Philip had entered Bram Johnson’s
cabin from the west. Out of the east the pale
fire of the winter sun seemed to concentrate itself
on the one window of Bram’s habitation, and
flooded the opposite partition. In this partition
there was a doorway, and in the doorway stood a girl.
She was standing full in the light
that came through the window when Philip saw her.
His first impression was that she was clouded in the
same wonderful hair that had gone into the making of
the golden snare. It billowed over her arms and
breast to her hips, aflame with the living fires of
the reflected sun. His second impression was that
his entrance had interrupted her while she was dressing
and that she was benumbed with astonishment as she
stared at him. He caught the white gleam of her
bare shoulders under her hair. And then, with
a shock, he saw what was in her face.
It turned his blood cold. It
was the look of a soul that had been tortured.
Agony and doubt burned in the eyes that were looking
at him. He had never seen such eyes. They
were like violet amethysts. Her face was dead
white. It was beautiful. And she was young.
She was not over twenty, it flashed upon him-but
she had gone through a hell.
“Don’t let me alarm you,”
he said, speaking gently. “I am Philip Raine
of the Royal Northwest Mounted Police.”
It did not surprise him that she made
no answer. As plainly as if she had spoken it
he had in those few swift moments read the story in
her face. His heart choked him as he waited for
her lips to move. It was a mystery to him afterward
why he accepted the situation so utterly as he stood
there. He had no question to ask, and there was
no doubt in his mind. He knew that he would kill
Bram Johnson when the moment arrived.
The girl had not seemed to breathe,
but now she drew in her breath in a great gasp.
He could see the sudden throb of her breast under her
hair, but the frightened light did not leave her eyes
even when he repeated the words he had spoken.
Suddenly she ran to the window, and Philip saw the
grip of her hands at the sill as she looked out.
Through the gate Bram was driving his wolves.
When she faced him again, her eyes had in them the
look of a creature threatened by a whip. It amazed
and startled him. As he advanced a step she cringed
back from him. It struck him then that her face
was like the face of an angel-filled with
a mad horror. She reached out her bare arms to
hold him back, and a strange pleading cry came from
her lips.
The cry stopped him like a shot.
He knew that she had spoken to him. And yet he
had not understood! He tore open his coat and
the sunlight fell on his bronze insignia of the Service.
Its effect on her amazed him even more than had her
sudden fear of him. It occurred to him suddenly
that with a two weeks’ ragged growth of beard
on his face he must look something like a beast himself.
She had feared him, as she feared Bram, until she
saw the badge.
“I am Philip Raine, of the Royal
Northwest Mounted Police,” he repeated again.
“I have come up here especially to help you,
if you need help. I could have got Bram farther
back, but there was a reason why I didn’t want
him until I found his cabin. That reason was you.
Why are you here with a madman and a murderer?”
She was watching him intently.
Her eyes were on his lips, and into her face-white
a few moments before-had risen swiftly a
flush of color. He saw the dread die out of her
eyes in a new and dazzling excitement. Outside
they could hear Bram. The girl turned again and
looked through the window. Then she began talking,
swiftly and eagerly, in a language that was as strange
to Philip as the mystery of her presence in Bram Johnson’s
cabin. She knew that he could not understand,
and suddenly she came up close to him and put a finger
to his lips, and then to her own, and shook her head.
He could fairly feel the throb of her excitement.
The astounding truth held him dumb. She was trying
to make him comprehend something-in a language
which he had never heard before in all his life.
He stared at her-like an idiot he told himself
afterward.
And then the shuffle of Bram’s
heavy feet sounded just outside the door. Instantly
the old light leapt into the girl’s eyes.
Before the door could open she had darted into the
room from which she had first appeared, her hair floating
about her in a golden cloud as she ran.
The door opened, and Bram entered.
At his heels, beyond the threshold, Philip caught
a glimpse of the pack glaring hungrily into the cabin.
Bram was burdened under the load he had brought from
the sledge. He dropped it to the floor, and without
looking at Philip his eyes fastened themselves on
the door to the inner room.
They stood there for a full minute,
Bram as if hypnotized by the door, and Philip with
his eyes on Bram. Neither moved, and neither made
a sound. A curtain had dropped over the entrance
to the inner room, and beyond that they could hear
the girl moving about. A dozen emotions were
fighting in Philip. If he had possessed a weapon
he would have ended the matter with Bram then, for
the light that was burning like a strange flame in
the wolf-man’s eyes convinced him that he had
guessed the truth. Bare-handed he was no match
for the giant madman. For the first time he let
his glance travel cautiously about the room. Near
the stove was a pile of firewood. A stick of
this would do-when the opportunity came.
And then, in a way that made him almost
cry out, every nerve in his body was startled.
The girl appeared in the doorway, a smile on her lips
and her eyes shining radiantly-straight
at Bram! She partly held out her arms, and began
talking. She seemed utterly oblivious of Philip’s
presence. Not a word that she uttered could he
understand. It was not Cree or Chippewyan or
Eskimo. It was not French or German or any tongue
that he had ever heard. Her voice was pure and
soft. It trembled a little, and she was breathing
quickly. But the look in her face that had at
first horrified him was no longer there. She had
braided her hair and had coiled the shining strands
on the crown of her head, and the coloring in her
face was like that of a rare painting. In these
astounding moments he knew that such color and such
hair did not go with any race that had ever bred in
the northland. From her face, even as her lips
spoke, he looked at Bram. The wolf-man was transfigured.
His strange eyes were shining, his heavy face was filled
with a dog-like joy, and his thick lips moved as if
he was repeating to himself what the girl was saying.
Was it possible that he understood
her? Was the strange language in which she was
speaking common between them! At first Philip
thought that it must be so-and all the
horrors of the situation that he had built up for
himself fell about him in confusing disorder.
The girl, as she stood there now, seemed glad that
Bram had returned; and with a heart choking him with
its suspense he waited for Bram to speak, and act.
When the girl ceased speaking the
wolf-man’s response came in a guttural cry that
was like a pæan of triumph. He dropped on his
knees beside the dunnage bag and mumbling thickly
as he worked he began emptying its contents upon the
floor.
Philip looked at the girl. She
was looking at him now. Her hands were clutched
at her breast, and in her face and attitude there was
a wordless entreaty for him to understand. The
truth came to him like a flash. For some reason
she had forced herself to appear that way to the wolf-man.
She had forced herself to smile, forced the look of
gladness into her face, and the words from her lips.
And now she was trying to tell him what it meant,
and pointing to Bram as he knelt with his huge head
and shoulders bent over the dunnage bag on the floor
she exclaimed in a low, tense voice:
“Tossí-tossí-han
er tossí!”
It was useless. He could not
understand, and it was impossible for him to hide
the bewilderment in his face. All at once an inspiration
came to him. Bram’s back was toward him,
and he pointed to the sticks of firewood. His
pantomime was clear. Should he knock the wolf-man’s
brains out as he knelt there?
He could see that his question sent
a thrill of alarm through her. She shook her
head. Her lips formed strange words, and looking
again at Bram she repeated, “Tossí-tossí-han
er tossí!” She clasped her hands suddenly
to her head then. Her slim fingers buried themselves
in the thick braids of her hair. Her eyes dilated-and
suddenly understanding flashed upon him. She
was telling him what he already knew-that
Bram Johnson was mad, and he repeated after her the
“Tossí-tossí,” tapping his forehead
suggestively, and nodding at Bram. Yes, that was
it. He could see it in the quick intake of her
breath and the sudden expression of relief that swept
over her face. She had been afraid he would attack
the wolf-man. And now she was glad that he understood
he was not to harm him.
If the situation had seemed fairly
clear to him a few minutes before it had become more
deeply mysterious than ever now. Even as the wolf-man
rose from his knees, still mumbling to himself in incoherent
exultation, the great and unanswerable question pounded
in Philip’s brain: “Who was this
girl, and what was she to Bram Johnson-the
crazed outlaw whom she feared and yet whom she did
not wish him to harm?”
And then he saw her staring at the
things which Bram had sorted out on the floor.
In her eyes was hunger. It was a living, palpitant
part of her now as she stared at the things which
Bram had taken from the dunnage bag-as
surely as Bram’s madness was a part of him.
As Philip watched her he knew that slowly the curtain
was rising on the tragedy of the golden snare.
In a way the look that he saw in her face shocked
him more than anything that he had seen in Bram’s.
It was as if, in fact, a curtain had lifted before
his eyes revealing to him an unbelievable truth, and
something of the hell through which she had gone.
She was hungry-for something that
was not flesh! Swiftly the thought
flashed upon him why the wolf-man had traveled so far
to the south, and why he had attacked him for possession
of his food supply. It was that he might bring
these things to the girl. He knew that it was
sex-pride that restrained the impulse that was pounding
in every vein of her body. She wanted to fling
herself down on her knees beside that pile of stuff-but
she remembered him! Her eyes met his, and
the shame of her confession swept in a crimson flood
into her face. The feminine instinct told her
that she had betrayed herself-like an animal,
and that he must have seen in her for a moment something
that was almost like Bram’s own madness.