Quietly Beatrice retrieved the bird
and began to remove its feathers. Ben built the
fire, chopped sturdily at a half-grown spruce until
it shattered to the earth, and then chopped it into
lengths for fuel. When the fire was blazing bright,
he cut away the green branches and laid them, stems
overlapping, into a fragrant bed.
“Here’s where you sleep
to-night, Beatrice,” he informed her.
She stopped in her work long enough
to try the springy boughs with her arms; then she
gave him an answering smile. Even a tenderfoot
can make some sort of a comfortable pallet out of
evergreen boughs ends overlapping and plumes
bent but a master woodsman can fashion a
veritable cradle, soft as silk with never a hard limb
to irritate the flesh, and yielding as a hair mattress.
Such softness, with the fragrance of the balsam like
a sleeping potion, can not help but bring sweet dreams.
Ben had been wholly deliberate in
the care with which he had built the pallet.
He had simply come to the conclusion that she was paying
a high price for her father’s sins; and from
now on he intended to make all things as easy as he
could for her. Moreover, she had been a sportswoman
of the rarest breed and merited every kindness he could
do for her.
He was not half so careful with his
own bed, built sixty feet on the opposite side of
the fire. He threw it together rather hastily.
And when he walked back to the fire he found an amazing
change.
Already Beatrice had established sovereignty
over the little patch of ground they had chosen for
the camp, and the wilderness had drawn back.
This spot was no longer mere part of the far-spreading,
trackless wilds. It had been set off and marked
so that the wilderness creatures could no longer mistake
it for part of their domain. Over the fire she
had erected a cooking rack; and water was already
boiling in a small bucket suspended from it.
In another container a fragrant mixture was in the
process of cooking. She had spread one of the
blankets on the grass for a tablecloth.
As twilight lowered they sat down
to their simple meal, tea, sweetened with
sugar, and vegetables and meat happily mingled in a
stew. It was true that the vegetable end was
held up by white grains of rice alone, but the meat
was the white, tender flesh of grouse, permeating the
entire dish with its tempting flavor. As a whole,
the stew was greatly satisfying to the inner man.
“I wish I’d brought more
tea,” Ben complained, as he sipped that most
delightful of all drinks, the black tea beloved of
the northern men.
“You a woodsman, and don’t
know how to remedy that!” the girl responded.
“I know of a native substitute that’s almost
as good as the real article.”
About the embers of the fire they
sat and watched the tremulous wings of night close
round them. The copse grew breathless. The
distant trees blended into shadow, the nearer trunks
dimmed and finally faded; the large, white northern
stars emerged in infinite troops and companies, peering
down through the rifts in the trees. Here
about their fire they had established the domain of
man. For a few short hours they had routed the
forces of the wilderness; but the foe pressed close
upon them. Just at the fluctuating ring of firelight
he waited, clothed in darkness and mystery, the
infinite, brooding spirit of the ancient forest.
They had never known such silence,
broken only by the prolonged chord of the river, as
descended upon them now. It was new and strange
to the conscious life of Ben, himself, the veritable
offspring of the woods; although infinitely old and
familiar to a still, watching, secret self within
him. It was as if he had searched forever for
this place and had just found it, and it answered,
to the full, a queer mood of silence in his own heart.
The wind had died down now. The last wail of a
coyote disconsolate on a far-away ridge had
trembled away into nothingness; the voices of the
Little People who had chirped and rustled in the tree
aisles during the daylight hours were stilled with
a breathless, dramatic stillness. Such sound
as remained over the interminable breadth of that
dark forest was only the faint stirrings and rustlings
of the beasts of prey going to their hunting; and this
was only a moving tone in the great chord of silence.
To Ben the falling night brought a
return of his most terrible moods. Beatrice sensed
them in his pale, set face and his cold, wolfish eyes.
The wolf sat beside him, swept by his master’s
mood, gazing with deadly speculations into the darkness.
Beatrice saw them as one breed to-night. The
wild had wholly claimed this repatriated son.
The paw of the Beast was heavy upon him; the softening
influences of civilization seemed wholly dispelled.
There was little here to remind her that this was the
twentieth century. The primitive that lies just
under the skin in all men was in the ascendancy; and
there was little indeed to distinguish him from the
hunter of long ago, a grizzled savage at the edge of
the ice who chased the mammoth and wild pony, knowing
no home but the forest and no gentleness unknown to
the wolf that ran at his heels.... The tenderness
and sympathy he had had for her earlier that day seemed
quite gone now. She searched for it in vain in
the dark and savage lines of his pale face.
Because it has always been that the
happiness of women must depend upon the mood of men,
her own spirits fell. The despair that descended
upon her brought also resentment and rage; and soon
she slipped away quietly to her bed. She drew
the blankets over her face; but no tears wet her cheeks
to-night. She was dry-eyed, thoughtful full
of vague plans.
She lay awake a long time, until at
last a little, faint ray of hope beamed bright and
clear. More than a hundred miles farther down
the Yuga, past the mouth of Grizzly River, not far
from the great, north-flowing stream of which the
Yuga was a tributary, lay an Indian village and
if only she could reach it she might enlist the aid
of the natives and make a safe return, by a long,
roundabout route, to her father’s arms.
The plan meant deliverance from Ben and the defeat
of all his schemes of vengeance, perhaps
the salvation of her father and his subordinates.
She realized perfectly the reality
of her father’s danger. She had read the
iron resolve in Ben’s face. She knew that
if she failed to make an immediate escape from him,
all his dreadful plans were likely to succeed:
his enemies would follow him into the unexplored mazes
of Back There to effect her rescue and fall helpless
in his trap. What quality of mercy he would extend
to them then she could readily guess.
Just to get down to the Indian village:
this was her whole problem. But it was Ben’s
plan to land and enter the interior somewhere in the
vast wilderness between, from which escape could not
be made until the flood waters of fall. The way
would remain open but a few hours more, due to the
simple fact that the waters were steadily falling and
the river-bottom crags, forming impassable barriers
at some points, would be exposed. If she made her
escape at all it must be soon.
Yet she could not attempt it at night.
She could not see to guide the canoe while the darkness
lay over the river. Just one further chance remained to
depart in the first gray of dawn.
She fell into troubled sleep, but
true to her resolution, wakened when the first ribbon
of light stretched along the eastern horizon.
She sat up, laying the blankets back with infinite
care. This was her chance: Ben still lay
asleep.
Just to steal down to the water’s
edge, push off the canoe, and trust her life to the
doubtful mercy of the river. The morning soon
would break; if she could avoid the first few crags,
she had every chance to guide her craft through to
deliverance and safety. By no conceivable chance
could Ben follow her. He would be left in the
shadow of the gorge, a prisoner without hope or prayer
of deliverance. There was no crossing the cliffs
that lifted so stern and gray just behind. Before
he could build any kind of a craft with axe and fire,
the waters would fall to a death level, beyond any
hope of carrying him to safety. The tables would
be turned; he would be left as helpless to follow her
as Neilson had been to follow him.
The plan meant deliverance for her;
but surely it meant death to him. Starvation
would drive him to the river and destruction, before
men could ever come the long way to rescue him.
But this was not her concern. She was a forest
girl and he her enemy: he must pay the price
for his own deeds.
She got to her feet, stalking with
absolute silence. She must not waken him now.
Softly she pressed her unshod foot into the grass.
He stirred in his sleep; and she paused, scarcely
breathing.
She looked toward him. Dimly
she could see his face, tranquil in sleep and gray
in the soft light; and an instantaneous surge of remorse
sped through her. There was a sweetness, a hint
of kindly boyishness in his face now, so changed since
she had left him beside the glowing coals. Yet
he was her deadly enemy; and she must not let her woman’s
heart cost her her victory in its moment of fulfillment.
She crept on down to the water.
She could discern the black shadow
of the canoe. One swift surge of her shoulders,
one leap, the splash of the stern in the water and
the swift stroke of the paddle, and she would be safe.
She stepped nearer.
But at that instant a subdued note
of warning froze her in her tracks. It was only
a small sound, hushed and hardly sharp enough to arouse
Ben from his sleep; but it was deadly, savage, unutterably
sinister. She had forgotten that Ben did not
wage war alone. For the moment she had given
no thought to his terrible ally, a pack
brother faithful to the death.
A great, gaunt form raised up from
the pile of duffle in the canoe; and his fangs showed
ivory white in the wan light. It was Fenris, and
he guarded the canoe. He crouched, ready to spring
if she drew near.
The girl sobbed once, then stole back to her blankets.