I
It was a burning hot day. Yan
was wandering in pursuit of birds among the endless
groves and glades of the Sandhill wilderness about
Carberry. The water in the numerous marshy ponds
was warm with the sun heat, so Yan cut across to the
trail spring, the only place in the country where
he might find a cooling drink. As he stooped beside
it his eye fell on a small hoof-mark in the mud, a
sharp and elegant track.
He had never seen one like it before,
but it gave him a thrill, for he knew at once it was
the track of a wild deer.
“There are no deer in those
hills now,” the settlers told Yan. Yet
when the first snow came that autumn he, remembering
the hoof-mark in the mud, quietly took down his rifle
and said to himself, “I am going into the hills
every day till I bring out a deer.” Yan
was a tall, raw lad in the last of his teens.
He was no hunter yet, but he was a tireless runner,
and filled with unflagging zeal. Away to the hills
he went on his quest day after day, and many a score
of long white miles he coursed, and night after night
he returned to the shanty without seeing even a track.
But the longest chase will end. On a far, hard
trip in the southern hills he came at last on the trail
of a deer-dim and stale, but still a deer-trail-and
again he felt a thrill as the thought came, “At
the other end of that line of dimples in the snow is
the creature that made them; each one is fresher than
the last, and it is only a question of time for me
to come up with their maker.”
At first Yan could not tell by the
dim track which way the animal had gone. But
he soon found that the mark was a little sharper at
one end, and rightly guessed that that was the toe;
also he noticed that the spaces shortened in going
up hill, and at last a clear imprint in a sandy place
ended all doubt. Away he went with a new fire
in his blood, and an odd prickling in his hair; away
on a long, hard follow through interminable woods
and hills, with the trail growing fresher as he flew.
All day he followed, and toward night it turned and
led him homeward. On it went, soon over familiar
ground, back to the sawmill, then over Mitchell’s
Plain, and at last into the thick poplar woods near
by, where Yan left it when it was too dark to follow.
He was only seven miles from home, and this he easily
trotted in an hour.
In the morning he was back to take
it up, but instead of an old track, there were now
so many fresh ones, crossing and winding, that he
could not follow at all. So he prowled along haphazard,
until he found two tracks so new that he could easily
trail them as before, and he eagerly gave chase.
As he sneaked along watching the tracks at his feet
instead of the woods ahead, he was startled by two
big-eared, grayish animals springing from a little
glade into which he had stumbled. They trotted
to a bank fifty yards away and then turned to gaze
at him.
How they did seem to look with
their great ears! How they spellbound him by
the soft gaze that he felt rather than saw! He
knew what they were. Had he not for weeks been
holding ready, preparing and hungering for this very
sight! And yet how useless were his preparations;
how wholly all his preconcepts were swept away, and
a wonder-stricken
“Oh-h-h!” went softly from his throat.
As he stood and gazed, they turned
their heads away, though they still seemed to look
at him with their great ears, and trotting a few steps
to a smoother place, began to bound up and down in
a sort of play. They seemed to have forgotten
him, and it was bewildering to see the wonderful effortless
way in which, by a tiny toe-touch, they would rise
six or eight feet in air. Yan stood fascinated
by the strange play of the light-limbed, gray-furred
creatures. There was no haste or alarm in their
movements; he would watch them until they began to
run away-till they should take fright and
begin the labored straining, the vast athletic bounds,
he had heard of. And it was only on noting that
they were rapidly fading into the distance that he
realized that now they were running away, already
were flying for safety.
Higher and higher they rose each time;
gracefully their bodies swayed inward as they curved
along some bold ridge, or for a long space the buff-white
scutcheons that they bore behind them seemed hanging
in the air while these wingless birds were really
sailing over some deep gully.
Yan stood intensely gazing until they
were out of sight, and it never once occurred to him
to shoot.
When they were gone he went to the
place where they had begun their play. Here was
one track; where was the next? He looked all around
and was surprised to see a blank for fifteen feet;
and then another blank, and on farther, another:
then the blanks increased to eighteen feet, then to
twenty, then to twenty-five and sometimes thirty feet.
Each of these playful, effortless bounds covered a
space of eighteen to thirty feet.
Gods above! They do not run at
all, they fly; and once in a while come down again
to tap the hill-tops with their dainty hoofs.
“I’m glad they got away,”
said Yan. “They’ve shown me something
to-day that never man saw before. I know that
no one else has ever seen it, or he would have told
of it.”
II
Yet when the morning came the old
wolfish instinct was back in his heart. “I
must away to the hills,” he said, “take
up the trail, and be a beast of the chase once more;
my wits against their wits; my strength against their
strength; and against their speed, my gun.”
Oh! those glorious hills-an
endless rolling stretch of sandy dunes, with lakes
and woods and grassy lawns between. Life-life
on every side, and life within, for Yan was young
and strong and joyed in powers complete. “These
are the best days of my life,” he said, “these
are my golden days.” He thought it then,
and oh, how well he came to know it in the after years!
All day at a long wolf-lope he would
go and send the white hare and the partridge flying
from his path, and swing along and scan the ground
for sign and the telltale inscript in the snow, the
oldest of all writing, more thrillful of interest
by far than the finest glyph or scarab that ever Egypt
gave to modern day.
But the driving snow was the wild
deer’s friend, as the driven snow was his foe,
and down it came that day and wiped out every trace.
The next day and the next still found
Yan careering in the hills, but never a track or sign
did he see. And the weeks went by, and many a
rolling mile he ran, and many a bitter day and freezing
night he passed in the snow-clad hills, sometimes
on a deer-trail but more often without; sometimes
in the barren hills, and sometimes led by woodmen’s
talk to far-off sheltering woods, and once or twice
he saw indeed the buff-white bannerets go
floating up the hills. Sometimes reports came
of a great buck that frequented the timber-lands near
the sawmill, and more than once Yan found his trail,
but never got a glimpse of him; and the few deer there
were now grew so wild with long pursuit that he had
no further chances to shoot, and the hunting season
passed in one long train of failures.
Bright, unsad failures they.
He seemed indeed to come back empty-handed, but he
really came home laden with the best spoils of the
chase, and he knew it more and more, as time went on,
till every day, at last, on the clear unending trail,
was a glad triumphant march.
III
The year went by. Another season
came, and Yan felt in his heart the hunter fret once
more. Even had he not, the talk he heard would
have set him all afire.
It told of a mighty buck that now
lived in the hills-the Sandhill Stag they
called him. It told of his size, his speed, and
the crowning glory that he bore on his brow, a marvellous
growth like sculptured bronze with gleaming ivory
points.
So when the first tracking snow came,
Yan set out with some comrades who had caught a faint
reflected glow of his ardor. They drove in a
sleigh to the Spruce Hill, then scattered to meet again
at sunset. The woods about abounded in hares
and grouse, and the powder burned all around.
But no deer-track was to be found, so Yan quietly left
the woods and set off alone for Kennedy’s Plain,
where last this wonderful buck had been seen.
After a few miles he came on a great
deer-track, so large and sharp and broken by such
mighty bounds that he knew it at once for the trail
of the Sandhill Stag.
With a sudden rush of strength to
his limbs he led away like a wolf on the trail.
And down his spine and in his hair he felt as before,
and yet as never before, the strange prickling that
he knew was the same as makes the wolf’s mane
bristle when he hunts. He followed till night
was near and he must needs turn, for the Spruce Hill
was many miles away.
He knew that it would be long after
sunset before he could get there, and he scarcely
expected that his comrades would wait for him, but
he did not care; he gloried in the independence of
his strength, for his legs were like iron and his
wind was like a hound’s. Ten miles were
no more to him than a mile to another man, for he could
run all day and come home fresh, and always when alone
in the lone hills he felt within so glad a gush of
wild exhilaration that his joy was full.
So when his friends, feeling sure
that he could take care of himself, drove home and
left him, he was glad to be left. They seemed
rather to pity him for imposing on himself such long,
toilsome tramps. They had no realization of what
he found in those wind-swept hills. They never
once thought what they and all their friends and every
man that ever lived has striven for and offered his
body, his brain, his freedom, and his life to buy;
what they were vainly wearing out their lives in fearful,
hopeless drudgery to gain, that boy was daily finding
in those hills. The bitter, biting, blizzard
wind was without, but the fire of health and youth
was within; and at every stride in his daily march,
it was happiness he found, and he knew it.
And he smiled such a gentle smile when he thought
of those driven home in the sleigh shivering and miserable,
yet pitying him.
Oh, what a glorious sunset he saw
that day on Kennedy’s Plain, with the snow dyed
red and the poplar woods aglow in pink and gold!
What a glorious tramp through the darkening woods
as the shadows fell and the yellow moon came up!
“These are the best days of
my life,” he sang. “These are my golden
days!”
And as he neared the great Spruce
Hill, Yan yelled a long hurrah! “In case
they are still there,” he told himself, but really
for very joy of feeling all alive.
As he listened for the improbable
response, he heard a faint howling of wolves away
over Kennedy’s Plain. He mimicked their
cry and quickly got response, and noticed that they
were gathering together, doubtless hunting something,
for now it was their hunting-cry. Nearer and nearer
it came, and his howls brought ready answers from the
gloomy echoing woods, when suddenly it flashed upon
him: “It’s my trail you are
on. You are hunting me.”
The road now led across a little open
plain. It would have been madness to climb a
tree in such a fearful frost, so he went out to the
middle of the open place and sat down in the moonlit
snow-a glittering rifle in his hands, a
row of shining brass pegs in his belt, and a strange,
new feeling in his heart. On came the chorus,
a deep, melodious howling, on to the very edge of
the woods, and there the note changed. Then there
was silence. They must have seen him sitting
there, for the light was like day, but they went around
in the edge of the woods. A stick snapped to
the right and a low ‘Woof’ came
from the left. Then all was still. Yan felt
them sneaking around, felt them watching him from
the cover, and strained his eyes in vain to see some
form that he might shoot. But they were wise,
and he was wise, for had he run he would soon have
seen them closing in on him. They must have been
but few, for after their council of war they decided
he was better let alone, and he never saw them at all.
For twenty minutes he waited, but hearing no more
of them, arose and went homeward. And as he tramped
he thought, “Now I know how a deer feels when
the grind of a moccasined foot or the click of a lock
is heard in the trail behind him.”
In the days that followed he learned
those Sandhills well, for many a frosty day and bitter
night he spent in them. He learned to follow
fast the faintest trail of deer. He learned just
why that trail went never past a tamarack-tree, and
why it pawed the snow at every oak, and why the buck’s
is plainest and the fawn’s down wind. He
learned just what the club-rush has to say, when its
tussocks break the snow. He came to know how
the musk-rat lives beneath the ice, and why the mink
slides down a hill, and what the ice says when it screams
at night. The squirrels taught him how best a
fir-cone can be stripped and which of toadstools one
might eat. The partridge, why it dives beneath
the snow, and the fox, just why he sets his feet so
straight, and why he wears so huge a tail.
He learned the ponds, the woods, the
hills, and a hundred secrets of the trail, but-he
got no deer.
And though many a score of crooked
frosty miles he coursed, and sometimes had a track
to lead and sometimes none, he still went on, like
Galahad when the Grail was just before him. For
more than once, the guide that led was the trail of
the Sandhill Stag.
IV
The hunt was nearly over, for the
season’s end was nigh. The moose-birds
had picked the last of the saskatoons, all the spruce-cones
were scaled, and the hunger-moon was at hand.
But a hopeful chickadee sang ‘See soon’
as Yan set off one frosty day for the great Spruce
Woods. On the road he overtook a woodcutter, who
told him that at such a place he had seen two deer
last night, a doe and a monstrous stag with “a
rocking-chair on his head.”
Straight to the very place went Yan,
and found the tracks-one like those he
had seen in the mud long ago, another a large unmistakable
print, the mark of the Sandhill Stag.
How the wild beast in his heart did
ramp-he wanted to howl like a wolf on a
hot scent; and away they went through woods and hills,
the trail and Yan and the inner wolf.
All day he followed and, grown crafty
himself, remarked each sign, and rejoiced to find
that nowhere had the deer been bounding. And when
the sun was low the sign was warm, so laying aside
unneeded things, Yan crawled along like a snake on
the track of a hare. All day the animals had
zigzagged as they fed; their drink was snow, and now
at length away across a lawn in a bank of brush Yan
spied a something flash. A bird perhaps;
he lay still and watched. Then gray among the
gray brush, he made out a great log, and from one
end of it rose two gnarled oaken boughs. Again
the flash-the move of a restless ear, then
the oak boughs moved and Yan trembled, for he knew
that the log in the brush was the form of the Sandhill
Stag. So grand, so charged with life.
He seemed a precious, sacred thing-a king,
fur-robed and duly crowned. To think of shooting
now as he lay unconscious, resting, seemed an awful
crime. But Yan for weeks and months had pined
for this. His chance had come, and shoot he must.
The long, long strain grew tighter yet-grew
taut-broke down, as up the rifle went.
But the wretched thing kept wabbling and pointing all
about the little glade. His breath came hot and
fast and choking-so much, so very much,
so clearly all, hung on a single touch. He laid
the rifle down, revulsed-and trembled in
the snow. But he soon regained the mastery, his
hand was steady now, the sights in line-’twas
but a deer out yonder. But at that moment the
Stag turned full Yan’s way, with those regardful
eyes and ears, and nostrils too, and gazed.
“Darest thou slay me?”
said an uncrowned, unarmed king once, as his eyes
fell on the assassin’s knife, and in that clear,
calm gaze the murderer quailed and cowed.
So trembled Yan; but he knew it was
only stag-fever, and he despised it then as he came
in time to honor it; and the beast that dwelt within
him fired the gun.
The ball splashed short. The
buck sprang up and the doe appeared. Another
shot; then, as they fled, another and another.
But away the deer went, lightly drifting across the
low round hills.
V
He followed their trail for some time,
but gnashed his teeth to find no sign of blood, and
he burned with a raging animal sense that was neither
love nor hate. Within a mile there was a new sign
that joined on and filled him with another rage and
shed light on many a bloody page of frontier history-a
moccasin-track, a straight-set, broad-toed, moosehide
track, the track of a Cree brave. He followed
in savage humor, and as he careered up a slope a tall
form rose from a log, raising one hand in peaceable
gesture. Although Yan was behind, the Indian
had seen him first.
“Who are you?” said Yan, roughly.
“Chaska.”
“What are you doing in my country?”
“It was my country first,” he replied
gravely.
“Those are my deer,” Yan said, and thought.
“No man owns wild deer till he kills them,”
said Chaska.
“You better keep off any trail I’m following.”
“Not afraid,” said he,
and made a gesture to include the whole settlement,
then added gently, “No good to fight; the best
man will get the most deer anyhow.”
And the end of it was that Yan stayed
for several days with Chaska, and got, not an antlered
buck indeed, but, better far, an insight into the
ways of a man who could hunt. The Indian taught
him not to follow the trail over the hills,
for deer watch their back track, and cross the hills
to make this more easy. He taught him to tell
by touch and smell of sign just how far ahead they
are, as well as the size and condition of the deer,
and not to trail closely when the game is near.
He taught him to study the wind by raising his moistened
finger in the air, and Yan thought, “Now I know
why a deer’s nose is always moist, for he must
always watch the wind.” He showed Yan how
much may be gained at times by patient waiting, and
that it is better to tread like an Indian with foot
set straight, for thereby one gains an inch or two
at each stride and can come back in one’s own
track through deep snow. And he also unwittingly
taught him that an Indian cannot shoot with
a rifle, and Natty Bumpo’s adage came to mind,
“A white man can shoot with a gun, but it ain’t
accordin’ to an Injun’s gifts.”
Sometimes they went out together and
sometimes singly. One day, while out alone, Yan
had followed a deer-track into a thicket by what is
now called Chaska Lake. The sign was fresh, and
as he sneaked around there was a rustle in the brush.
Then he saw the kinnikinnick boughs shaking.
His gun flew up and covered the spot. As soon
as he was sure of the place he meant to fire.
But when he saw the creature as a dusky moving form
through the twigs, he awaited a better view, which
came, and he had almost pulled the trigger when his
hand was stayed by a glimpse of red, and a moment
later out stepped-Chaska.
“Chaska,” Yan gasped, “I nearly
did for you.”
For reply the Indian drew his finger
across the red handkerchief on his brow. Yan
knew then one reason why a hunting Indian always wears
it; after that he wore one himself.
One day a flock of prairie-chickens
flew high overhead toward the thick Spruce Woods.
Others followed, and it seemed to be a general move.
Chaska looked toward them and said, “Chickens
go hide in bush. Blizzard to-night.”
It surely came, and the hunters stayed
all day by the fire. Next day it was as fierce
as ever. On the third day it ceased somewhat,
and they hunted again. But Chaska returned with
his gun broken by a fall, and after a long silent
smoke he said:
“Yan hunt in Moose Mountain?”
“No!”
“Good hunting. Go?”
Yan shook his head.
Presently the Indian, glancing to
the eastward, said, “Sioux tracks there to-day.
All bad medicine here.” And Yan knew that
his mind was made up. He went away and they never
met again, and all that is left of him now is his
name, borne by the lonely lake that lies in the Carberry
Hills.
VI
“There are more deer round Carberry
now than ever before, and the Big Stag has been seen
between Kennedy’s Plain and the mill.”
So said a note that reached Yan away in the East,
where he had been chafing in a new and distasteful
life. It was the beginning of the hunting season,
the fret was already in his blood, and that letter
decided him. For a while the iron horse, for
a while the gentle horse, then he donned his moosehide
wings and flew as of old on many a long, hard flight,
to return as so often before.
Then he heard that at a certain lake
far to the eastward seven deer had been seen; their
leader a wonderful buck.
With three others he set out in a
sleigh to the eastward lake, and soon found the tracks-six
of various sizes and one large one, undoubtedly that
of the famous Stag.
How utterly the veneer was torn to
tatters by those seven chains of tracks! How
completely the wild paleolithic beast stood revealed
in each of the men, in spite of semi-modern garb,
as they drove away on the trail with a wild, excited
gleam in every eye!
It was nearly night before the trail
warmed up, but even then, in spite of Yan’s
earnest protest, they drove on in the sleigh.
And soon they came to where the trail told of seven
keen observers looking backward from a hill, then
an even sevenfold chain of twenty-five-foot bounds.
The hunters got no glimpse at all, but followed till
the night came down, then hastily camped in the snow.
In the morning they followed as before,
and soon came to where seven spots of black, bare
ground showed where the deer had slept.
Now when the trail grew warm Yan insisted
on hunting on foot. He trailed the deer into
a great thicket, and knew just where they were by
a grouse that flew cackling from its farther side.
He arranged a plan, but his friends
would not await the blue-jay’s ‘all-right’
note, and the deer escaped. But finding themselves
hard pressed, they split their band, two going one
way and five another. Yan kept with him one,
Duff, and leaving the others to follow the five deer,
he took up the twofold trail. Why? Because
in it was the great broad track he had followed for
two years back.
On they went, overtaking the deer
and causing them again to split. Yan sent Duff
after the doe, while he stuck relentlessly to the track
of the famous Stag. As the sun got low, the chase
led to a great half-wooded stretch, in a country new
to him; for he had driven the Stag far from his ancient
range. The trail again grew hot, but just as
Yan felt sure he soon would close, two distant shots
were heard, and the track of the Stag as he found
it then went off in a fear-winged flight that might
keep on for miles.
Yan went at a run, and soon found
Duff. He had had two long shots at the doe.
The second he thought had hit her. Within half
a mile they found blood on the trail; within another
half-mile the blood was no more seen and the track
seemed to have grown very large and strong. The
snow was drifting and the marks not easily read, yet
Yan knew very soon that the track they were on was
not that of the wounded doe, but was surely that of
her antlered mate. Back on the trail they ran
till they solved the doubt, for there they learned
that the Stag, after making his own escape, had come
back to change off: an old, old trick of the
hunted whereby one deer will cleverly join on and carry
on the line of tracks to save another that is too hard
pressed, while it leaps aside to hide or fly in a
different direction. Thus the Stag had sought
to save his wounded mate, but the hunters remorselessly
took up her trail and gloated like wolves over the
slight drip of blood. Within another short run
they found that the Stag, having failed to divert
the chase to himself, had returned to her, and at
sundown they sighted them a quarter of a mile ahead
mounting a long snow-slope. The doe was walking
slowly, with hanging head and ears. The buck
was running about as though in trouble that he did
not understand, and coming back to caress the doe
and wonder why she walked so slowly. In another
half-mile the hunters came up with them. She
was down in the snow. When he saw them coming,
the great Stag shook the oak-tree on his brow and
circled about in doubt, then fled from a foe he was
powerless to resist.
As the men came near the doe made
a convulsive effort to rise, but could not. Duff
drew his knife. It never before occurred to Yan
why he and each of them carried a long knife.
The poor doe turned on her foes her great lustrous
eyes; they were brimming with tears, but she made
no moan. Yan turned his back on the scene and
covered his face with his hands, but Duff went forward
with the knife and did some dreadful, unspeakable
thing, Yan scarcely knew what, and when Duff called
him he slowly turned, and the big Stag’s mate
was lying quiet in the snow, and the only living thing
that they saw as they quit the scene was the great
round form bearing aloft the oak-tree on its brow as
it haunted the nearer hills.
And when, an hour later, the men came
with the sleigh to lift the doe’s body from
the crimsoned snow, there were large fresh tracks
about it, and a dark shadow passed over the whitened
hill into the silent night.
What morbid thoughts came from the
fire that night! How the man in Yan did taunt
the glutted brute! Was this the end? Was
this the real chase? After long weeks, with the
ideal alone in mind, after countless blessed failures,
was this the vile success-a beautiful, glorious,
living creature tortured into a loathsome mass of carrion?
VII
But when the morning came the impress
of the night was dim. A long howl came over the
hill, and the thought that a wolf was on the trail
that he was quitting smote sadly on Yan’s heart.
They all set out for the settlement, but within an
hour Yan only wanted an excuse to stay. And when
at length they ran onto the fresh track of the Sandhill
Stag himself, the lad was all ablaze once more.
“I cannot go back-something
tells me that I must stay-I must see him
face to face again.”
The rest had had enough of the bitter
frost, so Yan took from the sleigh a small pot, a
blanket, and some food, and left them, to follow alone
the great sharp imprint in the snow.
“Good-by-good luck!”
He watched the sleigh out of sight,
in the low hills, and then felt as he never had before.
Though he had been so many months alone in the wilds,
he had never known loneliness, but as soon as his friends
were gone he was overwhelmed by a sense of the utter
heart-sickening dreariness of the endless, snowy waste.
Where were the charms that he had never failed to
find until now? He wanted to recall the sleigh,
but pride kept him silent.
In a little while it was too late,
and soon he was once more in the power of that fascinating,
endless chain of tracks,-a chain begun
years ago, when in a June the track of a mother Blacktail
was suddenly joined by two little ones’ tracks.
Since then the three had gone on winding over the
land the trail-chains they were forging,-knotted
and kinked, and twisted with every move and thought
of the makers, imprinted with every hap of their lives,
but interrupted never wholly. At times the tracks
were joined by that of some fierce foe and the kind
of mark was changed, but the chains went on for months
and years, now fast, now slow, but endless, until
some foe more strong joined on and there one trail
was ended. But this great Stag was forging still
that mystic chain. A million roods of hills had
he overlaid with its links, had scribbled over in
this oldest script with the story of his life.
If only our eyes were bright enough to follow up that
twenty thousand miles of trail, what light unguessed
we might obtain where the wisest now are groping!
But skin deep, man is brute.
Just a little while ago we were mere hunting brutes-our
bellies were our only thought, that telltale line
of dots was the road to food. No man can follow
it far without feeling a wild beast prickling in his
hair and down his spine. Away Yan went, a hunter-brute
once more, all other feelings swamped.
Late that day the trail, after many
a kink and seeming break, led into a great dense thicket
of brittle, quaking asp. Yan knew that the Stag
was there to lie at rest. The deer went in up-wind,
of course. His eyes and ears would watch his
trail, and his nose would guard in front, so Yan went
in at one side, trusting to get a shot. With a
very agony of care he made his way, step by step,
and, after many minutes, surely found the track, still
leading on. Another lengthy crawl, with nerves
at tense, and then the lad thought he heard a twig
snapped behind him, though the track was still ahead.
And after long he found it true. Before lying
down the Stag had doubled back, and while Yan had
thought him still ahead, he was lying far behind, so
had gotten wind of the man and now was miles away.
Once more into the unknown north away,
till cold, black night came down; then Yan sought
out a sheltered spot and made a tiny, red-man’s
fire. As Chaska had taught him long ago-’Big
fire for fool.’
When the lad curled up to sleep he
felt a vague wish to turn three times like a dog,
and a well-defined wish that he had fur on his face
and a bushy tail to lay around his freezing hands and
feet, for it was a night of northern frost. Old
Peboan was stalking on the snow. The stars seemed
to crackle, so one could almost hear. The trees
and earth were bursting with the awful frost.
The ice on a near lake was rent all night by cracks
that went whooping from shore to shore; and down between
the hills there poured the cold that burns.
A prairie-wolf came by in the night,
but he did not howl or treat Yan like an outsider
now. He gave a gentle, doglike ‘Woof,
woof,’ a sort of ‘Oho! so you have
come to it at last,’ and passed away. Toward
morning the weather grew milder, but with the change
there came a driving snow. The track was blotted
out. Yan had heeded nothing else, and did not
know where he was. After travelling an aimless
mile or two he decided to make for Pine Creek, which
ought to lie southeastward. But which way was
southeast? The powdery snow was driven along through
the air, blinding, stinging, burning. On all things
near it was like smoke, and on farther things, a driving
fog. But he made for a quaking asp grove, and
there, sticking through the snow, he found a crosier
golden-rod, dead and dry, but still faithfully delivering
its message, ‘Yon is the north.’
With course corrected, on he went, and, whenever in
doubt, dug out this compass-flower, till the country
dipped and Pine Creek lay below.
There was good camping here, the very
spot indeed where, fifteen years before, Butler had
camped on his Loneland Journey; but now the blizzard
had ceased, so Yan spent the day hunting without seeing
a track, and he spent the night as before, wishing
that nature had been kinder to him in the matter of
fur. During that first lone night his face and
toes had been frozen and now bore burning sores.
But still he kept on the chase, for something within
had told him that the Grail was surely near.
Next day a strange, unreasoning guess sent him east
across the creek in a deerless-looking barren land.
Within half a mile he came on dim tracks made lately
in the storm. He followed, and soon found where
six deer had lain at rest, and among them a great,
broad bed and a giant track that only one could have
made. The track was almost fresh, the sign unfrozen
still. “Within a mile,” he thought.
But within a hundred yards there loomed up on a fog-wrapped
hillside five heads with ears regardant, and at that
moment, too, there rose up from the snowy top a great
form like a blasted trunk with two dead boughs still
on. But they had seen him first, and before the
deadly gun could play, six beacons waved and a friendly
hill had screened them from its power.
The Sandhill Stag had gathered his
brood again, yet now that the murderer was on the
track once more, he scattered them as before.
But there was only one track for Yan.
At last the chase led away to the
great dip of Pine Creek-a mile-wide flat,
with a long, dense thicket down the middle.
“There is where he is hiding
and watching now, but there he will not rest,”
said the something within, and Yan kept out of sight
and watched; after half an hour a dark spot left the
willow belt and wandered up the farther hill.
When he was well out of sight over the hill Yan ran
across the valley and stalked around to get the trail
on the down-wind side. He found it, and there
learned that the Stag was as wise as he-he
had climbed a good lookout and watched his back trail,
then seeing Yan crossing the flat, his track went swiftly
bounding, bounding .
The Stag knew just how things stood;
a single match to a finish now, and he led away for
a new region. But Yan was learning something he
had often heard-that the swiftest deer can
be run down by a hardy man; for he was as fresh as
ever, but the great Stag’s bounds were shortening,
he was surely tiring out, he must throw off the hunter
now, or he is lost.
He often mounted a high hill to scan
the white world for his foe, and the after-trail was
a record of what he learned or feared. At last
his trail came to a sudden end. This was a mystery
until long study showed how he had returned backward
on his own track for a hundred yards, then bounded
aside to fly in another direction. Three times
he did this, and then passed through an aspen thicket
and, returning, lay down in this thicket near his
own track, so that in following, Yan must pass where
the Stag could smell and hear him long before the
trail brought the hunter over-close.
All these doublings and many more
like them were patiently unravelled and the shortening
bounds were straightened out once more till, as daylight
waned, the tracks seemed to grow stale and the bounds
again grow long. After a little, Yan became wholly
puzzled, so he stopped right there and spent another
wretched night. Next day at dawn he worked it
out.
He found he had been running the trail
he had already run. With a long hark-back, the
doubt was cleared. The desperate Stag had joined
onto his old track and bounded aside at length to
let the hunter follow the cold scent. But the
join-on was found and the real trail read, and the
tale that it told was of a great Stag wearing out,
too tired to eat, too scared to sleep, with a tireless
hunter after.
VIII
A last long follow brought the hunt
back to familiar ground-a marsh-encompassed
tract of woods with three ways in. There was the
deer’s trail entering. Yan felt he would
not come out there, for he knew his foe was following.
So swiftly and silently the hunter made for the second
road on the down-wind side, and having hung his coat
and sash there on a swaying sapling, he hastened to
the third way out, and hid. After a while, seeing
nothing, Yan gave the low call that the jaybird gives
when there’s danger abroad in the woods.
All deer take guidance from the jay,
and away off in the encompassed woods Yan saw the
great Stag with wavering ears go up a high lookout.
A low whistle turned him to a statue, but he was far
away with many a twig between. For some seconds
he stood sniffing the wind and gazing with his back
to his foe, watching the back trail, where so long
his enemy had been, but never dreaming of that enemy
in ambush ahead. Then the breeze set the coat
on the sapling a-fluttering. The Stag quickly
quit the hillock, not leaping or crashing through the
brush,-he had years ago got past that,-but
silent and weasel-like threading the maze, he disappeared.
Yan crouched in the willow thicket and strained his
every sense and tried to train his ears for keener
watching. A twig ticked in the copse that he
was in. Yan slowly rose with nerve and sense
at tightest tense, the gun in line-and as
he rose, there also rose, but fifteen feet away, a
wondrous pair of bronze and ivory horns, a royal head,
a noble form behind it, and face to face they stood,
Yan and the Sandhill Stag. At last-at
last, his life was in Yan’s hands. The
Stag flinched not, but stood and gazed with those
great ears and mournful, truthful eyes, and the rifle
leaped but sank again, for the Stag stood still and
calmly looked him in the eyes, and Yan felt the prickling
fading from his scalp, his clenched teeth eased, his
limbs, bent as to spring, relaxed and manlike stood
erect.
‘Shoot, shoot, shoot now!
This is what you have toiled for,’ said a
faint and fading voice, and spoke no more.
But Yan remembered the night when
he, himself run down, had turned to face the hunting
wolves, he remembered too that night when the snow
was red with crime, and now between him and the other
there he dimly saw a vision of an agonizing, dying
doe, with great, sad eyes, that only asked, ‘What
harm have I done you?’ A change came over him,
and every thought of murder went from Yan as they
gazed into each other’s eyes-and
hearts. Yan could not look him in the eyes and
take his life, and different thoughts and a wholly
different concept of the Stag, coming-coming-long
coming-had come.
“Oh, beautiful creature!
One of our wise men has said, the body is the soul
made visible; is your spirit then so beautiful-as
beautiful as wise? We have long stood as foes,
hunter and hunted, but now that is changed and we
stand face to face, fellow-creatures looking in each
other’s eyes, not knowing each other’s
speech-but knowing motives and feelings.
Now I understand you as I never did before; surely
you at least in part understand me. For your
life is at last in my power, yet you have no fear.
I knew of a deer once, that, run down by the hounds,
sought safety with the hunter, and he saved it-and
you also I have run down and you boldly seek safety
with me. Yes! you are as wise as you are beautiful,
for I will never harm a hair of you. We are brothers,
oh, bounding Blacktail! only I am the elder and stronger,
and if only my strength could always be at hand to
save you, you would never come to harm. Go now,
without fear, to range the piney hills; never more
shall I follow your trail with the wild wolf rampant
in my heart. Less and less as I grow do I see
in your race mere flying marks, or butcher-meat.
We have grown, Little Brother, and learned many things
that you know not, but you have many a precious sense
that is wholly hidden from us. Go now without
fear of me.
“I may never see you again.
But if only you would come sometimes and look me in
the eyes and make me feel as you have done to-day,
you would drive the wild beast wholly from my heart,
and then the veil would be a little drawn and I should
know more of the things that wise men have prayed
for knowledge of. And yet I feel it never will
be-I have found the Grail. I have
learned what Buddha learned. I shall never see
you again. Farewell.”