Until he felt the warm thrill of the
girl’s arm under his hand Philip did not realize
the hazard he had taken. He turned suddenly to
confront Bram. He would not have known then that
the wolf-man was mad, and impulsively he reached out
a hand.
“Bram, she’s starving,”
he cried. “I know now why you wanted that
stuff! But why didn’t you tell me!
Why don’t you talk, and let me know who she
is, and why she is here, and what you want me to do?”
He waited, and Bram stared at him without a sound.
“I tell you I’m a friend,” he went
on. “I-”
He got no farther than that, for suddenly
the cabin was filled with the madness of Bram’s
laugh. It was more terrible than out on the open
Barren, or in the forest, and he felt the shudder of
the girl at his side. Her face was close to his
shoulder, and looking down he saw that it was white
as death, but that even then she was trying to smile
at Bram. And Bram continued to laugh-and
as he laughed, his eyes blazing a greenish fire, he
turned to the stove and began putting fuel into the
fire. It was horrible. Bram’s laugh-the
girl’s dead white face, and her smile!
He no longer asked himself who she was, and why she
was there. He was overwhelmed by the one appalling
fact that she was here, and that the stricken
soul crying out to him from the depths of those eyes
that were like wonderful blue amethysts told him that
Bram had made her pay the price. His muscles
hardened as he looked at the huge form bending over
the stove. It was a splendid opportunity.
A single leap and he would be at the outlaw’s
throat. With that advantage, in open combat,
the struggle would at least be equal.
The girl must have guessed what was
in his mind, for suddenly her fingers were clutching
at his arm and she was pulling him away from the wolf-man,
speaking to him in the language which he could not
understand. And then Bram turned from the stove,
picked up a pail, and without looking at them left
the cabin. They could hear his laugh as he joined
the wolves.
Again Philip’s conclusions toppled
down about him like a thing made of blocks. During
the next few moments he knew that the girl was telling
him that Bram had not harmed her. She seemed almost
hysterically anxious to make him understand this,
and at last, seizing him by the hand, she drew him
into the room beyond the curtained door. Her meaning
was quite as plain as words. She was showing him
what Bram had done for her. He had made her this
separate room by running a partition across the cabin,
and in addition to this he had built a small lean-to
outside the main wall entered through a narrow door
made of saplings that were still green. He noticed
that the partition was also made of fresh timber.
Except for the bunk built against the wall, a crude
chair, a sapling table and half a dozen bear skins
that carpeted the floor the room was empty. A
few garments hung on the wall-a hood made
of fur, a thick mackinaw coat belted at the waist
with a red scarf, and something done up in a small
bundle.
“I guess-I begin
to get your meaning,” he said, looking straight
into her shining blue eyes. “You want to
impress on me that I’m not to wring Bram Johnson’s
neck when his back is turned, or at any other time,
and you want me to believe that he hasn’t done
you any harm. And yet you’re afraid to
the bottom of your soul. I know it. A little
while ago your face was as white as chalk, and now-now-it’s
the prettiest face I’ve ever seen. Now,
see here, little girl-”
It gave him a pleasant thrill to see
the glow in her eyes and the eager poise of her slim,
beautiful body as she listened to him.
“I’m licked,” he
went on, smiling frankly at her. “At least
for the present. Maybe I’ve gone loony,
like Bram, and don’t realize it yet. I
set out for a couple of Indians, and find a madman;
and at the madman’s cabin I find you, looking
at first as though you were facing straight up against
the door of-of-well, seeing that you can’t understand
I might as well say it-of hell!
Now, if you weren’t afraid of Bram, and if he
hasn’t hurt you, why did you look like that?
I’m stumped. I repeat it-dead
stumped. I’d give a million dollars if I
could make Bram talk. I saw what was in his eyes.
You saw it-and that pretty pink went
out of your face so quick it seemed as though your
heart must have stopped beating. And yet you’re
trying to tell me he hasn’t harmed you.
My God-I wish I could believe it!”
In her face he saw the reflection
of the change that must have come suddenly into his
own.
“You’re a good fifteen
hundred miles from any other human being with hair
and eyes and color like yours,” he continued,
as though in speaking his thoughts aloud to her some
ray of light might throw itself on the situation.
“If you had something black about you. But
you haven’t. You’re all gold-pink
and white and gold. If Bram has another fit of
talking he may tell me you came from the moon-that
a châsse-galère crew brought you down out
of space to keep house for him. Great Scott,
can’t you give me some sort of an idea of who
you are and where you same from?”
He paused for an answer-and
she smiled at him. There was something pathetically
sweet in that smile. It brought a queer lump into
his throat, and for a space he forgot Bram.
“You don’t understand
a cussed word of it, do you?” he said, taking
her hand in both his own and holding it closely for
a moment. “Not a word. But we’re
getting the drift of things-slowly.
I know you’ve been here quite a while, and that
morning, noon and night since the châsse-galère
brought you down from the moon you’ve had nothing
to put your little teeth into but meat. Probably
without salt, too. I saw how you wanted to throw
yourself down on that pile of stuff on the floor.
Let’s have breakfast!”
He led her into the outer room, and
eagerly she set to work helping him gather the things
from the floor. He felt that an overwhelming load
had been lifted from his heart, and he continued to
tell her about it while he hurried the preparation
of the breakfast for which he knew she was hungering.
He did not look at her too closely. All at once
it had dawned upon him that her situation must be
tremendously more embarrassing than his own.
He felt, too, the tingle of a new excitement in his
veins. It was a pleasurable sensation, something
which he did not pause to analyze just at present.
Only he knew that it was because she had told him
as plainly as she could that Bram had not harmed her.
“And if he had I guess
you’d have let me smash his brains out when he
was bending over the stove, wouldn’t you?”
he said, stirring the mess of desiccated potato he
was warming in one of his kit-pans. He looked
up to see her eyes shining at him, and her lips parted.
She was delightfully pretty. He knew that every
nerve in her body was straining to understand him.
Her braid had slipped over her shoulder. It was
as thick as his wrist, and partly undone. He
had never dreamed that a woman’s hair could
hold such soft warm fires of velvety gold. Suddenly
he straightened himself and tapped his chest, an inspiring
thought leaping into his head.
“I am Philip Raine,” he
said. “Philip Raine-Philip Raine-Philip
Raine-”
He repeated the name over and over
again, pointing each time to himself. Instantly
light flashed into her face. It was as if all
at once they had broken through the barrier that had
separated them. She repeated his name, slowly,
clearly, smiling at him, and then with both hands
at her breast, she said:
“Celie Armin.”
He wanted to jump over the stove and
shake hands with her, but the potatoes were sizzling.
Celie Armin! He repeated the name as he stirred
the potatoes, and each time he spoke it she nodded.
It was decidedly a French name-but half
a minute’s experiment with a few simple sentences
of Pierre Breault’s language convinced him that
the girl understood no word of it.
Then he said again:
“Celie!”
Almost in the same breath she answered:
“Philip!”
Sounds outside the cabin announced
the return of Bram. Following the snarl and whine
of the pack came heavy footsteps, and the wolf-man
entered. Philip did not turn his head toward the
door. He did not look at first to see what effect
Bram’s return had on Celie Armin. He went
on casually with his work. He even began to whistle;
and then, after a final stir or two at the potatoes,
he pointed to the pail in which the coffee was bubbling,
and said:
“Turn the coffee, Celie. We’re ready!”
He caught a glimpse of her face then.
The excitement and color had partly died out of it.
She took the pail of coffee and went with it to the
table.
Then Philip faced Bram.
The wolf-man was standing with his
back to the door. He had not moved since entering,
and he was staring at the scene before him in a dull,
stupid sort of way. In one hand he carried a pail
filled with water; in the other a frozen fish.
“Too late with the fish, Bram,”
said Philip. “We couldn’t make the
little lady wait. Besides, I think you’ve
fed her on fish and meat until she is just about ready
to die. Come to breakfast!”
He loaded a tin plate with hot potatoes,
bannock-bread and rice that he had cooked before setting
out on the Barren, and placed it before the girl.
A second plate he prepared for Bram, and a third for
himself. Bram had not moved. He still held
the pail and the fish in his hands. Suddenly
he lowered both to the floor with a growl that seemed
to come from the bottom of his great chest, and came
to the table. With one huge hand he seized Philip’s
arm. It was not a man’s grip. There
was apparently no effort in it, and yet it was a vise-like
clutch that threatened to snap the bone. And
all the time Bram’s eyes were on the girl.
He drew Philip back, released the terrible grip on
his arm, and shoved the two extra plates of food to
the girl. Then he faced Philip.
“We eat ze meat, m’sieu!”
Quietly and sanely he uttered the
words. In his eyes and face there was no trace
of madness. And then, even as Philip stared, the
change came. The giant flung back his head and
his wild, mad laugh rocked the cabin. Out in
the corral the snarl and cry of the wolves gave a savage
response to it.
It took a tremendous effort for Philip
to keep a grip on himself. In that momentary
flash of sanity Bram had shown a chivalry which must
have struck deep home in the heart of the girl.
There was a sort of triumph in her eyes when he looked
at her. She knew now that he must understand
fully what she had been trying to tell him. Bram,
in his madness, had been good to her. Philip
did not hesitate in the impulse of the moment.
He caught Bram’s hand and shook it. And
Bram, his laugh dying away in a mumbling sound, seemed
not to notice it. As Philip began preparing the
fish the wolf-man took up a position against the farther
wall, squatted Indian-fashion on his heels. He
did not take his eyes from the girl until she had
finished, and Philip brought him a half of the fried
fish. He might as well have offered the fish to
a wooden sphinx. Bram rose to his feet, mumbling
softly, and taking what was left of one of the two
caribou quarters he again left the cabin.
His mad laugh and the snarling outcry
of the wolves came to them a moment later.