“The people in
the city felt the shock of it that day.
And they
said, in solemn gloom,
’The
drive is in the boom,
And O’Connor’s
drawn his wages; clear the track and give
him room.’”
For a long time they rode side by
side on the jumper without a word. Mr. Ide decided
that his reticent companion was pondering a plan for
the approaching interview, and was careful not to
interrupt the train of thought. He was infinitely
disappointed and not a little vexed when Wade turned
to him at last and inquired, with plain effort to make
his voice calm, whether John Barrett had recovered
sufficiently to go home.
“He? He went two weeks
ago he and his girl,” snapped the
little man, impatiently.
After a moment he began to dig at
the buttons of his fur coat, and dipped his hand into
his breast-pocket. He brought out a letter.
“Here’s a line Barrett’s
girl left to be sent in to you the first chance.”
He met the young man’s reproachful gaze boldly.
“When a man’s got real business to attend
to,” he snorted, “he ain’t to blame
if he disremembers tugaluggin’ a love-letter.”
He gave the missive into Wade’s hands, and went
on, discontentedly: “What kind of a crazy-headed
performance was it those girls was up to when they
came up into these woods? I’ve had too
much on my mind to try to get it out of my girl, and
probably I couldn’t, anyway, if she took a notion
not to tell me. She has her own way about everything,
just as her mother did before her,” he grumbled.
“I have no possible right to
discuss Miss Nina Ide’s movements,
even with her father. Miss Barrett’s affairs
are wholly her own. May I read my letter?”
“May you read it?” blurted
Ide, missing the delicacy of this conventional request.
“What in tophet do you think I’ve got to
do with your readin’ your own letters?”
And he subsided into offended silence, seeking to
express in this way his general dissatisfaction with
events as they were disposing themselves.
Though the cold wind stung bitterly,
Wade held the open letter in his bare hands, for he
longed for the touch of the paper where her hand had
rested.
“MY DEAR DWIGHT, We
are going home. The darkness has not lifted from
us. For my light and my comfort I look into the
north, where I know your love is shining.
My sister was sitting by my father’s side
when I returned, and he was awake from his long dream
and knew her, but he had not spoken the truth
to her, and if she knows she has not told.
And the cloud of it all is over us, and I cannot speak
to him or open my heart to him. He did not even
ask where I had been. It is as though he
feared one word would dislodge the avalanche
under which he shrinks. And I have to write this
of my father! So we are going home.
Love me. I need all your love. Take all
of mine in return.”
When Wade folded it he found Rodburd
Ide studying his face with shrewd side glance.
“Have you any idea what ‘Stumpage
John’ is goin’ to do with the other one the
left-hand one?” he inquired, blandly. “Favor
each other considerably, don’t they? It
told the story to me the first time I saw them together,
after the right-hand one got there to my place.
You can’t hardly blame John for not takin’
the left-hand one out with him, same as my girl sort
of expected he would, same as his own girl did, too,
I reckon.”
“Did he say anything to ” stammered
Wade, and hesitated.
“Nothin’ to me,”
returned the magnate of Castonia, briskly. “Didn’t
have to. Knowed I knew. Day he left he tramped
up and down the river-bank for more’n two hours,
and then come to me with his face about the color of
the Hullin’ Machine froth and asked me to call
the girl Kate into the back office of my store.
I wasn’t tryin’ to listen or overhear,
you understand, but I heard him stutter somethin’
about takin’ her out of the woods and puttin’
her in school, and she braced back and put her hands
on her hips and broke in and told him to go to hell.”
“What?” shouted Wade, in utter astonishment.
“Oh, not in them words,”
corrected Ide. “But that’s what it
come to so far as meanin’ went. And then
she sort of spit at him, and walked out and back to
my house.”
He clapped the reins smartly on the
flank of the lagging horse, as though this sort of
conversation wasted time, and added: “She’s
still at my house, and the girl says she’s goin’
to stay there so I guess that settles it.
Now let’s get down to some business that amounts
to somethin’! What are you goin’
to say to Pulaski Britt?”
But if Dwight Wade knew, he did not
say. He sat bowed forward, hands between his
knees, the letter between his palms, his jaw muscles
ridged under the tan of his cheeks, and so the long
ride ended in silence.
When they were once in the Jerusalem
cutting it was not necessary to search long for the
Honorable Pulaski Britt, ex-State senator. They
heard him bellowing hoarsely, and a moment later were
looking down on him from the top of a ramdown.
A pair of horses were floundering in the deep snow,
one of them “cast” and tangled in the harness.
The teamster stood at one side holding the reins helplessly.
The snow was spotted with blood.
“You’ve let that horse
calk himself, you beef-brained son of a bladder-fish!”
roared Britt. “You ain’t fit to drive
a rockin’-horse with wooden webbin’s!”
He dove upon the struggling animal, and, hooking his
great fists about the bit-rings, dragged the horse
to his feet. “Stripped to the fetlocks!”
mourned the owner. He surveyed the bleeding leg
and whirled on the teamster. “That’s
the second pair you’ve put out of business for
me in a week. Me furnishing hundred-and-fifty-dollar
horses for you to paint the snow with!” He ploughed
across to where the man stood holding the reins, and
struck him full in the face, and the fellow went down
like a log, blood flying from his face. “Mix
some of your five-cent blood with blood that’s
worth something!” he yelped. “If
there’s got to be rainbow-snow up this way, I
know how to furnish it cheaper.”
“That’s a nice, interestin’
gent down there for you to tackle just now on your
business proposition,” observed Ide, sourly.
“Now, suppose you use common-sense, and turn
around and go back to Enchanted!”
But the Honorable Pulaski suddenly
heard the jangle of their jumper-bell, and stared
up at them.
“Gettin’ lessons on how
to run a crew, Ide?” he asked. And seeing
that the teamster was up and fumbling blindly at the
tangled harness, he advanced up the slope. “I
‘ain’t ever forgiven you for takin’
Tommy Eye away from me. That man’s a teamster!
It was a nasty trick, and perhaps your young whelp
of a partner there has found out enough about woods
law by this time to understand it.”
“Mr. Britt ” began Wade.
“I don’t want to talk
to you at all!” snapped the tyrant, flapping
his hand in protest.
“Nor I to you!” retorted
Wade, in sudden heat. “But as Mr. Ide’s
partner I have taken charge of the woods end of our
operation, and I’ve got business to talk with
you. We haven’t begun to land our logs yet
because ”
“It’s a wonder to me that
you’ve got any cut down, you dude!” snorted
Britt, contemptuously.
“Because we haven’t had
an understanding about the drive,” went on the
young man, trying to keep his temper. “Now,
about logs coming down Enchanted and into Jerusalem ”
“You’ll pay drivin’ fees for every
stick.”
“And you’ll take our drive with yours?”
“No, sir. I won’t
put the iron of a pick-pole into a log with your mark
on it!” declared Britt.
“Mr. Britt,” said Wade,
his voice trembling in the stress of his emotions,
“as an operator in this section, as a man who
is asking you straight business questions as courteously
as I know how, I am entitled to decent treatment,
and it will be better for all of us if I get it.”
“Threats, hey?” demanded Britt, malignantly.
“No threats, sir. If you
won’t take our drive for the usual fees and
guarantee its delivery, will you let us drive it independently?”
“Not with my water and you’ll
pay fees just the same!”
“Your water! Who
made you the boss of God’s rains and rivers?
Have you any charter, giving you the right to turn
the State waters of Blunder Lake from their natural
outlet and keep everybody else from using them?”
Britt clacked his finger in his hard
palm and blurted contemptuous “Phuh!”
through his beard.
“Show me any such charter, Mr.
Britt, or tell me where to find the record of it,
and I’ll accept the law.”
“Hell on your law!” cried the tyrant of
the Umcolcus.
“Aren’t you willing to let the law decide
it, Mr. Britt?”
“Hell on your law!”
Three times more did Wade, his face
burning in his righteous anger, his voice trembling
with passion, ask the question. Three times did
the Honorable Pulaski Britt fling those four words
of maddening insult back at him. And Wade, his
face going suddenly white, snatched the reins from
Ide’s hands, struck the horse, whirled him
into the trail, and drove away madly. Down the
aisles of the forest followed those four words as
long as Pulaski Britt felt that their iteration could
reach the ears of listeners.
“So you finished your business
with him, did you?” inquired Ide, at last, allowing
himself, as a true prophet, a bit of a sneer.
“I got just what I went after,”
snarled the young man. “I got in four words
the fighting rules of these woods, explained by the
head devil of them all, and, by ,
if that’s the only way for an honest man to save
his skin up here, they can have the fight on those
lines! Take the reins, Mr. Ide; I want to straighten
this thing in my mind.”
Little passed between them on the
return journey, but they talked far into the night,
leaning towards each other across the little splint
table in the office camp.
The next morning they climbed the
side of Enchanted, following the main road that had
been swamped to Enchanted Stream. On the upper
slopes they came upon the log-yards, and heaps of
great, stripped spruces piled ready for the sleds.
Farther up the slopes they heard the monotonous “whush-wish”
of the cross-cut saws and the crackling crash of falling
trees.
In the Maine woods it is not the practice
to haul to landings until the tree crop is practically
all down and yarded on the main roads. This practice
in the case of the Enchanted operation that winter
was providential; for in the conference of the night
before Rodburd Ide and his partner had definitely
abandoned Enchanted Stream. That decision left
them the alternative of Blunder Stream. It was
the only plan that fitted with Rodburd Ide’s
new hopes based on the log contract in his breast-pocket.
For months he had dimly foreseen this crisis without
clear conception as to how it was to be met. But
the possibilities of the gamble had fascinated him.
In his calculations he had tried to
keep prudence to the fore. But he had been waiting
so long that at last prudence became dizzy in the swirl
of possibilities. He had never intended to make
Dwight Wade his mere cat’s-paw. But the
vehement courage of that sturdy young man, as displayed
in the battle of Castonia, had touched something in
Rodburd Ide’s soul. All through his
quiet life he had seen might and mastery make money
out of the woods. And so at last he himself ventured,
trusting much to the might and mastery he found in
this self-reliant young gentleman whom Fate had flung
into his life. Gasping at the boldness of it,
he was willing that the whole winter’s cut of
the Enchanted operation should be landed upon Blunder
Stream. That there was a way to get their water
he admitted to himself, but he did not dare to think
much upon the means. Dwight Wade, driven by fierce
anger against Pulaski Britt, who blocked his way to
the girl whom his own hands could win but for Britt,
smote the splint table and declared that there should
be a spring flood in Blunder Stream.
“And if you fear lawsuits, being
a man of property, Mr. Ide, you should not know what
I intend to do. You may be held as a partner.
Dissolve that partnership. You may be held as
an employer. Discharge me when this log-cut is
landed. Protect yourself. I have only my
two hands for them to attach.”
The little man blinked at him admiringly,
and then patted his shoulder.
“You needn’t tell me what
you intend to do. You are the one for this end,
and I can trust you. But when it comes to responsibility
and the law, Wade, if those thieves try it on, after
all they’ve stolen, you’ll find Rod Ide
right with you. You’re my partner, and you’ll
stay my partner,” declared Ide, stoutly.
He repeated it as they swung around
the upper granite dome of Enchanted, and looked down
the western slope into Blunder valley.
“There’s the place for
your main road, Wade,” he said “down
that shoulder there! Swamp a half-mile of the
steep pitch and you’ll come into the Cameron
road, and it will take you to the stream. You’ll
need about fifteen hundred feet of snub-line for that
sharp incline there, and I’ll have it up to
you by the time you are ready for it. Put the
swale hay to the rest of the pitches. It will
trig better than gravel. Don’t let ’em
put a chain round a runner. You want to keep your
road so smooth that every load of logs will go down
there like a boy down a barn rollway. Sprinkle
your levels and keep ’em glare ice. By ,
it’s a beauty of an outlook for a landing-job!
Cut your high slopes this trip. Keep your logs
above the level of that shoulder, and every hoss team
will make a four-turn day of it. We’ll save
a dollar a thousand on the landing-proposition alone,
over and above the Enchanted road chance! And
up there ” He gazed to the north up
the valley over the wooded ridges, and then hushed
his voice, as though there lay somewhere in that blue
distance a thing that he feared.
“Up there is a lake of water,
Mr. Ide, that God designed to flow down this valley,
and it’s going to find its own channel again somehow!
I hope that doesn’t sound like cheap boasting.
It’s only my idea of the right.”
He led the way back around the granite
dome above the spruce benches, and the old man followed
in silence.
Two hours later Rodburd Ide was off
and away for Castonia, his jumper-bell jangling its
echoes among the trees. He had hope in his heart
and a letter in his pocket. The hope was his own.
The letter was addressed to John Barrett’s daughter,
and the superscription had brought a little scowl
to the brows of the magnate of Castonia. Somehow
it seemed like communication with the enemy.
But Dwight Wade, writing it in the stillness of the
night, while the little man snored in his bunk, had
seemed in his own imaginings to be putting into that
letter, as one lays away for safe keeping in a casket,
all that heart and soul held of love and candor and
tenderness. It was as though he intrusted those
into her hands to preserve for him against the day
when he might take them back into life and living
once more. Just now they did not seem to belong
to this life on Enchanted; they did not harmonize
with the bitter conditions. He pressed down the
envelope’s seal with the fantastic reflection
that he was sending out of the conflict witnesses in
whose presence he might stand ashamed.
Therefore, it was not treason that
Rodburd Ide bore in the pocket of his big fur coat.
Dwight Wade had sent tenderer emotions to the
rear. He stood at the front, ready to meet iron
with iron and fire with fire.