“Kogmollocks-the
blackest-hearted little devils alive when it comes
to trading wives and fighting,” said Philip,
a little ashamed of the suddenness with which he had
jumped back from the window. “Excuse my
abruptness, dear. But I’d recognize that
death-thing on the other side of the earth. I’ve
seen them throw it like an arrow for a hundred yards-and
I have a notion they’re watching that window!”
At sight of the dead wolf and the
protruding javelin Celie’s face had gone as
white as ash. Snatching up one of the pictures
from the table, she thrust it into Philip’s
hand. It was one of the fighting pictures.
“So it’s you?”
he said, smiling at her and trying to keep the tremble
of excitement out of his voice. “It’s
you they want, eh? And they must want you bad.
I’ve never heard of those little devils coming
within a hundred miles of this far south. They
must want you bad. Now-I wonder
why?” His voice was calm again. It
thrilled him to see how utterly she was judging the
situation by the movement of his lips and the sound
of his voice. With him unafraid she would be
unafraid. He judged that quickly. Her eyes
bared her faith in him, and suddenly he reached out
and took her face between his two hands, and laughed
softly, while each instant he feared the smash of
a javelin through the window. “I like to
see that look in your eyes,” he went on.
“And I’m almost glad you can’t understand
me, for I couldn’t lie to you worth a cent.
I understand those pictures now-and I think
we’re in a hell of a fix. The Eskimos have
followed you and Bram down from the north, and I’m
laying a wager with myself that Bram won’t return
from the caribou hunt. If they were Nunatalmutes
or any other tribe I wouldn’t be so sure.
But they’re Kogmollocks. They’re
worse than the little brown head-hunters of the Philippines
when it comes to ambush, and if Bram hasn’t got
a spear through him this minute I’ll never guess
again!” He withdrew his hands from her face,
still smiling at her as he talked. The color was
returning into her face. Suddenly she made a movement
as if to approach the window. He detained her,
and in the same moment there came a fierce and snarling
outcry from the wolves in the corral. Making Celie
understand that she was to remain where he almost forcibly
placed her near the table, Philip went again to the
window. The pack had gathered close to the gate
and two or three of the wolves were leaping excitedly
against the sapling bars of their prison. Between
the cabin and the gate a second body lay in the snow.
Philip’s mind leapt to a swift conclusion.
The Eskimos had ambushed Bram, and they believed that
only the girl was in the cabin. Intuitively he
guessed how the superstitious little brown men of
the north feared the madman’s wolves. One
by one they were picking them off with their javelins
from outside the corral.
As he looked a head and pair of shoulders
rose suddenly above the top of the sapling barrier,
an arm shot out and he caught the swift gleam of a
javelin as it buried itself in the thick of the pack.
In a flash the head and shoulders of the javelin-thrower
had disappeared, and in that same moment Philip heard
a low cry behind him. Celie had returned to the
window. She had seen what he had seen, and her
breath came suddenly in a swift and sobbing excitement.
In amazement he saw that she was no longer pale.
A vivid flush had gathered in each of her cheeks and
her eyes blazed with a dark fire. One of her hands
caught his arm and her fingers pinched his flesh.
He stared dumbly for a moment at the strange transformation
in her. He almost believed that she wanted to
fight-that she was ready to rush out shoulder
to shoulder with him against their enemies. Scarcely
had the cry fallen from her lips when she turned and
ran swiftly into her room. It seemed to Philip
that she was not gone ten seconds. When she returned
she thrust into his hand a revolver.
It was a toy affair. The weight
and size of the weapon told him that before he broke
it and looked at the caliber. It was a “stocking”
gun as they called those things in the service, fully
loaded with .22 caliber shots and good for a possible
partridge at fifteen or twenty paces. Under other
conditions it would have furnished him with considerable
amusement. But the present was not yesterday or
the day before. It was a moment of grim necessity-and
the tiny weapon gave him the satisfaction of knowing
that he was not entirely helpless against the javelins.
It would shoot as far as the stockade, and it might
topple a man over if he hit him just right. Anyway,
it would make a noise.
A noise! The grin that had come
into his face died out suddenly as he looked at Celie.
He wondered if to her had come the thought that now
flashed upon him-if it was that thought
that had made her place the revolver in his hand.
The blaze of excitement in her wonderful eyes almost
told him that it was. With Bram gone, the Eskimos
believed she was alone and at their mercy as soon
as the wolves were out of the way. Two or three
shots from the revolver-and Philip’s
appearance in the corral-would shake their
confidence. It would at least warn them that
Celie was not alone, and that her protector was armed.
For that reason Philip thanked the Lord that a “stocking”
gun had a bark like the explosion of a toy cannon
even if its bite was like that of an insect.
Cautiously he took another look at
Bram’s wolves. The last javelin had transfixed
another of their number and the animal was dragging
itself toward the center of the corral. The remaining
seven were a dozen yards on the other side of the
gate now, leaping and snarling at the stockade, and
he knew that the next attack would come from there.
He sprang to the door. Celie was only a step
behind him as he ran out, and was close at his side
when he peered around the end of the cabin.
“They must not see you,”
he made her understand. “It won’t
do any good and when they see another man they may
possibly get the idea in their heads that you’re
not here. There can’t be many of them or
they’d make quicker work of the wolves.
I should say not more than-”
“Se! Se!”
The warning came in a low cry from
Celie’s lips. A dark head was appearing
slowly above the top of the stockade, and Philip darted
suddenly out into the open. The Eskimo did not
see him, and Philip waited until he was on the point
of hurling his javelin before he made a sound.
Then he gave a roar that almost split his throat.
In the same instant he began firing. The crack
of his pistol and the ferocious outcry he made sent
the Eskimo off the stockade like a ball hit by a club.
The pack, maddened by their inability to reach their
enemies, turned like a flash. Warned by one experience,
Philip hustled Celie into the cabin. They were
scarcely over the threshold when the wolves were at
the door.
“We’re sure up against
a nice bunch,” he laughed, standing for a moment
with his arm still about Celie’s waist.
“A regular hell of a bunch, little girl!
Now if those wolves only had sense enough to know that
we’re a little brother and sister to Bram, we’d
be able to put up a fight that would be some circus.
Did you see that fellow topple off the fence?
Don’t believe I hit him. At least I hope
I didn’t. If they ever find out the size
of this pea-shooter’s sting they’ll sit
up there like a row of crows and laugh at us.
But-what a bully noise it made!”
He was blissfully unmindful of danger
as he held her in the crook of his arm, looking straight
into her lovely face as he talked. It was a moment
of splendid hypocrisy. He knew that in her excitement
and the tremendous effort she was making to understand
something of what he was saying that she was unconscious
of his embrace. That, and the joyous thrill of
the situation, sent the hot blood into his face.
“I’m dangerously near
to going the limit,” he told her, speaking with
a seriousness that would impress her. “I’d
fight twenty of those little devils single-handed
to know just how you’d take it, and I’d
fight another dozen to know who that fellow is in
the picture. I’m tempted right now to hug
you up close, and kiss you, and let you know how I
feel. I’d like to do that-before-anything
happens. But would you understand? That’s
it-would you understand that I love every
inch of you from the ground up or would you think
I was just beast? That’s what I’m
afraid of. But I’d like to let you know
before I have to put up the big fight for you.
And it’s coming-if they’ve got
Bram. They’ll break down the gate to-night,
or burn it, and with the wolves out of the way they’ll
rush the cabin. And then-”
Slowly he drew his arm from her, and
something of the reaction of his thoughts must have
betrayed itself in the look that came into his face.
“I guess I’ve already
pulled off a rotten deal on the other fellow,”
he said, turning to the window. “That is,
if you belong to him. And if you didn’t
why would you stand there with your arms about his
neck and he hugging you up like that!”
A few minutes before he had crumpled
the picture in his hand and dropped it on the floor.
He picked it up now and mechanically smoothed it out
as he made his observation, through the window.
The pack had returned to the stockade. By the
aimless manner in which they had scattered he concluded
that for the time at least their mysterious enemies
had drawn away from the corral.
Celie had not moved. She was
watching him earnestly. It seemed to him, as
he went to her with the picture, that a new and anxious
questioning had come into her eyes. It was as
if she had discovered something in him which she had
not observed before, something which she was trying
to analyze even as he approached her. He felt
for the first time a sense of embarrassment.
Was it possible that she had comprehended some word
or thought of what he had expressed to her? He
could not believe it And yet, a woman’s intuition-
He held out the picture. Celie
took it and for a space looked at it steadily without
raising her eyes to meet his. When she did look
at him the blue in her eyes was so wonderful and deep
and the soul that looked out of them was so clear
to his own vision that the shame of that moment’s
hypocrisy when he had stood with his arm about her
submerged him completely. If she had not understood
him she at least had guessed.
“Min fader,” she said
quietly, with the tip of her little forefinger on
the man in the picture. “Min fader.”
For a moment he thought she had spoken in English.
“Your-your father?” he cried.
She nodded.
“Oo-ee-min fader!”
“Thank the Lord,” gasped
Philip. And then he suddenly added, “Celie,
have you any more cartridges for this pop-gun?
I feel like licking the world!”