The odd thing was that his name was
really Dennis. In the West, Dennis stands genetically
for the under dog, for the man who is left. His
name is Dennis! Why? The man in
this story was christened Dennis, and, being a native
son of the Golden West, he took particular pains to
keep the fact a secret from the “boys.”
When he punched cattle on our range he was known as
“Kingdom Come” Brown, because, even in
those days, it was plain to tenderfeet that physically
and intellectually D. Brown, cowboy, was not likely
to inherit the kingdoms of the earth.
Ever since he had been breeched ill-fortune
had marked him for her own. Nevertheless, he
was rich in the possession of a temperament which
soared like a lark above suffering and disappointment.
He believed steadfastly that his “turn”
would come. “It ain’t goin’
to be like this yere always,” was
a phrase familiar to us. To this we replied,
“Not much!”
In our hearts we, too, believed that
the turn would come, but that, humanly speaking, it
would occur in the sweet by-and-by. Hence the
nickname. The hardest nuts admitted that Brown
was travelling upon the rough road which leads upwards.
His golden slippers were waiting for him sure!
He set an example which none followed, but which all,
in sober moments, commended. He neither drank
nor swore. He remained faithful to the memory
of a woman who had married somebody else. For
her sake he sold his horse and saddle, and became a
lumber-man. The losing of his Mamie was, of course,
the heaviest of his many bludgeonings. She was
a simple soul, like D. Brown, inured to hard work,
and at the mercy of a drunken father, who had perilously
escaped by the very skin of his teeth from the clutches
of Judge Lynch. To give to Mamie a home had been
the consuming desire of poor Dennis. For this
he pinched and saved till, at last, the needful sum
lay snug in a San Lorenzo bank. Then the bank
“bust”!
Without a word to Mamie, Dennis drifted
away to some distant range, and before he was seen
again Tom Barker had appeared. Why Tom, a big,
brutal lumberman, desired to marry Mamie, no longer
young, never pretty, penniless, and admittedly fond
of Dennis, must remain a mystery. Why Mamie married
Tom is a question easily answered. Tom was “boss”
of a logging-camp, and none had ever denied his Caesarean
attributes. He had the qualities and vices conspicuously
absent in Dennis. He was Barker, of Barker’s
Inlet. The mere mention of his name in certain
saloons was enough to put the fear of God into men
even bigger than himself. A sort of malefic magnetism
exuded from every pore of his skin. When he held
up his finger Mamie crawled to him. She believed,
probably, that she was escaping from a drunken father,
and she knew that Tom could and would supply many
things for which she had yearned a parlour,
for instance, possibly a piano, and a silk dress.
She would have taken Dennis without these amenities,
but Dennis had fled to the back of Nowhere without
even saying good-bye.
Months after the marriage Dennis came
back. Ajax described the wedding and the subsequent
flitting to Barker’s Inlet. Dennis listened,
stroking his too thin, straggling moustache. Next
day he sold his horse and saddle.
When he appeared at Barker’s
Inlet and asked for a job, Tom Barker smiled.
He had heard of Dennis, and he knew that Mamie had
given to Dennis what never would be given to him the
love and confidence of a simple woman. Into his
savage bull-head crept the determination to torment
these two unsophisticated creatures delivered by Fate
to be his slaves, and as such at his mercy.
Accordingly, Dennis was engaged.
Tom’s position at the inlet
must be defined. Some years before he had been
known as a timber-cruiser that is to say,
a man who “locates,” during his wanderings
through forests primeval, belts of timber which will
be likely to allure the speculative lumberman.
Barker, therefore, had discovered the inlet which
bore his name, and in consideration of his services,
and with a due sense of his physical and mental qualifications,
he had been appointed boss of the camp by the real
owners a syndicate of rich men, who knew
that logs were worth ten dollars a thousand feet,
and that the man to make them so was Tom Barker.
The syndicate wisely gave Tom a free hand, knowing
that, in everything which concerned the working of
men and machinery to the limit, Tom would begin at
the point where their less elastic consciences might
leave off. The syndicate, therefore, remained
in Victoria, or Vancouver, or San Francisco, and said
of Tom that he was a rustler from “Way back,
and as lively as they make ’em.”
It will be guessed that Tom’s
principal difficulty was engaging men. Having
engaged them, he was certain to get plenty of work
out of them, and they couldn’t leave till they
had earned sufficient money to take themselves elsewhere.
All the boys came to Tom stoney-broke; otherwise they
would never have “signed on.” To be
treated like a hog, to root assiduously for Tom, or
to starve, stared several able-bodied men in the face.
One genial Californian remarked, “It’s
a choice between Death and Damnation.”
You will now understand why Tom smiled
when Dennis Brown asked for a job.
He knew that Dennis was a cow-puncher, and not a star
performer on his own pitch, and he had only to look at the man to realise how
unfitted he was for the rough work of a logging-camp. A derisive chuckle
gurgled from his huge, hairy throat as he growled out
“Say! This ain’t like teachin’
Sunday-school.”
“I know it ain’t,”
said Dennis cheerfully. But his heart sank at
the mention of the Sunday-school. Long ago he
had taught in a Sunday-school. It was simply
awful to think that the piety of a too ardent youth
was now to be held up to the ridicule of the boys.
“I believe your name is Dennis?”
continued the boss of Barker’s Inlet.
“It is,” our unhappy friend admitted.
“Go up to the bunk-house,”
commanded Tom, “and tell Jimmy Doolan, with
my regards, to take particler care of yer. I’ll
speak to him later.” Then, as Dennis was
moving off, he added, in a rasping voice: “You
an’ my wife is acquainted, eh? Wal, when
you’ve dropped your blankets, come up to the
house and say howdy.”
Dennis went up to the house.
There was one house at the inlet: a four-roomed
frame building with three coats of paint on it and
a red roof. It stood some distance from the collection
of shacks and cabins at the mouth of the Coho River,
and it overlooked some of the most glorious scenery
in the world. In front stretched the Sound, a
silver sea just dimpled by the soft spring breeze.
To right and left, and behind, lay the forest that
silent land of the North, illimitable as space, everlastingly
green when the snows had melted, shadowy, mysterious,
terrible!
As Dennis approached the house he
heard a terrific sound the crash of a felled
and falling tree some giant who had held
his own in the struggle for existence when William
the Norman ruled in England. And then, from all
points of the compass, the echoes, in varying cadence,
repeated that tremendous, awe-inspiring sound the
last sobbing cry of a Titan.
A moment later Mamie received him
and ushered him into the parlour, where a small piano,
a table of shellwork, and crimson plush curtains challenged
the interest and curiosity of all who were privileged
to behold them. “Let me take yer hat,”
said Mamie.
The hand she held out trembled slightly.
Dennis perceived that she was thinner and paler.
“Yer well fixed,” he murmured.
“An’ happy as a clam, I reckon?”
“I’d oughter be happy,”
said Mamie dubiously. Then she added hastily,
“Never expected to see you in a logging-camp.”
“No? Wal, I kinder wondered
how you was makin’ it. You don’t look
extry peart, Mis’ Barker. Lonesome for ye,
ain’t it?”
Already he knew that except for a
few squaws she was the only woman in the camp.
“I don’t mind that,” said Mrs. Barker.
Something in her tone arrested his
attention. Stupid and slow though he was, he
divined that Mamie’s thin, white cheeks and trembling
hands were not caused by lonesomeness. He stared
at her intently, till the blood gushed into her face.
And then and there he knew almost everything.
“Got a baby?” he asked thickly.
She answered savagely, “No, I haven’t,
thank God!”
Above the chimneypiece hung an enlarged
photograph of her husband, taken a couple of days
after his wedding. Mr. Barker had faced the camera
with the same brutal complacency which distinguished
all his actions. He smiled grimly, thrusting
forward his heavy lower jaw, inviting inspection,
obviously pleased to exhibit himself as a ferocious
and untamed animal. Through the sleeves of his
ill-cut black coat the muscles of his arms and shoulders
showed bulgingly. The ordinary observer, looking
at the photograph for the first time, would be likely
to reflect: “Here is a ruffian who needs
a licking, but he has not got it yet.”
“How’s paw?” said Mamie.
“Las’ time I seen the old man he was paralysed
drunk, as usual.”
“Yes, he would be that,” assented Mamie
indifferently.
After this, conversation languished,
and very soon the visitor took his leave. When
Mamie handed to him his hat she said awkwardly, “You
never told me good-bye”; and to this indictment
Dennis replied laconically, “Holy Mackinaw!
I couldn’t.”
Those who know the wilder portions
of this planet will understand that all was said between
these two weaklings who had loved each other dearly.
Dennis returned to the bunk-house. Mamie ran to
her bed-room and cried her eyes out.
Within a week the camp knew two facts
concerning the newcomer. His name was Dennis!
And he had loved Tom Barker’s dough-faced wife!
Tom’s selection of his first
instrument of torture indicated subtlety. He
bought from a Siwash Indian the most contemptible-looking
cur ever beheld at the inlet, and he christened the
unfortunate beast Dennis. There was
a resemblance between dog and man. Each, in the
struggle for existence, had received more than his
due share of kicks, and the sense of this in any animal
manifests itself unmistakably. And each, moreover,
exhibited the same amazing optimism, which is, perhaps,
a sure sign of a mind not quite balanced.
Dennis, the dog, followed his new
master wherever he went. Tom would introduce
him with the remark, “His name is Dennis, too.”
And if Dennis, the man, happened to be present, Tom
would swear at the dog, calling him every evil name
which came to the tip of the foulest tongue in British
Columbia. Always, at the end of these commination
services, Tom would say to Dennis, the man, “I
an’t a-speakin’ to you, old socks, so
keep yer hair on.”
That the cow-puncher (who, in his
day, must have carried a “gun”) did keep
on his hair became a topic of talk amongst the boys,
confirming a conviction that Dennis had been aptly
named. Certainly he lacked backbone and jawbone.
Moreover, change of skies brought to him no change
of luck. Within a fortnight he was badly hurt,
and obliged to remain in bed for nearly a week.
“I got mixed up with a log,”
he explained to Mamie. “It bruk loose,
an’ I didn’t quite get outer the way.
See?”
“Me, too,” whispered Mamie.
“Same trouble here ’zactly.”
Twice while he lay upon his back she
brought to the bunk-house a chocolate layer cake and
some broth. Upon the occasion of her third visit
she came empty-handed, with her too pale eyes full
of tears, and her heart full of indignation.
“I ain’t got nothing,”
she muttered. “Tom says it’s his grub.”
“That’s all right,”
replied Dennis, noting that she walked stiffly.
“But, look ye here; he ain’t been wallopin’
ye, has he?”
“Yes, he has. When he was
through I tole him I’d sooner have his blows
than his kisses any day.”
“I hadn’t oughter hev come here,”
said Dennis.
“Never saw the sun shine till you did,”
murmured Mamie.
At this he tried to take her hand,
but she evaded his grasp. Then, with an extraordinary
dignity, looking deep into the man’s eyes, she
said slowly: “I tole you that because it’s
God’s truth, and sorter justifies your comin’;
but I aim ter be an honest woman, and you must help
me to remain so.”
With that she flitted away.
Next day Dennis went back to work.
And what work, for a man never at best strong, and
now enfeebled by severe pain and illness! Some
magnificent timber had been found a couple of miles
inland, situated not too far from the Coho. The
experts had already felled, stripped, and sawed into
logs the huge trees. To Dennis and others remained
the arduous labour of guiding, with the help of windlasses,
these immense logs to the river, whence they would
descend in due time to the inlet, there to be joined
together into vast rafts, later on again to be towed
to their destination. Of all labour, this steering
of logs through dense forest to their appointed waterway
is the hardest and roughest. Dennis, of course,
wore thick gloves, but in spite of these his hands
were mutilated horribly, because he lacked the experience
to handle the logs with discretion. Even the
best men are badly knocked about at this particular
job, and the duffers are very likely to be killed
outright.
At the end of ten lamentable days
Dennis came to the conclusion that Tom Barker wanted
to kill him by the Chinese torture of Ling, or death
by a thousand cuts. More than one of the boys
said: “Why don’t you get what dough
is comin’ to ye and skip?” Dennis shook
his head. Not being able to explain to himself
why he stayed, he held his tongue, and thus gained
a reputation for grit which lightened other burdens.
Jim Doolan, the big Irishman, was of opinion that
Dennis Brown was little better than a denied baby
with a soft spot in his head, but he admitted that
the cow-puncher was “white,” and obviously
bent upon self-destruction. By this time the
camp knew that the boss was taking an unholy interest
in Dennis, although he continued to treat him with
derisive civility. The rage he couldn’t
suppress was vented upon the dog. And Dennis
never saw the poor beast kicked or beaten without
reflecting: “He does that to Mamie when
nobody ain’t lookin’.” In his
feeble fashion he tried to interfere. Dollars
to Tom Barker were dearer than cardinal virtues, and
he had never been known to refuse an opportunity to
make a bit on any deal. Dennis offered to buy
the dog.
“What’s he worth?” said Tom, thrusting
out his jaw.
“I’ll give five for him.”
“Five? For a dog that I’ve learned
to love? Not much!”
“Ten?”
“Nope!”
“Fifteen?”
Tom laughed.
“You ain’t got money enough
to buy him,” he said. “I’m going
to have more fun than a barrel o’ monkeys out
o’ this yere dog, and don’t you forget
it!”
After this Dennis, the Sunday-school
teacher, the man whose golden slippers were awaiting
him in the sweet by-and-by, began to lie awake at
night and wrestle with the problem: “Is
a man ever justified in breaking the sixth commandment?”
The camp held that Tom bore a charmed life. Men
had tried to kill him more than once, and had perished
ingloriously in the attempt. His coolness and
courage were indisputable. There are moments
in a lumberman’s business when nothing will
save an almost impossible situation but the instant
exercise of the most daring and devil-may-care pluck,
determination, and skill. Tom was never found
wanting at such moments. To see him “ride
a log” was a sight to inspire admiration and
respect in a Texas broncho-buster.
To kill such a superb animal might well rack a simple
and guileless cowboy whose name was Dennis.
It is relevant to mention that Dennis, the dog, licked the
hand that beat him, fawned upon the foot that kicked him, and rendered unto his
lord and master implicit and invariable obedience. The Siwash, his former
owner, had trained him to retrieve, and of this Tom took shameless advantage.
He would throw his hat or a glove or a stick into the middle of a rapid, and the
gallant Dennis would dash into the swirling waters, regardless of colliding
logs, fanged rocks, or spiky stumps. One day the dog got caught.
Tom, with an oath, leapt on to the nearest log, from that to another and another
till he reached the poor beast, whom he released with incredible skill and
audacity, returning as he had come, followed by the dog. The boys yelled
their appreciation of this astounding feat. Jimmy Doolan asked
“What in thunder made ye do that, Tom?”
Tom scowled.
“I dunno,” he answered.
“Dennis Brown knows that I think the world of
that cur.”
Within a fortnight, by an admittedly
amazing coincidence, Dennis, the man, was caught in
a precisely similar fashion. As a “river-driver”
Dennis was beginning to “catch on.”
But he had not yet learned what he could or could
not do. River-drivers wear immense boots, heavily
spiked. Dennis upon this occasion had been sent
with a crew to what is technically called “sweep
the river” after a regular drive. Such logs
as have wandered ashore, or been hung up in back eddies,
are collected and sent on to join the others.
This is hard work, but exciting, and not without its
humours. Certain obstinate logs have to be coaxed
down the river. It would almost seem as if they
knew the fate that awaited them in the saw-pits, and
in every fibre of their being exercised an instinct
for self-preservation. For instance, a log may
refuse to pass a certain rock in the river which has
offered no obstruction whatever to other logs.
Then the lumberman, armed with his long pole, with
its spike to push and its sharp hook to pull, must
reach that rock and pull and prod the recalcitrant
traveller on his appointed way.
Dennis, in attempting this, had slipped
upon the rock, and his heavy boot had been caught
and held between the log and the rock. Below was
a boiling rapid; above the river swirled in a heavy,
oily mass. Dennis, to save his life, held tight
on to the rock. He was in the position of the
drunken Scot who dared not abandon his grip of the
rail of the refreshment bar, because if he let go he
would fall down, and if he did not let go he must
miss his train. Dennis held on with both hands.
If he endeavoured to unfasten his boot, he would be
swept into the rapid; if he did not let go, and none
came to his rescue, the log would grind his leg to
powder.
Tom happened to see him and plunged
into the river. Dennis had crawled on to the
rock from the other side, a feat easily achievable.
Tom might have gone round; any other man in the camp
would have done so. The odds were slightly against
his reaching the rock, for the river was running like
a mill-race.
Five minutes later both men, dripping
wet, were safely ashore, and the log was careering
down stream!
“Ye’ve saved my life,” gasped Dennis.
“Never seen such a blamed fool
as you in all my days,” replied Tom, as he stared
savagely into Dennis’s mild blue eyes. “You’d
hurt yerself rockin’ a baby’s cradle,
you would. ’Bout time you quit men’s
work, ain’t it?”
“Not yet,” said Dennis.
During these weeks upon the river Dennis had not seen
anything of Mamie. Tom Barker, as supreme boss, visited all crews, and
then returned to his wife, with either a leer or a frown upon his face.
She had come to loathe the leer more than the frown. In the different
camps the boys told the same story
“He knocks the stuffin’ out of her!”
The stay-at-home Briton, warm with
roast beef and indigestion, will wonder that one man
amongst a hundred should be suffered to ill-treat
a thin, dough-faced little woman. Why did they
not arise and slaughter him? Had Tom stolen a
colt in the cattle-country he would have been lynched.
Let publicists resolve the problem!
Finally, one Sunday morning, Dennis
and Mamie met again.
“Holy Mackinaw!” exclaimed Dennis.
“Anything wrong?”
“Everything.”
“I don’t understand.” But,
of course, she did.
“It’s God’s truth, then, what the
boys say?”
She hung her head.
“I thought he’d quit when
I went up the river,” said Dennis. “Say,
let’s you an’ me skin out o’ this.
I’ll get my dough to-night.”
“Oh, Dennis!” she murmured,
in piteous protestation, “we’d burn in
eternal torment.”
“We’d burn together,”
said Dennis. “Anyways, if this ain’t
torment, and if Barker ain’t Beelzebub himself,
I’m a liar.”
She shook her head, with the tears
streaming down her thin, white cheeks.
“Gee!” said Dennis, reduced to silence.
“I tuk him for better and worse,” sobbed
Mamie.
“You might ha’ guessed
that it would be worse,” growled Dennis.
Then, desperately, he blurted out, “Because
you’re dead-set on keepin’ the seventh
commandment, you’re jest naterally drivin’
me to break the sixth.”
“What?”
“I’ve said it. And
he saved my life, too. But when I look at yer,
I get to thinking.” His voice sank to a
hoarse whisper. “I think lots, nights.
He comes back to ye alone, through them trees, and
there’s one place where the pine needles is
thick as moss. And I mind me what a Dago told
me onst. He’d killed his man, he had, stabbed
him from behind with a knife he showed me: jest
an ordinary knife, only sharp. An’ he told
me how he done it, whar to strike savvy?
It goes in slick!”
He stopped, seeing that Mamie was
regarding him with wide-eyed horror and consternation.
“Dennis!”
“Yes, my name’s Dennis,
right enough. That’s the trouble. I
hav’n’t the nerve to kill Barker, and
you hav’n’t the nerve to skip off with
me. Were two of a kind, Mamie, scairt to death
of what comes after death. And you know it.
So long!”
She caught at his arm.
“You ain’t a-goin’ to leave the
inlet?”
“It’s a mighty big country,
this,” Dennis replied austerely; “but I’ve
a notion it ain’t quite big enough for Barker
an’ me. So long!”
“I’m comin’ up to-morrer,
Dennis, to see ’em run the last rapid. Mebbe
you was fullish to leave the range?”
He marked the interrogation in her tone, and answered, for
him, almost roughly
“Mebbe I was, but not so fullish
as you by a long sight!”
With that he returned to the bunk-house.
Not half a mile from the inlet the
Coho gathers itself together for its last wild rush
to salt water. And here there is a huge pool where
logs lie peacefully as alligators in the sun.
At the end of the pool the river flows gently in a
channel free from rocks and snags. Then the channel
narrows, and a little farther on you behold the head
of the rapid, and half-way down the Coho Falls thunder
everlastingly. When the logs reach the falls
they are meat for the mills. Nothing can stop
them then. One after another they rise on end
to take the final plunge. Some twist and writhe
as if in agony, as if conscious that the river and
forest shall know them no more. Thousands have
travelled the self-same way; not one has ever returned.
The lower rapid of the Coho hardly deserves its name.
Half a mile farther on it is an estuary across which
stretches the boom.
The crews assembled on each side of
the pool. The logs were pricked into slow movement.
This being duffers’ work was assigned to the
less experienced. The picked river-drivers stood
upon the rocks of the upper rapid, pole in hand.
And here, watching them with a lack-lustre eye, stood
Mamie in the shade of a dogwood tree in full blossom.
Now and again a soft white petal would fall upon the
water and be swept away. Above the hemlocks soughed
softly. At her feet the giant maidenhair raised
its delicate fronds till they touched her cheek.
She watched the logs go by in a never-ending
procession. The scene fascinated her, although,
in a sense, she was singularly devoid of either imagination
or perception. Movement beguiled a woman whose
own life had been stagnant for five-and-twenty years.
Deep down in her heart was the unformulated but inevitable
conviction that the logs were moving and that she
was standing still. Tom loomed large in the immediate
foreground. He, too, moved so swiftly that his
huge form lacked definition. She saw him snatch
a pole from one of the men and stab viciously at a
log which refused to budge; and every time that his
arm rose and fell a little shudder trickled down her
spinal column. The log seemed to receive the
blows apathetically. A bad jam was imminent.
She could hear Tom swearing, and the other logs floating
on and on seemed to hear him also, and tremble.
His bull’s voice rose loud above the roar of
the falls. Mamie looked down. At her feet
crouched Dennis, the dog, and he also was trembling
at those raucous sounds, and Mamie could feel his
thin ribs pressing against her own thin legs.
At that moment light came to her obscure
mind. She was like the log. She refused
to budge, funked the plunge, submitting to unending
blows, and words which were almost worse than blows.
And by her obstinacy and apathy she was driving the
best man on God’s earth to premeditated murder.
That morning, let us remember, Tom
had beaten the dog, and because she had interfered
with a pitiful protest her husband had struck her close
to the temple. Ever since this blow she had heard
the roar of the falls with increasing intensity.
“Why don’t it move?” she asked herself.
As she put the question the log did
move, borne away by the full current. Mamie,
followed by the dog, ran after it, with her eyes aflame
with excitement. Dennis barked, divining something
uncanny, eager to distract the mind of his mistress
from what seemed to be engrossing it. Still she
ran on, with her eyes upon the log. The dog knew
that she must stop in a moment, that no one could pass
the falls unless they went over them. Did he
divine also that she meant to go over them that
at last, with her poor, imperfect vision, she had seen
that way out of captivity?
She reached the point where farther
advance was impossible. To her right rose a solid
wall of stone; opposite rose its twin; between the
two the river rushed tumultuously, tossing the great
logs hither and thither as if they were spilikins.
Mamie watched her own log. After
its goadings it kept a truer course than most of its
fellows. But she had outstripped it. Standing
upon the edge of the precipice, feeling the cold spray
upon her face, hearing the maddening roar of the monster
below, less to be feared than that other monster from
whom she realised that she had escaped, she waited
for the final plunge....
What was passing in her mind at this
supreme moment? We may well believe that she
saw clearly the past through the mists which obscured
the future. Always she had been a log at the mercy
of a drunken father. Her mother had died in giving
birth to her, but she knew vaguely that this mother
was a Church member. She did not know and,
knowing, could never have understood that
from her she had inherited a conscience or
shall we call it an ineradicable instinct? which
constrained her to turn aside, shuddering, from certain
temptations, to obey, without reasoning, certain ethical
laws, solemnly expounded to her by a Calvinistic grandmother.
But Nature had been too much for her. Even as
she had turned instinctively and with horror from the
breaking of a commandment, so also she had selected
the mate who possessed in excess the physical qualities
so conspicuously lacking in her. She had fallen
a victim, and a reluctant victim, to the law of compensation.
When Tom Barker held up his finger and whistled, she
crawled to him.
The log, slightly rolling, as if intoxicated,
neared the brink of the falls. And then it stopped
again, where the river was narrowest and the current
strongest. No log had stopped in this place before;
Mamie saw that it was caught by a small rock, and
held fast by the other logs behind it.
“It won’t go over,” she murmured.
Within a minute a terrific jam impended.
Across the river Tom was swearing horribly; and between
husband and wife rose a filmy cloud of spray upon
which were imprinted the mysterious colours of the
rainbow, which, long ago, Mamie had been taught to
regard as the most wonderful symbol in the world God’s
promise that in the end good should triumph over evil.
Afraid to move, fascinated, she stood
still, staring at the rainbow.
Presently Tom disappeared. When
he returned Mamie could see him very plainly.
He had a stick of dynamite and a fuse. Mamie saw
him glance at his watch and measure the fuse.
Then, leaping from log to log, he approached the one
in midstream which lay passive, blocking the advance
of all the others. With splendid skill and daring
he adjusted the dynamite upon the small rock which
held the log, and lit the fuse. He returned as
he had come, and Mamie could hear the cheers of the
men upon the opposite bank.
“It’ll hev to go now,” she reflected.
At this moment Dennis, the dog, must
have realised that his master had left something behind
on the rock. Mamie saw him spring from log to
log, and then, holding the dynamite between his teeth,
with the spluttering fuse still attached, follow his
master.
“Tom!” she screamed. “Look
out!”
Tom turned and saw! And the others Dennis
Brown, Mamie, the river-drivers saw also
and trembled. Tom began to curse the dog, adjuring
him to go back, to drop it, drop IT, DROP IT!
But the faithful creature, who had
risked life to retrieve sticks thrown into fierce
rapids, ran steadily on. Mamie saw the face of
her husband crumble into an expression of hideous
terror and palsy. His lips mouthed inarticulately,
with his huge hands he tried to push back the monstrous
fate that was overtaking him.
The dog laid the dynamite at his master’s
feet at the moment when it exploded.
And the man whose name was Dennis
knew that his turn had come at last.