It must have been fully half a minute
that Bram stood like a living creature turned suddenly
into dead stone. His eyes had left Philip’s
face and were fixed on the woven tress of shining hair.
For the first time his thick lips had fallen agape.
He did not seem to breathe. At the end of the
thirty seconds his hand unclenched from about the whip
and the club and they fell into the snow. Slowly,
his eyes still fixed on the snare as if it held for
him an overpowering fascination, he advanced a step,
and then another, until he reached out and took from
Philip the thing which he held. He uttered no
word. But from his eyes there disappeared the
greenish fire. The lines in his heavy face softened
and his thick lips lost some of their cruelty as he
held up the snare before his eyes so that the light
played on its sheen of gold. It was then that
Philip saw that which must have meant a smile in Bram’s
face.
Still this strange man made no spoken
sound as he coiled the silken thread around one of
his great fingers and then placed it somewhere inside
his coat. He seemed, all at once, utterly oblivious
of Philip’s presence. He picked up the
revolver, gazed heavily at it for a moment, and with
a grunt which must have reflected his mental decision
hurled it far out over the plain. Instantly the
wolves were after it in a mad rush. The knife
followed the revolver; and after that, as coolly as
though breaking firewood, the giant went to Philip’s
rifle, braced it across his knee, and with a single
effort snapped the stock off close to the barrel.
“The devil!” growled Philip.
He felt a surge of anger rise in him,
and for an instant the inclination to fling himself
at Bram in the defense of his property. If he
had been helpless a few minutes before, he was utterly
so now. In the same breath it flashed upon him
that Bram’s activity in the destruction of his
weapons meant that his life was spared, at least for
the present. Otherwise Bram would not be taking
these precautions.
The futility of speech kept his own
lips closed. At last Bram looked at him, and
pointed to his snowshoes where he had placed them last
night against the snow dune. His invitation for
Philip to prepare himself for travel was accompanied
by nothing more than a grunt.
The wolves were returning, sneaking
in watchfully and alert. Bram greeted them with
the snap of his whip, and when Philip was ready motioned
him to lead the way into the north. Half a dozen
paces behind Philip followed Bram, and twice that
distance behind the outlaw came the pack. Now
that his senses were readjusting themselves and his
pulse beating more evenly Philip began to take stock
of the situation. It was, first of all, quite
evident that Bram had not accepted him as a traveling
companion, but as a prisoner; and he was equally convinced
that the golden snare had at the last moment served
in some mysterious way to save his life.
It was not long before he saw how
Bram had out-generaled him. Two miles beyond
the big drift they came upon the outlaw’s
huge sledge, from which Bram and his wolves had made
a wide circle in order to stalk him from behind.
The fact puzzled him. Evidently Bram had expected
his unknown enemy to pursue him, and had employed
his strategy accordingly. Why, then, had he not
attacked him the night of the caribou kill?
He watched Bram as he got the pack
into harness. The wolves obeyed him like dogs.
He could perceive among them a strange comradeship,
even an affection, for the man-monster who was their
master. Bram spoke to them entirely in Eskimo-and
the sound of it was like the rapid clack-clack-clack
of dry bones striking together. It was weirdly
different from the thick and guttural tones Bram used
in speaking Chippewyan and the half-breed patois.
Again Philip made an effort to induce
Bram to break his oppressive silence. With a
suggestive gesture and a hunch of his shoulders he
nodded toward the pack, just as they were about to
start.
“If you thought I tried to kill
you night before last why didn’t you set your
wolves after me, Bram-as you did those other
two over on the Barren north of Kasba Lake? Why
did you wait until this morning? And where-where
in God’s name are we going?”
Bram stretched out an arm.
“There!”
It was the one question he answered,
and he pointed straight as the needle of a compass
into the north. And then, as if his crude sense
of humor had been touched by the other thing Philip
had asked, he burst into a laugh. It made one
shudder to see laughter in a face like Bram’s.
It transformed his countenance from mere ugliness into
one of the leering gargoyles carven under the cornices
of ancient buildings. It was this laugh, heard
almost at Bram’s elbow, that made Philip suddenly
grip hard at a new understanding-the laugh
and the look in Bram’s eyes. It set him
throbbing, and filled him all at once with the desire
to seize his companion by his great shoulders and shake
speech from his thick lips. In that moment, even
before the laughter had gone from Bram’s face,
he thought again of Pelletier. Pelletier must
have been like this-in those terrible days
when he scribbled the random thoughts of a half-mad
man on his cabin door.
Bram was not yet mad. And yet
he was fighting the thing that had killed Pelletier.
Loneliness. The fate forced upon him by the law
because he had killed a man.
His face was again heavy and unemotional
when with a gesture he made Philip understand that
he was to ride on the sledge. Bram himself went
to the head of the pack. At the sharp clack of
his Eskimo the wolves strained in their traces.
Another moment and they were off, with Bram in the
lead.
Philip was amazed at the pace set
by the master of the pack. With head and shoulders
hunched low he set off in huge swinging strides that
kept the team on a steady trot behind him. They
must have traveled eight miles an hour. For a
few minutes Philip could not keep his eyes from Bram
and the gray backs of the wolves. They fascinated
him, and at the same time the sight of them-straining
on ahead of him into a voiceless and empty world-filled
him with a strange and overwhelming compassion.
He saw in them the brotherhood of man and beast.
It was splendid. It was epic. And to this
the Law had driven them!
His eyes began to take in the sledge
then. On it was a roll of bear skins-Bram’s
blankets. One was the skin of a polar bear.
Near these skins were the haunches of caribou meat,
and so close to him that he might have reached out
and touched it was Bram’s club. At the side
of the club lay a rifle. It was of the old breech-loading,
single-shot type, and Philip wondered why Bram had
destroyed his own modern weapon instead of keeping
it in place of this ancient Company relic. It
also made him think of night before last, when he
had chosen for his refuge a tree out in the starlight.
The club, even more than the rifle,
bore marks of use. It was of birch, and three
feet in length. Where Bram’s hand gripped
it the wood was worn as smooth and dark as mahogany.
In many places the striking end of the club was dented
as though it had suffered the impact of tremendous
blows, and it was discolored by suggestive stains.
There was no sign of cooking utensils and no evidence
of any other food but the caribou flesh. On the
rear of the sledge was a huge bundle of pitch-soaked
spruce tied with babiche, and out of this stuck the
crude handle of an ax.
Of these things the gun and the white
bear skin impressed Philip most. He had only
to lean forward a little to reach the rifle, and the
thought that he could scarcely miss the broad back
of the man ahead of him struck him all at once with
a sort of mental shock. Bram had evidently forgotten
the weapon, or was utterly confident in the protection
of the pack. Or-had he faith in his
prisoner? It was this last question that Philip
would liked to have answered in the affirmative.
He had no desire to harm Bram. He had even a less
desire to escape him. He had forgotten, so far
as his personal intentions were concerned, that he
was an agent of the Law-under oath to bring
in to Divisional Headquarters Bram’s body dead
or alive. Since night before last Bram had ceased
to be a criminal for him. He was like Pelletier,
and through him he was entering upon a strange adventure
which held for him already the thrill and suspense
of an anticipation which he had never experienced
in the game of man-hunting.
Had the golden snare been taken from
the equation-had he not felt the thrill
of it in his fingers and looked upon the warm fires
of it as it lay unbound on Pierre Breault’s
table, his present relation with Bram Johnson he would
have considered as a purely physical condition, and
he might then have accepted the presence of the rifle
there within his reach as a direct invitation from
Providence.
As it was, he knew that the master
of the wolves was speeding swiftly to the source of
the golden snare. From the moment he had seen
the strange transformation it had worked in Bram that
belief within him had become positive. And now,
as his eyes turned from the inspection of the sledge
to Bram and his wolves, he wondered where the trail
was taking him. Was it possible that Bram was
striking straight north for Coronation Gulf and the
Eskimo? He had noted that the polar bear skin
was only slightly worn-that it had not long
been taken from the back of the animal that had worn
it. He recalled what he could remember of his
geography. Their course, if continued in the direction
Bram was now heading, would take them east of the
Great Slave and the Great Bear, and they would hit
the Arctic somewhere between Melville Sound and the
Coppermine River. It was a good five hundred miles
to the Eskimo settlements there. Bram and his
wolves could make it in ten days, possibly in eight.
If his guess was correct, and Coronation
Gulf was Bram’s goal, he had found at least
one possible explanation for the tress of golden hair.
The girl or woman to whom it had belonged
had come into the north aboard a whaling ship.
Probably she was the daughter or the wife of the master.
The ship had been lost in the ice-she had
been saved by the Eskimo-and she was among
them now, with other white men. Philip pictured
it all vividly. It was unpleasant-horrible.
The theory of other white men being with her he was
conscious of forcing upon himself to offset the more
reasonable supposition that, as in the case of the
golden snare, she belonged to Bram. He tried to
free himself of that thought, but it clung to him
with a tenaciousness that oppressed him with a grim
and ugly foreboding. What a monstrous fate for
a woman! He shivered. For a few moments
every instinct in his body fought to assure him that
such a thing could not happen. And yet he knew
that it could happen. A woman up there-with
Bram! A woman with hair like spun gold-and
that giant half-mad enormity of a man!
He clenched his hands at the picture
his excited brain was painting for him. He wanted
to jump from the sledge, overtake Bram, and demand
the truth from him. He was calm enough to realize
the absurdity of such action. Upon his own strategy
depended now whatever answer he might make to the
message chance had sent to him through the golden snare.
For an hour he marked Bram’s
course by his compass. It was straight north.
Then Bram changed the manner of his progress by riding
in a standing position behind Philip. With his
long whip he urged on the pack until they were galloping
over the frozen level of the plain at a speed that
must have exceeded ten miles an hour. A dozen
times Philip made efforts at conversation. Not
a word did he get from Bram in reply. Again and
again the outlaw shouted to his wolves in Eskimo; he
cracked his whip, he flung his great arms over his
head, and twice there rolled out of his chest deep
peals of strange laughter. They had been traveling
more than two hours when he gave voice to a sudden
command that stopped the pack, and at a second command-a
staccato of shrill Eskimo accompanied by the lash
of his whip-the panting wolves sank upon
their bellies in the snow.
Philip jumped from the sledge, and
Bram went immediately to the gun. He did not
touch it, but dropped on his knees and examined it
closely. Then he rose to his feet and looked
at Philip, and there was no sign of madness in his
heavy face as he said,
“You no touch ze gun, m’sieu.
Why you no shoot when I am there-at head
of pack?”
The calmness and directness with which
Bram put the question after his long and unaccountable
silence surprised Philip.
“For the same reason you didn’t
kill me when I was asleep, I guess,” he said.
Suddenly he reached out and caught Bram’s arm.
“Why the devil don’t you come across!”
he demanded. “Why don’t you talk?
I’m not after you-now. The Police
think you are dead, and I don’t believe I’d
tip them off even if I had a chance. Why not
be human? Where are we going? And what in
thunder-”
He did not finish. To his amazement
Bram flung back his head, opened his great mouth,
and laughed. It was not a taunting laugh.
There was no humor in it. The thing seemed beyond
the control of even Bram himself, and Philip stood
like one paralyzed as his companion turned quickly
to the sledge and returned in a moment with the gun.
Under Philip’s eyes he opened the breech.
The chamber was empty. Bram had placed in his
way a temptation-to test him!
There was saneness in that stratagem-and
yet as Philip looked at the man now his last doubt
was gone. Bram Johnson was hovering on the borderland
of madness.
Replacing the gun on the sledge, Bram
began hacking off chunks of the caribou flesh with
a big knife. Evidently he had decided that it
was time for himself and his pack to breakfast.
To each of the wolves he gave a portion, after which
he seated himself on the sledge and began devouring
a slice of the raw meat. He had left the blade
of his knife buried in the carcass-an invitation
for Philip to help himself. Philip seated himself
near Bram and opened his pack. Purposely he began
placing his food between them, so that the other might
help himself if he so desired. Bram’s jaws
ceased their crunching. For a moment Philip did
not look up. When he did he was startled.
Bram’s eyes were blazing with a red fire.
He was staring at the cooked food. Never had Philip
seen such a look in a human face before.
He reached out and seized a chunk
of bannock, and was about to bite into it when with
the snarl of a wild beast Bram dropped his meat and
was at him. Before Philip could raise an arm in
defense his enemy had him by the throat. Back
over the sledge they went. Philip scarcely knew
how it happened-but in another moment the
giant had hurled him clean over his head and he struck
the frozen plain with a shock that stunned him.
When he staggered to his feet, expecting a final assault
that would end him, Bram was kneeling beside his pack.
A mumbling and incoherent jargon of sound issued from
his thick lips as he took stock of Philip’s
supplies. Of Philip himself he seemed now utterly
oblivious. Still mumbling, he dragged the pile
of bear skins from the sledge, unrolled them, and
revealed a worn and tattered dunnage bag. At
first Philip thought this bag was empty. Then
Bram drew from it a few small packages, some of them
done up in paper and others in bark. Only one
of these did Philip recognize-a half pound
package of tea such as the Hudson’s Bay Company
offers in barter at its stores. Into the dunnage
bag Bram now put Philip’s supplies, even to the
last crumb of bannock, and then returned the articles
he had taken out, after which he rolled the bag up
in the bear skins and replaced the skins on the sledge.
After that, still mumbling, and still
paying no attention to Philip, he reseated himself
on the edge of the sledge and finished his breakfast
of raw meat.
“The poor devil!” mumbled Philip.
The words were out of his mouth before
he realized that he had spoken them. He was still
a little dazed by the shock of Bram’s assault,
but it was impossible for him to bear malice or thought
of vengeance. In Bram’s face, as he had
covetously piled up the different articles of food,
he had seen the terrible glare of starvation-and
yet he had not eaten a mouthful. He had stored
the food away, and Philip knew it was as much as his
life was worth to contend its ownership.
Again Bram seemed to be unconscious
of his presence, but when Philip went to the meat
and began carving himself off a slice the wolf-man’s
eyes shot in his direction just once. Purposely
he stood in front of Bram as he ate the raw steak,
feigning a greater relish than he actually enjoyed
in consuming his uncooked meal. Bram did not wait
for him to finish. No sooner had he swallowed
the last of his own breakfast than he was on his feet
giving sharp commands to the pack. Instantly
the wolves were alert in their traces. Philip
took his former position on the sledge, with Bram
behind him.
Never in all the years afterward did
he forget that day. As the hours passed it seemed
to him that neither man nor beast could very long
stand the strain endured by Bram and his wolves.
At times Bram rode on the sledge for short distances,
but for the most part he was running behind, or at
the head of the pack. For the pack there was no
rest. Hour after hour it surged steadily onward
over the endless plain, and whenever the wolves sagged
for a moment in their traces Brain’s whip snapped
over their gray backs and his voice rang out in fierce
exhortation. So hard was the frozen crust of the
Barren that snowshoes were no longer necessary, and
half a dozen times Philip left the sledge and ran
with the wolf-man and his pack until he was winded.
Twice he ran shoulder to shoulder with Bram.
It was in the middle of the afternoon
that his compass told him they were no longer traveling
north-but almost due west. Every quarter
of an hour after that he looked at his compass.
And always the course was west.
He was convinced that some unusual
excitement was urging Bram on, and he was equally
certain this excitement had taken possession of him
from the moment he had found the food in his pack.
Again and again he heard the strange giant mumbling
incoherently to himself, but not once did Bram utter
a word that he could understand.
The gray world about them was darkening
when at last they stopped.
And now, strangely as before, Bram
seemed for a few moments to turn into a sane man.
He pointed to the bundle of fuel,
and as casually as though he had been conversing with
him all the day he said to Philip:
“A fire, m’sieu.”
The wolves had dropped in their traces,
their great shaggy heads stretched out between their
paws in utter exhaustion, and Bram went slowly down
the line speaking to each one in turn. After that
he fell again into his stolid silence. From the
bear skins he produced a kettle, filled it with snow,
and hung it over the pile of fagots to which
Philip was touching a match. Philip’s tea
pail he employed in the same way.
“How far have we come, Bram?” Philip asked.
“Fift’ mile, m’sieu,” answered
Bram without hesitation.
“And how much farther have we to go?”
Bram grunted. His face became
more stolid. In his hand he was holding the big
knife with which he cut the caribou meat. He was
staring at it. From the knife he looked at Philip.
“I keel ze man at God’s
Lake because he steal ze knife-an’
call me lie. I keel heem-lak that!”-and
he snatched up a stick and broke it into two pieces.
His weird laugh followed the words.
He went to the meat and began carving off chunks for
the pack, and for a long time after that one would
have thought that he was dumb. Philip made greater
effort than ever to rouse him into speech. He
laughed, and whistled, and once tried the experiment
of singing a snatch of the Caribou Song which he knew
that Bram must have heard many times before. As
he roasted his steak over the fire he talked about
the Barren, and the great herd of caribou he had seen
farther east; he asked Bram questions about the weather,
the wolves, and the country farther north and west.
More than once he was certain that Bram was listening
intently, but nothing more than an occasional grunt
was his response.
For an hour after they had finished
their supper they continued to melt snow for drinking
water for themselves and the wolves. Night shut
them in, and in the glow of the fire Bram scooped
a hollow in the snow for a bed, and tilted the big
sledge over it as a roof. Philip made himself
as comfortable as he could with his sleeping bag, using
his tent as an additional protection. The fire
went out. Bram’s heavy breathing told Philip
that the wolf-man was soon asleep. It was a long
time before he felt a drowsiness creeping over himself.
Later he was awakened by a heavy grasp
on his arm, and roused himself to hear Bram’s
voice close over him.
“Get up, m’sieu.”
It was so dark he could not see Bram
when he got on his feet, but he could hear him a moment
later among the wolves, and knew that he was making
ready to travel. When his sleeping-bag and tent
were on the sledge he struck a match and looked at
his watch. It was less than a quarter of an hour
after midnight.
For two hours Bram led his pack straight
into the west. The night cleared after that,
and as the stars grew brighter and more numerous in
the sky the plain was lighted up on all sides of them,
as on the night when Philip had first seen Bram.
By lighting an occasional match Philip continued to
keep a record of direction and time. It was three
o’clock, and they were still traveling west,
when to his surprise they struck a small patch of
timber. The clump of stunted and wind-snarled
spruce covered no more than half an acre, but it was
conclusive evidence they were again approaching a
timber-line.
From the patch of spruce Bram struck
due north, and for another hour their trail was over
the white Barren. Soon after this they came to
a fringe of scattered timber which grew steadily heavier
and deeper as they entered into it. They must
have penetrated eight or ten miles into the forest
before the dawn came. And in that dawn, gray and
gloomy, they came suddenly upon a cabin.
Philip’s heart gave a jump.
Here, at last, would the mystery of the golden snare
be solved. This was his first thought. But
as they drew nearer, and stopped at the threshold
of the door, he felt sweep over him an utter disappointment.
There was no life here. No smoke came from the
chimney and the door was almost buried in a huge drift
of snow. His thoughts were cut short by the crack
of Bram’s whip. The wolves swept onward
and Bram’s insane laugh sent a weird and shuddering
echo through the forest.
From the time they left behind them
the lifeless and snow-smothered cabin Philip lost
account of time and direction. He believed that
Bram was nearing the end of his trail. The wolves
were dead tired. The wolf-man himself was lagging,
and since midnight had ridden more frequently on the
sledge. Still he drove on, and Philip searched
with increasing eagerness the trail ahead of them.
It was eight o’clock-two
hours after they had passed the cabin-when
they came to the edge of a clearing in the center of
which was a second cabin. Here at a glance Philip
saw there was life. A thin spiral of smoke was
rising from the chimney. He could see only the
roof of the log structure, for it was entirely shut
in by a circular stockade of saplings six feet high.
Twenty paces from where Bram stopped
his team was the gate of the stockade. Bram went
to it, thrust his arm through a hole even with his
shoulders, and a moment later the gate swung inward.
For perhaps a space of twenty seconds he looked steadily
at Philip, and for the first time Philip observed
the remarkable change that had come into his face.
It was no longer a face of almost brutish impassiveness.
There was a strange glow in his eyes. His thick
lips were parted as if on the point of speech, and
he was breathing with a quickness which did not come
of physical exertion. Philip did not move or
speak. Behind him he heard the restless whine
of the wolves. He kept his eyes on Bram, and as
he saw the look of joy and anticipation deepening
in the wolf-man’s face the appalling thought
of what it meant sickened him. He clenched his
hands. Bram did not see the act. He was looking
again toward the cabin and at the spiral of smoke
rising out of the chimney.
Then he faced Philip, and said,
“M’sieu, you go to ze cabin.”
He held the gate open, and Philip
entered. He paused to make certain of Bram’s
intention. The wolf-man swept an arm about the
enclosure.
“In ze pit I loose ze wolve, m’sieu.”
Philip understood. The stockade
enclosure was Bram’s wolf-pit, and Bram meant
that he should reach the cabin before he gave the pack
the freedom of the corral. He tried to conceal
the excitement in his face as he turned toward the
cabin. From the gate to the door ran a path worn
by many footprints, and his heart beat faster as he
noted the smallness of the moccasin tracks. Even
then his mind fought against the possibility of the
thing. Probably it was an Indian woman who lived
with Bram, or an Eskimo girl he had brought down from
the north.
He made no sound as he approached
the door. He did not knock, but opened it and
entered, as Bram had invited him to do.
From the gate Bram watched the cabin
door as it closed behind him, and then he threw back
his head and such a laugh of triumph came from his
lips that even the tired beasts behind him pricked
up their ears and listened.
And Philip, in that same moment, had
solved the mystery of the golden snare.