From the day they left Washington
Jim put his life and his fate in his wife’s
hands. He meant to follow her judgment, and, self-willed
and strong in intellect as he was, he said that she
should have a fair chance of fulfilling her purpose.
There had been many pour parlers as to what Jim should
do. There was farming. She set that aside,
because it meant capital, and it also meant monotony
and loneliness; and capital was limited, and monotony
and loneliness were bad for Jim, deadening an active
brain which must not be deprived of stimulants stimulants
of a different sort, however, from those which had
heretofore mastered it. There was the law.
But Jim would have to become a citizen of Canada,
change his flag, and where they meant to go to
the outskirts there would be few opportunities
for the law; and with not enough to do there would
be danger. Railway construction? That seemed
good in many ways, but Jim had not the professional
knowledge necessary; his railway experience with his
father had only been financial. Above all else
he must have responsibility, discipline, and strict
order in his life.
“Something that will be good
for my natural vanity, and knock the nonsense out
of me,” Jim agreed, as they drew farther and
farther away from Washington and the past, and nearer
and nearer to the Far North and their future.
Never did two more honest souls put their hands in
each other’s, and set forth upon the thorniest
path to a goal which was their hearts’ desire.
Since they had become one, there had come into Sally’s
face that illumination which belongs only to souls
possessed of an idea greater than themselves, outside
themselves saints, patriots; faces which
have been washed in the salt tears dropped for others’
sorrows, and lighted by the fire of self-sacrifice.
Sally Seabrook, the high-spirited, the radiant, the
sweetly wilful, the provoking, to concentrate herself
upon this narrow theme to reconquer the
lost paradise of one vexed mortal soul!
What did Jim’s life mean? It
was only one in the millions coming and going, and
every man must work out his own salvation. Why
should she cramp her soul to this one issue, when
the same soul could spend itself upon the greater
motives and in the larger circle? A wide world
of influence had opened up before her; position, power,
adulation, could all have been hers, as John Appleton
and Jim’s father had said. She might have
moved in well-trodden ways, through gardens of pleasure,
lived a life where all would be made easy, where she
would be shielded at every turn, and her beauty would
be flattered by luxury into a constant glow.
She was not so primitive, so unintellectual, as not
to have thought of this, else her decision would have
had less importance; she would have been no more than
an infatuated emotional woman with a touch of second
class drama in her nature. She had thought of
it all, and she had made her choice. The easier
course was the course for meaner souls, and she had
not one vein of thin blood nor a small idea in her
whole nature. She had a heart and mind for great
issues. She believed that Jim had a great brain,
and would and could accomplish great things.
She knew that he had in him the strain of hereditary
instinct his mother’s father had
ended a brief life in a drunken duel on the Mississippi,
and Jim’s boyhood had never had discipline or
direction, or any strenuous order. He might never
acquire order, and the power that order and habit
and the daily iteration of necessary thoughts and acts
bring; but the prospect did not appal her. She
had taken the risk with her eyes wide open; had set
her own life and happiness in the hazard. But
Jim must be saved, must be what his talents, his genius,
entitled him to be. And the long game must have
the long thought.
So, as they drew into the great Saskatchewan
Valley, her hand in his, and hope in his eyes, and
such a look of confidence and pride in her as brought
back his old strong beauty of face, and smoothed the
careworn lines of self-indulgence, she gave him his
course: as a private he must join the North-West
Mounted Police, the red-coated riders of the plains,
and work his way up through every stage of responsibility,
beginning at the foot of the ladder of humbleness
and self-control. She believed that he would
agree with her proposal; but her hands clasped his
a little more firmly and solicitously there
was a faint, womanly fear at her heart as
she asked him if he would do it. The life meant
more than occasional separation; it meant that there
would be periods when she would not be with him; and
there was great danger in that; but she knew that
the risks must be taken, and he must not be wholly
reliant on her presence for his moral strength.
His face fell for a moment when she
made the suggestion, but it cleared presently, and
he said with a dry laugh: “Well, I guess
they must make me a sergeant pretty quick. I’m
a colonel in the Kentucky Carbineers!”
She laughed, too; then a moment afterwards,
womanlike, wondered if she was right, and was a little
frightened. But that was only because she was
not self-opinionated, and was anxious, more anxious
than any woman in all the North.
It happened as Jim said; he was made
a sergeant at once Sally managed that;
for, when it came to the point, and she saw the conditions
in which the privates lived, and realised that Jim
must be one of them and clean out the stables, and
groom his horse and the officers’ horses, and
fetch and carry, her heart failed her, and she thought
that she was making her remedy needlessly heroical.
So she went to see the Commissioner, who was on a
tour of scrutiny on their arrival at the post, and,
as better men than he had done in more knowing circles,
he fell under her spell. If she had asked for
a lieutenancy, he would probably have corrupted some
member of Parliament into securing it for Jim.
But Jim was made a sergeant, and the
Commissioner and the captain of the troop kept their
eyes on him. So did other members of the troop
who did not quite know their man, and attempted, figuratively,
to pinch him here and there. They found that
his actions were greater than his words, and both
were in perfect harmony in the end, though his words
often seemed pointless to their minds, until they
understood that they had conveyed truths through a
medium more like a heliograph than a telephone.
By and by they begin to understand his heliographing,
and, when they did that, they began to swear by him,
not at him.
In time it was found that the troop
never had a better disciplinarian than Jim. He
knew when to shut his eyes, and when to keep them open.
To non-essentials he kept his eyes shut; to essentials
he kept them very wide open. There were some
men of good birth from England and elsewhere among
them, and these mostly understood him first. But
they all understood Sally from the beginning, and
after a little they were glad enough to be permitted
to come, on occasion, to the five-roomed little house
near the barracks, and hear her talk, then answer her
questions, and, as men had done at Washington, open
out their hearts to her. They noticed, however,
that while she made them barley-water, and all kinds
of soft drinks from citric acid, sarsaparilla and the
like, and had one special drink of her own invention,
which she called cream-nectar, no spirits were to
be had. They also noticed that Jim never drank
a drop of liquor, and by and by, one way or another,
they got a glimmer of the real truth, before it became
known who he really was or anything of his story.
And the interest in the two, and in Jim’s reformation,
spread through the country, while Jim gained reputation
as the smartest man in the force.
They were on the outskirts of civilisation;
as Jim used to say, “One step ahead of the procession.”
Jim’s duty was to guard the columns of settlement
and progress, and to see that every man got his own
rights and not more than his rights; that justice
should be the plumb-line of march and settlement.
His principle was embodied in certain words which
he quoted once to Sally from the prophet Amos:
“And the Lord said unto me, Amos, what seest
thou? And I said, A plumbline.”
On the day that Jim became a lieutenant
his family increased by one. It was a girl, and
they called her Nancy, after Jim’s mother.
It was the anniversary of their marriage, and, so
far, Jim had won, with what fightings and strugglings
and wrestlings of the spirit only Sally and himself
knew. And she knew as well as he, and always saw
the storm coming before it broke a restlessness,
then a moodiness, then a hungry, eager, helpless look,
and afterwards an agony of longing, a feverish desire
to break away and get the thrilling thing which would
still the demon within him.
There had been moments when his doom
seemed certain he knew and she knew that
if he once got drunk again he would fall never to rise.
On one occasion, after a hard, long, hungry ride,
he was half-mad with desire, but even as he seized
the flask that was offered to him by his only enemy,
the captain of B Troop, at the next station eastward,
there came a sudden call to duty, two hundred Indians
having gone upon the war-path. It saved him;
it broke the spell. He had to mount and away,
with the antidote and stimulant of responsibility driving
him on.
Another occasion was equally perilous
to his safety. They had been idle for days in
a hot week in summer, waiting for orders to return
from the rail-head where they had gone to quell a
riot, and where drink and hilarity were common.
Suddenly more suddenly than it had ever
come, the demon of his thirst had Jim by the throat.
Sergeant Sewell, of the grey-stubble head, who loved
him more than his sour heart had loved anybody in
all his life, was holding himself ready for the physical
assault he must make upon his superior officer, if
he raised a glass to his lips, when salvation came
once again. An accident had occurred far down
on the railway line, and the operator of the telegraph-office
had that very day been stricken down with pleurisy
and pneumonia. In despair the manager had sent
to Jim, eagerly hoping that he might help them, for
the Riders of the Plains were a sort of court of appeal
for every trouble in the Far North.
Instantly Jim was in the saddle with
his troop. Out of curiosity he had learned telegraphy
when a boy, as he had learned many things, and, arrived
at the scene of the accident, he sent messages and
received them by sound, not on paper as
did the official operator, to the amazement and pride
of the troop. Then, between caring for the injured
in the accident, against the coming of the relief train,
and nursing the sick operator through the dark moments
of his dangerous illness, he passed a crisis of his
own disease triumphantly; but not the last crisis.
So the first and so the second and
third years passed in safety.