The next morning the tail of the storm
was still sweeping bitterly over the edge of the Barren,
but Philip set out, with Pierre Breault as his guide,
for the place where the half-breed had seen Bram Johnson
and his wolves in camp. Three days had passed
since that exciting night, and when they arrived at
the spot where Bram had slept the spruce shelter was
half buried in a windrow of the hard, shot like snow
that the blizzard had rolled in off the open spaces.
From this point Pierre marked off
accurately the direction Bram had taken the morning
after the hunt, and Philip drew the point of his compass
to the now invisible trail. Almost instantly he
drew his conclusion.
“Bram is keeping to the scrub
timber along the edge of the Barren,” he said
to Pierre. “That is where I shall follow.
You might add that much to what I have written to
MacVeigh. But about the snare, Pierre Breault,
say not a word. Do you understand? If he
is a loup-garou man, and weaves golden hairs
out of the winds-”
“I will say nothing, M’sieu,” shuddered
Pierre.
They shook hands, and parted in silence.
Philip set his face to the west, and a few moments
later, looking back, he could no longer see Pierre.
For an hour after that he was oppressed by the feeling
that he was voluntarily taking a desperate chance.
For reasons which he had arrived at during the night
he had left his dogs and sledge with Pierre, and was
traveling light. In his forty-pound pack, fitted
snugly to his shoulders, were a three pound silk service-tent
that was impervious to the fiercest wind, and an equal
weight of cooking utensils. The rest of his burden,
outside of his rifle, his Colt’s revolver and
his ammunition, was made up of rations, so much of
which was scientifically compressed into dehydrated
and powder form that he carried on his back, in a
matter of thirty pounds, food sufficient for a month
if he provided his meat on the trail. The chief
article in this provision was fifteen pounds of flour;
four dozen eggs he carried in one pound of egg powder;
twenty-eight pounds of potatoes in four pounds of
the dehydrated article; four pounds of onions in a
quarter of a pound of the concentration, and so on
through the list.
He laughed a little grimly as he thought
of this concentrated efficiency in the pack on his
shoulders. In a curious sort of way it reminded
him of other days, and he wondered what some of his
old-time friends would say if he could, by some magic
endowment, assemble them here for a feast on the trail.
He wondered especially what Mignon Davenport would
say-and do. P-f-f-f! He could
see the blue-blooded horror in her aristocratic face!
That wind from over the Barren would curdle the life
in her veins. She would shrivel up and die.
He considered himself a fairly good judge in the matter,
for once upon a time he thought that he was going
to marry her. Strange why he should think of
her now, he told himself; but for all that he could
not get rid of her for a time. And thinking of
her, his mind traveled back into the old days, even
as he followed over the hidden trail of Bram.
Undoubtedly a great many of his old friends had forgotten
him. Five years was a long time, and friendship
in the set to which he belonged was not famous for
its longevity. Nor love, for that matter.
Mignon had convinced him of that. He grimaced,
and in the teeth of the wind he chuckled. Fate
was a playful old chap. It was a good joke he
had played on him-first a bit of pneumonia,
then a set of bad lungs afflicted with that “galloping”
something-or-other that hollows one’s cheeks
and takes the blood out of one’s veins.
It was then that the horror had grown larger and larger
each day in Mignon’s big baby-blue eyes, until
she came out with childish frankness and said that
it was terribly embarrassing to have one’s friends
know that one was engaged to a consumptive.
Philip laughed as he thought of that.
The laugh came so suddenly and so explosively that
Bram could have heard it a hundred yards away, even
with the wind blowing as it was. A consumptive!
Philip doubled up his arm until the hard muscles in
it snapped. He drew in a deep lungful of air,
and forced it out again with a sound like steam escaping
from a valve. The north had done that for
him; the north with its wonderful forests, its vast
skies, its rivers, and its lakes, and its deep snows-the
north that makes a man out of the husk of a man if
given half a chance. He loved it. And because
he loved it, and the adventure of it, he had joined
the Police two years ago. Some day he would go
back, just for the fun of it; meet his old friends
in his old clubs, and shock baby-eyed Mignon to death
with his good health.
He dropped these meditations as he
thought of the mysterious man he was following.
During the course of his two years in the Service he
had picked up a great many odds and ends in the history
of Bram’s life, and in the lives of the Johnsons
who had preceded him. He had never told any one
how deeply interested he was. He had, at times,
made efforts to discuss the quality of Bram’s
intelligence, but always he had failed to make others
see and understand his point of view. By the Indians
and half-breeds of the country in which he had lived,
Bram was regarded as a monster of the first order
possessed of the conjuring powers of the devil himself.
By the police he was earnestly desired as the most
dangerous murderer at large in all the north, and the
lucky man who captured him, dead or alive, was sure
of a sergeantcy. Ambition and hope had run high
in many valiant hearts until it was generally conceded
that Bram was dead.
Philip was not thinking of the sergeantcy
as he kept steadily along the edge of the Barren.
His service would shortly be up, and he had other
plans for the future. From the moment his fingers
had touched the golden strand of hair he had been
filled with a new and curious emotion. It possessed
him even more strongly to-day than it had last night.
He had not given voice to that emotion, or to the thoughts
it had roused, even to Pierre. Perhaps he was
ridiculous. But he possessed imagination, and
along with that a great deal of sympathy for animals-and
some human beings. He had, for the time, ceased
to be the cool and calculating man-hunter intent on
the possession of another’s life. He knew
that his duty was to get Bram and take him back to
headquarters, and he also knew that he would perform
his duty when the opportunity came-unless
he had guessed correctly the significance of the golden
snare.
And had he guessed correctly?
There was a tremendous doubt in his mind, and yet
he was strangely thrilled. He tried to argue that
there were many ways in which Bram might have secured
the golden hairs that had gone into the making of
his snare; and that the snare itself might long have
been carried as a charm against the evils of disease
and the devil by the strange creature whose mind and
life were undoubtedly directed to a large extent by
superstition. In that event it was quite logical
that Bram had come into possession of his golden talisman
years ago.
In spite of himself, Philip could
not believe that this was so. At noon, when he
built a small fire to make tea and warm his bannock,
he took the golden tress from his wallet and examined
it even more closely than last night. It might
have come from a woman’s head only yesterday,
so bright and shimmery was it in the pale light of
the midday sun. He was amazed at the length and
fineness of it, and the splendid texture of each hair.
Possibly there were half a hundred hairs, each of an
equal and unbroken length.
He ate his dinner, and went on.
Three days of storm had covered utterly every trace
of the trail made by Bram and his wolves. He was
convinced, however, that Bram would travel in the
scrub timber close to the Barren. He had already
made up his mind that this Barren-the Great
Barren of the unmapped north-was the great
snow sea in which Bram had so long found safety from
the law. Beaching five hundred miles east and
west, and almost from the Sixtieth degree to the Arctic
Ocean, its un-peopled and treeless wastes formed a
tramping ground for him as safe as the broad Pacific
to the pirates of old. He could not repress a
shivering exclamation as his mind dwelt on this world
of Bram’s. It was worse than the edge of
the Arctic, where one might at least have the Eskimo
for company.
He realized the difficulty of his
own quest. His one chance lay in fair weather,
and the discovery of an old trail made by Bram and
his pack. An old trail would lead to fresher
ones. Also he was determined to stick to the
edge of the scrub timber, for if the Barren was Bram’s
retreat he would sooner or later strike a trail-unless
Bram had gone straight out into the vast white plain
shortly after he had made his camp in the forest near
Pierre Breault’s cabin. In that event it
might be weeks before Bram would return to the scrub
timber again.
That night the last of the blizzard
that had raged for days exhausted itself. For
a week clear weather followed. It was intensely
cold, but no snow fell. In that week Philip traveled
a hundred and twenty miles westward.
It was on the eighth night, as he
sat near his fire in a thick clump of dwarf spruce,
that the thing happened which Pierre Breault, with
a fatalism born of superstition, knew would come to
pass. And it is curious that on this night, and
in the very hour of the strange happening, Philip
had with infinite care and a great deal of trouble
rewoven the fifty hairs back into the form of the golden
snare.