The process of mental induction occasionally
does not pause to reason its way, but leaps to an
immediate and startling finality, which, by reason
of its very suddenness, is for a space like the shock
of a sudden blow. After that one gasp of amazement
Philip made no sound. He spoke no word to Pierre.
In a sudden lull of the wind sweeping over the cabin
the ticking of his watch was like the beating of a
tiny drum. Then, slowly, his eyes rose from the
silken thread in his fingers and met Pierre’s.
Each knew what the other was thinking. If the
hair had been black. If it had been brown.
Even had it been of the coarse red of the blond Eskimo
of the upper Mackenzie! But it was gold-shimmering
gold.
Still without speaking, Philip drew
a knife from his pocket and cut the shining thread
above the second knot, and worked at the finely wrought
weaving of the silken filaments until a tress of hair,
crinkled and waving, lay on the table before them.
If he had possessed a doubt, it was gone now.
He could not remember where he had ever seen just that
colored gold in a woman’s hair. Probably
he had, at one time or another. It was not red
gold. It possessed no coppery shades and lights
as it rippled there in the lamp glow. It was flaxen,
and like spun silk-so fine that, as he
looked at it, he marveled at the patience that had
woven it into a snare. Again he looked at Pierre.
The same question was in their eyes.
“It must be-that
Bram has a woman with him,” said Pierre.
“It must be,” said Philip. “Or-”
That final word, its voiceless significance,
the inflection which Philip gave to it as he gazed
at Pierre, stood for the one tremendous question which,
for a space, possessed the mind of each. Pierre
shrugged his shoulders. He could not answer it.
And as he shrugged his shoulders he shivered, and
at a sudden blast of the wind against the cabin door
he turned quickly, as though he thought the blow might
have been struck by a human hand.
“Diable!” he cried,
recovering himself, his white teeth flashing a smile
at Philip. “It has made me nervous-what
I saw there in the light of the campfire, M’sieu.
Bram, and his wolves, and that!”
He nodded at the shimmering strands.
“You have never seen hair the color of this,
Pierre?”
“Non. In all my life-not once.”
“And yet you have seen white
women at Fort Churchill, at York Factory, at Lac la
Biche, at Cumberland House, and Norway House, and at
Fort Albany?”
“Ah-h-h, and at many other places,
M’sieu. At God’s Lake, at Lac Seul,
and over on the Mackenzie-and never have
I seen hair on a woman like that.”
“And Bram has never been out
of the northland, never farther south than Fort Chippewyan
that we know of,” said Philip. “It
makes one shiver, eh, Pierre? It makes one think
of-what? Can’t you answer?
Isn’t it in your mind?”
French and Cree were mixed half and
half in Pierre’s blood. The pupils of his
eyes dilated as he met Philip’s steady gaze.
“It makes one think,”
he replied uneasily, “of the châsse-galère
and the loup-garou, and-and-almost
makes one believe. I am not superstitious, M’sieu-non-non-I
am not superstitious,” he cried still more uneasily.
“But many strange things are told about Bram
and his wolves;-that he has sold his soul
to the devil, and can travel through the air, and
that he can change himself into the form of a wolf
at will. There are those who have heard him singing
the Chanson de Voyageur to the howling of his wolves
away up in the sky. I have seen them, and talked
with them, and over on the McLeod I saw a whole tribe
making incantation because they had seen Bram and his
wolves building themselves a conjuror’s house
in the heart of a thunder-cloud. So-is
it strange that he should snare rabbits with, a woman’s
hair?”
“And change black into the color
of the sun?” added Philip, falling purposely
into the other’s humor.
“If the rest is true-”
Pierre did not finish. He caught
himself, swallowing hard, as though a lump had risen
in his throat, and for a moment or two Philip saw him
fighting with himself, struggling with the age-old
superstitions which had flared up for an instant like
a powder-flash. His jaws tightened, and he threw
back his head.
“But those stories are not
true, M’sieu,” he added in a repressed
voice. “That is why I showed you the snare.
Bram Johnson is not dead. He is alive. And
there is a woman with him, or-”
“Or-”
The same thought was in their eyes
again. And again neither gave voice to it.
Carefully Philip was gathering up the strands of hair,
winding them about his forefinger, and placing them
afterward in a leather wallet which he took from his
pocket. Then, quite casually, he loaded his pipe
and lighted it. He went to the door, opened it,
and for a few moments stood listening to the screech
of the wind over the Barren. Pierre, still seated
at the table, watched him attentively. Philip’s
mind was made up when he closed the door and faced
the half-breed again.
“It is three hundred miles from
here to Fort Churchill,” he said. “Half
way, at the lower end of Jesuche Lake, MacVeigh and
his patrol have made their headquarters. If I
go after Bram, Pierre, I must first make certain of
getting a message to MacVeigh, and he will see that
it gets to Fort Churchill. Can you leave your
foxes and poison-baits and your deadfalls long enough
for that?”
A moment Pierre hesitated.
Then he said:
“I will take the message.”
Until late that night Philip sat up
writing his report. He had started out to run
down a band of Indian thieves. More important
business had crossed his trail, and he explained the
whole matter to Superintendent Fitzgerald, commanding
“M” Division at Fort Churchill. He
told Pierre Breault’s story as he had heard
it. He gave his reasons for believing it, and
that Bram Johnson, three times a murderer, was alive.
He asked that another man be sent after the Indians,
and explained, as nearly as he could, the direction
he would take in his pursuit of Bram.
When the report was finished and sealed he had omitted
just one thing.
Not a word had he written about the
rabbit snare woven from a woman’s hair.