Both Philip and Jeanne were silent
for some moments after Gregson had gone; their only
movement was the gentle stroking of Philip’s
hand over the girl’s soft hair. Their hearts
were full, too full for speech. And yet he knew
that upon his strength depended everything now.
The revelations of Gregson, which virtually ended
the fight against him personally, were but trivial
in his thoughts compared with the ordeal which was
ahead of Jeanne. Both Pierre and her father were
dead, and, with the exception of Jeanne, no one but
he knew of the secret that had died with them.
He could feel against him the throbbing of the storm
that was passing in the girl’s heart, and in
answer to it he said nothing in words, but held her
to him with a gentleness that lifted her face, quiet
and beautiful, so that her eyes looked steadily and
questioningly into his own.
“You love me,” she said,
simply, and yet with a calmness that sent a curious
thrill through him.
“Beyond all else in the world,” he replied.
She still looked at him, without speaking,
as though through his eyes she was searching to the
bottom of his soul.
“And you know,” she whispered, after a
moment.
He drew her so close she could not
move, and crushed his face down against her own.
“Jeanne Jeanne everything
is as it should be,” he said. “I am
glad that you were found out in the snows. I
am glad that the woman in the picture was your mother.
I would have nothing different than it is, for if
things were different you would not be the Jeanne that
I know, and I would not love you so. You have
suffered, sweetheart. And I, too, have had my
share of sorrow. God has brought us together,
and all is right in the end. Jeanne my
sweet Jeanne ”
Gregson had left the outer door slightly
ajar. A gust of wind opened it wider. Through
it there came now a sound that interrupted the words
on Philip’s lips, and sent a sudden quiver through
Jeanne. In an instant both recognized the sound.
It was the firing of rifles, the shots coming to them
faintly from far beyond the mountain at the end of
the lake. Moved by the same impulse, they ran
to the door, hand in hand.
“It is Sachigo!” panted
Jeanne. She could hardly speak. She seemed
to struggle to get breath, “I had forgotten.
They are fighting ”
MacDougall strode up from his post
beside the door, where he had been waiting for the
appearance of Jeanne.
“Firing off there,” he said.
“What does it mean?”
“We must wait and see,”
replied Philip. “Send two of your men to
investigate, Mac. I will rejoin you after I have
taken Miss d’Arcambal over to Cassidy’s
wife.”
He moved away quickly with Jeanne.
On a sudden rise of the wind from the south the firing
came to them more distinctly. Then it died away,
and ended in three or four intermittent shots.
For the space of a dozen seconds a strange stillness
followed, and then over the mountain top, where there
was still a faint glow in the sky, there came the low,
quavering, triumphal cry of the Crees: a cry born
of the forest itself, mournful even in its joy, only
half human almost like a far-away burst
of tongue from a wolf pack on the hunt trail.
And after that there was an unbroken silence.
“It is over,” breathed Philip.
He felt Jeanne’s fingers tighten about his own.
“No one will ever know,”
he continued. “Even MacDougall will not
guess what has happened out there to-night.”
He stopped a dozen paces from Cassidy’s
cabin. The windows were aglow, and they could
hear the laughter and play of Cassidy’s two children
within. Gently he drew Jeanne to him.
“You will stay here to-night,
dear,” he said. “To-morrow we will
go to Fort o’ God.”
“You must take me home to-night,”
whispered Jeanne, looking up into his face. “I
must go, Philip. Send some one with me, and you
can come in the morning with
Pierre ”
She put her hand to his face again,
in the sweet touch that told more of her love than
a thousand words.
“You understand, dear,”
she went on, seeing the anxiety in his eyes. “I
have the strength to-night. I must
return to father, and he will know everything when
you come to Fort o’ God.”
“I will send MacDougall with
you,” said Philip, after a moment. “And
then I will follow ”
“With Pierre.”
“Yes, with Pierre.”
For a brief space longer they stood
outside of Cassidy’s cabin, and then Philip,
lifting her face, said gently:
“Will you kiss me, dear? It is the first
time.”
He bent down, and Jeanne’s lips reached his
own.
“No, it is not the first time,”
she confessed, in a whisper. “Not since
that day when I thought you were dying after
we came through the rapids ”
Five minutes later Philip returned
to MacDougall. Roberts, Henshaw, Cassidy, and
Lecault were with the engineer.
“I’ve sent the St. Pierres
to find out about the firing,” he said.
“Look at the crowd over at the store. Every
one heard it, and they’ve seen the fire on the
mountain. They think the Indians have cornered
a moose or two and are shooting them by the blaze.”
“They’re probably right,”
said Philip. “I want a word with you, Mac.”
He walked a little aside with the
engineer, leaving the others in a group, and in a
low voice told him as much as he cared to reveal about
the identity of Thorpe and Gregson’s mission
in camp. Then he spoke of Jeanne.
“I believe that the death of
Thorpe practically ends all danger to us,” he
concluded. “I’m going to offer you
a pleasanter job than fighting, Mac. It is imperative
that Miss d’Arcambal should return to D’Arcambal
House before morning, and I want you to take her, if
you will. I’m choosing the best man I’ve
got because well, because she’s going
to be my wife, Mac. I’m the happiest man
on earth to-night!”
MacDougall did not show surprise.
“Guessed it,” he said,
shortly, thrusting out a hand and grinning broadly
into Philip’s face “Couldn’t help
from seeing, Phil. And the firing, and Thorpe,
and that half-breed in there ”
Understanding was slowly illuminating his face.
“You’ll know all about
them a little later, Mac,” said Philip softly.
“To-night we must investigate nothing very
far. Miss d’Arcambal must be taken home
immediately. Will you go?”
“With pleasure.”
“She can ride one of the horses
as far as the Little Churchill,” continued Philip.
“And there she will show you a canoe. I
will follow in the morning with the body of Pierre,
the half-breed.”
A quarter of an hour later MacDougall
and Jeanne set out over the river trail, leaving Philip
standing behind, watching them until they were hidden
in the night. It was fully an hour later before
the St. Pierres returned. Philip was uneasy
until the two dark-faced hunters came into the little
office and leaned their rifles against the wall.
He had feared that Sachigo might have left some trace
of his ambush behind. But the St. Pierres
had discovered nothing, and could give only one reason
for the burning pine on the summit of the mountain.
They agreed that Indians had fired it to frighten
moose from a thick cover to the south and west, and
that their hunt had been a failure.
It was midnight before Philip relaxed
his caution, which he maintained until then in spite
of his belief that Thorpe’s men, under Blake,
had met a quick finish at the hands of Sachigo and
his ambushed braves. His men left for their cabins,
with the exception of Cassidy, whom he asked to spend
the remainder of the night in one of the office bunks.
Alone he went in to prepare Pierre for his last journey
to Fort o’ God.
A lamp was burning low beside the
bunk in which Pierre lay. Philip approached and
turned the wick higher, and then he gazed in wonder
upon the transfiguration in the half-breed’s
face. Pierre had died with a smile on his lips;
and with a curious thickening in his throat Philip
thought that those lips, even in death, were craved
in the act of whispering Jeanne’s name.
It seemed to him, as he stood in silence for many
moments, that Pierre was not dead, but that he was
sleeping a quiet, unbreathing sleep, in which there
came to him visions of the great love for which he
had offered up his life and his soul. Jeanne’s
hands, in his last moments, had stilled all pain.
Peace slumbered in the pale shadows of his closed
eyes. The Great God of his faith had come to
him in his hour of greatest need on earth, and he had
passed away into the Valley of Silent Men on the sweet
breath of Jeanne’s prayers. The girl had
crossed his hands upon his breast. She had brushed
back his long hair. Philip knew that she had imprinted
a kiss upon the silent lips before the soul had fled,
and in the warmth and knowledge of that kiss Pierre
had died happy.
And Philip, brokenly, said aloud:
“God bless you, Pierre, old man!”
He lifted the cold hands back, and
gently drew the covers which had hidden the telltale
stains of death from Jeanne’s eyes. He turned
down Pierre’s shirt, and in the lamp-glow there
glistened the golden locket. For the first time
he noticed it closely. It was half as large as
the palm of his hand, and very thin, and he saw that
it was bent and twisted. A shudder ran through
him when he understood what had happened. The
bullet that had killed Pierre had first struck the
locket, and had burst it partly open. He took
it in his hand. And then he saw that through
the broken side there protruded the end of a bit of
paper. For a brief space the discovery made him
almost forget the presence of death. Pierre had
never opened the locket, because it was of the old-fashioned
kind that locked with a key, and the key was gone.
And the locket had been about Jeanne’s neck when
he found her out in the snows! Was it possible
that this bit of paper had something to do with the
girl he loved?
Carefully, so that it would not tear,
he drew it forth. There was writing on the paper,
as he had expected, and he read it, bent low beside
the lamp. The date was nearly eighteen years old.
The lines were faint. The words were these:
My husband, God
can never undo what I have done. I have dragged
myself back, repentant, loving you more than I have
ever loved you in my life, to leave our little girl
with you. She is your daughter, and mine.
She was born on the eighth day of September, the seventh
month after I left Fort o’ God, She is yours,
and so I bring her back to you, with the prayer that
she will help to fill the true and noble heart that
I have broken. I cannot ask your forgiveness,
for I do not deserve it. I cannot let you see
me, for I should kill myself at your feet. I have
lived this long only for the baby. I will leave
her where you cannot fail to find her, and by the
time you have read this I will have answered for my
sin my madness, if you can have charity
regard it so. And if God is kind I will hover
about you always, and you will know that in death
the old sweetheart, and the mother, has found what
she could never again hope for in life.
Your wife.
Philip rose slowly erect and gazed
down into the still, tranquil face of Pierre, the
half-breed.
“Why didn’t you open it?”
he whispered. “Why didn’t you open
it? My God, what it would have saved ”
For a full minute he looked down at
Pierre, as though he expected that the white lips
would move and answer him. And then he thought
of Jeanne hurrying to Fort o’ God, and of the
terrible things which she was to reveal to her father
that night. She was D’Arcambal’s own
daughter. What pain what agony of
father and child he might have saved if he had examined
the locket a little sooner! He looked at his watch
and found that Jeanne had been gone three hours.
It would be impossible to overtake MacDougall and
the girl unless something had occurred to delay them
somewhere along the trail. He hurried back into
the little room, where he had left Cassidy. In
a few words he explained that it was necessary for
him to follow Jeanne and the engineer to D’Arcambal
House without a moment’s delay, and he directed
Cassidy to take charge of camp affairs, and to send
Pierre’s body with a suitable escort the next
day.
“It isn’t necessary for
me to tell you what to do,” he finished, “You
understand.”
Cassidy nodded. Six months before
he had buried his youngest child under a big spruce
back of his cabin.
Philip hastened to the stables, and,
choosing one of the lighter animals, was soon galloping
over the trail toward the Little Churchill. In
his face there blew a cold wind from Hudson’s
Bay, and now and then he felt the sting of fine particles
in his eyes. They were the presage of storm.
A shifting of the wind a little to the east and south,
and the fine particles would thicken, and turn into
snow. By morning the world would be white.
He came into the forests beyond the plain, and in
the spruce and the cedar tops the wind was half a gale,
filling the night with wailing and moaning sounds
that sent strange shivers through him as he thought
of Pierre in the cabin. In such a way, he imagined,
had the north wind swept across the cold barrens on
the night that Pierre had found the woman and the
babe; and now it seemed, in his fancies, as though
above and about him the great hand that had guided
the half-breed then was bringing back the old night,
as if Pierre, in dying, had wished it so. For
the wind changed. The fine particles thickened,
and changed to snow. And then there was no longer
the wailing and the moaning in the tree-tops, but
the soft murmur of a white deluge that smothered him
in a strange gloom and hid the trail. There were
two canoes concealed at the end of the trail on the
Little Churchill, and Philip chose the smallest.
He followed swiftly after MacDougall and Jeanne.
He could no longer see either side of the stream,
and he was filled with a fear that he might pass the
little creek that led to Fort o’ God. He
timed himself by his watch, and when he had paddled
for two hours he ran in close to the west shore, traveling
so slowly that he did not progress a mile in half an
hour. And then suddenly, from close ahead, there
rose through the snow-gloom the dismal howl of a dog,
which told him that he was near to Fort o’ God.
He found the black opening that marked the entrance
to the creek, and when he ran upon the sand-bar a
hundred yards beyond he saw lights burning in the
great room where he had first seen D’Arcambal.
He went now where Pierre had led him that night, and
found the door unlocked. He entered silently,
and passed down the dark hall until, on the left,
he saw a glow of light that came from the big room.
Something in the silence that was ahead of him made
his own approach without sound, and softly he entered
through the door.
In the great chair sat the master
of Fort o’ God, his gray head bent; at his feet
knelt Jeanne, and so close were they that D’Arcambal’s
face was hidden in Jeanne’s shining, disheveled
hair. No sooner had Philip entered the room than
his presence seemed to arouse the older man. He
lifted his head slowly, looking toward the door, and
when he saw who stood there he raised one of his arms
from about the girl and held it out to Philip.
“My son!” he said.
In a moment Philip was upon his knees
beside Jeanne, and one of D’Arcambal’s
heavy hands fell upon his shoulder in a touch that
told him he had come too late to keep back any part
of the terrible story which Jeanne had bared to him.
The girl did not speak when she saw him beside her.
It was as if she had expected him to come, and her
hand found his and nestled in it, as cold as ice.
“I have hurried from the camp,”
he said. “I tried to overtake Jeanne.
About Pierre’s neck I found a locket, and in
the locket was this ”
He looked into D’Arcambal’s
haggard face as he gave him the blood-stained note,
and he knew that in the moment that was to come the
master of Fort o’ God and his daughter should
be alone.
“I will wait in the portrait-room,”
he said, in a low voice, and as he rose to his feet
he pressed Jeanne’s hand to his lips.
The old room was as he had left it
weeks before. The picture of Jeanne’s mother
still hung with its face to the wall. There was
the same elusive movement of the portrait over the
volume of warm air that rose from the floor.
In this room he seemed to breathe again the presence
of a warm spirit of life, as he had felt it on the
first night a spirit that seemed to him
to be a part of Jeanne herself, and he thought of
the last words of the wife and mother of
her promise to remain always near those whom she loved,
to regain after death the companionship which she
could never hope for in life. And then there
came to him a thought of the vast and wonderful mystery
of death, and he wondered if it was her spirit that
had been with him more than one lonely night, when
his camp-fire was low; if it was her presence that
had filled him with transcendent dreams of hope and
love, coming to him that night beside the rock at
Churchill, and leading him at last to Jeanne, for
whom she had given up her life. He heard again
the rising of the wind outside and the beating of
the storm against the window, and he went softly to
see if his vision could penetrate into the white,
twisting gloom beyond the glass. For many minutes
he stood, seeing nothing. And then he heard a
sound, and turned to see Jeanne and her father standing
in the door. Glory was in the face of the master
of Fort o’ God. He seemed not to see Philip he
seemed to see nothing but the picture that was turned
against the wall. He strode across the room,
his great shoulders straightened, his shaggy head erect,
and with the pride of one revealing first to human
eyes the masterpiece of his soul and life he turned
the picture so that the radiant face of the wife and
mother looked down upon him. And was it fancy
that for a fleeting moment the smile left the beautiful
lips, and a light, soft and luminous, pleading for
love and forgiveness, filled the eyes of Jeanne’s
mother? Philip trembled. Jeanne came across
to him silently, and crept into his arms. And
then, slowly, the master of Fort o’ God turned
toward them and stretched out both of his great arms.
“My children!” he said.