When the spring days came around,
Stonor, whose business it was to keep watch on such
things, began to perceive an undercurrent of waywardness
among the Indians and breeds of the post. Teachers
know how an epidemic of naughtiness will sweep a class;
this was much the same thing. There was no actual
outbreak; it was chiefly evinced in defiant looks and
an impudent swagger. It was difficult to trace
back, for the red people hang together solidly; a
man with even a trace of red blood will rarely admit
a white man into the secrets of the race. Under
questioning they maintain a bland front that it is
almost impossible to break down. Stonor had long
ago learned the folly of trying to get at what he wanted
by direct questioning.
He finally, as he thought, succeeded
in locating the source of the infection at Carcajou
Point. Parties from the post rode up there with
suspicious frequency, and came back with a noticeably
lowered moral tone, licking their lips, so to speak.
All the signs pointed to whisky.
At dawn of a morning in May, Stonor,
without having advertised his intention, set off for
Carcajou on horseback. The land trail cut across
a wide sweep of the river, and on horseback one could
make it in a day, whereas it was a three days’
paddle up-stream. Unfortunately he couldn’t
take them by surprise, for Carcajou was on the other
side of the river from Enterprise, and Stonor must
wait on the shore until they came over after him.
As soon as he left the buildings of
the post behind him Stonor’s heart was greatly
lifted up. It was his first long ride of the season.
The trail led him through the poplar bush back to
the bench, thence in a bee-line across the prairie.
The sun rose as he climbed the bench. The prairie
was not the “bald-headed” so dear to those
who know it, but was diversified with poplar bluffs,
clumps of willow, and wild-rose-scrub in the hollows.
The crocuses were in bloom, the poplar trees hanging
out millions of emerald pendants, and the sky showed
that exquisite, tender luminousness that only the
northern sky knows when the sun travels towards the
north. Only singing-birds were lacking to complete
the idyl of spring. Stonor, all alone in a beautiful
world, lifted up his voice to supply the missing praise.
Towards sunset he approached the shore
of the river opposite Carcajou Point, but as he didn’t
wish to arrive at night, he camped within shelter
of the woods. In the morning he signalled for
a boat. They came after him in a dug-out, and
he swam his horse across.
A preliminary survey of the place
revealed nothing out of the way. The people who
called themselves Beaver Indians were in reality the
scourings of half the tribes in the country, and it
is doubtful if there was an individual of pure red
race among them. Physically they were a sad lot,
for Nature revenges herself swiftly on the offspring
of hybrids. Quaint ethnological differences were
exhibited in the same family; one brother would have
a French physiognomy, another a Scottish cast of feature,
and a third the thick lips and flattened nose of a
negro. Their village was no less nondescript than
its inhabitants, merely a straggling row of shacks,
thrown together anyhow, and roofed with sods, now
putting forth a brave growth of weeds. These houses
were intended for a winter residence only. In
summer they “pitched around.” At
present they were putting their dug-outs and canoes
in order for a migration.
Stonor was received on the beach by
Shose (Joseph) Cardinal, a fine, up-standing ancient
of better physique than his sons and grandsons.
In a community of hairless men he was further distinguished
by a straggling grey beard. His wits were beginning
to fail, but not yet his cunning. He was extremely
anxious to learn the reason for the policeman’s
coming. For Stonor to tell him would have been
to defeat his object; to lie would have been to lower
himself in their eyes; so Stonor took refuge in an
inscrutability as polite as the old man’s own.
Stonor made a house-to-house canvass
of the village, inquiring as to the health and well-being
of each household, as is the custom of his service,
and keeping his eyes open on his own account.
He satisfied himself that if there had been whisky
there, it was drunk up by now. Some of the men
showed the sullen depressed air that follows on a
prolonged spree, but all were sober at present.
He was in one of the last houses of
the village, when, out of the tail of his eye, he
saw a man quietly issue from the house next in order,
and, covered by the crowd around the door, make his
way back to a house already visited. Stonor,
without saying anything, went back to that house and
found himself face to face with a young white man,
a stranger, who greeted him with an insolent grin.
“Who are you?” demanded the policeman.
“Hooliam.”
“You have a white man’s name. What
is it?”
“Smith” this
with inimitable insolence, and a look around that bid
for the applause of the natives.
Stonor’s lip curled at the spectacle
of a white man’s thus lowering himself.
“Come outside,” he said sternly. “I
want to talk to you.”
He led the way to a place apart on
the river bank, and the other, not daring to defy
him openly, followed with a swagger. With a stern
glance Stonor kept the tatterdemalion crowd at bay.
Stonor coolly surveyed his man in the sunlight and
saw that he was not white, as he had supposed, but
a quarter or eighth breed. He was an uncommonly
good-looking young fellow in the hey-day of his youth,
say, twenty-six. With his clear olive skin, straight
features and curly dark hair he looked not so much
like a breed as a man of one of the darker peoples
of the Caucasian race, an Italian or a Greek.
There was a falcon-like quality in the poise of his
head, in his gaze, but the effect was marred by the
consciousness of evil, the irreconcilable look in the
fine eyes.
“Bad clear through!” was Stonor’s
instinctive verdict.
“Where did you come from?” he demanded.
“Up river,” was the casual
reply. The man’s English was as good as
Stonor’s own.
“Answer me fully.”
“From Sah-ko-da-tah
prairie, if you know where that is. I came into
that country by way of Grande Prairie. I came
from Winnipeg.”
Stonor didn’t believe a word
of this, but had no means of confuting the man on
the spot. “How long have you been here?”
he asked.
“A week or so. I didn’t keep track.”
“What is your business here?”
“I’m looking for a job.”
“Among the Beavers? Why didn’t you
come to the trading-post?”
“I was coming, but they tell
me John Gaviller’s a hard man to work fer.
Thought I better keep clear of him.”
“Gaviller’s the only employer
of labour hereabouts. If you don’t like
him you’ll have to look elsewhere.”
“I can take up land, can’t I?”
“Not here. This is treaty
land. Plenty of good surveyed homesteads around
the post.”
“Thanks. I prefer to pick my own location.”
“I’ll give you your choice.
You can either come down to the post where I can keep
an eye on your doings, or go back up the river where
you came from.”
“Do you call this a free country?”
“Never mind that. You’re
getting off easy. If you’d rather, I’ll
put you under arrest and carry you down to the post
for trial.”
“On what charge?”
“Furnishing whisky to the Indians.”
“It’s a lie!” cried
the man, hoping to provoke Stonor into revealing the
extent of his information.
But the policeman shrugged, and remained mum.
The other suddenly changed his front.
“All right, I’ll go if I have to,”
he said, with a conciliatory air. “To-morrow.”
“You’ll leave within an
hour,” said Stonor, consulting his watch.
“I’ll see you off. Better get your
things together.”
The man still lingered, and Stonor
saw an unspoken question in his eye, a desire to ingratiate
himself. Now Stonor, under his stern port as an
officer of the law, was intensely curious about the
fellow. With his good looks, his impudent assurance,
his command of English, he was a notable figure in
that remote district. The policeman permitted
himself to unbend a little.
“What are you travelling in?” he asked.
“Dug-out.” Encouraged
by the policeman’s altered manner, the self-styled
Hooliam went on, with an air of taking Stonor into
his confidence: “These niggers here are
a funny lot, aren’t they? Still believe
in magic.”
“In what way?”
“Why, they’re always talking
about a White Medicine Man who lives beside a river
off to the north-west. Ernest Imbrie they call
him. Do you know him?”
“No.”
“He’s been to the post, hasn’t he?”
“No.”
“Well, how did he get into the country?”
“I don’t know.”
“These people say he works magic.”
“Well, if anyone wants to believe that !”
“What do they say about him down at the post?”
“Plenty of foolishness.”
“But what?”
“You don’t expect me to repeat foolish
gossip, do you?”
“No, but what do you think about him?”
“I don’t think.”
“They say that Gaviller’s
lodged a complaint against him, and you’re going
out there to arrest him as soon as it’s fit to
travel.”
“That’s a lie. There’s no complaint
against the man.”
“But you are going out there, aren’t you?”
“I can’t discuss my movements with you.”
“That means you are going.
Is it true he sent in a whole bale of silver foxes
to the post?”
“Say, what’s your interest
in this man, anyway?” said Stonor, losing patience.
“Nothing at all,” said
the breed carelessly. “These Indians are
always talking about him. It roused my curiosity,
that’s all.”
“Suppose you satisfy my curiosity
about yourself,” suggested Stonor meaningly.
The old light of impudent mockery
returned to the comely dark face. “Me?
Oh, I’m only a no-account hobo,” he said.
“I’ll have to be getting ready now.”
And so Stonor’s curiosity remained
unsatisfied. To have questioned the man further
would only have been to lower his dignity. True,
he might have arrested him, and forced him to give
an account of himself, but the processes of justice
are difficult and expensive so far north, and the
policemen are instructed not to make arrests except
when unavoidable. At the moment it did not occur
to Stonor but that the man’s questions about
Imbrie were actuated by an idle curiosity.
When the hour was up, the entire population
of Carcajou Point gathered on the shore to witness
Hooliam’s departure. Stonor was there, too,
of course, standing grimly apart from the rabble.
Of what they thought of this summary deportation he
could not be sure, but he suspected that if the whisky
were all gone, they would not care much one way or
the other. Hooliam was throwing his belongings
in a dug-out of a different style from that used by
the Beavers. It was ornamented with a curved prow
and stern, such as Stonor had not before seen.
“Where did you get that boat?” he asked.
“I didn’t steal it,”
answered Hooliam impudently. “Traded my
horse for it and some grub at Fort Cardigan.”
Cardigan was a Company post on the
Spirit a hundred miles or so above the Crossing.
Stonor saw that Hooliam was well provided with blankets,
grub, ammunition, etc., and that it was not Company
goods.
When Hooliam was ready to embark,
he addressed the crowd in an Indian tongue which strongly
resembled Beaver, which Stonor spoke, but had different
inflections. Freely translated, his words were:
“I go, men. The moose-berry
(i. e., red-coat) wills it. I don’t
like moose-berries. Little juice and much stone.
To eat moose-berries draws a man’s mouth up
like a tobacco-bag when the string is pulled.”
They laughed, with deprecatory side-glances
at the policeman. They were not aware that he
spoke their tongue. Stonor had no intention of
letting them know it, and kept an inscrutable face.
They pushed off the dug-out, and Hooliam, with a derisive
wave of the hand, headed up river. All remained
on the shore, and Stonor, seeing that they expected
something more of Hooliam, remained also.
He had gone about a third of a mile
when Stonor saw him bring the dug-out around and ground
her on the beach. He made no move to get out,
but a woman appeared from out of the shrubbery and
got in. She was too far away for Stonor to distinguish
anything of her features; her figure looked matronly.
“Who is that?” he asked sharply.
Several voices answered. “Hooliam’s
woman. Hooliam got old woman for his woman” with
scornful laughter. Now that Hooliam was gone,
they were prepared to curry favour with the policeman.
Stonor was careful not to show the
uneasiness he felt. This was his first intimation
that Hooliam had a companion. He considered following
him in another dug-out, but finally decided against
it. The fact that he had taken the woman aboard
in plain sight smacked merely of bravado. A long
experience of the red race had taught Stonor that they
love to shroud their movements in mystery from the
whites, and that in their most mysterious acts there
is not necessarily any significance.
Hooliam, with a wave of his paddle,
resumed his journey, and presently disappeared around
a bend. Stonor turned on his heel and left the
beach, followed by the people. They awaited his
next move somewhat apprehensively, displaying an anxiety
to please which suggested bad consciences. Stonor,
however, contented himself with offering some private
admonitions to Shose Cardinal, who seemed to take them
in good part. He then prepared to return to the
post. The people speeded his departure with relieved
faces.
That night Stonor camped on the prairie
half-way home. As he lay wooing sleep under the
stars, his horse cropping companionably near by, a
new thought caused him to sit up suddenly in his blankets.
“He mentioned the name Ernest
Imbrie. The Indians never call him anything but
the White Medicine Man. And even if they had picked
up the name Imbrie at the post, they never speak of
a man by his Christian name. If they had heard
the name Ernest I doubt if they could pronounce it.
Sounds as if he knew the name beforehand. Queer
if there should be any connection there. I wish
I hadn’t let him go so easily. Oh,
well, it’s too late to worry about it now.
The steamboat will get to the Crossing before he does.
I’ll drop a line to Lambert to keep an eye on
him.”