Stonor, returning to the shack, was
hailed with joy as one who might have come back from
Hades unscathed. He told Clare just what he had
found.
“What do you think?” she asked anxiously.
“Isn’t it clear?
He saw us coming and took to the tree. There were
so many tracks around the base of the tree that I
was put off. He must have been hidden there all
the time we were looking for him and shouting.
As soon as it got dark he tried to make his get-away,
but his calculations were somewhat upset by his falling.
Even after we had taken warning, he had to risk getting
into his store-room, because all his food was there.
No doubt he thought we would all be in the other room,
and he could sneak in and take what he could carry.
When he was scared off by Mary’s scream he started
his journey without it, that’s all.”
“But why should he run from us from
me?”
Stonor shrugged helplessly.
She produced the little red book again.
“Read something here,” she said, turning
the pages.
Under her directing finger, while
she looked aside, he read: “The hardest
thing I have to contend against is my hunger for her.
Discipline is of little avail against that. I
spend whole days wrestling with myself, trying to
get the better of it, and think I have conquered, only
to be awakened at night by wanting her worse than ever.”
“Does that sound as if he wished
to escape me?” she murmured.
In her distress of mind it did not
occur to her, of course, that this was rather a cruel
situation for Stonor. He did not answer for a
moment; then said in a low tone: “I am
afraid his mind is unhinged. You suggested it.”
“I know,” she said quickly.
“But I have been thinking it over. It can’t
be. Listen to this.” She hastily turned
the pages of the little book. “What day
is this?”
“The third of July.”
“This was written June 30th,
only four days ago. It is the last entry in the
book. Listen!” She read, while the tears
started to her eyes:
“I must try to get in some good
books on natural history. If I could make better
friends with the little wild things around me I need
never be lonely. There is a young rabbit who
seems disposed to hit it off with me. I toss
him a bit of biscuit after breakfast every morning.
He comes and waits for it now. He eats it daintily
in my sight; then, with a flirt of his absurd tail
for ‘thank you,’ scampers down to the river
to wash it down.”
“Those are not the thoughts of a man out of
his mind.”
“No,” he admitted, “but
everything you have read shows him to be of a sensitive,
high-strung nature. On such a man the sudden shock
of our coming ”
“Oh, then I have waited too
long!” she cried despairingly. “And
now I can never repay!”
“Not necessarily,” said
Stonor with a dogged patience. “Such cases
are common in the North. But I never knew one
to be incurable.”
She took this in, and it comforted
her partly; but her thoughts were still busy with
matters remote from Stonor. After a while she
asked abruptly: “What do you think we ought
to do?”
“Start up the river at once,”
he said. “We’ll hear news of him on
the way. We’ll overtake him in the end.”
She stared at him with troubled eyes,
pondering this suggestion. At last she slowly
shook her head. “I don’t think we
ought to go,” she murmured.
“What!” he cried, astonished.
“You wish to stay here after last
night! Why?”
“I don’t know,” she said helplessly.
“But if the man is really not
right, he needs looking after. We ought to hurry
after him.”
“It seems so,” she said,
still with the air of those who speak what is strange
to themselves; “but I have an intuition, a premonition I
don’t know what to call it! Something tells
me that we do not yet know the truth.”
Stonor turned away helplessly.
He could not argue against a woman’s reason
like this.
“Ah, don’t be impatient
with me,” she said appealingly. “Just
wait to-day. If nothing happens during the day
to throw any light on what puzzles us, I will make
no more objections. I’ll be willing to start
this afternoon, and camp up the river.”
“It will give him twelve hours’ start
of us.”
Her surprising answer was: “I don’t
think he’s gone.”
Stonor made his way over the old portage
trail. He wished to have a look at the Great
Falls before returning up-river. Clare, waiting
for what she could not have told, had chosen to remain
at the shack, and Mary Moosa was not afraid to stay
with her by daylight. Like Stonor, Mary believed
that the man had undoubtedly left the neighbourhood,
and that no further danger was to be apprehended from
that quarter.
Stonor went along abstractedly, climbing
over the obstructions or cutting a way through, almost
oblivious to his surroundings. His heart was
jealous and sore. His instinct told him that the
man who had prowled around the shack the night before
was an evil-doer; yet Clare persisted in exalting
him to the skies. In his present temper it seemed
to Stonor as if Clare purposely made his task as hard
as possible for him. In fact, the trooper had
a grievance against the whole world.
Suddenly he realized that his brain
was simply chasing itself in circles. Stopping
short, he shook himself much like a dog on issuing
from the water. His will was to shake off the
horrors of the past night and his dread of the future.
Better sense told him that only weakness lay in dwelling
on these things. Let things fall as they would,
he would meet them like a man, he hoped, and no more
could be asked of him. In the meantime he would
not worry himself into a stew. He went on with
a lighter breast.
From the cutting in the trail Stonor
saw that someone had travelled that way a while before,
probably during the previous season, for the cuts on
green wood were half-healed. It was clear, from
the amount of cutting he had been obliged to do, that
this traveller was the first that way in many years.
Stonor further saw from the style of his axe-work that
he was a white man; a white man chops a sapling with
one stroke clean through: a red man makes two
chops, half-way through on each side. This was
pretty conclusive evidence that Imbrie had first come
from down-river.
This trail had not been used since,
and Stonor, remembering the suggestion in Imbrie’s
diary that he frequently visited the falls, supposed
that he had some other way of reaching there.
He determined to see if it was practicable to make
his way along the beach on the way back.
The trail did not take him directly
to the falls, but in a certain place he saw signs
of an old side-path striking off towards the river,
and, following this, he was brought out on a plateau
of rock immediately above the spot where the river
stepped off into space. Here he stood for a moment
to prepare himself for the sight before looking over.
His eye was caught by some ends of string fluttering
from the branches of a bush beside him. He was
at a loss to account for their presence until he remembered
Etzooah and his humble offerings to the Old Man.
Here Etzooah had tied his tobacco-bags.
Approaching the brink, the river smoothed
itself a little as if gathering its forces for the
leap, and over the edge itself it slipped smoothly.
It was true to a certain extent that the cataract muffled
its own voice, but the earth trembled. The gorge
below offered a superb prospect. After the invariable
flatness and tameness of the shores above, the sudden
cleft in the world impressed the beholder stunningly.
Then Stonor went to the extreme edge
and looked over. A deep, dull roar smote upon
his ears; he was bewildered and satisfied. Knowing
the Indian propensity to exaggerate, he had half expected
to find merely a cascade wilder than anything above;
or perhaps a wide straggling series of falls.
It was neither. The entire river gathered itself
up, and plunged sheer into deep water below.
The river narrowed down at the brink, and the volume
of water was stupendous. The drop was over one
hundred feet. The water was of the colour of
strong tea, and as it fell it drew over its brown
sheen a lovely, creamy fleece of foam. Tight little
curls of spray puffed out of the falling water like
jets of smoke, and, spreading and descending, merged
into the white cloud that rolled about the foot of
the falls. This cloud itself billowed up in successive
undulations like full draperies, only to spread out
and vanish in the sunshine.
Stonor had the solemn feeling that
comes to the man who knows himself to be among the
first of his race to gaze on a great natural wonder.
He and Imbrie alone had seen this sight. What
of the riddle of Imbrie? Doctor, magician, skulker
in the night, madman perhaps and Clare’s
husband! Must he be haunted by him all his life?
But the noble spectacle before Stonor’s eyes
calmed his nerves. All will be clear in the end,
he told himself. And nothing could destroy his
thought of Clare.
He would liked to have remained for
hours, but everything drew him back to the shack.
He started back along the beach. On the whole
it was easier going than by the encumbered trail.
There were no obstacles except the low precipice that
has been mentioned, and that proved to be no great
matter to climb around. Meanwhile every foot of
the rapid offered a fascinating study to the river-man.
This rapid seemed to go against all the customary
rules for rapids. Nowhere in all its torn expanse
could Stonor pick a channel; the rocks stuck up everywhere.
He noticed that one could have returned in a canoe
in safety from the very brink of the falls by means
of the back-waters that crept up the shore.
His attention was caught by a log-jam
out in the rapid. He had scarcely noticed it
the day before while searching for tracks. Two
great rocks, that stuck out of the water close together
where the current ran swiftest, had at some time caught
an immense fallen tree squarely on their shoulders,
and the pressure of the current held it there.
Another tree had caught on the obstruction, and another,
and now the fantastic pile reared itself high out
of the water.
At the moment Stonor had no weightier
matter on his mind than to puzzle how this had come
about. Suddenly his blood ran cold to perceive
what looked like a human foot sticking out of the
water at the bottom of the pile. He violently
rubbed his eyes, thinking that they deceived him.
But there was no mistake. It was a foot,
clad in a moccasin of the ordinary style of the country.
While Stonor looked it was agitated back and forth
as in a final struggle. With a sickened breast,
he instinctively looked around for some means of rescue.
But he immediately realized that the owner of the
foot was long past aid. The movement was due
simply to the action of the current.
His brain whirled dizzily. A
foot? Whose foot? Imbrie’s? There
was no other man anywhere near. But Imbrie knew
the place so well he could not have been carried down,
unless he had chosen to end his life that way.
And his anxiety to obtain food the night before did
not suggest that he had any intention of putting himself
out of the way. Perhaps it was an Indian drowned
up-river and carried down. But they would surely
have heard of the accident on the way. More likely
Imbrie. If his brain was unhinged, who could
say what wild impulse might seize him? Was this
the reason for Clare’s premonition? If
it was Imbrie, how could he tell her?
Stonor forced down the mounting horror
that constricted his throat, and soberly bethought
himself of what he must do. Useless to speculate
on whose the body might be; he had to find out.
He examined the place up and down with fresh care.
The log-jam was about half-a-mile above the falls,
and a slightly lesser distance below Imbrie’s
shack. It was nearer his side of the river than
the other; say, fifty yards of torn white water lay
between the drift-pile and the beach. To wade
or swim out was out of the question. On the other
hand, the strongest flow of water, the channel such
as it was, set directly for the obstruction, and it
might be possible to drop down on it from above if
one provided some means for getting back again.
Stonor marked the position of every rock, every reef
above, and little by little made his plan.
He returned to the shack. In
her present state of nerves he dared not tell Clare
of what he had found. In any case he might be
mistaken in his supposition as to the identity of
the body. In that case she need never be told.
He was careful to present himself with a smooth face.
“Any news?” cried Clare
eagerly. “You’ve been gone so long!”
He shook his head. “Anything here?”
“Nothing. I am ready to go now as soon
as we have eaten.”
Stonor, faced with the necessity of
suddenly discovering some reason for delaying their
start, stroked his chin. “Have you slept?”
he asked.
“How could I sleep?”
“I don’t think you ought to start until
you’ve had some sleep.”
“I can sleep later.”
“I need sleep too. And Mary.”
“Of course! How selfish of me! We
can start towards evening, then.”
While Clare was setting the biscuits to the fire in
the shack, and
Stonor was chopping wood outside, Mary came out for
an armful of wood.
The opportunity of speaking to her privately was too
good to be missed.
“Mary,” said Stonor.
“There’s a dead body caught in the rapids
below here.”
“Wah!” she cried, letting the wood fall.
“You teenk it is him?”
“I don’t know. I suppose so.
I’ve got to find out.”
“Find out? In the rapids?
How you goin’ find out? You get carry over
the falls!”
“Not so loud! I’ve
got it all doped out. I’m taking no unnecessary
chances. But I’ll need you to help me.”
“I not help you,” said
Mary rebelliously. “I not help you drown
yourself for a dead man. He’s
dead anyhow. If you go over the falls what we
do? What we do?”
“Easy! I told you I had
a good plan. Wait and see what it is. Get
her to sleep this afternoon, and we’ll try to
pull it off before she wakes. Now run on in,
or she’ll wonder what we’re talking about.
Don’t show anything in your face.”
Mary’s prime accomplishment
lay in hiding her feelings. She picked up her
wood, and went stolidly into the shack.
Stonor, searching among Imbrie’s
things, was much reassured to find a tracking-line.
This, added to his own line, would give him six hundred
feet of rope, which he judged ample for his purpose.
He spliced the two while the meal was preparing.
“What’s that for?” Clare asked.
“To help us up-stream.”
As soon as he had eaten he went back
to the beach. His movements here were invisible
to those in the shack. He carried the remaining
bark-canoe on his back down the beach to a point about
a hundred and fifty yards above the log-jam.
This was to be his point of departure. He took
a fresh survey of the rapids, and went over and over
in his mind the course he meant to take.
After cutting off several short lengths
that he required for various purposes, Stonor fastened
the end of the line to a tree on the edge of the bank;
the other end he made fast to the stern of the canoe not
to the point of the stern, but to the stern-thwart
where it joined the gunwale. This was designed
to hold the canoe at an angle against the current
that would keep her out in the stream. The slack
of the line was coiled neatly on the beach.
With one of the short lengths Stonor
then made an offset from this line near where it was
fastened to the thwart, and passed it around his own
body under the arms. Thus, if the canoe smashed
on the rocks or swamped, by cutting the line at the
thwart the strain would be transferred to Stonor’s
body, and the canoe could be left to its fate.
Another short length with a loop at the end was made
fast at the other end of the thwart. This was
for the purpose of making fast to the log-jam while
Stonor worked to free the body. A third piece
of line he carried around his neck. This was
to secure the body.
During the course of these preparations
Mary joined him. She reported that Clare was
fast asleep. Stonor made a little prayer that
she might not awaken till this business was over.
He explained to Mary what he was about,
and showed her her part. She listened sullenly,
but, seeing that his mind was made up, shrugged at
the uselessness of opposing his will. Mary was
to pay out the rope according to certain instructions,
and afterwards to haul him in.
Finally, after reassuring himself
of the security of all his knots, he divested himself
of hat, tunic, and boots and stepped into the canoe.
He shook hands with Mary, took his knife between his
teeth, and pushed off. He made as much as he
could out of the back-water alongshore, and then,
heading diagonally up-stream, shot out into the turmoil,
paddling like a man possessed in order to make sure
of getting far enough out before the current swept
him abreast of his destination. Mary, according
to instructions, paid out the rope freely. Before
starting he had marked every rock in his course, and
he avoided them now by instinct. His thinking
had been done beforehand. He worked like a machine.
He saw that he was going to make it,
with something to spare. When he had the log-jam
safely under his quarter, he stopped paddling, and,
bringing the canoe around, drifted down on it.
There was plenty of water out here. He held up
a hand to Mary, and according to pre-arrangement she
gradually took up the strain on the line. The
canoe slowed up, and the current began to race past.
So far so good. The line held
the canoe slightly broached to the current, thus the
pressure of the current itself kept him from edging
ashore. The log-pile loomed up squarely ahead
of him. Mary let him down on it hand over hand.
He manoeuvred himself abreast an immense log pointing
up and down river, alongside of which the current slipped
silkily. Casting his loop over the stump of a
branch, he was held fast and the strain was taken
off Mary’s arms.
The moccasined foot protruded from
the water at the bow of his canoe. He soon saw
the impossibility of attempting to work from the frail
canoe, so he untied the rope which bound him to it,
and pulled himself out on the logs. The rope
from the shore was still around his body in case of
a slip. He was taking no unnecessary chances.
The body was caught in some way under
the same great log that his canoe was fastened to.
The current tore at the projecting foot with a snarl.
The foot oscillated continually under the pull, and
sometimes disappeared altogether, only to spring back
into sight with a ghastly life-like motion. Stonor
cautiously straddled the log, and groped beneath it.
His principal anxiety was that log and all might come
away from the jam and be carried down, but there was
little danger that his insignificant weight would
disturb so great a bulk.
The body was caught in the fork of
a branch underneath. He succeeded in freeing
the other foot. He guessed that a smart pull up-stream
would liberate the whole, but in that case the current
would almost surely snatch it from his grasp.
He saw that it would be an impossible task from his
insecure perch to drag the body out on the log, and
in turn load it into the fragile canoe. His only
chance lay in towing it ashore.
So, with the piece of line he had
brought for the purpose, he lashed the feet together,
and made the other end fast to the bow-thwart of the
canoe. Then he got in and adjusted his stern-line
as before it became the bow-line for the
return journey. In case it should become necessary
to cut adrift from the canoe, he took the precaution
of passing a line direct from his body to that which
he meant to tow. When all was ready he signalled
to Mary to haul in.
Now began the most difficult half
of his journey. On the strength of Mary’s
arms depended the freeing of the body. It came
away slowly. Stonor had an instant’s glimpse
of the ghastly tow bobbing astern, before settling
down to the business in hand. For awhile all went
well, though the added pull of the submerged body
put a terrific strain on Mary. Fortunately she
was as strong as a man. Stonor aided her all he
could with his paddle, but that was little. He
was kept busy fending his egg-shell craft off the
rocks. He had instructed Mary, as the slack accumulated,
to walk gradually up the beach. This was to avoid
the danger of the canoe’s broaching too far
to the current. But Mary could not do it under
the increased load. The best she could manage
was to brace her body against the stones, and pull
in hand over hand.
As the line shortened Stonor saw that
he was going to have trouble. Instead of working
in-shore, the canoe was edging further into the stream,
and ever presenting a more dangerous angle to the tearing
current. Mary had pulled in about a third of the
line, when suddenly the canoe, getting the current
under her dead rise, darted out into mid-stream like
a fish at the end of a line, and hung there canting
dangerously. The current snarled along the gunwale
like an animal preparing to crush its prey.
The strain on Mary was frightful.
She was extended at full length with her legs braced
against an outcrop of rock. Stonor could see her
agonized expression. He shouted to her to slack
off the line, but of course the roar of the water
drowned his puny voice. In dumb-play he tried
desperately to show her what to do, but Mary was possessed
of but one idea, to hang on until her arms were pulled
out.
The canoe tipped inch by inch, and
the boiling water crept up its freeboard. Finally
it swept in, and Stonor saw that all was over with
the canoe. With a single stroke of his knife he
severed the rope at the thwart behind him; with another
stroke the rope in front. When the tug came on
his body he was jerked clean out of the canoe.
It passed out of his reckoning. By the drag behind
him, he knew he still had the dead body safe.
He instinctively struck out, but the
tearing water, mocking his feeble efforts, buffeted
him this way and that as with the swing of giant arms.
Sometimes he was spun helplessly on the end of his
line like a trolling-spoon. He was flung sideways
around a boulder and pressed there by the hands of
the current until it seemed the breath was slowly
leaving his body. Dazed, blinded, gasping, he
somehow managed to struggle over it, and was cast
further in-shore. The tendency of the current
was to sweep him in now. If he could only keep
alive! The stones were thicker in-shore.
He was beaten first on one side, then the other.
All his conscious efforts were reduced to protecting
his head from the rocks with his arms.
The water may have been but a foot
or two deep, but of course he could gain no footing.
He still dragged his leaden burden. All the breath
was knocked out of him under the continual blows,
but he was conscious of no pain. The last few
moments were a blank. He found himself in the
back-water, and expended his last ounce of strength
in crawling out on hands and knees on the beach.
He cast himself flat, sobbing for breath.
Mary came running to his aid.
He was able to nod to her reassuringly, and in the
ecstasy of her relief, she sat down suddenly, and wept
like a white woman. Stonor gathered himself together
and sat up groaning. The onset of pain was well-nigh
unendurable. He felt literally as if his flesh
all over had been pounded to a jelly. But all
his limbs, fortunately, responded to their functions.
“Lie still,” Mary begged of him.
He shook his head. “I must
keep moving, or I’ll become as helpless as a
log.”
The nameless thing was floating in
the back-water. Together they dragged it out
on the stones. It was Stonor’s first sight
of that which had cost him such pains to secure.
He nerved himself to bear it. Mary was no fine
lady, but she turned her head away. The man’s
face was totally unrecognizable by reason of the battering
it had received on the rocks; his clothes were partly
in ribbons; there was a gaping wound in the breast.
For the rest, as far as Stonor could
judge, it was the body of a young man, and a comely
one. His skin was dark like that of an Italian,
or a white man with a quarter or eighth strain of
Indian blood in his veins. Stonor was astonished
by this fact; nothing that he had heard had suggested
that Imbrie was not as white as himself. This
put a new look on affairs. For an instant Stonor
doubted. But the man’s hand was well-formed
and well-kept; and in what remained of his clothes
one could still see the good materials and the neatness.
In fact, it could be none other than Imbrie.
He was roused from his contemplation
of the gruesome object by a sharp exclamation from
Mary. Looking up, he saw Clare a quarter of a
mile away, hastening to them along the beach.
His heart sank.
“Go to her,” he said quickly.
“Keep her from coming here.”
Mary hastened away. Stonor followed
more slowly, disguising his soreness as best he could.
For him it was cruel going over the stones yet
all the way he was oddly conscious of the beauty of
the wild cascade, sweeping down between its green
shores.
As he had feared, Clare refused to
be halted by Mary. Thrusting the Indian woman
aside, she came on to Stonor.
“What’s the matter?”
she cried stormily. “Why did you both leave
me? Why does she try to stop me? Why!
you’re all wet! Where’s your tunic,
your boots? You’re in pain!”
“Come to the house,” he said. “I’ll
tell you.”
She would not be put off. “What
has happened? I insist on knowing now! What
is there down there I mustn’t see?”
“Be guided by me,” he
pleaded. “Come away, and I’ll tell
you everything.”
“I will see!” she
cried. “Do you wish to put me out of my
mind with suspense?”
He saw that it was perhaps kinder
not to oppose her. “I have found a body
in the river,” he said. “Do not look
at it. Let me tell you.”
She broke away from him. “I
must know the worst,” she muttered.
He let her go. She ran on down
the beach, and he hobbled after. She stopped
beside the body, and looked down with wide, wild eyes.
One dreadful low cry escaped her.
“Ernest!”
She collapsed. Stonor caught
her sagging body. Her head fell limply back over
his arm.