Gilbert Beattie, driving home by way
of the French outfit, after having seen his sister-in-law
embark, found that another party of settlers had arrived.
Many of the natives, attracted by news of these events,
had also come in, and the settlement presented a scene
of activity such as it had never known.
It gave the trader much food for thought.
Clearly the old order was passing fast, and it behooved
an enterprising merchant to adjust himself to the
new. Beattie was no longer a young man, and he
felt an honest anxiety for the future. Would
he be able to maintain his supremacy?
When he reached his own store he found
a handsome native girl waiting to see him. He
had seen her before, but could not place her.
He asked her name.
“Bela Charley,” she answered.
“O-ho!” he said, looking
at her with a fresh curiosity. “You are
she, eh?” Whatever they might be saying about
this girl, he commended the calm, self-respecting
air with which she bore his scrutiny. “Do
you want to trade?” he asked. “One
of the clerks will wait on you.”
She shook her head. “Want see you.”
“What can I do for you?”
“Company got little house beside
the road down there. Nobody livin’ there.”
“Well, what of it?”
“You let me live there?” she asked.
“You’d better go home to your people,
my girl,” he said grimly.
“I have left them,” she returned coolly.
“What would you think of doing?”
he asked curiously. “How could you make
your living?”
“Plenty people here now,”
she said. “More comin’. I goin’
keep stoppin’-house for meals.”
“Alone?” he asked, frowning.
“Sure!” said Bela.
He shook his head. “It wouldn’t do.”
“Why?”
“You’re too good-looking,”
he replied bluntly. “It wouldn’t be
respectable.”
“I tak’ care of myself,” averred
Bela. “Anybody say so.”
“How about that story that’s going the
rounds now?”
“Moch lies, I guess.”
“Very like; but it can’t
be done,” he said firmly. “I can’t
have a scandal right in front of my wife’s door.”
“Good for trade,” suggested
Bela insinuatingly. “Mak’ the new
people come up here. Now they always hangin’
round Stiffy and Mahooley’s.”
This argument was not without weight;
nevertheless, Beattie continued to shake his head.
“Can’t do it unless you get a chaperon.”
“Chaperon?” repeated Bela, puzzled.
“Get a respectable woman to
come live with you, and I’ll say all right.”
Bela nodded and marched out of the
store without wasting any further words.
In an hour she was back, bringing
Mary, Bateese Otter’s widow. Mary, according
to the standards of the settlement, was a paragon of
virtue. Gilbert Beattie grinned.
“Here is Mary Otter,”
said Bela calmly. “She poor. She goin’
live with me. I guess she is respectable.
She live in the mission before, and scrub the floors.
Pere Lacombe tell her come live wit’ me.
Is that all right?”
Since Bela had secured the sanction
of the Church upon her enterprise, Beattie felt that
the responsibility was no longer his. He gladly
gave her her way.
The astonishing news spread up and
down the road like lightning. Bela Charley was
going to open a “resteraw.” Here was
a new and fascinating subject for gossip.
Nobody knew that Bela was in the settlement.
Nobody had seen her come. Exactly like her, said
those who were familiar with her exploits in the past.
What would happen when Bela and Sam met again? others
asked.
While everybody had helped this story
on its rounds, no man believed that Bela had really
carried off Sam. Funny that this girl should turn
up almost at the moment of the other girl’s departure!
Nobody, however, suspected as yet that there was anything
more than coincidence in this.
The main thing was Bela was known
to be an A1 cook, and the grub at the French outfit
was rotten. Mahooley himself confessed it.
Within two hours six men, including
Big Jack and his pals, arrived for dinner. Bela
was not at all discomposed. She had already laid
in supplies from the company. Dinner would be
ready for all who came, she said, six bits per man.
Breakfast and supper, four bits.
To-day they would have to sit on the
floor, but by to-morrow proper arrangements would
be completed. No, there would be no accommodations
for sleeping. Everybody must go home at ten o’clock.
While they waited they could cut some good sods to
mend the roof, if they wanted.
Some of the guests, thinking of the
past, approached her somewhat diffidently; but if
Bela harboured any resentment, she hid it well.
She was the same to all, a wary, calm, efficient hostess.
Naturally the men were delighted to
be given an opportunity to start fresh. Three
of them laboured at the roof with a will. Husky,
who only had one good arm, cleaned fish for her.
The dinner, when it came on, was no disappointment.
Sam, rattling back over the rough
trail that afternoon, stamped in his empty wagon-box
and whistled cheerfully. Things were going well
with him. The long, hard-working days in the
open air were good for both health and spirits.
He liked his job, and he was making money. He
had conceived a great affection for his lively little
team, and, lacking other companions, confided his
hopes and fears in them.
Not that he had yet succeeded in winning
from under the load of derision that had almost crushed
him; the men still greeted him with their tongues
in their cheeks. But now that he had a man’s
job, it was easier to bear.
He believed, too, that he was making
progress with them. The hated gibe “white
slave” was less frequently heard. Sam, passionately
bent on making good in the community, weighed every
shade of the men’s manner toward him, like a
lover his mistress’s.
He met Big Jack and his pals driving
back around the bay in Jack’s wagon. They
had staked out their land across the bay, but still
spent most of their time in the settlement. Both
drivers pulled up their horses.
The men hailed Sam with at least the
appearance of good nature. As for Sam himself,
he had made up his mind that since he was going to
live among them, he would only make himself ridiculous
by maintaining a sore and distant air. He was
learning to give as good as he got.
“Heard the news?” asked
Big Jack, glancing around at his companions, promising
them a bit of sport.
“What news?” asked Sam warily.
“Your new girl has flew the coop.”
“What do you mean?” demanded Sam, scowling.
“Wafted. Vamosed. Fluffed out.
Beat it for the outside.”
“Who are you talking about?”
“Beattie’s wife’s sister.”
“Miss Mackall?”
“Went back with the bishop this morning.”
Sam’s face was a study in blank incredulity.
“Didn’t you know she was
goin’?” asked Jack with pretended concern.
He turned to his mates. “Boys, this here’s
a serious matter. Looks like a regular lovers’
quarrel. We ought to have broke it to him more
gentle!”
“I don’t believe it!”
said Sam. “But if it is true, she’s
got a right to go when she likes without asking me.”
He made a move to drive on.
“Hold on!” cried Big Jack. “I’ve
got another piece of news for you.”
“Spit it out,” snapped Sam, scornful and
unconcerned.
“Your old girl’s come
to town. Ring out the new, ring in the old, as
the song says. Lucky for you they didn’t
happen simultaneous.”
This affected Sam more than the first
item. In spite of him, a red tide surged up from
his neck. He scowled angrily at having to betray
himself before them. They laughed derisively.
“I suppose you mean Bela,”
he said stiffly. “The settlement is free
to her, I guess. She’s no more mine than
the other.”
“Opened a resteraw in the shack
below the company store,” Big Jack went on.
“We had our dinner there. Six bits a man.
Better drop in to supper.”
“Not by a damn sight!” muttered Sam.
He shook his reins, and drove on to the tune of their
laughter.
His feelings were much mixed.
He felt that he ought in decency to be chiefly concerned
on Jennie Mackall’s account, but he could not
drive Bela out of his head. He was both angry
and terrified at her coming. Just when he was
beginning to feel free and easy she had to come and
start up the old trouble in his breast. Just when
men were beginning to forget the story which humiliated
him, she came along and gave it new point!
Sam had to get mad at something, and,
like young persons generally, he concentrated on a
side issue. By the time he got into the settlement
he had succeeded in working himself up to a great pitch
of indignation against the Beatties, who, he told
himself, had sent Jennie Mackall home to part her
from him.
Reaching the company reservation,
he drove boldly up the hill to ask for an explanation.
Mrs. Beattie was on the porch sewing, as ever her
bland, capable self.
“They tell me Miss Mackall has
gone away,” said Sam stiffly.
“She was taken sick last night,”
replied Mrs. Beattie. “We all thought it
best for her to go when she had a good chance.”
Sam stood undecided.
Mrs. Beattie arose.
“She left a note to bid you good-bye. I’ll
get it.”
This was what Sam read, written in a well nigh illegible
scrawl:
DEAR BOY,
I cannot stay here. I am sick.
I can’t explain further. Can scarcely
hold a pen. It’s dreadful to have to go
without seeing you. But don’t try to
follow me. I will write you from outside,
when I can think more calmly. Oh, it’s horrible!
Oh, be careful of yourself! Don’t let
yourself be deceived. I would say more if
I dared. Tear this up instantly. Don’t
forget me.
Ever thine,
JENNIE.
Sam bowed stiffly to Mrs. Beattie,
and turned away. The letter mystified and exasperated
him. The emotion it breathed found no response
in his own breast. The phrasing sounded exaggerated
and silly. Why on earth should he follow?
He understood the veiled reference to Bela. Little
need for Jennie to warn him against her!
At the same time Sam felt mean because
he experienced no greater distress at Jennie’s
going. Finally, manlike, he swore under his breath,
and resolved again to have no more to do with women.
No suspicion of the real state of affairs crossed
his mind.
Returning down hill in his wagon,
he had to pass the little house where they had told
him Bela was. Smoke was rising from the chimney.
A great disquiet attacked him; he was not thinking
of Jennie at all then. He heard sounds of activity
from within the shack. Wild horses could not
have dragged his head around to look. Urging his
horses, he got out of sight as quick as he could.
But out of sight was not out of mind.
“What’s the matter with
me?” he asked himself irritably. “I’m
my own master, I guess. Nobody can put anything
over on me. What need I care if she opens a dozen
restaurants? One would think I was afraid of the
girl! Ridiculous! Lord! I wish she were
at the other side of the world!”
There was no escaping her. During
the days that followed, Bela was the principal topic
of conversation around the settlement. Her place
became a general rendezvous for all the white men.
Graves’s young men saved the
Government their rations, but took it out in horse-flesh
riding around the bay to sup at Bela’s.
The policemen spent their hours off duty and wages
there.
Stiffy and Mahooley fired their cook
and went with the rest. The shack proved inadequate
to hold them all, and Graves sent over a tent to be
used as a kitchen annex.
Since Sam was the only white man who
did not patronize the place, he had to submit to be
held up on the road half a dozen times a day while
they forced him to listen to the details of the last
wonderful meal at Bela’s.
“No bannock and sow-belly; no,
sir! Real raised outside bread and genuine cow-butter
from the mission. Green stuff from the mission
garden. Roasted duck and prairie-chicken; stewed
rabbit and broiled fish fresh out of the lake!
Pudding with raisins in it, and on Sunday an apricot
pie!”
Bela, it seemed, brought everybody
under contribution. They told how even Mrs. Beattie,
the great lady of the place, was giving her cooking
lessons.
It was not only the food that made
Bela’s place attractive. The men told how
agreeably she welcomed them, making every man feel
at home. She remembered their likes and dislikes;
she watched to see that their plates were kept full.
When the table was cleared they were
allowed to smoke and to play cards. Bela was
good for a bit of fun, too; nothing highty-tighty
about her. She had a clever tongue in her head.
But all fair and above-board, you understand.
Lord! if any fellow got fresh he’d mighty soon
be chucked out by the others. But nobody ever
tried it on there was something about her A
fine girl!
That was how the panegyrics always
ended: “A fine girl, sir!” Every
man felt a particular gratitude to Bela. It was
a place to go nights. It combined the advantages
of a home and a jolly club. Up north men were
apt to grow rusty and glum for the lack of a little
amusement.
All of which evidenced a new side
of Bela’s character. She was coming on.
In such a favourable atmosphere she might well develop.
It seemed that she moved like a queen among her courtiers.
They scrambled to do her behests.
Poor Sam, after listening to these
tales, was obliged to drive past the house of entertainment
eyes front, and cook his supper in solitude at Grier’s
Point. He could no longer count on even an occasional
companion, for nowadays everybody hurried to Bela’s.
The plain fact of the matter was,
he suffered torments of lonesomeness. Lying in
his blankets waiting for sleep, perhaps in a cold
drizzle, in his mind’s ear he could hear the
sounds of merriment in the shack three miles away.
As his heart weakened, he was obliged to batter himself
harder and harder to keep up his rage against the
cause of all his troubles.
One afternoon returning from around
the bay earlier than usual, in a straight stretch
of the road between the two trading posts, he saw her
coming. No mistaking that slender, skirted figure
with a carriage as proud and graceful as a blooded
horse.
His heart set up a tremendous thumping.
There was no way of avoiding a meeting, unless he
turned tail and fled before her. That was not
to be thought of. It was the first time they
had come face to face since the unforgettable morning
in Johnny Gagnon’s shack.
Sam steeled himself, and commenced
to whistle. He would show her! Exactly what
he meant to show her he could not have told, but it
necessitated a jaunty air and a rollicking whistle.
It was his intention to hail her in a friendly off-hand
way like any of the men might provided
his heart did not leap out of his breast before he
reached her.
It did not. But as they passed
he received the shock of his life. Whatever it
was he expected from her, an angry scowl maybe, or
an appealing look, or a scornfully averted head, he
did not get it. She raised calm, smiling eyes
to his and said provokingly:
“Hello, Sam!”
That was what he had meant to do,
but it missed fire. He found himself gaping clownishly
at her. For something had leaped out of her eyes
into his, something sweet and terrible and strange
that threw him into a hopeless confusion.
He whipped up his horses and banged
down the trail. All night he tossed in his blankets,
hungry and exasperated beyond bearing. Cursing
her brought him no satisfaction at all. It rang
hollowly.
As the days passed, stories of another
kind reached Sam’s ears. It appeared that
many of Bela’s boarders desired to marry her,
particularly the four settlers who had first arrived.
They had offered themselves in due form, it was said,
and, much to the satisfaction of the company in general,
had been turned down in positive terms.
Whether or not this was precisely
true, Husky Marr suddenly sold out his outfit and
went out on a York boat, while Black Shand Fraser
packed up his and trekked over to the Spirit River.
Later word came back that he had built himself a raft,
and had gone down to Fort Ochre, the farthest point
that white men had reached.
The other two stuck it out. Big
Jack Skinner philosophically abandoned his pretensions,
but Joe Hagland would not take his answer. He
continued to besiege Bela, and the general opinion
was that he would wear her out in the end. All
of which did not help smooth Sam’s pillow.
Another piece of news was that old
Musq’oosis had come to live with Bela and help
her run her place. That night on his way back
Sam saw that a teepee had been pitched beside the
road near the stopping-house. In the end, as
was inevitable, Sam began to argue with himself as
to the wisdom of his course in staying away from Bela’s.
“Every time they see me drive
past it revives the story in their minds,” he
told himself. “They’ll think I’m
afraid of her. She’ll think I’m afraid
of her. I’ve got to show them all.
I’m just making a fool of myself staying away.
It’s only a public eating-house. My money’s
as good as anybody else’s, I guess. I’ll
never make good with the gang until I can mix with
them there as if nothing had happened.”
(Photoplay Edition “The
Huntress") (A First National Picture)]
Thus do a young man’s secret
desires beguile him. But even when he had persuaded
himself that it would be the part of wisdom to eat
at Bela’s, Sam did not immediately act on it.
A kind of nervous dread restrained him.
One afternoon he was delayed across
the bay, and as he approached the “resteraw”
the fellows were already gathering for supper.
Sam listened to the jovial talk and laughter coming
through the door with a sore and desirous heart.
“Why can’t I have a good
time, too?” he asked himself rebelliously.
But he did not pull up. A few yards beyond the
shack he met Stiffy and Mahooley riding to supper.
“Hey, Sam!” cried the
latter teasingly. “Come on in to supper.
I’ll blow!”
“Much obliged,” said Sam
good-naturedly. “My horses’ feed is
down at the Point. I have to be getting on.”
“There’s plenty feed here,” said
Mahooley.
Sam shook his head.
“I believe you’re afraid of the girl.”
The shaft went home. Sam laughed
scornfully and pulled his horses’ heads around.
“Oh, well, since you put it that way I guess
I will eat a meal off you.”