For a few minutes after the wolf-man
and his hunters had gone from the corral Philip did
not move from the window. He almost forgot that
the girl was standing behind him. At no time
since Pierre Breault had revealed the golden snare
had the situation been more of an enigma to him than
now. Was Bram Johnson actually mad-or
was he playing a colossal sham? The question
had unleashed itself in his brain with a suddenness
that had startled him. Out of the past a voice
came to him distinctly, and it said, “A madman
never forgets!” It was the voice of a great
alienist, a good friend of his, with whom he had discussed
the sanity of a man whose crime had shocked the country.
He knew that the words were true. Once possessed
by an idea the madman will not forget it. It
becomes an obsession with him-a part of
his existence. In his warped brain a suspicion
never dies. A fear will smolder everlastingly.
A hatred lives steadily on.
If Bram Johnson was mad would he play
the game as he was playing it now! He had almost
killed Philip for possession of the food, that the
girl might have the last crumb of it. Now, without
a sign of the madman’s caution, he had left
it all within his reach again. A dozen times
the flaming suspicion in his eyes had been replaced
by a calm and stupid indifference. Was the suspicion
real and the stupidity a clever dissimulation?
And if dissimulation-why?
He was positive now that Bram had
not harmed the girl in the way he had dreaded.
Physical desire had played no part in the wolf-man’s
possession of her. Celie had made him understand
that;-and yet in Bram’s eyes he had
caught a look now and then that was like the dumb
worship of a beast. Only once had that look been
anything different-and that was when Celie
had given him a tress of her hair. Even the suspicion
roused in him then was gone now, for if passion and
desire were smoldering in the wolf-man’s breast
he would not have brought a possible rival to the
cabin, nor would he have left them alone together.
His mind worked swiftly as he stared
unseeing out into the corral. He would no longer
play the part of a pawn. Thus far Bram had held
the whip hand. Now he would take it from him
no matter what mysterious protestation the girl might
make! The wolf-man had given him a dozen opportunities
to deliver the blow that would make him a prisoner.
He would not miss the next.
He faced Celie with the gleam of this
determination in his eyes. She had been watching
him intently and he believed that she had guessed a
part of his thoughts. His first business was to
take advantage of Brain’s absence to search
the cabin. He tried to make Celie understand
what his intentions were as he began.
“You may have done this yourself,”
he told her. “No doubt you have. There
probably isn’t a corner you haven’t looked
into. But I have a hunch I may find something
you missed-something interesting.”
She followed him closely. He
began at each wall and went over it carefully, looking
for possible hiding places. Then he examined the
floor for a loose sapling. At the end of half
an hour his discoveries amounted to nothing.
He gave an exclamation of satisfaction when under
an old blanket in a dusty corner he found a Colt army
revolver. But it was empty, and he found no cartridges.
At last there was nothing left to search but the wolf-man’s
bunk. At the bottom of this he found what gave
him his first real thrill-three of the silken
snares made from Celie Armin’s hair.
“We won’t touch them,”
he said after a moment, replacing the bear skin that
had covered them. “It’s good etiquette
up here not to disturb another man’s cache and
that’s Bram’s. I can’t imagine
any one but a madman doing that. And yet-”
He looked suddenly at Celie.
“Do you suppose he was afraid
of you?” he asked her. “Is that
why he doesn’t leave even the butcher-knife
in this shack? Was he afraid you might shoot
him in his sleep if he left the temptation in your
way?”
A commotion among the wolves drew
him to the window. Two of the beasts were fighting.
While his back was turned Celie entered her room and
returned a moment or two later with a handful of loose
bits of paper. The pack held Philip’s attention.
He wondered what chance he would have in an encounter
with the beasts which Bram had left behind as a guard.
Even if he killed Bram or made him a prisoner he would
still have that horde of murderous brutes to deal
with. If he could in some way induce the wolf-man
to bring his rifle into the cabin the matter would
be easy. With Bram out of the way he could shoot
the wolves one by one from the window. Without
a weapon their situation would be hopeless. The
pack-with the exception of one huge, gaunt
beast directly under the window-had swung
around the end of the cabin out of his vision.
The remaining wolf in spite of the excitement of battle
was gnawing hungrily at a bone. Philip could
hear the savage grind of its powerful jaws, and all
at once the thought of how they might work out their
salvation flashed upon him. They could starve
the wolves! It would take a week, perhaps ten
days, but with Bram out of the way and the pack helplessly
imprisoned within the corral it could be done.
His first impulse now was to impress on Celie the
necessity of taking physical action against Bram.
The sound of his own name turned him
from the window with a sudden thrill.
If the last few minutes had inspired
an eagerness for action in his own mind he saw at
a glance that something equally exciting had possessed
Celie Armin. Spread out on the table were the
bits of paper she had brought from her room, and,
pointing to them, she again called him by name.
That she was laboring under a new and unusual emotion
impressed him immediately. He could see that
she was fighting to restrain an impulse to pour out
in words what would have been meaningless to him,
and that she was telling him the bits of paper were
to take the place of voice. For one swift moment
as he advanced to the table the papers meant less
to him than the fact that she had twice spoken his
name. Her soft lips seemed to whisper it again
as she pointed, and the look in her eyes and the poise
of her body recalled to him vividly the picture of
her as he had first seen her in the cabin. He
looked at the bits of paper. There were fifteen
or twenty pieces, and on each was sketched a picture.
He heard a low catch in Celie’s
breath as he bent over them, and his own pulse quickened.
A glance was sufficient to show him that with the
pictures Celie was trying to tell him what he wanted
to know. They told her own story-who
she was, why she was at Bram Johnson’s cabin,
and how she had come. This, at least, was the
first thought that impressed him. He observed
then that the bits of paper were soiled and worn as
though they had been handled a great deal. He
made no effort to restrain the exclamation that followed
this discovery.
“You drew these pictures for
Bram,” he scanning them more carefully.
“That settles one thing. Bram doesn’t
know much more about you than, I do. Ships, and
dogs, and men-and fighting-a
lot of fighting-and-”
His eyes stopped at one of the pictures
and his heart gave a sudden excited thump. He
picked up the bit of paper which had evidently been
part of a small sack. Slowly he turned to the
girl and met her eyes. She was trembling in her
eagerness for him to understand.
“That is you,” he
said, tapping the central figure in the sketch, and
nodding at her. “You-with your
hair down, and fighting a bunch of men who look as
though they were about to beat your brains out with
clubs! Now-what in God’s name
does it mean? And here’s a ship up in the
corner. That evidently came first. You landed
from that ship, didn’t you? From the ship-the
ship-the ship-”
“Skunnert!” she cried
softly, touching the ship with her finger. “Skunnert-Sibirien!”
“Schooner-Siberia,” translated
Philip. “It sounds mightily like that,
Celie. Look here-” He opened
his pocket atlas again at the map of the world.
“Where did you start from, and where did you
come ashore? If we can get at the beginning of
the thing-”
She had bent her head over the crook
of his arm, so that in her eager scrutiny of the map
his lips for a moment or two touched the velvety softness
of her hair. Again he felt the exquisite thrill
of her touch, the throb of her body against him, the
desire to take her in his arms and hold her there.
And then she drew back a little, and her finger was
once more tracing out its story on the map. The
ship had started from the mouth of the Lena River,
in Siberia, and had followed the coast to the blue
space that marked the ocean above Alaska. And
there the little finger paused, and with a hopeless
gesture Celie intimated that was all she knew.
From somewhere out of that blue patch the ship had
touched the American shore. One after another
she took up from the table the pieces of paper that
carried on the picture-story from that point.
It was, of course, a broken and disjointed story.
But as it progressed every drop of blood in Philip’s
body was stirred by the thrill and mystery of it.
Celie Armin had traveled from Denmark through Russia
to the Lena River in Siberia, and from there a ship
had brought her to the coast of North America.
There had been a lot of fighting, the significance
of which he could only guess at; and now, at the end,
the girl drew for Philip another sketch in which a
giant and a horde of beasts appeared. It was
a picture of Bram and his wolves, and at last Philip
understood why she did not want him to harm the wolf-man.
Bram had saved her from the fate which the pictures
only partly portrayed for him. He had brought
her far south to his hidden stronghold, and for some
reason which the pictures failed to disclose was keeping
her a prisoner there.
Beyond these things Celie Armin was still a mystery.
Why had she gone to Siberia?
What had brought her to the barren Arctic coast of
America? Who were the mysterious enemies from
whom Bram the madman had saved her? And who-who-
He looked again at one of the pictures
which he had partly crumpled in his hand. On
it were sketched two people. One was a figure
with her hair streaming down-Celie herself.
The other was a man. The girl had pictured herself
close in the embrace of this man’s arms.
Her own arms encircled the man’s neck.
From the picture Philip had looked at Celie, and the
look he had seen in her eyes and face filled his heart
with a leaden chill. It was more than hope that
had flared up in his breast since he had entered Bram
Johnson’s cabin. And now that hope went
suddenly out, and with its extinguishment he was oppressed
by a deep and gloomy foreboding.
He went slowly to the window and looked out.
The next moment Celie was startled
by the sudden sharp cry that burst from his lips.
Swiftly she ran to his side. He had dropped the
paper. His hands were gripping the edge of the
sill, and he was staring like one who could not believe
his own eyes.
“Good God-look! Look at that!”
They had heard no sound outside the
cabin during the last few minutes. Yet under
their eyes, stretched out in the soiled and trampled
snow, lay the wolf that a short time before had been
gnawing a bone. The animal was stark dead.
Not a muscle of its body moved. Its lips were
drawn back, its jaws agape, and under the head was
a growing smear of blood. It was not these things-not
the fact but the instrument of death that held
Philip’s eyes. The huge wolf had been completely
transfixed by a spear.
Instantly Philip recognized it-the
long, slender, javelin-like narwhal harpoon used by
only one people in the world, the murderous little
black-visaged Kogmollocks of Coronation Gulf and Wollaston
Land.
He sprang suddenly back from the window,
dragging Celie with him.