This is how it befell. Thomas
Douglas, Earl of Selkirk, thought that a flourishing
colony right in the midst of the rich hunting-grounds
of the Hudson’s Bay Company, in which he was
interested, would prove no less a benefit to the natives
than an excellent thing for the colonists. Accordingly,
he busied himself in persuading a number of his fellow-countrymen
to leave their hillside farms, and, with their families,
voyage to the unknown wilds of the New World.
Among those whose courage was equal
to this enterprise was Andrew Macrae, accompanied
by his good wife, Kirstie, his sturdy son, Hector,
then just on the edge of his teens, his bonnie wee
daughter, Ailie, and his two splendid sheep dogs,
Dour and Dandy.
The dogs’ names were not given
them at random. They just fitted their natures.
A more serious creature than Dour surely never stood
upon four legs. He bore himself as if he were
responsible, not merely for the occupants of the sheep-cote,
but also of the cottage as well. He was never
known to frisk or gambol, or to bark without due cause.
Dandy was the very opposite, as black
as a raven, save for a superb snow-white shirt-front,
which he managed to keep marvellously clean, and a
few touches of golden-brown on his shapely head.
He was only a little slighter than Dour, and as lively
and frolicsome as the other was impassive. Although
not quite the equal of Dour, Dandy was an excellent
sheep dog, too, and many a cotter envied Andrew the
possession of the two fine creatures.
Hector loved both dogs dearly, albeit
he stood a trifle in awe of Dour. The dogs were
as much members of the family as Ailie and himself.
He would have shared his last bit of bannock or sup
of ‘parritch’ with either of them, and
they fully returned his affection, each in his own
way.
Hector was a ‘braw laddie,’
in very sooth. From his father, he got the straightness
and strength of body, the deftness of hand and foot,
and the rapidity of thought that made him an unquestioned
leader among his playfellows, and from his mother
the light, crisp hair, the laughing blue eyes, and
the happy turn of speech that made the other boys love
as well as obey him.
He stood in much awe of his father,
who was as strict as he was just, but his mother had
his whole heart, and many a time did he go to her
for comfort, when reproved by Andrew for some little
bit of heedlessness.
With little Ailie, a dark-eyed, dark-haired
sprite, not like either parent, to protect and pet,
the Macraes made up a notably happy family group,
and were the recipients of many attentions from their
fellow passengers, on the long voyage on a slow sailing
ship to the bleak shores of Hudson’s Bay.
That voyage out proved far from being
a pleasant holiday. Cooped up in an over-loaded
vessel, whose accommodation was scant at best, fed
upon pork and beef that was salter than the sea itself,
and hard biscuits that became alive with weevils ere
the ship reached its destination, all the colonists
suffered more or less severely. It spoke well
for the stamina of the Macraes that they bore the
privations of the passage better than the majority,
and landed at York Factory in fairly good trim.
‘Eh, but glad I am to put my
feet upon the solid ground again!’ exclaimed
Andrew Macrae, with heartfelt emphasis, as he sprang
out of the boat and strode up the beach, and, in so
saying, he spoke for every one on board the vessel.
Hector’s legs wobbled under
him in so absurd a fashion that he tumbled over several
times in his first attempt at running, and even Dour
and Dandy, for a little, seemed hardly to understand
that they were free to bound away in any direction
they pleased.
But presently all the colonists were
landed, and, having been kindly welcomed by the Hudson’s
Bay Company’s employees at York Factory, made
haste to bestow themselves as best they might among
the buildings of the fort.
The Macraes were fortunate in getting
a snug room to themselves, and there, with their two
children and faithful dogs, they settled down to await
the beginning of the next stage of their long journey.
On the following morning, Hector,
accompanied by Ailie, and having Dour and Dandy, went
down to the beach, where there was much going on to
entertain them.
The sailors were busy unloading the
vessel of her very miscellaneous cargo, comprising
tea and tobacco, sugar and salt, blankets and muskets,
knives, hatchets, and all the varied articles required
for provisioning the forts, or trading with the Indians,
while Indians and half-breeds lounged near by, watching
them with half-contemptuous interest. The Hudson’s
Bay officials moved briskly about, giving sharp orders,
and, in and among them everywhere, were dogs of all
ages and sizes, but alike in resembling wolves or
foxes, for the Huskie breed was predominant.
The sheep dogs made no attempt to
find favour with the others. On the contrary,
they kept close to Hector, their gleaming eyes, curling
lips, and bristling necks expressing in the clearest
way what they thought of their new acquaintances.
The latter were not long in showing their feelings
in the matter. No sooner did the collies draw
near them than they rushed to meet them, snarling
and growling so ferociously that Hector began to feel
a little alarmed, while Ailie shrank closer to him,
clasping his hand tightly in hers, and murmuring:
’I’m frightened. They’ll bite
us.’ ‘They won’t dare to,’
responded Hector bravely, albeit his heart was thumping
at a lively rate. ’I’ll drive them
off with my stick,’ and he flourished gallantly
a slender cudgel that he had picked up at the gate
of the fort.
But the graceless Huskies had small
respect for a stick when not in the hands of a man,
and they closed in about the little group in a very
menacing way. At last they got so close that
Dour and Dandy, in their love and loyalty to the two
children, could restrain themselves no longer, and,
at the same moment, they flew at the throats of the
two foremost assailants.
Instantly, there was a terrific uproar,
the dogs barking and wrangling furiously, Hector shouting:
‘Away, you brutes!’ while he laid his stick
stoutly upon the backs and heads of the Huskies, and
poor little Ailie shrieked pitifully at what she believed
to be the imminent peril of all four.
The collies fought superbly.
Fearfully outnumbered as they were, their superior
sagacity and speed of movement for a while enabled
them to hold their own. Keeping close together
in front of the children, they struck to right and
left with their keen white fangs, slashing the Huskies
on head and shoulder, so that one after another slunk
away, howling dolefully.
But for each one thus driven off,
two others rushed to the attack, and, in spite of
the splendid play Hector made with his stick, at the
risk of being badly bitten himself, the issue must
have gone hard against the gallant collies, for the
Huskies would not have stopped until they had torn
them to pieces. But, in the nick of time, a stalwart
figure came charging down the beach with mighty strides.
Into the thick of the melee plunged
Andrew Macrae, using, with unsparing energy, not only
his heavily booted feet, but his tightly clenched
fists. On this side and that fell his tremendous
blows, and every one meant a disabled or disheartened
dog, until, presently, the whole pack had fled out
of reach, and the wrathful Scotsman stood panting
but triumphant, Ailie clinging sobbingly to one knee,
and Hector standing breathless at the other, while
Dour and Dandy, after a brief greeting, made haste
to take stock of themselves, and see what damage they
had suffered at the teeth of the evil-tempered Huskies.