The night was so bright that the spruce
trees cast vivid shadows on the snow. Overhead
there were a billion stars in a sky as dear as an open
sea, and the Great Dipper shone like a constellation
of tiny suns. The world did not need a moon.
At a distance of three hundred yards Philip could
have seen a caribou if it had passed. He sat close
to his fire, with the heat of it reflected from the
blackened face of a huge rock, finishing the snare
which had taken him an hour to weave. For a long
time he had been conscious of the curious, hissing
monotone of the Aurora, the “music of the skies,”
reaching out through the space of the earth with a
purring sound that was at times like the purr of a
cat and at others like the faint hum of a bee.
Absorbed in his work he did not, for a time, hear
the other sound. Not until he had finished, and
was placing the golden snare in his wallet, did the
one sound individualize and separate itself from the
other.
He straightened himself suddenly,
and listened. Then he jumped to his feet and
ran through fifty feet of low scrub to the edge of
the white plain.
It was coming from off there, a great
distance away. Perhaps a mile. It might
be two. The howling of wolves!
It was not a new or unusual sound
to him. He had listened to it many times during
the last two years. But never had it thrilled
him as it did now, and he felt the blood leap in sudden
swiftness through his body as the sound bore straight
in his direction. In a flash he remembered all
that Pierre Breault had said. Bram and his pack
hunted like that. And it was Bram who was coming.
He knew it.
He ran back to his tent and in what
remained of the heat of the fire he warmed for a few
moments the breech of his rifle. Then he smothered
the fire by kicking snow over it. Returning to
the edge of the plain, he posted himself near the
largest spruce he could find, up which it would be
possible for him to climb a dozen feet or so if necessity
drove him to it. And this necessity bore down
upon him like the wind. The pack, whether guided
by man or beast, was driving straight at him, and it
was less than a quarter of a mile away when Philip
drew himself up in the spruce. His breath came
quick, and his heart was thumping like a drum, for
as he climbed up the slender refuge that was scarcely
larger in diameter than his arm he remembered the
time when he had hung up a thousand pounds of moose
meat on cedars as thick as his leg, and the wolves
had come the next night and gnawed them through as
if they had been paper. From his unsteady perch
ten feet off the ground he stared out into the starlit
Barren.
Then came the other sound. It
was the swift chug, chug, chug of galloping feet-of
hoofs breaking through the crust of the snow.
A shape loomed up, and Philip knew it was a caribou
running for its life. He drew an easier breath
as he saw that the animal was fleeing parallel with
the projecting finger of scrub in which he had made
his camp, and that it would strike the timber a good
mile below him. And now, with a still deeper
thrill, he noted the silence of the pursuing wolves.
It meant but one thing. They were so close on
the heels of their prey that they no longer made a
sound. Scarcely had the caribou disappeared when
Philip saw the first of them-gray, swiftly
moving shapes, spread out fan-like as they closed
in on two sides for attack, so close that he could
hear the patter of their feet and the blood-curdling
whines that came from between their gaping jaws.
There were at least twenty of them, perhaps thirty,
and they were gone with the swiftness of shadows driven
by a gale.
From his uncomfortable position Philip
lowered himself to the snow again. With its three
or four hundred yard lead he figured that the caribou
would almost reach the timber a mile away before the
end came. Concealed in the shadow of the spruce,
he waited. He made no effort to analyze the confidence
with which he watched for Bram. When he at last
heard the curious zip-zip-zip
of snowshoes approaching his blood ran no faster than
it had in the preceding minutes of his expectation,
so sure had he been that the man he was after would
soon loom up out of the starlight. In the brief
interval after the passing of the wolves he had made
up his mind what he would do. Fate had played
a trump card into his hand. From the first he
had figured that strategy would have much to do in
the taking of Bram, who would be practically unassailable
when surrounded by the savage horde which, at a word
from him, had proved themselves ready to tear his
enemies into pieces. Now, with the wolves gorging
themselves, his plan was to cut Bram off and make him,
a prisoner.
From his knees he rose slowly to his
feet, still hidden in the shadow of the spruce.
His rifle he discarded. In his un-mittened hand
he held his revolver. With staring eyes he looked
for Bram out where the wolves had passed. And
then, all at once, came the shock. It was tremendous.
The trickery of sound on the Barren had played an unexpected
prank with his senses, and while he strained his eyes
to pierce the hazy starlight of the plain far out,
Bram himself loomed up suddenly along the edge of
the bush not twenty paces away.
Philip choked back the cry on his
lips, and in that moment Bram stopped short, standing
full in the starlight, his great lungs taking in and
expelling air with a gasping sound as he listened for
his wolves. He was a giant of a man. A monster,
Philip thought. It is probable that the elusive
glow of the night added to his size as he stood there.
About his shoulders fell a mass of unkempt hair that
looked like seaweed. His beard was short and
thick, and for a flash Philip saw the starlight in
his eyes-eyes that were shining like the
eyes of a cat. In that same moment he saw the
face. It was a terrible, questing face-the
face of a creature that was hunting, and yet hunted;
of a creature half animal and half man. So long
as he lived he knew that he would never forget it;
the wild savagery of it, the questing fire that was
in the eyes, the loneliness of it there in the night,
set apart from all mankind; and with the face he would
never forget that other thing that came to him audibly-the
throbbing, gasping heartbeat of the man’s body.
In this moment Philip knew that the
time to act was at hand. His fingers gripped
tighter about the butt of his revolver as he stepped
forward out of the shadow.
Bram would have seen him then, but
in that same instant he had flung back his head and
from his throat there went forth a cry such as Philip
had never heard from man or beast before. It began
deep in Bram’s cavernous chest, like the rolling
of a great drum, and ended in a wailing shriek that
must have carried for miles over the open plain-the
call of the master to his pack, of the man-beast to
his brothers. It may be that even before the
cry was finished some super-instinct had warned Bram
Johnson of a danger which he had not seen. The
cry was cut short. It ended in a hissing gasp,
as steam is cut off by a valve. Before Philip’s
startled senses had adjusted themselves to action
Bram was off, and as his huge strides carried him
swiftly through the starlight the cry that had been
on his lips was replaced by the strange, mad laugh
that Pierre Breault had described with a shiver of
fear.
Without moving, Philip called after him:
“Bram-Bram Johnson-stop!
In the name of the King-”
It was the old formula, the words
that carried with them the majesty and power of Law
throughout the northland. Bram heard them.
But he did not stop. He sped on more swiftly,
and again Philip called his name.
“Bram-Bram Johnson-”
The laugh came back again. It
was weird and chuckling, as though Bram was laughing
at him.
In the starlight Philip flung up his
revolver. He did not aim to hit. Twice he
fired over Bram’s head and shoulders, so close
that the fugitive must have heard the whine of the
bullets.
“Bram-Bram Johnson!” he shouted
a third time.
His pistol arm relaxed and dropped
to his side, and he stood staring after the great
figure that was now no more than a shadow in the gloom.
And then it was swallowed up entirely. Once more
he was alone under the stars, encompassed by a world
of nothingness. He felt, all at once, that he
had been a very great fool. He had played his
part like a child; even his voice had trembled as
he called out Bram’s name. And Bram-even
Bram-had laughed at him.
Very soon he would pay the price of
his stupidity-of his slowness to act.
It was thought of that which quickened his pulse as
he stared out into the white space into which Bram
had gone. Before the night was over Bram would
return, and with him would come the wolves.
With a shudder Philip thought of Corporal
Lee as he turned back through the scrub to the big
rock where he had made his camp.
The picture that flashed into his
mind of the fate of the two men from Churchill added
to the painful realization of his own immediate peril-a
danger brought upon himself by an almost inconceivable
stupidity. Philip was no more than the average
human with good red blood in his veins. A certain
amount of personal hazard held a fascination for him,
but he had also the very great human desire to hold
a fairly decent hand in any game of chance he entered.
It was the oppressive conviction that he had no chance
now that stunned him. For a few minutes he stood
over the spot where his fire had been, a film of steam
rising into his face, trying to adjust his mind to
some sort of logical action. He was not afraid
of Bram. He would quite cheerfully have gone
out and fought open-handedly for his man, even though
he had seen that Bram was a giant. This, much
he told himself, as he fingered the breech of his
rifle, and listened.
But it was not Bram who would fight.
The wolves would come. He probably would not
see Bram again. He would hear only his laugh,
or his great voice urging on his pack, as Corporal
Lee and the other man had heard it.
That Bram would not return for vengeance
never for a moment entered his analysis of the situation.
By firing after his man Philip had too clearly disclosed
his identity and his business; and Bram, fighting for
his own existence, would be a fool not to rid himself
of an immediate and dangerous enemy.
And then, for the first time since
he had returned from the edge of the Barren, Philip
saw the man again as he had seen him standing under
the white glow of the stars. And it struck him,
all at once, that Bram had been unarmed. Comprehension
of this fact, slow as it had been, worked a swift
and sudden hope in him, and his eyes took in quickly
the larger trees about him. From a tree he could
fight the pack and kill them one by one. He had
a rifle and a revolver, and plenty of ammunition.
The advantage would lay all with him. But if
he was treed, and Bram happened to have a rifle-
He put on the heavy coat he had thrown
off near the fire, filled his pockets with loose ammunition,
and hunted for the tree he wanted. He found it
a hundred yards from his camp. It was a gnarled
and wind-blown spruce six inches in diameter, standing
in an open. In this open Philip knew that he
could play havoc with the pack. On the other hand,
if Bram possessed a rifle, the gamble was against
him. Perched in the tree, silhouetted against
the stars that made the night like day, he would be
an easy victim. Bram could pick him off without
showing himself. But it was his one chance, and
he took it.