The window was open when Philip came
to it, and Jean was waiting to give him an assisting
hand. The moment he was in the room he turned
to look at Josephine. She was gone. Almost
angrily he whirled upon the half-breed, who had lowered
the window, and was now drawing the curtain.
It was with an effort that he held back the words on
his lips. Jean saw that effort, and shrugged
his shoulders with an appreciative gesture.
“It is partly my fault that
she is not here, M’sieur,” he explained.
“She would have told you nothing of what has
passed between us not as much, perhaps,
as I. She will see you in the morning.”
“And there’s damned little
consolation at the present moment in that,”
gritted Philip, with clenched hands. “Jean I’m
ready to fight now! I feel like a rat must feel
when it’s cornered. I’ve got to jump
pretty soon in some direction or
I’ll bust. It’s impossible ”
Jean’s hand fell softly upon his arm.
“M’sieur, you would cut
off this right arm if it would give you Josephine?”
“I’d cut off my head!” exploded
Philip.
“Do you remember that it was
only a few hours ago that I said she could never be
yours in this world?” Croisset reminded him,
in the same quiet voice. “And now, when
even I say there is hope, can you not make me have
the confidence in you that I must have if
we win?”
Philip’s face relaxed. In silence he gripped
Jean’s hand.
“And what I am going to tell
you a thing which Josephine would not say
if she were here, is this, M’sieur,” went
on Jean. “Before you left us alone in this
room I had a doubt. Now I have none. The
great fight is coming. And in that fight all
the spirits of Kisamunito must be with us. You
will have fighting enough. And it will be such
fighting its you will remember to the end of your
days. But until the last word is said until
the last hour, you must be as you have been. I
repeat that. Have you faith enough in me to believe?”
“Yes, I believe,” said
Philip. “It seems inconceivable, Jean but
I believe.”
Jean moved to the door.
“Good-night, M’sieur,” he said.
“Good-night, Jean.”
For a few moments after Croisset had
left him Philip stood motionless. Then he locked
the door. Until he was alone he did not know what
a restraint he had put upon himself. Jean’s
words, the mysterious developments of the evening,
the half promise of the fulfilment of his one great
hope had all worked him into a white heat
of unrest. He knew that he could not stay in
his room, that it would be impossible for him to sleep.
And he was not in a condition to rejoin Adare and his
wife. He wanted to walk to find relief
in physical exertion, Of a sudden his mind was made
up. He extinguished the light. Then he reopened
the window, and dropped out into the night again.
He made his way once more to the edge
of the forest. He did not stop this time, but
plunged deeper into its gloom. Moon and stars
were beginning to lighten the white waste ahead of
him. He knew he could not lose himself, as he
could follow his own trail back. He paused for
a moment in the shelter of a spruce to fill his pipe
and light it. Then he went on. Now that
he was alone he tried to discover some key to all
that Jean had said to him. After all, his first
guess had not been so far out of the way: it
was a physical force that was Josephine’s deadliest
menace. What was this force? How could he
associate it with the baby back in Adare House?
Unconsciously his mind leaped to Thoreau, the Free
Trader, as a possible solution, but in the same breath
he discarded that as unreasonable. Such a force
as Thoreau and his gang would be dealt with by Adare
himself, or the forest people. There was something
more. Vainly he racked his brain for some possible
enlightenment.
He walked ten minutes without noting
the direction he was taking when he was brought to
a standstill with a sudden shock. Not twenty paces
from him he heard voices. He dodged behind a tree,
and an instant later two figures hurried past him.
A cry rose to his lips, but he choked it back.
One of the two was Jean. The other was Josephine!
For a moment he stood staring after
them, his hand clutching at the bark of the tree.
A feeling that was almost physical pain swept over
him as he realized the truth. Josephine had not
gone to her room. He understood now. She
had purposely evaded him that she might be with Jean
alone in the forest. Three days before Philip
would not have thought so much of this. Now it
hurt. Josephine had given him her love, yet in
spite of that she was placing greater confidence in
the half-breed than in him. This was what hurt at
first. In the next breath his overwhelming faith
in her returned to him. There was some tremendous
reason for her being here with Jean. What was
it? He stepped out from behind the tree as he
stared after them.
His eyes caught the pale glow of something
that he had not seen before. It was a campfire,
the illumination of it only faintly visible deeper
in the forest. Toward this Josephine and Jean
were hurrying. A low exclamation of excitement
broke from his lips as a still greater understanding
dawned upon him. His hand trembled. His breath
came quickly. In that camp there waited for Josephine
and Croisset those who were playing the other half
of the game in which he had been given a blind man’s
part! He did not reason or argue with himself.
He accepted the fact. And no longer with hesitation
his hand fell to his automatic, and he followed swiftly
after Josephine and the half-breed.
He began to see what Jean had meant.
In the room he had simply prepared Josephine for this
visit. It was in the forest and not
in Adare House, that the big test of the night was
to come.
It was not curiosity that made him
follow them now. More than ever he was determined
to keep his faith with Jean and the girl, and he made
up his mind to draw only near enough to give his assistance
if it should become necessary. Roused by the
conviction that Josephine and the half-breed were
not making this mysterious tryst without imperilling
themselves, he stopped as the campfire burst into full
view, and examined his pistol. He saw figures
about the fire. There were three, one sitting,
and two standing. The fire was not more than a
hundred yards ahead of him, and he saw no tent.
A moment later Josephine and Jean entered the circle
of fireglow, and the sitting man sprang to his feet.
As Philip drew nearer he noticed that Jean stood close
to his companion, and that the girl’s hand was
clutching his arm. He heard no word spoken, and
yet he could see by the action of the man who had been
sitting that he was giving the others instructions
which took them away from the fire, deeper into the
gloom of the forest.
Seventy yards from the fire Philip
dropped breathlessly behind a cedar log and rested
his arm over the top of it. In his hand was his
automatic. It covered the spot of gloom into which
the two men had disappeared. If anything should
happen he was ready.
In the fire-shadows he could not make
out distinctly the features of the third man.
He was not dressed like the others. He wore knickerbockers
and high laced boots. His face was beardless.
Beyond these things he could make out nothing more.
The three drew close together, and only now and then
did he catch the low murmur of a voice. Not once
did he hear Jean. For ten minutes he crouched
motionless, his eyes shifting from the strange tableau
to the spot of gloom where the others were hidden.
Then, suddenly, Josephine sprang back from her companions.
Jean went to her side. He could hear her voice
now, steady and swift vibrant with something
that thrilled him, though he could not understand
a word that she was speaking. She paused, and
he could see that she was tense and waiting.
The other replied. His words must have been brief,
for it seemed he could scarcely have spoken when Josephine
turned her back upon him and walked quickly out into
the forest. For another moment Jean Croisset
stood close to the other. Then he followed.
Not until he knew they were safe did
Philip rise from his concealment. He made his
way cautiously back to Adare House, and reentered his
room through the window. Half an hour later,
dressed so that he revealed no evidence of his excursion
in the snow, he knocked at Jean’s door.
The half-breed opened it. He showed some surprise
when he saw his visitor.
“I thought you were in bed,
M’sieur,” he exclaimed. “Your
room was dark.”
“Sleep?” laughed Philip.
“Do you think that I can sleep to-night, Jean?”
“As well as some others, perhaps,”
replied Jean, offering him a chair. “Will
you smoke, M’sieur?”
Philip lighted a cigar, and pointed
to the other’s moccasined feet, wet with melting
snow.
“You have been out,” he
said. “Why didn’t you invite me to
go with you?”
“It was a part of our night’s
business to be alone,” responded Jean.
“Josephine was with me. She is in her room
now with the baby.”
“Does Adare know you have returned?”
“Josephine has told him.
He is to believe that I went out to see a trapper
over on the Pipestone.”
“It is strange,” mused
Philip, speaking half to himself. “A strange
reason indeed it must be to make Josephine say these
false things.”
“It is like driving sharp claws
into her soul,” affirmed Jean.
“I believe that I know something
of what happened to-night, Jean. Are we any nearer
to the end to the big fight?”
“It is coming, M’sieur.
I am more than ever certain of that. The third
night from this will tell us.”
“And on that night ”
Philip waited expectantly.
“We will know,” replied
Jean in a voice which convinced him that the half-breed
would say no more. Then he added: “It
will not be strange if Josephine does not go with
you on the sledge-drive to-morrow, M’sieur.
It will also be curious if there is not some change
in her, for she has been under a great strain.
But make as if you did not see it. Pass your
time as much as possible with the master of Adare.
Let him not guess. And now I am going to ask
you to let me go to bed. My head aches. It
is from the blow.”
“And there is nothing I can do for you, Jean?’
“Nothing, M’sieur.”
At the door Philip turned.
“I have got a grip on myself
now, Jean,” he said. “I won’t
fail you. I’ll do as you say. But
remember, we are to have the fight at the end!”
In his room he sat up for a time and
smoked. Then he went to bed. Half a dozen
times during the night he awoke from a restless slumber.
Twice he struck a match to look at his watch.
It was still dark when he got up and dressed.
From five until six he tried to read. He was delighted
when Metoosin came to the door and told him that breakfast
would be ready in half an hour. This gave him
just time to shave.
He expected to eat alone with Adare
again this morning, and his heart jumped with both
surprise and joy when Josephine came out into the hall
to meet him. She was very pale. Her eyes
told him that she had passed a sleepless night.
But she was smiling bravely, and when she offered him
her hand he caught her suddenly in his arms and held
her close to his breast while he kissed her lips,
and then her shining hair.
“Philip!” she protested. “Philip ”
He laughed softly, and for a moment his face was close
against hers.
“My brave little darling!
I understand,” he whispered. “I know
what a night you’ve had. But there’s
nothing to fear. Nothing shall harm you.
Nothing shall harm you, nothing, nothing!”
She drew away from him gently, and
there was a mist in her eyes. But he had brought
a bit of colour into her face. And there was a
glow behind the tears. Then, her lip quivering,
she caught his arm.
“Philip, the baby is sick and
I am afraid. I haven’t told father.
Come!”
He went with her to the room at the
end of the hall. The Indian woman was crooning
softly over a cradle. She fell silent as Josephine
and Philip entered, and they bent over the little
flushed face on the pillow. Its breath came tightly,
gaspingly, and Josephine clutched Philip’s hand,
and her voice broke in a sob.
“Feel, Philip its little face the
fever ”
“You must call your mother and
father,” he said after a moment. “Why
haven’t you done this before, Josephine?”
“The fever came on suddenly within
the last half hour,” she whispered tensely.
“And I wanted you to tell me what to do, Philip.
Shall I call them now?”
He nodded.
“Yes.”
In an instant she was out of the room.
A few moments later she returned, followed by Adare
and his wife. Philip was startled by the look
that came into Miriam’s face as she fell on her
knees beside the cradle. She was ghastly white.
Dumbly Adare stood and gazed down on the little human
mite he had grown to worship. And then there came
through his beard a great broken breath that was half
a sob.
Josephine lay her cheek against his arm for a moment,
and said:
“You and Philip go to breakfast,
Mon Pere. I am going to give the baby some of
the medicine the Churchill doctor left with me.
I was frightened at first. But I’m not
now. Mother and I will have him out of the fever
shortly.”
Philip caught her glance, and took
Adare by the arm. Alone they went into the breakfast-room.
Adare laughed uneasily as he seated himself opposite
Philip.
“I don’t like to see the
little beggar like that,” he said, taking to
shake off his own and Philip’s fears with a smile.
“It was Mignonne who scared me her
face. She has nursed so many sick babies that
it frightened me to see her so white. I thought
he might be dying.”
“Cutting teeth, mebby,” volunteered Philip.
“Too young,” replied Adare.
“Or a touch of indigestion, That brings fever.”
“Whatever it is, Josephine will
soon have him kicking and pulling my thumb again,”
said Adare with confidence. “Did she ever
tell you about the little Indian baby she found in
a tepee?”
“No.”
“It was in the dead of winter.
Mignonne was out with her dogs, ten miles to
the south. Captain scented the thing the
Indian tepee. It was abandoned banked
high with snow and over it was the smallpox
signal. She was about to go on, but Captain made
her go to the flap of the tepee. The beast knew,
I guess. And Josephine my God, I wouldn’t
have let her do it for ten years of my life!
There had been smallpox in that tent; the smell of
it was still warm. Ugh! And she looked in!
And she says she heard something that was no louder
than the peep of a bird. Into that death-hole
she went and brought out a baby. The
parents, starving and half crazed after their sickness,
had left it thinking it was dead.
“Josephine brought it to a cabin
close to home, in two weeks she had that kid out rolling
in the snow. Then the mother and father heard
something of what had happened, and came to us as fast
as their legs could bring them. You should have
seen that Indian mother’s gratitude! She
didn’t think it so terrible to leave the baby
unburied. She thought it was dead. Pasoo
is the Indian father’s name. Several times
a year they come to see Josephine, and Pasoo brings
her the choicest furs of his trap-line. And each
time he says: ‘Nipa tu mo-wao,’
which means that some day he hopes to be able to kill
for her. Nice, isn’t it to have
friends who’ll murder your enemies for you if
you just give ’em the word?”
“One never can tell,”
began Philip cautiously. “A time might come
when she would need friends. If such a day should
happen ”
He paused, busying himself with his
steak. There was a note of triumph, of exultation,
in Adare’s low laugh.
“Have you ever seen a fire run
through a pitch-dry forest?” he asked.
“That is the way word that Josephine wanted friends
would sweep through a thousand square miles of this
Northland. And the answer to it would be like
the answer of stray wolves to the cry of the hunt-pack!”
All over Philip there surged a warm glow.
“You could not have friends
like that down there, in the cities,” he said.
Adare’s face clouded.
“I am not a pessimist,”
he answered, after a moment. “It has been
one of my few Commandments always to look for the
bright spot, if there is one. But, down there,
I have seen so many wolves, human wolves. It
seems strange to me that so many people should have
the same mad desire for the dollar that the wolves
of the forest have for warm, red, quivering flesh.
I have known a wolf-pack to kill five times what it
could eat in a night, and kill again the next night,
and still the next always more than enough.
They are like the Dollar Hunters only beasts.
Among such, one cannot have solid friends not
very many who will not sell you for a price.
I was afraid to trust Josephine down among them.
I am glad that it was you she met, Philip. You
were of the North a foster-child, if not
born there.”
That day was one of gloom in Adare
House. The baby’s fever grew steadily worse,
until in Josephine’s eyes Philip read the terrible
fear. He remained mostly with Adare in the big
room. The lamps were lighted, and Adare had just
risen from his chair, when Miriam came through the
door. She was swaying, her hands reaching out
gropingly, her face the gray of ash that crumbles
from an ember. Adare sprung to meet her, a strange
cry on his lips, and Philip was a step behind her.
He heard her moaning words, and as he rushed past them
into the hall he knew that she had fallen fainting
into her husband’s arms.
In the doorway to Josephine’s
room he paused. She was there, kneeling beside
the little cradle, and her face as she lifted it to
him was tearless, but filled with a grief that went
to the quick of his soul. He did not need to
look into the cradle as she rose unsteadily, clutching
a hand at her heart, as if to keep it from breaking.
He knew what he would see. And now he went to
her and drew her close in his strong arms, whispering
the pent-up passion of the things that were in his
heart, until at last her arms stole up about his neck,
and she sobbed on his breast like a child. How
long he held her there, whispering over and over again
the words that made her grief his own, he could not
have told; but after a time he knew that some one else
had entered the room, and he raised his eyes to meet
those of John Adare. The face of the great, grizzled
giant had aged five years. But his head was erect.
He looked at Philip squarely. He put out his two
hands, and one rested on Josephine’s head, the
other on Philip’s shoulder.
“My children,” he said
gently, and in those two words were weighted the strength
and consolation of the world.
He pointed to the door, motioning
Philip to take Josephine away, and then he went and
stood at the crib-side, his great shoulders hunched
over, his head bowed down.
Tenderly Philip led Josephine from
the room. Adare had taken his wife to her room,
and when they entered she was sitting in a chair, staring
and speechless. And now Josephine turned to Philip,
taking his face between her two hands, and her soul
looking at him through a blinding mist of tears.
“My Philip,” she whispered,
and drew his face down and kissed him. “Go
to him now. We will come soon.”
He returned to Adare like one in a
dream a dream that was grief and pain,
with its one golden thread of joy. Jean was there
now, and the Indian woman; and the master of Adare
had the still little babe huddled up against his breast.
It was some time before they could induce him to give
it to Moanne. Then, suddenly, he shook himself
like a great bear, and crushed Philip’s shoulders
in his hands.
“God knows I’m sorry for
you, Boy,” he cried brokenly. “It’s
hurt me terribly. But you it
must be like the cracking of your soul. And Josephine,
Mignonne, my little flower! She is with her
mother?”
“Yes,” replied Philip.
“Come. Let us go. We can do nothing
here. And Josephine and her mother will be better
alone for a time.”
“I understand,” said Adare
almost roughly, in his struggle to steady himself.
“You’re thinking of me, Boy.
God bless you for that. You go to Josephine and
Miriam. It is your place. Jean and I will
go into the big room.”
Philip left them at Adare’s
room and went to his own, leaving the door open that
he might hear Josephine if she came out into the hall.
He was there to meet her when she appeared a little
later. They went to Moanne. And at last
all things were done, and the lights were turned low
in Adare House. Philip did not take off his clothes
that night, nor did Jean and Metoosin. In the
early dawn they went out together to the little garden
of crosses. Close to the side of Iowaka, Jean
pointed out a plot.
“Josephine would say the little
one will sleep best there, close to her,”
he said. “She will care for it, M’sieur.
She will know, and understand, and keep its little
soul bright and happy in Heaven.”
And there they digged. No one
in Adare House heard the cautious fall of pick and
spade.
With morning came a strangely clear
sun. Out of the sky had gone the last haze of
cloud. Jean crossed himself, and said:
“She knows and has sent sunshine
instead of storm.”
Hours later it was Adare who stood
over the little grave, and said words deep and strong,
and quivering with emotion, and it was Jean and Metoosin
who lowered the tiny casket into the frozen earth.
Miriam was not there, but Josephine clung to Philip’s
side, and only once did her voice break in the grief
she was fighting back. Philip was glad when it
was over, and Adare was once more in his big room,
and Josephine with her mother. He did not even
want Jean’s company. In his room he sat
alone until supper time. He went to bed early,
and strangely enough slept more soundly than he had
been able to sleep for some time.
When he awoke the following morning
his first thought was that this was the day of the
third night. He had scarcely dressed when Adare’s
voice greeted him from outside the door. It was
different now filled with the old cheer
and booming hopefulness, and Philip smiled as he thought
how this stricken giant of the wilderness was rising
out of his own grief to comfort Josephine and him.
They were all at breakfast, and Philip was delighted
to find Josephine looking much better than he had
expected. Miriam had sunk deepest under the strain
of the preceding hours. She was still white and
wan. Her hands trembled. She spoke little.
Tenderly Adare tried to raise her spirits.
During the rest of that day Philip
saw but little of Josephine, and he made no effort
to intrude himself upon her. Late in the afternoon
Jean asked him if he had made friends with the dogs,
and Philip told him of his experience with them.
Not until nine o’clock that night did he know
why the half-breed had asked.
At that hour Adare House had sunk
into quiet. Miriam and her husband had gone to
bed, the lights were low. For an hour Philip had
listened for the footsteps which he knew he would
hear to-night. At last he knew that Josephine
had come out into the hall. He heard Jean’s
low voice, their retreating steps, and then the opening
and closing of the door that let them out into the
night. There was a short silence. Then the
door reopened, and some one returned through the hall.
The steps stopped at his own door a knock and
a moment later he was standing face to face with Croisset.
“Throw on your coat and cap
and come with me, M’sieur,” he cried in
a low voice. “And bring your pistol!”
Without a word Philip obeyed.
By the time they stood out in the night his blood
was racing in a wild anticipation. Josephine had
disappeared. Jean gripped his arm.
“To-night something may happen,”
he said, in a voice that was as hard and cold as the
blue lights of the aurora in the polar sky. “It
is possible. We may need your help.
I would have asked Metoosin, but it would have made
him suspicious of something and he knows
nothing. You have made friends with the dogs?
You know Captain?”
“Yes!”
“Then go to them go
as fast as you can, M’sieur. And if you
hear a shot to-night or a loud cry from
out there in the forest, free the dogs swiftly, Captain
first, and run with them to our trail, shouting ‘kill!
Kill! Kill!’ with every breath
you take, and don’t stop so long as there is
a footprint in the snow ahead of you or a human bone
to pick! Do you understand, M’sieur?”
His eyes were points of flame in the gloom.
“Do you understand?”
“Yes,” gasped Philip. “But Jean ”
“If you understand that
is all,” interrupted Jean, “If there is
a peril in what we are doing this night the pack will
be worth more to us than a dozen men. If anything
happens to us they will be our avengers. Go!
There is not one moment for you to lose. Remember a
shot a single cry!”
His voice, the glitter in his eyes,
told Philip this was no time for words. He turned
and ran swiftly across the clearing in the direction
of the dog pit, Ten minutes later he came into a gloom
warm with the smell of beast. Eyes of fire glared
at him. The snapping of fangs and the snarling
of savage throats greeted him. One by one he called
the names of the dogs he remembered called
them over and over again, advancing fearlessly among
them, until he dropped upon his knees with his hand
on the chain that held Captain. From there he
talked to them, and their whines answered him.
Then he fell silent listening.
He could hear his own heart beat. Every fibre
in his body was aquiver with excitement and a strange
fear. The hand that rested on Captain’s
collar trembled. In the distance an owl hooted,
and the first note of it sent a red-hot fire through
him. Still farther away a wolf howled. Then
came a silence in which he thought he could hear the
rush of blood through his own throbbing veins.
With his fingers at the steel snap
on Captain’s collar he waited.