When Tybalt the tale-gatherer asked
why it was so called, Pierre said: “Because
of the Great Slave;” and then paused.
Tybalt did not hurry Pierre, knowing
his whims. If he wished to tell, he would in
his own time; if not, nothing could draw it from him.
It was nearly an hour before Pierre, eased off from
the puzzle he was solving with bits of paper and obliged
Tybalt. He began as if they had been speaking
the moment before:
“They have said it is legend,
but I know better. I have seen the records of
the Company, and it is all there. I was at Fort
O’Glory once, and in a box two hundred years
old the factor and I found it. There were other
papers, and some of them had large red seals, and a
name scrawled along the end of the page.”
Pierre shook his head, as if in contented
musing. He was a born story-teller. Tybalt
was aching with interest, for he scented a thing of
note.
“How did any of those papers,
signed with a scrawl, begin?” he asked.
“‘To our dearly-beloved,’
or something like that,” answered Pierre.
“There were letters also. Two of them were
full of harsh words, and these were signed with the
scrawl.”
“What was that scrawl?” asked Tybalt.
Pierre stooped to the sand, and wrote
two words with his finger. “Like that,”
he answered.
Tybalt looked intently for an instant,
and then drew a long breath. “Charles Rex,”
he said, hardly above his breath.
Pierre gave him a suggestive sidelong
glance. “That name was droll, eh?”
Tybalt’s blood was tingling
with the joy of discovery. “It is a great
name,” he said shortly.
“The Slave was great the Indians
said so at the last.”
“But that was not the name of the Slave?”
“Mais non. Who said so!
Charles Rex like that! was the man who wrote
the letters.”
“To the Great Slave?”
Pierre made a gesture of impatience. “Very
sure.”
“Where are those letters now?”
“With the Governor of the Company.”
Tybalt cut the tobacco for his pipe savagely.
“You’d have liked one of those papers?”
asked Pierre provokingly.
“I’d give five hundred dollars for one,”
broke out Tybalt.
Pierre lifted his eyebrows. “T’sh,
what’s the good of five hundred dollars up here?
What would you do with a letter like that?”
Tybalt laughed with a touch of irony,
for Pierre was clearly “rubbing it in.”
“Perhaps for a book?” gently asked Pierre.
“Yes, if you like.”
“It is a pity. But there is a way.”
“How?”
“Put me in the book. Then ”
“How does that touch the case?”
Pierre shrugged a shoulder gently,
for he thought Tybalt was unusually obtuse. Tybalt
thought so himself before the episode ended.
“Go on,” he said, with
clouded brow, but interested eye. Then, as if
with sudden thought: “To whom were the letters
addressed, Pierre?”
“Wait!” was the reply.
“One letter said: ’Good cousin, We
are evermore glad to have thee and thy most excelling
mistress near us. So, fail us not at our cheerful
doings, yonder at Highgate.’ Another a
year after said: ’Cousin, for
the sweetening of our mind, get thee gone into some
distant corner of our pasturage the farthest
doth please us most. We would not have thee on
foreign ground, for we bear no ill-will to our brother
princes, and yet we would not have thee near our garden
of good loyal souls, for thou hast a rebel heart and
a tongue of divers tunes. Thou lovest not the
good old song of duty to thy prince. Obeying us,
thy lady shall keep thine estates untouched; failing
obedience, thou wilt make more than thy prince unhappy.
Fare thee well.’ That was the way of two
letters,” said Pierre.
“How do you remember so?”
Pierre shrugged a shoulder again. “It is
easy with things like that.”
“But word for word?”
“I learned it word for word.”
“Now for the story of the Lake if
you won’t tell me the name of the man.”
“The name afterwards-perhaps.
Well, he came to that farthest corner of the pasturage,
to the Hudson’s Bay country, two hundred years
ago. What do you think? Was he so sick of
all, that he would go so far he could never get back?
Maybe those ‘cheerful doings’ at Highgate,
eh? And the lady who can tell?”
Tybalt seized Pierre’s arm.
“You know more. Damnation, can’t you
see I’m on needles to hear? Was there anything
in the letters about the lady? Anything more
than you’ve told?”
Pierre liked no man’s hand on
him. He glanced down at the eager fingers, and
said coldly:
“You are a great man; you can
tell a story in many ways, but I in one way alone,
and that is my way maïs oui!”
“Very well, take your own time.”
“Bien. I got the story
from two heads. If you hear a thing like that
from Indians, you call it ‘legend’; if
from the Company’s papers, you call it ‘history.’
Well, in this there is not much difference. The
papers tell precise the facts; the legend gives the
feeling, is more true. How can you judge the
facts if you don’t know the feeling? No!
what is bad turns good sometimes, when you know the
how, the feeling, the place. Well, this story
of the Great Slave eh?... There is
a race of Indians in the far north who have hair so
brown like yours, m’sieu’, and eyes no
darker. It is said they are of those that lived
at the Pole, before the sea swamped the Isthmus, and
swallowed up so many islands. So. In those
days the fair race came to the south for the first
time, that is, far below the Circle. They had
their women with them. I have seen those of to-day:
fine and tall, with breasts like apples, and a cheek
to tempt a man like you, m’sieu’; no grease
in the hair no, M’sieu’ Tybalt.”
Tybalt sat moveless under the obvious
irony, but his eyes were fixed intently on Pierre,
his mind ever travelling far ahead of the tale.
“Alors: the ‘good
cousin’ of Charles Rex, he made a journey with
two men to the Far-off Metal River, and one day this
tribe from the north come on his camp. It was
summer, and they were camping in the Valley of the
Young Moon, more sweet, they say, than any in the north.
The Indians cornered them. There was a fight,
and one of the Company’s men was killed, and
five of the other. But when the king of the people
of the Pole saw that the great man was fair of face,
he called for the fight to stop.
“There was a big talk all by
signs, and the king said for the great man to come
and be one with them, for they liked his fair face their
forefathers were fair like him. He should have
the noblest of their women for his wife, and be a
prince among them. He would not go: so they
drew away again and fought. A stone-axe brought
the great man to the ground. He was stunned,
not killed. Then the other man gave up, and said
he would be one of them if they would take him.
They would have killed him but for one of their women.
She said that he should live to tell them tales of
the south country and the strange people, when they
came again to their camp-fires. So they let him
live, and he was one of them. But the chief man,
because he was stubborn and scorned them, and had
killed the son of their king in the fight, they made
a slave, and carried him north a captive, till they
came to this lake the Lake of the Great
Slave.
“In all ways they tried him,
but he would not yield, neither to wear their dress
nor to worship their gods. He was robbed of his
clothes, of his gold-handled dagger, his belt of silk
and silver, his carbine with rich chasing, and all,
and he was among them almost naked, it was
summer, as I said, yet defying them. He was taller
by a head than any of them, and his white skin rippled
in the sun like soft steel.”
Tybalt was inclined to ask Pierre
how he knew all this, but he held his peace.
Pierre, as if divining his thoughts, continued:
“You ask how I know these things.
Very good: there are the legends, and there were
the papers of the Company. The Indians tried every
way, but it was no use; he would have nothing to say
to them. At last they came to this lake.
Now something great occurred. The woman who had
been the wife of the king’s dead son, her heart
went out in love of the Great Slave; but he never
looked at her. One day there were great sports,
for it was the feast of the Red Star. The young
men did feats of strength, here on this ground where
we sit. The king’s wife called out for the
Great Slave to measure strength with them all.
He would not stir. The king commanded him; still
he would not, but stood among them silent and looking
far away over their heads. At last, two young
men of good height and bone threw arrows at his bare
breast. The blood came in spots. Then he
gave a cry through his beard, and was on them like
a lion. He caught them, one in each arm, swung
them from the ground, and brought their heads together
with a crash, breaking their skulls, and dropped them
at his feet. Catching up a long spear, he waited
for the rest. But they did not come, for, with
a loud voice, the king told them to fall back, and
went and felt the bodies of the men. One of them
was dead; the other was his second son he
would live.
“‘It is a great deed,’
said the king, ’for these were no children, but
strong men.’
“Then again he offered the Great
Slave women to marry, and fifty tents of deerskin
for the making of a village. But the Great Slave
said no, and asked to be sent back to Fort O’Glory.
“The king refused. But
that night, as he slept in his tent, the girl-widow
came to him, waked him, and told him to follow her.
He came forth, and she led him softly through the
silent camp to that wood which we see over there.
He told her she need not go on. Without a word,
she reached over and kissed him on the breast.
Then he understood. He told her that she could
not come with him, for there was that lady in England his
wife, eh? But never mind, that will come.
He was too great to save his life, or be free at the
price. Some are born that way. They have
their own commandments, and they keep them.
“He told her that she must go
back. She gave a little cry, and sank down at
his feet, saying that her life would be in danger if
she went back.
“Then he told her to come, for
it was in his mind to bring her to Fort O’Glory,
where she could marry an Indian there. But now
she would not go with him, and turned towards the
village. A woman is a strange creature yes,
like that! He refused to go and leave her.
She was in danger, and he would share it, whatever
it might be. So, though she prayed him not, he
went back with her; and when she saw that he would
go in spite of all, she was glad: which is like
a woman.
“When he entered the tent again,
he guessed her danger, for he stepped over the bodies
of two dead men. She had killed them. As
she turned at the door to go to her own tent, another
woman faced her. It was the wife of the king,
who had suspected, and had now found out. Who
can tell what it was? Jealousy, perhaps.
The Great Slave could tell, maybe, if he could speak,
for a man always knows when a woman sets him high.
Anyhow, that was the way it stood. In a moment
the girl was marched back to her tent, and all the
camp heard a wicked lie of the widow of the king’s
son.
“To it there was an end after the way of their
laws.
“The woman should die by fire,
and the man, as the king might will. So there
was a great gathering in the place where we are, and
the king sat against that big white stone, which is
now as it was then. Silence was called, and they
brought the girl-widow forth. The king spoke:
“’Thou who hadst a prince
for thy husband, didst go in the night to the tent
of the slave who killed thy husband; whereby thou also
becamest a slave, and didst shame the greatness which
was given thee. Thou shalt die, as has been set
in our laws.’
“The girl-widow rose, and spoke.
’I did not know, O king, that he whom thou madest
a slave slew my husband, the prince of our people,
and thy son. That was not told me. But had
I known it, still would I have set him free, for thy
son was killed in fair battle, and this man deserves
not slavery or torture. I did seek the tent of
the Great Slave, and it was to set him free no
more. For that did I go, and, for the rest, my
soul is open to the Spirit Who Sees. I have done
naught, and never did, nor ever will, that might shame
a king, or the daughter of a king, or the wife of
a king, or a woman. If to set a great captive
free is death for me, then am I ready. I will
answer all pure women in the far Camp of the Great
Fires without fear. There is no more, O king,
that I may say, but this: she who dies by fire,
being of noble blood, may choose who shall light the
faggots is it not so?’
“Then the king replied: ‘It is so.
Such is our law.’
“There was counselling between
the king and his oldest men, and so long were they
handling the matter backwards and forwards that it
seemed she might go free. But the king’s
wife, seeing, came and spoke to the king and the others,
crying out for the honour of her dead son; so that
in a moment of anger they all cried out for death.
“When the king said again to
the girl that she must die by fire, she answered:
’It is as the gods will. But it is so, as
I said, that I may choose who shall light the fires?’
“The king answered yes, and
asked her whom she chose. She pointed towards
the Great Slave. And all, even the king and his
councillors, wondered, for they knew little of the
heart of women. What is a man with a matter like
that? Nothing nothing at all.
They would have set this for punishment: that
she should ask for it was beyond them. Yes, even
the king’s wife it was beyond her.
But the girl herself, see you, was it not this way? If
she died by the hand of him she loved, then it would
be easy, for she could forget the pain, in the thought
that his heart would ache for her, and that at the
very last he might care, and she should see it.
She was great in her way also that girl,
two hundred years ago.
“Alors, they led her a
little distance off, there is the spot,
where you see the ground heave a little, and the Great
Slave was brought up. The king told him why the
girl was to die. He went like stone, looking,
looking at them. He knew that the girl’s
heart was like a little child’s, and the shame
and cruelty of the thing froze him silent for a minute,
and the colour flew from his face to here and there
on his body, as a flame on marble. The cords
began to beat and throb in his neck and on his forehead,
and his eyes gave out fire like flint on an arrow-head.
“Then he began to talk.
He could not say much, for he knew so little of their
language. But it was ‘No!’ every other
word. ‘No no no no!’
the words ringing from his chest. ‘She
is good!’ he said. ‘The other-no!’
and he made a motion with his hand. ’She
must not die no! Evil? It is
a lie! I will kill each man that says it, one
by one, if he dares come forth. She tried to
save me well?’ Then he made them know
that he was of high place in a far country, and that
a man like him would not tell a lie. That pleased
the king, for he was proud, and he saw that the Slave
was of better stuff than himself. Besides, the
king was a brave man, and he had strength, and more
than once he had laid his hand on the chest of the
other, as one might on a grand animal. Perhaps,
even then, they might have spared the girl was it
not for the queen. She would not hear of it.
Then they tried the Great Slave, and he was found guilty.
The queen sent him word to beg for pardon. So
he stood out and spoke to the queen. She sat
up straight, with pride in her eyes, for was it not
a great prince, as she thought, asking? But a
cloud fell on her face, for he begged the girl’s
life. Since there must be death, let him die,
and die by fire in her place! It was then two
women cried out: the poor girl for joy not
at the thought that her life would be saved, but because
she thought the man loved her now, or he would not
offer to die for her; and the queen for hate, because
she thought the same. You can guess the rest:
they were both to die, though the king was sorry for
the man.
“The king’s speaker stood
out and asked them if they had anything to say.
The girl stepped forward, her face without any fear,
but a kind of noble pride in it, and said: ‘I
am ready, O king.’
“The Great Slave bowed his head,
and was thinking much. They asked him again,
and he waved his hand at them. The king spoke
up in anger, and then he smiled and said: ‘O
king, I am not ready; if I die, I die.’
Then he fell to thinking again. But once more
the king spoke: ’Thou shalt surely die,
but not by fire, nor now; nor till we have come to
our great camp in our own country. There thou
shalt die. But the woman shall die at the going
down of the sun. She shall die by fire, and thou
shalt light the faggots for the burning.’
“The Great Slave said he would
not do it, not though he should die a hundred deaths.
Then the king said that it was the woman’s right
to choose who should start the fire, and he had given
his word, which should not be broken.
“When the Great Slave heard
this he was wild for a little, and then he guessed
altogether what was in the girl’s mind.
Was not this the true thing in her, the very truest?
Mais oui! That was what she wished to
die by his hand rather than by any other; and something
troubled his breast, and a cloud came in his eyes,
so that for a moment he could not see. He looked
at the girl, so serious, eye to eye. Perhaps she
understood. So, after a time, he got calm as the
farthest light in the sky, his face shining among
them all with a look none could read. He sat
down, and wrote upon pieces of bark with a spear-point those
bits of bark I have seen also at Fort O’Glory.
He pierced them through with dried strings of the
slippery-elm tree, and with the king’s consent
gave them to the Company’s man, who had become
one of the people, telling him, if ever he was free,
or could send them to the Company, he must do so.
The man promised, and shame came upon him that he had
let the other suffer alone; and he said he was willing
to fight and die if the Great Slave gave the word.
But he would not; and he urged that it was right for
the man to save his life. For himself, no.
It could never be; and if he must die, he must die.
“You see, a great man must always
live alone and die alone, when there are only such
people about him. So, now that the letters were
written, he sat upon the ground and thought, looking
often towards the girl, who was placed apart, with
guards near. The king sat thinking also.
He could not guess why the Great Slave should give
the letters now, since he was not yet to die, nor
could the Company’s man show a reason when the
king asked him. So the king waited, and told
the guards to see that the Great Slave did not kill
himself.
“But the queen wanted the death
of the girl, and was glad beyond telling that the
Slave must light the faggots. She was glad when
she saw the young braves bring a long sapling from
the forest, and, digging a hole, put it stoutly in
the ground, and fetch wood, and heap it about.
“The Great Slave noted that
the bark of the sapling had not been stripped, and
more than once he measured, with his eye, the space
between the stake and the shores of the Lake:
he did this most private, so that no one saw but the
girl.
“At last the time was come.
The Lake was all rose and gold out there in the west,
and the water so still so still. The cool, moist
scent of the leaves and grass came out from the woods
and up from the plain, and the world was so full of
content that a man’s heart could cry out, even
as now, while we look eh, is it not good?
See the deer drinking on the other shore there!”
Suddenly Pierre became silent, as if he had forgotten
the story altogether. Tybalt was impatient, but
he did not speak. He took a twig, and in the
sand he wrote “Charles Rex.” Pierre
glanced down and saw it.
“There was beating of the little
drums,” he continued, “and the crying
of the king’s speaker; and soon all was ready,
and the people gathered at a distance, and the king
and the queen, and the chief men nearer; and the girl
was brought forth.
“As they led her past the Great
Slave, she looked into his eyes, and afterwards her
heart was glad, for she knew that at the last he would
be near her, and that his hand should light the fires.
Two men tied her to the stake. Then the king’s
man cried out again, telling of her crime, and calling
for her death. The Great Slave was brought near.
No one knew that the palms of his hands had been rubbed
in the sand for a purpose. When he was brought
beside the stake, a torch was given him by his guards.
He looked at the girl, and she smiled at him, and said:
‘Good-bye. Forgive. I die not afraid,
and happy.’
“He did not answer, but stooped
and lit the sticks here and there. All at once
he snatched a burning stick, and it and the torch he
thrust, like lightning, in the faces of his guards,
blinding them. Then he sprang to the stake, and,
with a huge pull, tore it from the ground, girl and
all, and rushed to the shore of the Lake, with her
tied so in his arms.
“He had been so swift that,
at first, no one stirred. He reached the shore,
rushed into the water, dragging a boat out with one
hand as he did so, and, putting the girl in, seized
a paddle and was away with a start. A few strokes,
and then he stopped, picked up a hatchet that was
in the boat with many spears, and freed the girl.
Then he paddled on, trusting, with a small hope, that
through his great strength he could keep ahead till
darkness came, and then, in the gloom, they might
escape. The girl also seized an oar, and the canoe the
king’s own canoe came on like a swallow.
“But the tribe was after them
in fifty canoes, some coming straight along, some
spreading out to close in later. It was no equal
game, for these people were so quick and strong with
the oars, and they were a hundred or more to two.
There could be but one end. It was what the Great
Slave had looked for: to fight till the last breath.
He should fight for the woman who had risked all for
him just a common woman of the north, but
it seemed good to lose his life for her; and she would
be happy to die with him.
“So they stood side by side
when the spears and arrows fell round them, and they
gave death and wounds for wounds in their own bodies.
When, at last, the Indians climbed into the canoe,
the Great Slave was dead of many wounds, and the woman,
all gashed, lay with her lips to his wet, red cheek.
She smiled as they dragged her away; and her soul hurried
after his to the Camp of the Great Fires.”
It was long before Tybalt spoke, but
at last he said: “If I could but tell it
as you have told it to me, Pierre!” Pierre answered:
“Tell it with your tongue, and this shall be
nothing to it, for what am I? What English have
I, a gipsy of the snows? But do not write it,
maïs non! Writing wanders from the
matter. The eyes, and the tongue, and the time,
that is the thing. But in a book it
will sound all cold and thin. It is for the north,
for the camp-fire, for the big talk before a man rolls
into his blanket, and is at peace. No, no writing,
monsieur. Speak it everywhere with your tongue.”
“And so I would, were my tongue
as yours. Pierre, tell me more about the letters
at Fort O’Glory. You know his name what
was it?”
“You said five hundred dollars
for one of those letters. Is it not?”
“Yes.” Tybalt had a new hope.
“T’sh! What do I
want of five hundred dollars! But, here, answer
me a question: Was the lady his wife,
she that was left in England a good woman?
Answer me out of your own sense, and from my story.
If you say right you shall have a letter one
that I have by me.”
Tybalt’s heart leapt into his
throat. After a little he said huskily:
“She was a good woman he believed
her that, and so shall I.”
“You think he could not have
been so great unless, eh? And that ’Charles
Rex,’ what of him?”
“What good can it do to call
him bad now?” Without a word, Pierre drew from
a leather wallet a letter, and, by the light of the
fast-setting sun, Tybalt read it, then read it again,
and yet again.
“Poor soul! poor lady!”
he said. “Was ever such another letter written
to any man? And it came too late; this, with the
king’s recall, came too late!”
“So so. He died
out there where that wild duck flies a Great
Slave. Years after, the Company’s man brought
word of all.”
Tybalt was looking at the name on
the outside of the letter.
“How do they call that name?”
asked Pierre. “It is like none I’ve
seen no.”
Tybalt shook his head sorrowfully, and did not answer.