“No, Captain; leave me here
and push on to Manitou Mountain. You ought to
make it in two days. I’m just as safe here
as on the sleds, and less trouble. A blind man’s
no good. I’ll have a good rest while you’re
gone, and then perhaps my eyes will come out right.
My foot’s nearly well now.”
Jeff Hyde was snow-blind. The
giant of the party had suffered most.
But Hume said in reply: “I
won’t leave you alone. The dogs can carry
you as they’ve done for the last ten days.”
But Jeff replied: “I’m
as safe here as marching, and safer. When the
dogs are not carrying me, nor any one leading me, you
can get on faster; and that means everything to us,
now don’t it?”
Hume met the eyes of Gaspe Toujours.
He read them. Then he said to Jeff: “It
shall be as you wish. Late Carscallen, Cloud-in-the-Sky,
and myself will push on to Manitou Mountain.
You and Gaspe Toujours will remain here.”
Jeff Hyde’s blind eyes turned
towards Gaspe Toujours, who said: “Yes.
We have plenty tabac.”
A tent was set up, provisions were
put in it, a spirit-lamp and matches were added, and
the simple ménage was complete. Not
quite. Jaspar Hume looked round. There was
not a tree in sight. He stooped and cut away a
pole that was used for strengthening the runners of
the sleds, fastened it firmly in the ground, and tied
to it a red woollen scarf, used for tightening his
white blankets round him. Then he said: “Be
sure and keep that flying.”
Jeff’s face was turned towards
the north. The blindman’s instinct was
coming to him. Far off white eddying drifts were
rising over long hillocks of snow. When he turned
round again his face was troubled. It grew more
troubled, then it brightened up again, and he said
to Hume: “Captain, would you leave that
book with me till you come back that about
infirmities, dangers, and necessities? I knew
a river-boss who used to carry an old spelling-book
round with him for luck. It seems to me as if
that book of yours, Captain, would bring luck to this
part of the White Guard, that bein’ out at heels
like has to stay behind.”
Hume had borne the sufferings of his
life with courage; he had led this terrible tramp
with no tremor at his heart for himself; he was seeking
to perform a perilous act without any inward shrinking;
but Jeff’s request was the greatest trial of
this critical period in his life.
Jeff felt, if he could not see, the
hesitation of his chief. His rough but kind instincts
told him something was wrong, and he hastened to add:
“Beg your pardon, Mr. Hume, it ain’t no
matter. I oughtn’t have asked you for it.
But it’s just like me. I’ve been a
chain on the leg of the White Guard this whole tramp.”
The moment of hesitation had passed
before Jeff had said half-a-dozen words, and Hume
put the book in his hands with the words: “No,
Jeff, take it. It will bring luck to the White
Guard. Keep it safe until I come back.”
Jeff took the book, but hearing a
guttural “Ugh” behind him, he turned round
defiantly. Cloud-in-the-Sky touched his arm and
said: “Good! Strong-back book good!”
Jeff was satisfied.
At this point they parted, Jeff and
Gaspe Toujours remaining, and Hume and his two followers
going on towards Manitou Mountain. There seemed
little probability that Clive Lepage would be found.
In their progress eastward and northward they had
covered wide areas of country, dividing and meeting
again after stated hours of travel, but not a sign
had been seen; neither cairn nor staff nor any mark
of human presence.
Hume had noticed Jeff Hyde’s
face when it was turned to the eddying drifts of the
north, and he understood what was in the experienced
huntsman’s mind. He knew that severe weather
was before them, and that the greatest danger of the
journey was to be encountered.
That night they saw Manitou Mountain,
cold, colossal, harshly calm; and jointly with that
sight there arose a shrieking, biting, fearful north
wind. It blew upon them in cruel menace of conquest,
in piercing inclemency. It struck a freezing
terror to their hearts, and grew in violent attack
until, as if repenting that it had foregone its power
to save, the sun suddenly grew red and angry, and
spread out a shield of blood along the bastions of
the west. The wind shrank back and grew less
murderous, and ere the last red arrow shot up behind
the lonely western wall of white, the three knew that
the worst of the storm had passed and that death had
drawn back for a time. What Hume thought may be
gathered from his diary; for ere he crawled in among
the dogs and stretched himself out beside Bouche,
he wrote these words with aching fingers:
January 10th: Camp 39. A
bitter day. We are facing three fears now:
the fate of those we left behind; Lepage’s fate;
and the going back. We are twenty miles from
Manitou Mountain. If he is found, I should
not fear the return journey; success gives hope.
But we trust in God.
Another day passed and at night, after
a hard march, they camped five miles from Manitou
Mountain. And not a sign! But Hume felt there
was a faint chance of Lepage being found at this mountain.
His iron frame had borne the hardships of this journey
well; his strong heart better. But this night
an unaccountable weakness possessed him. Mind
and body were on the verge of helplessness. Bouche
seemed to understand this, and when he was unhitched
from the team of dogs, now dwindled to seven, he leaped
upon his master’s breast. It was as if some
instinct of sympathy, of prescience, was passing between
the man and the dog. Hume bent his head down
to Bouche for an instant and rubbed his side kindly;
then he said, with a tired accent: “It’s
all right, old dog, it’s all right.”
Hume did not sleep well at first,
but at length oblivion came. He waked to feel
Bouche tugging at his blankets. It was noon.
Late Carscallen and Cloud-in-the-Sky were still sleeping inanimate
bundles among the dogs. In an hour they were
on their way again, and towards sunset they had reached
the foot of Manitou Mountain. Abruptly from the
plain rose this mighty mound, blue and white upon
a black base. A few straggling pines grew near
its foot, defying latitude, as the mountain itself
defied the calculations of geographers and geologists.
A halt was called. Late Carscallen and Cloud-in-the-Sky
looked at the chief. His eyes were scanning the
mountain closely. Suddenly he motioned. A
hundred feet up there was a great round hole in the
solid rock, and from this hole there came a feeble
cloud of smoke! The other two saw also. Cloud-in-the-Sky
gave a wild whoop, and from the mountain there came,
a moment after, a faint replica of the sound.
It was not an echo, for there appeared at the mouth
of the cave an Indian, who made feeble signs for them
to come. In a little while they were at the cave.
As Jaspar Hume entered, Cloud-in-the-Sky and the stalwart
but emaciated Indian who had beckoned to them spoke
to each other in the Chinook language, the jargon common
to all Indians of the West.
Jaspar Hume saw a form reclining on
a great bundle of pine branches, and he knew what
Rose Lepage had prayed for was come to pass. By
the flickering light of a handful of fire he saw Lepage rather
what was left of him a shadow of energy,
a heap of nerveless bones. His eyes were shut,
but as Hume, with a quiver of memory and sympathy at
his heart, stood for an instant, and looked at the
man whom he had cherished as a friend and found an
enemy, Lepage’s lips moved and a weak voice
said: “Who is there?”
“A friend.”
“Come-near-me, friend.”
Hume made a motion to Late Carscallen,
who was heating some liquor at the fire, and then
he stooped and lifted up the sick man’s head,
and took his hand. “You have come to
save me!” whispered the weak voice again.
“Yes; I’ve come to save you.”
This voice was strong and clear and true.
“I seem to have heard your
voice before somewhere before I
seem to have ”
But he had fainted.
Hume poured a little liquor down the
sick man’s throat, and Late Carscallen chafed
the delicate hand delicate in health, it
was like that of a little child now. When breath
came again Hume whispered to his helper “Take
Cloud-in-the-Sky and get wood; bring fresh branches.
Then clear one of the sleds, and we will start back
with him in the early morning.”
Late Carscallen, looking at the skeleton-like
figure, said: “He will never get there.”
“Yes, he will get there,” was Hume’s
reply.
“But he is dying.”
“He goes with me to Fort Providence.”
“Ay, to Providence he goes,
but not with you,” said Late Carscallen, doggedly.
Anger flashed in Hume’s eye, but he said quietly
“Get the wood,
Carscallen.”
Hume was left alone with the starving
Indian, who sat beside the fire eating voraciously,
and with the sufferer, who now was taking mechanically
a little biscuit sopped in brandy. For a few moments
thus, then his sunken eyes opened, and he looked dazedly
at the man bending above him. Suddenly there
came into them a look of terror. “You you are
Jaspar Hume,” his voice said in an awed whisper.
“Yes.” The hands of the sub-factor
chafed those of the other.
“But you said you were a friend, and come to
save me.”
“I have come to save you.”
There was a shiver of the sufferer’s
body. This discovery would either make him stronger
or kill him. Hume knew this, and said: “Lepage,
the past is past and dead to me; let it be so to you.”
There was a pause.
“How did you know about
me?”
“I was at Fort Providence.
There came letters from the Hudson’s Bay Company,
and from your wife, saying that you were making this
journey, and were six months behind ”
“My wife Rose!”
“I have a letter for you from
her. She is on her way to Canada. We are
to take you to her.”
“To take me to her.”
Lepage shook his head sadly, but he pressed to his
lips the letter that Hume had given him.
“To take you to her, Lepage.”
“No, I shall never see her again.”
“I tell you, you shall.
You can live if you will. You owe that to her to
me to God.”
“To her to you to
God. I have been true to none. I have been
punished. I shall die here.”
“You shall go to Fort Providence.
Do that in payment of your debt to me, Lepage.
I demand that.” In this transgressor there
was a latent spark of honour, a sense of justice that
might have been developed to great causes, if some
strong nature, seeing his weaknesses, had not condoned
them, but had appealed to the natural chivalry of an
impressionable, vain, and weak character. He
struggled to meet Hume’s eyes, and doing so,
he gained confidence and said: “I will try
to live. I will do you justice yet.”
“Your first duty is to eat and
drink. We start for Fort Providence to-morrow.”
The sick man stretched out his hand.
“Food! Food!” he said.
In tiny portions food and drink were
given to him, and his strength sensibly increased.
The cave was soon aglow with the fire kindled by Late
Carscallen and Cloud-in-the-Sky. There was little
speaking, for the sick man soon fell asleep.
Lepage’s Indian told Cloud-in-the-Sky the tale
of their march how the other Indian and
the dogs died; how his master became ill as they were
starting towards Fort Providence from Manitou Mountain
in the summer weather; how they turned back and took
refuge in this cave; how month by month they had lived
on what would hardly keep a rabbit alive; and how,
at last, his master urged him to press on with his
papers; but he would not, and stayed until this day,
when the last bit of food had been eaten, and they
were found.