Philip was not unaccustomed to the
occasional mental and physical shock which is an inevitable
accompaniment of the business of Law in the northland.
But never had he felt quite the same stir in his blood
as now-when he found himself looking down
the short tunnel into the face of the man he was hunting.
There come now and then moments in
which a curious understanding is impinged upon one
without loss of time in reason and surmise-and
this was one of those moments for Philip. His
first thought as he saw the great wild face in the
door of his tunnel was that Bram had been looking
at him for some time-while he was asleep;
and that if the desire to kill had been in the outlaw’s
breast he might have achieved his purpose with very
little trouble. Equally swift was his observance
of the fact that the tent with which he had covered
the aperture was gone, and that his rifle, with the
weight of which he had held the tent in place, had
disappeared. Bram had secured possession of them
before he had roused himself.
It was not the loss of these things,
or entirely Bram’s sudden and unexpected appearance,
that sent through him the odd thrill, which he experienced.
It was Bram’s face, his eyes, the tense and mysterious
earnestness that was in his gaze. It was not the
watchfulness of a victor looking at his victim.
In it there was no sign of hatred or of exultation.
There was not even unfriendliness there. Rather
it was the study of one filled with doubt and uneasiness,
and confronted by a question which he could not answer.
There was not a line of the face which Philip could
not see now-its high cheek-bones, its wide
cheeks, the low forehead, the flat nose, the thick
lips. Only the eyes kept it from being a terrible
face. Straight down through the generations Bram
must have inherited those eyes from some woman of the
past. They were strange things in that wild and
hunted creature’s face-gray eyes,
large, beautiful. With the face taken away they
would have been wonderful.
For a full minute not a sound passed
between the two men. Philip’s hand had
slipped to the butt of his revolver, but he had no
intention of using it. Then he found his voice.
It seemed the most natural thing in the world that
he should say what he did.
“Hello, Bram!”
“Boo-joo, m’sieu!”
Only Bram’s thick lips moved.
His voice was low and guttural. Almost instantly
his head disappeared from the opening.
Philip dug himself quickly from his
sleeping-bag. Through the aperture there came
to him now another sound, the yearning whine of beasts.
He could not hear Bram. In spite of the confidence
which his first look at Bram had given him he felt
a sudden shiver run up his spine as he faced the end
of the tunnel on his hands and knees, his revolver
in his hand. What a rat in a trap he would be
if Bram loosed his wolves! What sport for the
pack-and perhaps for the master himself!
He could kill two or three-and that would
be all. They would be in on him like a whirlwind,
diving through his snow walls as easily as a swimmer
might cut through water. Had he twice made a
fool of himself? Should he have winged Bram Johnson,
three times a murderer, in place of offering him a
greeting?
He began crawling toward the opening,
and again he heard the snarl and whine of the beasts.
The sound seemed some distance away. He reached
the end of the tunnel and peered out through the “door”
he had made in the crust.
From his position he could see nothing-nothing
but the endless sweep of the Barren and his old trail
leading up to the snow dune. The muzzle of his
revolver was at the aperture when he heard Bram’s
voice.
“M’sieu-ze
revolv’-ze knife-or I mus’
keel yon. Ze wolve plent’ hungr’-”
Bram was standing just outside of
his line of vision. He had not spoken loudly
or threateningly, but Philip felt in the words a cold
and unexcited deadliness of purpose against which
he knew that it would be madness for him to fight.
Bram had more than the bad man’s ordinary drop
on him. In his wolves he possessed not only an
advantage but a certainty. If Philip had doubted
this, as he waited for another moment with the muzzle
of his revolver close to the opening, his uncertainty
was swept away by the appearance thirty feet in front
of his tunnel of three of Bram’s wolves.
They were giants of their kind, and as the three faced
his refuge he could see the snarling gleam of their
long fangs. A fourth and a fifth joined them,
and after that they came within his vision in twos
and threes until a score of them were huddled straight
in front of him. They were restless and whining,
and the snap of their jaws was like the clicking of
castanets. He caught the glare of twenty pairs
of eyes fastened on his retreat and involuntarily he
shrank back that they might not see him. He knew
that it was Bram who was holding them back, and yet
he had heard no word, no command. Even as he
stared a long snakelike shadow uncurled itself swiftly
in the air and the twenty foot lash of Bram’s
caribou-gut whip cracked viciously over the heads
of the pack. At the warning of the whip the horde
of beasts scattered, and Bram’s voice came again.
“M’sieu-ze revolv’-ze
knife-or I loose ze wolve-”
The words were scarcely out of his
mouth when Philip’s revolver flew through the
opening and dropped in the snow.
“There it is, old man,”
announced Philip. “And here comes the knife.”
His sheath-knife followed the revolver.
“Shall I throw out my bed?” he asked.
He was making a tremendous effort
to appear cheerful. But he could not forget that
last night he had shot at Bram, and that it was not
at all unreasonable to suppose that Bram might knock
his brains out when he stuck his head out of the hole.
The fact that Bram made no answer to his question
about the bed did not add to his assurance. He
repeated the question, louder than before, and still
there was no answer. In the face of his perplexity
he could not repress a grim chuckle as he rolled up
his blankets. What a report he would have for
the Department-if he lived to make it!
On paper there would be a good deal of comedy about
it-this burrowing oneself up like a hibernating
woodchuck, and then being invited out to breakfast
by a man with a club and a pack of brutes with fangs
that had gleamed at him like ivory stilettos.
He had guessed at the club, and a moment later as
he thrust his sleeping-bag out through the opening
he saw that it was quite obviously a correct one.
Bram was possessing himself of the revolver and the
knife. In the same hand he held his whip and
a club.
Seizing the opportunity, Philip followed
his bed quickly, and when Bram faced him he was standing
on his feet outside the drift.
“Morning, Bram!”
His greeting was drowned in a chorus
of fierce snarls that made his blood curdle even as
he tried to hide from Bram any visible betrayal of
the fact that every nerve up and down his spine was
pricking him, like a pin. From Bram’s throat
there shot forth at the pack a sudden sharp clack
of Eskimo, and with it the long whip snapped in their
faces again.
Then he looked steadily at his prisoner.
For the first time Philip saw the look which he dreaded
darkening his face. A greenish fire burned in
the strange eyes. The thick lips were set tightly,
the flat nose seemed flatter, and with a shiver Philip
noticed Bram’s huge, naked hand gripping his
club until the cords stood out like babiche thongs
under the skin. In that moment he was ready to
kill. A wrong word, a wrong act, and Philip knew
that the end was inevitable.
In the same thick guttural voice which
he used in his half-breed patois he demanded,
“Why you shoot-las’ night!”
“Because I wanted to talk with
you, Bram,” replied Philip calmly. “I
didn’t shoot to hit you. I fired over your
head.”
“You want-talk,”
said Bram, speaking as if each word cost him a certain
amount of effort. “Why-talk?”
“I wanted to ask you why it
was that you killed a man down in the God’s
Lake country.”
The words were out before Philip could
stop them. A growl rose in Bram’s chest.
It was like the growl of a beast. The greenish
fire in his eyes grew brighter.
“Ze poleece,” he said.
“Ka, ze poleece-like kam
from Churchill an’ ze wolve keel!”
Philip’s hand was fumbling in
his pocket. The wolves were behind him and he
dared not turn to look. It was their ominous silence
that filled him with dread. They were waiting-watching-their
animal instinct telling them that the command for
which they yearned was already trembling on the thick
lips of their master. The revolver and the knife
dropped from Bram’s hand. He held only the
whip and the club.
Philip drew forth the wallet.
“You lost something-when
you camped that night near Pierre Breault’s
cabin,” he said, and his own voice seemed strange
and thick to him. “I’ve followed
you-to give it back. I could have killed
you if I had wanted to-when I fired over
your head. But I wanted to stop you. I wanted
to give you-this.”
He held out to Bram the golden snare.