin. It was a secluded and peculiarly lonely
spot, hidden by the island from the few boats that
plied the Bay. Here lived Lem Horn and his wife
and two sons, Eli, a young man of twenty-one years,
and Mark, nineteen years of age.
“There’s no smoke,” observed Jamie.
“Maybe they’re all down
to Fort Pelican getting their winter outfit,”
suggested David.
“There seems to be no one about
but the dogs,” said Doctor Joe, as he stepped
ashore with the painter and made it fast, while Lem’s
big sledge dogs, lolling in the sun, watched them
curiously.
Visitors do not knock in Labrador.
The cabins are always open to travellers whether or
not the host is at home. Andy was in advance,
and opening the door he stopped on the threshold with
an exclamation of horror.
Stretched upon the floor lay Lem Horn,
his face and hair smeared with blood, and on the floor
near him was a small pool of blood. A chair was
overturned, and Lem’s legs were tangled in a
fish-net.
Doctor Joe leaned over the prostrate figure.
“Shot,” said he, “and from behind!”
“Does you mean somebody shot he?” asked
David, quite horrified.
“Yes, and it must have happened yesterday,”
said Doctor Joe.