A weary journey beyond the last scrub
timber and straggling copses, into the heart of the
Barrens where the niggard North is supposed to deny
the Earth, are to be found great sweeps of forests
and stretches of smiling land. But this the world
is just beginning to know. The world’s
explorers have known it, from time to time, but hitherto
they have never returned to tell the world.
The Barrens well, they
are the Barrens, the bad lands of the Arctic, the
deserts of the Circle, the bleak and bitter home of
the musk-ox and the lean plains wolf. So Avery
Van Brunt found them, treeless and cheerless, sparsely
clothed with moss and lichens, and altogether uninviting.
At least so he found them till he penetrated to the
white blank spaces on the map, and came upon undreamed-of
rich spruce forests and unrecorded Eskimo tribes.
It had been his intention, (and his bid for fame),
to break up these white blank spaces and diversify
them with the black markings of mountain-chains, sinks
and basins, and sinuous river courses; and it was
with added delight that he came to speculate upon
the possibilities of timber belts and native villages.
Avery Van Brunt, or, in full distinction,
Professor A. Van Brunt of the Geological Survey, was
second in command of the expedition, and first in
command of the sub-expedition which he had led on a
side tour of some half a thousand miles up one of
the branches of the Thelon and which he was now leading
into one of his unrecorded villages. At his back
plodded eight men, two of them French-Canadian voyageurs,
and the remainder strapping Crees from Manitoba-way.
He, alone, was full-blooded Saxon, and his blood was
pounding fiercely through his veins to the traditions
of his race. Clive and Hastings, Drake and Raleigh,
Hengest and Horsa, walked with him. First of all
men of his breed was he to enter this lone Northland
village, and at the thought an exultancy came upon
him, an exaltation, and his followers noted that his
leg-weariness fell from him and that he insensibly
quickened the pace.
The village emptied itself, and a
motley crowd trooped out to meet him, men in the forefront,
with bows and spears clutched menacingly, and women
and children faltering timidly in the rear. Van
Brunt lifted his right arm and made the universal
peace sign, a sign which all peoples know, and the
villagers answered in peace. But to his chagrin,
a skin-clad man ran forward and thrust out his hand
with a familiar “Hello.” He was a
bearded man, with cheeks and brow bronzed to copper-brown,
and in him Van Brunt knew his kind.
“Who are you?” he asked,
gripping the extended hand. “Andree?”
“Who’s Andree?” the man asked back.
Van Brunt looked at him more sharply.
“By George, you’ve been here some time.”
“Five years,” the man
answered, a dim flicker of pride in his eyes.
“But come on, let’s talk.”
“Let them camp alongside of
me,” he answered Van Brunt’s glance at
his party. “Old Tantlatch will take care
of them. Come on.”
He swung off in a long stride, Van
Brunt following at his heels through the village.
In irregular fashion, wherever the ground favored,
the lodges of moose hide were pitched. Van Brunt
ran his practised eye over them and calculated.
“Two hundred, not counting the
young ones,” he summed up.
The man nodded. “Pretty
close to it. But here’s where I live, out
of the thick of it, you know more privacy
and all that. Sit down. I’ll eat with
you when your men get something cooked up. I’ve
forgotten what tea tastes like.... Five years
and never a taste or smell.... Any tobacco?...
Ah, thanks, and a pipe? Good. Now for a fire-stick
and we’ll see if the weed has lost its cunning.”
He scratched the match with the painstaking
care of the woodsman, cherished its young flame as
though there were never another in all the world,
and drew in the first mouthful of smoke. This
he retained meditatively for a time, and blew out
through his pursed lips slowly and caressingly.
Then his face seemed to soften as he leaned back,
and a soft blur to film his eyes. He sighed heavily,
happily, with immeasurable content, and then said
suddenly:
“God! But that tastes good!”
Van Brunt nodded sympathetically. “Five
years, you say?”
“Five years.” The
man sighed again. “And you, I presume, wish
to know about it, being naturally curious, and this
a sufficiently strange situation, and all that.
But it’s not much. I came in from Edmonton
after musk-ox, and like Pike and the rest of them,
had my mischances, only I lost my party and outfit.
Starvation, hardship, the regular tale, you know,
sole survivor and all that, till I crawled into Tantlatch’s,
here, on hand and knee.”
“Five years,” Van Brunt
murmured retrospectively, as though turning things
over in his mind.
“Five years on February last.
I crossed the Great Slave early in May ”
“And you are ... Fairfax?” Van Brunt
interjected.
The man nodded.
“Let me see ... John, I think it is, John
Fairfax.”
“How did you know?” Fairfax
queried lazily, half-absorbed in curling smoke-spirals
upward in the quiet air.
“The papers were full of it at the time.
Prevanche ”
“Prevanche!” Fairfax sat
up, suddenly alert. “He was lost in the
Smoke Mountains.”
“Yes, but he pulled through and came out.”
Fairfax settled back again and resumed
his smoke-spirals. “I am glad to hear it,”
he remarked reflectively. “Prevanche was
a bully fellow if he did have ideas about head-straps,
the beggar. And he pulled through? Well,
I’m glad.”
Five years ... the phrase drifted
recurrently through Van Brunt’s thought, and
somehow the face of Emily Southwaithe seemed to rise
up and take form before him. Five years ...
A wedge of wild-fowl honked low overhead and at sight
of the encampment veered swiftly to the north into
the smouldering sun. Van Brunt could not follow
them. He pulled out his watch. It was an
hour past midnight. The northward clouds flushed
bloodily, and rays of sombre-red shot southward, firing
the gloomy woods with a lurid radiance. The air
was in breathless calm, not a needle quivered, and
the least sounds of the camp were distinct and clear
as trumpet calls. The Crees and voyageurs
felt the spirit of it and mumbled in dreamy undertones,
and the cook unconsciously subdued the clatter of
pot and pan. Somewhere a child was crying, and
from the depths of the forest, like a silver thread,
rose a woman’s voice in mournful chant:
“O-o-o-o-o-o-a-haa-ha-a-ha-aa-a-a,
O-o-o-o-o-o-a-ha-a-ha-a.”
Van Brunt shivered and rubbed the
backs of his hands briskly.
“And they gave me up for dead?”
his companion asked slowly.
“Well, you never came back, so your friends ”
“Promptly forgot.” Fairfax laughed
harshly, defiantly.
“Why didn’t you come out?”
“Partly disinclination, I suppose,
and partly because of circumstances over which I had
no control. You see, Tantlatch, here, was down
with a broken leg when I made his acquaintance, a
nasty fracture, and I set it for him and
got him into shape. I stayed some time, getting
my strength back. I was the first white man he
had seen, and of course I seemed very wise and showed
his people no end of things. Coached them up
in military tactics, among other things, so that they
conquered the four other tribal villages, (which you
have not yet seen), and came to rule the land.
And they naturally grew to think a good deal of me,
so much so that when I was ready to go they wouldn’t
hear of it. Were most hospitable, in fact.
Put a couple of guards over me and watched me day
and night. And then Tantlatch offered me inducements, in
a sense, inducements, so to say, and as
it didn’t matter much one way or the other,
I reconciled myself to remaining.”
“I knew your brother at Freiburg. I am
Van Brunt.”
Fairfax reached forward impulsively
and shook his hand. “You were Billy’s
friend, eh? Poor Billy! He spoke of you often.”
“Rum meeting place, though,”
he added, casting an embracing glance over the primordial
landscape and listening for a moment to the woman’s
mournful notes. “Her man was clawed by a
bear, and she’s taking it hard.”
“Beastly life!” Van Brunt
grimaced his disgust. “I suppose, after
five years of it, civilization will be sweet?
What do you say?”
Fairfax’s face took on a stolid
expression. “Oh, I don’t know.
At least they’re honest folk and live according
to their lights. And then they are amazingly
simple. No complexity about them, no thousand
and one subtle ramifications to every single emotion
they experience. They love, fear, hate, are angered,
or made happy, in common, ordinary, and unmistakable
terms. It may be a beastly life, but at least
it is easy to live. No philandering, no dallying.
If a woman likes you, she’ll not be backward
in telling you so. If she hates you, she’ll
tell you so, and then, if you feel inclined, you can
beat her, but the thing is, she knows precisely what
you mean, and you know precisely what she means.
No mistakes, no misunderstandings. It has its
charm, after civilization’s fitful fever.
Comprehend?”
“No, it’s a pretty good
life,” he continued, after a pause; “good
enough for me, and I intend to stay with it.”
Van Brunt lowered his head in a musing
manner, and an imperceptible smile played on his mouth.
No philandering, no dallying, no misunderstanding.
Fairfax also was taking it hard, he thought, just
because Emily Southwaithe had been mistakenly clawed
by a bear. And not a bad sort of a bear, either,
was Carlton Southwaithe.
“But you are coming along with
me,” Van Brunt said deliberately.
“No, I’m not.”
“Yes, you are.”
“Life’s too easy here,
I tell you.” Fairfax spoke with decision.
“I understand everything, and I am understood.
Summer and winter alternate like the sun flashing
through the palings of a fence, the seasons are a
blur of light and shade, and time slips by, and life
slips by, and then ... a wailing in the forest, and
the dark. Listen!”
He held up his hand, and the silver
thread of the woman’s sorrow rose through the
silence and the calm. Fairfax joined in softly.
“O-o-o-o-o-o-a-haa-ha-a-ha-aa-a-a,
O-o-o-o-o-o-a-ha-a-ha-a,” he sang. “Can’t
you hear it? Can’t you see it? The
women mourning? the funeral chant? my hair white-locked
and patriarchal? my skins wrapped in rude splendor
about me? my hunting-spear by my side? And who
shall say it is not well?”
Van Brunt looked at him coolly.
“Fairfax, you are a damned fool. Five years
of this is enough to knock any man, and you are in
an unhealthy, morbid condition. Further, Carlton
Southwaithe is dead.”
Van Brunt filled his pipe and lighted
it, the while watching slyly and with almost professional
interest. Fairfax’s eyes flashed on the
instant, his fists clenched, he half rose up, then
his muscles relaxed and he seemed to brood. Michael,
the cook, signalled that the meal was ready, but Van
Brunt motioned back to delay. The silence hung
heavy, and he fell to analyzing the forest scents,
the odors of mould and rotting vegetation, the resiny
smells of pine cones and needles, the aromatic savors
of many camp-smokes. Twice Fairfax looked up,
but said nothing, and then:
“And ... Emily ...?”
“Three years a widow; still a widow.”
Another long silence settled down,
to be broken by Fairfax finally with a naïve smile.
“I guess you’re right, Van Brunt.
I’ll go along.”
“I knew you would.”
Van Brunt laid his hand on Fairfax’s shoulder.
“Of course, one cannot know, but I imagine for
one in her position she has had offers ”
“When do you start?” Fairfax interrupted.
“After the men have had some
sleep. Which reminds me, Michael is getting angry,
so come and eat.”
After supper, when the Crees and voyageurs
had rolled into their blankets, snoring, the two men
lingered by the dying fire. There was much to
talk about, wars and politics and explorations,
the doings of men and the happening of things, mutual
friends, marriages, deaths, five years
of history for which Fairfax clamored.
“So the Spanish fleet was bottled
up in Santiago,” Van Brunt was saying, when
a young woman stepped lightly before him and stood
by Fairfax’s side. She looked swiftly into
his face, then turned a troubled gaze upon Van Brunt.
“Chief Tantlatch’s daughter,
sort of princess,” Fairfax explained, with an
honest flush. “One of the inducements, in
short, to make me stay. Thom, this is Van Brunt,
friend of mine.”
Van Brunt held out his hand, but the
woman maintained a rigid repose quite in keeping with
her general appearance. Not a line of her face
softened, not a feature unbent. She looked him
straight in the eyes, her own piercing, questioning,
searching.
“Precious lot she understands,”
Fairfax laughed. “Her first introduction,
you know. But as you were saying, with the Spanish
fleet bottled up in Santiago?”
Thom crouched down by her husband’s
side, motionless as a bronze statue, only her eyes
flashing from face to face in ceaseless search.
And Avery Van Brunt, as he talked on and on, felt a
nervousness under the dumb gaze. In the midst
of his most graphic battle descriptions, he would
become suddenly conscious of the black eyes burning
into him, and would stumble and flounder till he could
catch the gait and go again. Fairfax, hands clasped
round knees, pipe out, absorbed, spurred him on when
he lagged, and repictured the world he thought he had
forgotten.
One hour passed, and two, and Fairfax
rose reluctantly to his feet. “And Cronje
was cornered, eh? Well, just wait a moment till
I run over to Tantlatch. He’ll be expecting
you, and I’ll arrange for you to see him after
breakfast. That will be all right, won’t
it?”
He went off between the pines, and
Van Brunt found himself staring into Thom’s
warm eyes. Five years, he mused, and she can’t
be more than twenty now. A most remarkable creature.
Being Eskimo, she should have a little flat excuse
for a nose, and lo, it is neither broad nor flat,
but aquiline, with nostrils delicately and sensitively
formed as any fine lady’s of a whiter breed the
Indian strain somewhere, be assured, Avery Van Brunt.
And, Avery Van Brunt, don’t be nervous, she
won’t eat you; she’s only a woman, and
not a bad-looking one at that. Oriental rather
than aborigine. Eyes large and fairly wide apart,
with just the faintest hint of Mongol obliquity.
Thom, you’re an anomaly. You’re out
of place here among these Eskimos, even if your father
is one. Where did your mother come from? or your
grandmother? And Thom, my dear, you’re
a beauty, a frigid, frozen little beauty with Alaskan
lava in your blood, and please don’t look at
me that way.
He laughed and stood up. Her
insistent stare disconcerted him. A dog was prowling
among the grub-sacks. He would drive it away and
place them into safety against Fairfax’s return.
But Thom stretched out a detaining hand and stood
up, facing him.
“You?” she said, in the
Arctic tongue which differs little from Greenland
to Point Barrow. “You?”
And the swift expression of her face
demanded all for which “you” stood, his
reason for existence, his presence there, his relation
to her husband everything.
“Brother,” he answered
in the same tongue, with a sweeping gesture to the
south. “Brothers we be, your man and I.”
She shook her head. “It is not good that
you be here.”
“After one sleep I go.”
“And my man?” she demanded, with tremulous
eagerness.
Van Brunt shrugged his shoulders.
He was aware of a certain secret shame, of an impersonal
sort of shame, and an anger against Fairfax.
And he felt the warm blood in his face as he regarded
the young savage. She was just a woman.
That was all a woman. The whole sordid
story over again, over and over again, as old as Eve
and young as the last new love-light.
“My man! My man! My
man!” she was reiterating vehemently, her face
passionately dark, and the ruthless tenderness of the
Eternal Woman, the Mate-Woman, looking out at him
from her eyes.
“Thom,” he said gravely,
in English, “you were born in the Northland
forest, and you have eaten fish and meat, and fought
with frost and famine, and lived simply all the days
of your life. And there are many things, indeed
not simple, which you do not know and cannot come to
understand. You do not know what it is to long
for the fleshpots afar, you cannot understand what
it is to yearn for a fair woman’s face.
And the woman is fair, Thom, the woman is nobly fair.
You have been woman to this man, and you have been
your all, but your all is very little, very simple.
Too little and too simple, and he is an alien man.
Him you have never known, you can never know.
It is so ordained. You held him in your arms,
but you never held his heart, this man with his blurring
seasons and his dreams of a barbaric end. Dreams
and dream-dust, that is what he has been to you.
You clutched at form and gripped shadow, gave yourself
to a man and bedded with the wraith of a man.
In such manner, of old, did the daughters of men whom
the gods found fair. And, Thom, Thom, I should
not like to be John Fairfax in the night-watches of
the years to come, in the night-watches, when his
eyes shall see, not the sun-gloried hair of the woman
by his side, but the dark tresses of a mate forsaken
in the forests of the North.”
Though she did not understand, she
had listened with intense attention, as though life
hung on his speech. But she caught at her husband’s
name and cried out in Eskimo:
“Yes! Yes! Fairfax! My man!”
“Poor little fool, how could he be your man?”
But she could not understand his English
tongue, and deemed that she was being trifled with.
The dumb, insensate anger of the Mate-Woman flamed
in her face, and it almost seemed to the man as though
she crouched panther-like for the spring.
He cursed softly to himself and watched
the fire fade from her face and the soft luminous
glow of the appealing woman spring up, of the appealing
woman who foregoes strength and panoplies herself
wisely in her weakness.
“He is my man,” she said
gently. “Never have I known other.
It cannot be that I should ever know other. Nor
can it be that he should go from me.”
“Who has said he shall go from
thee?” he demanded sharply, half in exasperation,
half in impotence.
“It is for thee to say he shall
not go from me,” she answered softly, a half-sob
in her throat.
Van Brunt kicked the embers of the
fire savagely and sat down.
“It is for thee to say.
He is my man. Before all women he is my man.
Thou art big, thou art strong, and behold, I am very
weak. See, I am at thy feet. It is for thee
to deal with me. It is for thee.”
“Get up!” He jerked her
roughly erect and stood up himself. “Thou
art a woman. Wherefore the dirt is no place for
thee, nor the feet of any man.”
“He is my man.”
“Then Jesus forgive all men!” Van Brunt
cried out passionately.
“He is my man,” she repeated monotonously,
beseechingly.
“He is my brother,” he answered.
“My father is Chief Tantlatch.
He is a power over five villages. I will see
that the five villages be searched for thy choice of
all maidens, that thou mayest stay here by thy brother,
and dwell in comfort.”
“After one sleep I go.”
“And my man?”
“Thy man comes now. Behold!”
From among the gloomy spruces came
the light carolling of Fairfax’s voice.
As the day is quenched by a sea of
fog, so his song smote the light out of her face.
“It is the tongue of his own people,” she
said; “the tongue of his own people.”
She turned, with the free movement
of a lithe young animal, and made off into the forest.
“It’s all fixed,”
Fairfax called as he came up. “His regal
highness will receive you after breakfast.”
“Have you told him?” Van Brunt asked.
“No. Nor shall I tell him till we’re
ready to pull out.”
Van Brunt looked with moody affection
over the sleeping forms of his men.
“I shall be glad when we are a hundred leagues
upon our way,” he said.
Thom raised the skin-flap of her father’s
lodge. Two men sat with him, and the three looked
at her with swift interest. But her face betokened
nothing as she entered and took seat quietly, without
speech. Tantlatch drummed with his knuckles on
a spear-heft across his knees, and gazed idly along
the path of a sun-ray which pierced a lacing-hole
and flung a glittering track across the murky atmosphere
of the lodge. To his right, at his shoulder, crouched
Chugungatte, the shaman. Both were old men, and
the weariness of many years brooded in their eyes.
But opposite them sat Keen, a young man and chief favorite
in the tribe. He was quick and alert of movement,
and his black eyes flashed from face to face in ceaseless
scrutiny and challenge.
Silence reigned in the place.
Now and again camp noises penetrated, and from the
distance, faint and far, like the shadows of voices,
came the wrangling of boys in thin shrill tones.
A dog thrust his head into the entrance and blinked
wolfishly at them for a space, the slaver dripping
from his ivory-white fangs. After a time he growled
tentatively, and then, awed by the immobility of the
human figures, lowered his head and grovelled away
backward. Tantlatch glanced apathetically at
his daughter.
“And thy man, how is it with him and thee?”
“He sings strange songs,”
Thom made answer, “and there is a new look on
his face.”
“So? He hath spoken?”
“Nay, but there is a new look
on his face, a new light in his eyes, and with the
New-Comer he sits by the fire, and they talk and talk,
and the talk is without end.”
Chugungatte whispered in his master’s
ear, and Keen leaned forward from his hips.
“There be something calling
him from afar,” she went on, “and he seems
to sit and listen, and to answer, singing, in his own
people’s tongue.”
Again Chugungatte whispered and Keen
leaned forward, and Thom held her speech till her
father nodded his head that she might proceed.
“It be known to thee, O Tantlatch,
that the wild goose and the swan and the little ringed
duck be born here in the low-lying lands. It
be known that they go away before the face of the frost
to unknown places. And it be known, likewise,
that always do they return when the sun is in the
land and the waterways are free. Always do they
return to where they were born, that new life may
go forth. The land calls to them and they come.
And now there is another land that calls, and it is
calling to my man, the land where he was
born, and he hath it in mind to answer
the call. Yet is he my man. Before all women
is he my man.”
“Is it well, Tantlatch?
Is it well?” Chugungatte demanded, with the
hint of menace in his voice.
“Ay, it is well!” Keen
cried boldly. “The land calls to its children,
and all lands call their children home again.
As the wild goose and the swan and the little ringed
duck are called, so is called this Stranger Man who
has lingered with us and who now must go. Also
there be the call of kind. The goose mates with
the goose, nor does the swan mate with the little
ringed duck. It is not well that the swan should
mate with the little ringed duck. Nor is it well
that stranger men should mate with the women of our
villages. Wherefore I say the man should go,
to his own kind, in his own land.”
“He is my own man,” Thom
answered, “and he is a great man.”
“Ay, he is a great man.”
Chugungatte lifted his head with a faint recrudescence
of youthful vigor. “He is a great man, and
he put strength in thy arm, O Tantlatch, and gave
thee power, and made thy name to be feared in the
land, to be feared and to be respected. He is
very wise, and there be much profit in his wisdom.
To him are we beholden for many things, for
the cunning in war and the secrets of the defence
of a village and a rush in the forest, for the discussion
in council and the undoing of enemies by word of mouth
and the hard-sworn promise, for the gathering of game
and the making of traps and the preserving of food,
for the curing of sickness and mending of hurts of
trail and fight. Thou, Tantlatch, wert a lame
old man this day, were it not that the Stranger Man
came into our midst and attended on thee. And
ever, when in doubt on strange questions, have we
gone to him, that out of his wisdom he might make things
clear, and ever has he made things clear. And
there be questions yet to arise, and needs upon his
wisdom yet to come, and we cannot bear to let him
go. It is not well that we should let him go.”
Tantlatch continued to drum on the
spear-haft, and gave no sign that he had heard.
Thom studied his face in vain, and Chugungatte seemed
to shrink together and droop down as the weight of
years descended upon him again.
“No man makes my kill.”
Keen smote his breast a valorous blow. “I
make my own kill. I am glad to live when I make
my own kill. When I creep through the snow upon
the great moose, I am glad. And when I draw the
bow, so, with my full strength, and drive the arrow
fierce and swift and to the heart, I am glad.
And the meat of no man’s kill tastes as sweet
as the meat of my kill. I am glad to live, glad
in my own cunning and strength, glad that I am a doer
of things, a doer of things for myself. Of what
other reason to live than that? Why should I
live if I delight not in myself and the things I do?
And it is because I delight and am glad that I go
forth to hunt and fish, and it is because I go forth
to hunt and fish that I grow cunning and strong.
The man who stays in the lodge by the fire grows not
cunning and strong. He is not made happy in the
eating of my kill, nor is living to him a delight.
He does not live. And so I say it is well this
Stranger Man should go. His wisdom does not make
us wise. If he be cunning, there is no need that
we be cunning. If need arise, we go to him for
his cunning. We eat the meat of his kill, and
it tastes unsweet. We merit by his strength,
and in it there is no delight. We do not live
when he does our living for us. We grow fat and
like women, and we are afraid to work, and we forget
how to do things for ourselves. Let the man go,
O Tantlatch, that we may be men! I am Keen, a
man, and I make my own kill!”
Tantlatch turned a gaze upon him in
which seemed the vacancy of eternity. Keen waited
the decision expectantly; but the lips did not move,
and the old chief turned toward his daughter.
“That which be given cannot
be taken away,” she burst forth. “I
was but a girl when this Stranger Man, who is my man,
came among us. And I knew not men, or the ways
of men, and my heart was in the play of girls, when
thou, Tantlatch, thou and none other, didst call me
to thee and press me into the arms of the Stranger
Man. Thou and none other, Tantlatch; and as thou
didst give me to the man, so didst thou give the man
to me. He is my man. In my arms has he slept,
and from my arms he cannot be taken.”
“It were well, O Tantlatch,”
Keen followed quickly, with a significant glance at
Thom, “it were well to remember that that which
be given cannot be taken away.”
Chugungatte straightened up.
“Out of thy youth, Keen, come the words of thy
mouth. As for ourselves, O Tantlatch, we be old
men and we understand. We, too, have looked into
the eyes of women and felt our blood go hot with strange
desires. But the years have chilled us, and we
have learned the wisdom of the council, the shrewdness
of the cool head and hand, and we know that the warm
heart be over-warm and prone to rashness. We
know that Keen found favor in thy eyes. We know
that Thom was promised him in the old days when she
was yet a child. And we know that the new days
came, and the Stranger Man, and that out of our wisdom
and desire for welfare was Thom lost to Keen and the
promise broken.”
The old shaman paused, and looked
directly at the young man.
“And be it known that I, Chugungatte,
did advise that the promise be broken.”
“Nor have I taken other woman
to my bed,” Keen broke in. “And I
have builded my own fire, and cooked my own food,
and ground my teeth in my loneliness.”
Chugungatte waved his hand that he
had not finished. “I am an old man and
I speak from understanding. It be good to be strong
and grasp for power. It be better to forego power
that good come out of it. In the old days I sat
at thy shoulder, Tantlatch, and my voice was heard
over all in the council, and my advice taken in affairs
of moment. And I was strong and held power.
Under Tantlatch I was the greatest man. Then
came the Stranger Man, and I saw that he was cunning
and wise and great. And in that he was wiser
and greater than I, it was plain that greater profit
should arise from him than from me. And I had
thy ear, Tantlatch, and thou didst listen to my words,
and the Stranger Man was given power and place and
thy daughter, Thom. And the tribe prospered under
the new laws in the new days, and so shall it continue
to prosper with the Stranger Man in our midst.
We be old men, we two, O Tantlatch, thou and I, and
this be an affair of head, not heart. Hear my
words, Tantlatch! Hear my words! The man
remains!”
There was a long silence. The
old chief pondered with the massive certitude of God,
and Chugungatte seemed to wrap himself in the mists
of a great antiquity. Keen looked with yearning
upon the woman, and she, unnoting, held her eyes steadfastly
upon her father’s face. The wolf-dog shoved
the flap aside again, and plucking courage at the
quiet, wormed forward on his belly. He sniffed
curiously at Thom’s listless hand, cocked ears
challengingly at Chugungatte, and hunched down upon
his haunches before Tantlatch. The spear rattled
to the ground, and the dog, with a frightened yell,
sprang sideways, snapping in mid-air, and on the second
leap cleared the entrance.
Tantlatch looked from face to face,
pondering each one long and carefully. Then he
raised his head, with rude royalty, and gave judgment
in cold and even tones: “The man remains.
Let the hunters be called together. Send a runner
to the next village with word to bring on the fighting
men. I shall not see the New-Comer. Do thou,
Chugungatte, have talk with him. Tell him he may
go at once, if he would go in peace. And if fight
there be, kill, kill, kill, to the last man; but let
my word go forth that no harm befall our man, the
man whom my daughter hath wedded. It is well.”
Chugungatte rose and tottered out;
Thom followed; but as Keen stooped to the entrance
the voice of Tantlatch stopped him.
“Keen, it were well to hearken
to my word. The man remains. Let no harm
befall him.”
Because of Fairfax’s instructions
in the art of war, the tribesmen did not hurl themselves
forward boldly and with clamor. Instead, there
was great restraint and self-control, and they were
content to advance silently, creeping and crawling
from shelter to shelter. By the river bank, and
partly protected by a narrow open space, crouched the
Crees and voyageurs. Their eyes could
see nothing, and only in vague ways did their ears
hear, but they felt the thrill of life which ran through
the forest, the indistinct, indefinable movement of
an advancing host.
“Damn them,” Fairfax muttered.
“They’ve never faced powder, but I taught
them the trick.”
Avery Van Brunt laughed, knocked the
ashes out of his pipe, and put it carefully away with
the pouch, and loosened the hunting-knife in its sheath
at his hip.
“Wait,” he said.
“We’ll wither the face of the charge and
break their hearts.”
“They’ll rush scattered if they remember
my teaching.”
“Let them. Magazine rifles
were made to pump. We’ll good!
First blood! Extra tobacco, Loon!”
Loon, a Cree, had spotted an exposed
shoulder and with a stinging bullet apprised its owner
of his discovery.
“If we can tease them into breaking
forward,” Fairfax muttered, “if
we can only tease them into breaking forward.”
Van Brunt saw a head peer from behind
a distant tree, and with a quick shot sent the man
sprawling to the ground in a death struggle. Michael
potted a third, and Fairfax and the rest took a hand,
firing at every exposure and into each clump of agitated
brush. In crossing one little swale out of cover,
five of the tribesmen remained on their faces, and
to the left, where the covering was sparse, a dozen
men were struck. But they took the punishment
with sullen steadiness, coming on cautiously, deliberately,
without haste and without lagging.
Ten minutes later, when they were
quite close, all movement was suspended, the advance
ceased abruptly, and the quietness that followed was
portentous, threatening. Only could be seen the
green and gold of the woods, and undergrowth, shivering
and trembling to the first faint puffs of the day-wind.
The wan white morning sun mottled the earth with long
shadows and streaks of light. A wounded man lifted
his head and crawled painfully out of the swale, Michael
following him with his rifle but forbearing to shoot.
A whistle ran along the invisible line from left to
right, and a flight of arrows arched through the air.
“Get ready,” Van Brunt
commanded, a new metallic note in his voice.
“Now!”
They broke cover simultaneously.
The forest heaved into sudden life. A great yell
went up, and the rifles barked back sharp defiance.
Tribesmen knew their deaths in mid-leap, and as they
fell, their brothers surged over them in a roaring,
irresistible wave. In the forefront of the rush,
hair flying and arms swinging free, flashing past
the tree-trunks, and leaping the obstructing logs,
came Thom. Fairfax sighted on her and almost
pulled trigger ere he knew her.
“The woman! Don’t
shoot!” he cried. “See! She is
unarmed!”
The Crees never heard, nor Michael
and his brother voyageur, nor Van Brunt, who
was keeping one shell continuously in the air.
But Thom bore straight on, unharmed, at the heels
of a skin-clad hunter who had veered in before her
from the side. Fairfax emptied his magazine into
the men to right and left of her, and swung his rifle
to meet the big hunter. But the man, seeming
to recognize him, swerved suddenly aside and plunged
his spear into the body of Michael. On the moment
Thom had one arm passed around her husband’s
neck, and twisting half about, with voice and gesture
was splitting the mass of charging warriors.
A score of men hurled past on either side, and Fairfax,
for a brief instant’s space, stood looking upon
her and her bronze beauty, thrilling, exulting, stirred
to unknown deeps, visioning strange things, dreaming,
immortally dreaming. Snatches and scraps of old-world
philosophies and new-world ethics floated through his
mind, and things wonderfully concrete and woefully
incongruous hunting scenes, stretches of
sombre forest, vastnesses of silent snow, the glittering
of ballroom lights, great galleries and lecture halls,
a fleeting shimmer of glistening test-tubes, long
rows of book-lined shelves, the throb of machinery
and the roar of traffic, a fragment of forgotten song,
faces of dear women and old chums, a lonely watercourse
amid upstanding peaks, a shattered boat on a pebbly
strand, quiet moonlit fields, fat vales, the smell
of hay....
A hunter, struck between the eyes
with a rifle-ball, pitched forward lifeless, and with
the momentum of his charge slid along the ground.
Fairfax came back to himself. His comrades, those
that lived, had been swept far back among the trees
beyond. He could hear the fierce “Hia!
Hia!” of the hunters as they closed in and cut
and thrust with their weapons of bone and ivory.
The cries of the stricken men smote him like blows.
He knew the fight was over, the cause was lost, but
all his race traditions and race loyalty impelled
him into the welter that he might die at least with
his kind.
“My man! My man!” Thom cried.
“Thou art safe!”
He tried to struggle on, but her dead weight clogged
his steps.
“There is no need! They are dead, and life
be good!”
She held him close around the neck
and twined her limbs about his till he tripped and
stumbled, reeled violently to recover footing, tripped
again, and fell backward to the ground. His head
struck a jutting root, and he was half-stunned and
could struggle but feebly. In the fall she had
heard the feathered swish of an arrow darting past,
and she covered his body with hers, as with a shield,
her arms holding him tightly, her face and lips pressed
upon his neck.
Then it was that Keen rose up from
a tangled thicket a score of feet away. He looked
about him with care. The fight had swept on and
the cry of the last man was dying away. There
was no one to see. He fitted an arrow to the
string and glanced at the man and woman. Between
her breast and arm the flesh of the man’s side
showed white. Keen bent the bow and drew back
the arrow to its head. Twice he did so, calmly
and for certainty, and then drove the bone-barbed
missile straight home to the white flesh, gleaming
yet more white in the dark-armed, dark-breasted embrace.