For a space Philip thought that the
cry must have come from Bram Johnson himself-that
the wolf-man had returned in the pit of the storm.
Against his breast Celie had apparently ceased to breathe.
Both listened for a repetition of the sound, or for
a signal at the barred door. It was strange that
in that moment the wind should die down until they
could hear the throbbing of their own hearts.
Celie’s was pounding like a little hammer, and
all at once he pressed his face down against hers
and laughed with sudden and joyous understanding.
“It was only the wind, dear,”
he said. “I never heard anything like it
before-never! It even fooled the wolves.
Bless your dear little heart how it frightened you!
And it was enough, too. Shall we light some of
Bram’s candles?”
He held her hand as he groped his
way to where he had seen Bram’s supply of bear-dips.
She held two of the candles while he lighted them
and their yellow flare illumined her face while his
own was still in shadow. What he saw in its soft
glow and the shine of her eyes made him almost take
her in his arms again, candles and all. And then
she turned with them and went to the table. He
continued to light candles until the sputtering glow
of half a dozen of them filled the room. It was
a wretched wastefulness, but it was also a moment
in which he felt himself fighting to get hold of himself
properly. And he felt also the desire to be prodigal
about something. When he had lighted his sixth
candle, and then faced Celie, she was standing near
the table looking at him so quietly and so calmly
and with such a wonderful faith in her eyes that he
thanked God devoutly he had kissed her only once-just
that once! It was a thrilling thought to know
that she knew he loved her. There was no
doubt of it now. And the thought of what he might
have done in that darkness and in the moment of her
helplessness sickened him. He could look her
straight in the eyes now-unashamed and
glad. And she was unashamed, even if a little
flushed at what had happened. The same thought
was in their minds-and he knew that she
was not sorry. Her eyes and the quivering tremble
of a smile on her lips told him that. She had
braided her hair in that interval when she had gone
to her room, and the braid had fallen over her breast
and lay there shimmering softly in the candle-glow.
He wanted to take her in his arms again. He wanted
to kiss her on the mouth and eyes. But instead
of that he took the silken braid gently in his two
hands and crushed it against his lips.
“I love you,” he cried softly. “I
love you.”
He stood for a moment or two with
his head bowed, the thrill of her hair against his
face. It was as if he was receiving some kind
of a wonderful benediction. And then in a voice
that trembled a little she spoke to him. Before
he could see fully what was in her eyes she turned
suddenly to the wall, took down his coat, and hung
it over the window. When he saw her face again
it was gloriously flushed. She pointed to the
candles.
“No danger of that,” he
said, comprehending her. “They won’t
throw any javelins in this storm. Listen!”
It was the wolves again. In a
moment their cry was drowned in a crash of the storm
that smote the cabin like a huge hand. Again it
was wailing over them in a wild orgy of almost human
tumult. He could see its swift effect on Celie
in spite of her splendid courage. It was not
like the surge of mere wind or the roll of thunder.
Again he was inspired by thought of his pocket atlas,
and opened it at the large insert map of Canada.
“I’ll show you why the
wind does that,” he explained to her, drawing
her to the table and spreading out the map. “See,
here is the cabin.” He made a little black
dot with her pencil, and turning to the four walls
of Bram’s stronghold made her understand what
it meant. “And there’s the big Barren,”
he went on, tracing it out with the pencil-point.
“Up here, you see, is the Arctic Ocean, and away
over there the Roes Welcome and Hudson’s Bay.
That’s where the storm starts, and when it gets
out on the Barren, without a tree or a rock to break
its way for five hundred miles-”
He told of the twisting air-currents
there and how the storm-clouds sometimes swept so
low that they almost smothered one. For a few
moments he did not look at Celie or he would have seen
something in her face which could not have been because
of what he was telling her, and which she could at
best only partly understand. She had fixed her
eyes on the little black dot. That was the
cabin. For the first time the map told her where
she was, and possibly how she had arrived there.
Straight down to that dot from the blue space of the
ocean far to the north the map-makers had trailed
the course of the Coppermine River. Celie gave
an excited little cry and caught Philip’s arm,
stopping him short in his explanation of the human
wailings in the storm. Then she placed a forefinger
on the river.
“There-there it is!”
she told him, as plainly as though her voice was speaking
to him in his own language. “We came down
that river. The Skunnert landed us there,”
and she pointed to the mouth of the Coppermine where
it emptied into Coronation Gulf. “And then
we came down, down, down-”
He repeated the name of the river.
“The Coppermine.”
She nodded, her breath breaking a
little in an increasing excitement. She seized
the pencil and two-thirds of the distance down the
Coppermine made a cross. It was wonderful, he
thought, how easily she made him understand.
In a low, eager voice she was telling him that where
she had put the cross the treacherous Kogmollocks had
first attacked them. She described with the pencil
their flight away from the river, and after that their
return-and a second fight. It was then
Bram Johnson had come into the scene. And back
there, at the point from which the wolf-man had fled
with her, was her father. That was the chief
thing she was striving to drive home in his comprehension
of the situation. Her father! And she
believed he was alive, for it was an excitement instead
of hopelessness or grief that possessed her as she
talked to him. It gave him a sort of shock.
He wanted to tell her, with his arms about her, that
it was impossible, and that it was his duty to make
her realize the truth. Her father was dead now,
even if she had last seen him alive. The little
brown men had got him, and had undoubtedly hacked
him into small pieces, as was their custom when inspired
by war-madness. It was inconceivable to think
of him as still being alive even if there had been
armed friends with him. There was Olaf Anderson
and his five men, for instance. Fighters every
one of them. And now they were dead. What
chance could this other man have?
Her joy when she saw that he understood
her added to the uncertainty which was beginning to
grip him in spite of all that the day had meant for
him. Her faith in him, since that thrilling moment
in the darkness, was more than ever like that of a
child. She was unafraid of Bram now. She
was unafraid of the wolves and the storm and the mysterious
pursuers from out of the north. Into his keeping
she had placed herself utterly, and while this knowledge
filled him with a great happiness he was now disturbed
by the fact that, if they escaped from the cabin and
the Eskimos, she believed he would return with her
down the Coppermine in an effort to find her father.
He had already made the plans for their escape and
they were sufficiently hazardous. Their one chance
was to strike south across the thin arm of the Barren
for Pierre Breault’s cabin. To go in the
opposite direction-farther north without
dogs or sledge-would be deliberate suicide.
Several times during the afternoon
he tried to bring himself to the point of urging on
her the naked truth-that her father was
dead. There was no doubt of that-not
the slightest. But each time he fell a little
short. Her confidence in the belief that her father
was alive, and that he was where she had marked the
cross on the map, puzzled him. Was it conceivable,
he asked himself, that the Eskimos had some reason
for not killing Paul Armin, and that Celie was
aware of the fact? If so he failed to discover
it. Again and again he made Celie understand that
he wanted to know why the Eskimos wanted her,
and each time she answered him with a hopeless little
gesture, signifying that she did not know. He
did learn that there were two other white men with
Paul Armin.
Only by looking at his watch did he
know when the night closed in. It was seven o’clock
when he led Celie to her room and urged her to go to
bed. An hour later, listening at her door, he
believed that she was asleep. He had waited for
that, and quietly he prepared for the hazardous undertaking
he had set for himself. He put on his cap and
coat and seized the club he had taken from Bram’s
bed. Then very cautiously he opened the outer
door. A moment later he stood outside, the door
closed behind him, with the storm pounding in his face.
Fifty yards away he could not have
heard the shout of a man. And yet he listened,
gripping his club hard, every nerve in his body strained
to a snapping tension. Somewhere within that
small circle of the corral were Bram Johnson’s
wolves, and as he hesitated with his back to the door
he prayed that there would come no lull in the storm
during the next few minutes. It was possible
that he might evade them with the crash and thunder
of the gale about him. They could not see him,
or hear him, or even smell him in that tumult of wind
unless on his way to the gate he ran into them.
In that moment he would have given a year of life to
have known where they were. Still listening, still
fighting to hear some sound of them in the shriek
of the storm, he took his first step out into the
pit of darkness. He did not run, but went as cautiously
as though the night was a dead calm, the club half
poised in his hands. He had measured the distance
and the direction of the gate and when at last he
touched the saplings of the stockade he knew that he
could not be far off in his reckoning. Ten paces
to the right he found the gate and his heart gave
a sudden jump of relief. Half a minute more and
it was open. He propped it securely against the
beat of the storm with the club he had taken from
Bram Johnson’s bed.
Then he turned back to the cabin,
with the little revolver clutched in his hand, and
his face was strained and haggard when he found the
door and returned again into the glow of the candle-light.
In the center of the room, her face as white as his
own, stood Celie. A great fear must have gripped
her, for she stood there in her sleeping gown with
her hands clutched at her breast, her eyes staring
at him in speechless questioning. He explained
by opening the door a bit and pantomiming to the gate
outside the cabin.
“The wolves will be gone in
the morning,” he said, a ring of triumph in
his voice. “I have opened the gate.
There is nothing in our way now.”
She understood. Her eyes were
a glory to look into then. Her fingers unclenched
at her breast, she gave a short, quick breath and a
little cry-and her arms almost reached
out to him. He was afraid of himself as he went
to her and led her again to the door of her room.
And there for a moment they paused, and she looked
up into his face. Her hand crept from his and
went softly to his shoulder. She said something
to him, almost in a whisper, and he could no longer
fight against the pride and the joy and the faith
he saw in her eyes. He bent down, slowly so that
she might draw away from him if she desired, and kissed
her upturned lips. And then, with a strange little
cry that was like the soft note of a bird, she turned
from him and disappeared into the darkness of her
room.
A great deal of that night’s
storm passed over his head unheard after that.
It was late when he went to bed. He crowded Bram’s
long box-stove with wood before he extinguished the
last candle.
And for an hour after that he lay
awake, thinking of Celie and of the great happiness
that had come into his life all in one day. During
that hour he made the plans of a lifetime. Then
he, too, fell into sleep-a restless, uneasy
slumber filled with many visions. For a time there
had come a lull in the gale, but now it broke over
the cabin in increased fury. A hand seemed slapping
at the window, threatening to break it, and a volley
of wind and snow shot suddenly down the chimney, forcing
open the stove door, so that a shaft of ruddy light
cut like a red knife through the dense gloom of the
cabin. In varying ways the sounds played a part
in Philip’s dreams. In all those dreams,
and segments of dreams, the girl was present.
It was strange that in all of them she should be his
wife. And it was strange that the big woods and
the deep snows played no part in them. He was
back home. And Celie was with him. Once
they went for wildflowers and were caught in a thunderstorm,
and ran to an old and disused barn in the center of
a field for shelter. He could feel Celie trembling
against him, and he was stroking her hair as the thunder
crashed over them and the lightning filled her eyes
with fear. After that there came to him a vision
of early autumn nights when they went corn-roasting,
with other young people. He had always been afflicted
with a slight nasal trouble, and smoke irritated him.
It set him sneezing, and kept him dodging about the
fire, and Celie was laughing as the smoke persisted
in following him about, like a young scamp of a boy
bent on tormenting him. The smoke was unusually
persistent on this particular night, until at last
the laughter went out of the girl’s face, and
she ran into his arms and covered his eyes with her
soft hands. Restlessly he tossed in his bunk,
and buried his face in the blanket that answered for
a pillow. The smoke reached him; even there,
and he sneezed chokingly. In that instant Celie’s
face disappeared. He sneezed again-and
awoke.
In that moment his dazed senses adjusted
themselves. The cabin was full of smoke.
It partly blinded him, but through it he could see
tongues of fire shooting toward the ceiling.
He heard then the crackling of burning pitch-a
dull and consuming roar, and with a stifled cry he
leaped from his bunk and stood on his feet. Dazed
by the smoke and flame, he saw that there was not
the hundredth part of a second to lose. Shouting
Celie’s name he ran to her door, where the fire
was already beginning to shut him out. His first
cry had awakened her and she was facing the lurid
glow of the flame as he rushed in. Almost before
she could comprehend what was happening he had wrapped
one of the heavy bear skins about her and had swept
her into his arms. With her face crushed against
his breast he lowered his head and dashed back into
the fiery holocaust of the outer room. The cabin,
with its pitch-filled logs, was like a box made of
tinder, and a score of men could not have beat out
the fire that was raging now. The wind beating
from the west had kept it from reaching the door opening
into the corral, but the pitch was hissing and smoking
at the threshold as Philip plunged through the blinding
pall and fumbled for the latch.
Not ten seconds too soon did he stagger
with his burden out into the night. As the wind
drove in through the open door the flames seemed to
burst in a sudden explosion and the cabin was a seething
snarl of flame. It burst through the window and
out of the chimney and Philip’s path to the
open gate was illumined by a fiery glow. Not until
he had passed beyond the stockade to the edge of the
forest did he stop and look back. Over their
heads the wind wailed and moaned in the spruce tops,
but even above that sound came the roar of the fire.
Against his breast Philip heard a sobbing cry, and
suddenly he held the girl closer, and crushed his
face down against hers, fighting to keep back the
horror that was gripping at his heart. Even as
he felt her arms creeping up out of the bearskin and
clinging about his neck he felt upon him like a weight
of lead the hopelessness of a despair as black as
the night itself. The cabin was now a pillar of
flame, and in it was everything that had made life
possible for them. Food, shelter, clothing-all
were gone. In this moment he did not think of
himself, but of the girl he held in his arms, and
he strained her closer and kissed her lips and her
eyes and her tumbled hair there in the storm-swept
darkness, telling her what he knew was now a lie-that
she was safe, that nothing could harm her. Against
him he felt the tremble and throb of her soft body,
and it was this that filled him with the horror of
the thing-the terror of the thought that
her one garment was a bearskin. He had felt,
a moment before, the chill touch of a naked little
foot.
And yet he kept saying, with his face against hers:
“It’s all right, little
sweetheart. We’ll come out all right-we
sure will!”