That the Eskimos both to the east
and the west were more than likely to come their way,
converging toward the central cry that was now silent,
Philip was sure. In the brief interval in which
he had to act he determined to make use of his fallen
enemies. This he impressed on Celie’s alert
mind before he ran back to the scene of the fight.
He made no more than a swift observation of the field
in these first moments-did not even look
for weapons. His thought was entirely of Celie.
The smallest of the three forms on the snow was the
Kogmollock he had struck down with his club.
He dropped on his knees and took off first the sealskin
bashlyk, or hood. Then he began stripping the
dead man of his other garments. From the fur
coat to the caribou-skin moccasins they were comparatively
new. With them in his arms he hurried back to
the girl.
It was not a time for fine distinctions.
The clothes were a godsend, though they had come from
a dead man’s back, and an Eskimo’s at that.
Celie’s eyes shone with joy. It amazed him
more than ever to see how unafraid she was in this
hour of great danger. She was busy with the clothes
almost before his back was turned.
He returned to the Eskimos. The
three were dead. It made him shudder-one
with a tiny bullet hole squarely between the eyes,
and the others crushed by the blows of the club.
His hand fondled Celie’s little revolver-the
pea-shooter he had laughed at. After all it had
saved his life. And the club-
He did not examine too closely there.
From the man he had struck with his naked fist he
outfitted himself with a hood and temiak, or coat.
In the temiak there were no pockets, but at the waist
of each of the dead men a narwhal skin pouch which
answered for all pockets. He tossed the three
pouches in a little heap on the snow before he searched
for weapons. He found two knives and half a dozen
of the murderous little javelins. One of the
knives was still clutched in the hand of the Eskimo
who was creeping up to disembowel him when Celie’s
revolver saved him. He took this knife because
it was longer and sharper than the other.
On his knees he began to examine the
contents of the three pouches. In each was the
inevitable roll of babiche, or caribou-skin cord, and
a second and smaller waterproof narwhal bag in which
were the Kogmollock fire materials. There was
no food. This fact was evident proof that the
Eskimos were in camp somewhere in the vicinity.
He had finished his investigation of the pouches when,
looking up from his kneeling posture, he saw Celie
approaching.
In spite of the grimness of the situation
he could not repress a smile as he rose to greet her.
At fifty paces, even with her face toward him, one
would easily make the error of mistaking her for an
Eskimo, as the sealskin bashlyk was so large that
it almost entirely concealed her face except when
one was very close to her. Philip’s first
assistance was to roll back the front of the hood.
Then he pulled her thick braid out from under the
coat and loosed the shining glory of her hair until
it enveloped her in a wonderful shimmering mantle.
Their enemies could not mistake her for a man now,
even at a hundred yards. If they ran into an
ambuscade she would at least be saved from the javelins.
Celie scarcely realized what he was
doing. She was staring at the dead men-silent
proof of the deadly menace that had threatened them
and of the terrific fight Philip must have made.
A strange note rose in her throat, and turning toward
him suddenly she flung herself into his arms.
Her own arms encircled his neck, and for a space she
lay shudderingly against his breast, as if sobbing.
How many times he kissed her in those moments Philip
could not have told. It must have been a great
many. He knew only that her arms were clinging
tighter and tighter about his neck, and that she was
whispering his name, and that his hands were buried
in her soft hair. He forgot time, forgot the
possible cost of precious seconds lost. It was
a small thing that recalled him to his senses.
From out of a spruce top a handful of snow fell on
his shoulder. It startled him like the touch of
a strange hand, and in another moment he was explaining
swiftly to Celie that there were other enemies near
and that they must lose no time in flight.
He fastened one of the pouches at
his waist, picked up his club, and-on second
thought-one of the Kogmollock javelins.
He had no very definite idea of how he might use the
latter weapon, as it was too slender to be of much
avail as a spear at close quarters. At a dozen
paces he might possibly throw it with some degree of
accuracy. In a Kogmollock’s hand it was
a deadly weapon at a hundred paces. With the
determination to be at his side when the next fight
came Celie possessed herself of a second javelin.
With her hand in his Philip set out then due north
through the forest.
It was in that direction he knew the
cabin must lay. After striking the edge of the
timber after crossing the Barren Bram Johnson had turned
almost directly south, and as he remembered the last
lap of the journey Philip was confident that not more
than eight or ten miles had separated the two cabins.
He regretted now his carelessness in not watching
Brain’s trail more closely in that last hour
or two. His chief hope of finding the cabin was
in the discovery of some landmark at the edge of the
Barren. He recalled distinctly where they had
turned into the forest, and in less than half an hour
after that they had come upon the first cabin.
Their immediate necessity was not
so much the finding of the cabin as escape from the
Eskimos. Within half an hour, perhaps even less,
he believed that other eyes would know of the fight
at the edge of the open. It was inevitable.
If the Kogmollocks on either side of them struck the
trail before it reached the open they would very soon
run upon the dead, and if they came upon footprints
in the snow this side of the open they would back-trail
swiftly to learn the source and meaning of the cry
of triumph that had not repeated itself. Celie’s
little feet, clad in moccasins twice too big for her,
dragged in the snow in a way that would leave no doubt
in the Eskimo mind. As Philip saw the situation
there was one chance for them, and only one. They
could not escape by means of strategy. They could
not hide from their pursuers. Hope depended entirely
upon the number of their enemies. If there were
only three or four of them left they would not attack
in the open. In that event he must watch for
ambuscade, and dread the night. He looked down
at Celie, buried in her furry coat and hood and plodding
along courageously at his side with her hand in his.
This was not a time in which to question him, and
she was obeying his guidance with the faith of a child.
It was tremendous, he thought-the most wonderful
moment that had ever entered into his life. It
is this dependence, this sublime faith and confidence
in him of the woman he loves that gives to a man the
strength of a giant in the face of a great crisis and
makes him put up a tiger’s fight for her.
For such a woman a man must win. And then Philip
noticed how tightly Celie’s other hand was gripping
the javelin with which she had armed herself.
She was ready to fight, too. The thrill of it
all made him laugh, and her eyes shot up to him suddenly,
filled with a moment’s wonder that he should
be laughing now. She must have understood, for
the big hood hid her face again almost instantly,
and her fingers tightened the smallest bit about his.
For a matter of a quarter of an hour
they traveled as swiftly as Celie could walk.
Philip was confident that the Eskimo whose cries they
had heard would strike directly for the point whence
the first cry had come, and it was his purpose to
cover as much distance as possible in the first few
minutes that their enemies might be behind them.
It was easier to watch the back trail than to guard
against ambuscades ahead. Twice in that time
he stopped where they would be unseen and looked back,
and in advancing he picked out the thinnest timber
and evaded whatever might have afforded a hiding place
to a javelin-thrower. They had progressed another
half mile when suddenly they came upon a snowshoe
trail in the snow.
It had crossed at right angles to
their own course, and as Philip bent over it a sudden
lump rose into his throat. The other Eskimos had
not worn snowshoes. That in itself had not surprised
him, for the snow was hard and easily traveled in
moccasins. The fact that amazed him now was that
the trail under his eyes had not been made by Eskimo
usamuks. The tracks were long and narrow.
The web imprint in the snow was not that of the broad
narwhal strip, but the finer mesh of babiche.
It was possible that an Eskimo was wearing them, but
they were A white man’s shoes!
And then he made another discovery.
For a dozen paces he followed in the trail, allowing
six inches with each step he took as the snowshoe
handicap. Even at that he could not easily cover
the tracks. The man who had made them had taken
a longer snowshoe stride than his own by at least
nine inches. He could no longer keep the excitement
of his discovery from Celie.
“The Eskimo never lived who
could make that track,” he exclaimed. “They
can travel fast enough but they’re a bunch of
runts when it comes to leg-swing. It’s
a white man-or Bram!”
The announcement of the wolf-man’s
name and Philip’s gesture toward the trail drew
a quick little cry of understanding from Celie.
In a flash she had darted to the snowshoe tracks and
was examining them with eager intensity. Then
she looked up and shook her head. It wasn’t
Bram! She pointed to the tail of the shoe and
catching up a twig broke it under Philip’s eyes.
He remembered now. The end of Bram’s shoes
was snubbed short off. There was no evidence
of that defect in the snow. It was not Bram who
had passed that way.
For a space he stood undecided.
He knew that Celie was watching him-that
she was trying to learn something of the tremendous
significance of that moment from his face. The
same unseen force that had compelled him to wait and
watch for his foes a short time before seemed urging
him now to follow the strange snowshoe trail.
Enemy or friend the maker of those tracks would at
least be armed. The thought of what a rifle and
a few cartridges would mean to him and Celie now brought
a low cry of decision from him. He turned quickly
to Celie.
“He’s going east-and
we ought to go north to find the cabin,” he told
her, pointing to the trail. “But we’ll
follow him. I want his rifle. I want it
more than anything else in this world, now that I’ve
got you. We’ll follow-”
If there had been a shadow of hesitation
in his mind it was ended in that moment. From
behind them there came a strange hooting cry.
It was not a yell such as they had heard before.
It was a booming far-reaching note that had in it
the intonation of a drum-a sound that made
one shiver because of its very strangeness. And
then, from farther west, it came-
“Hoom-Hoom-Ho-o-o-o-o-m-m-m-m-”
In the next half minute it seemed
to Philip that the cry was answered from half a dozen
different quarters. Then again it came from directly
behind them.
Celie uttered a little gasp as she
clung to his hand again. She understood as well
as he. One of the Eskimos had discovered the dead
and their foes were gathering in behind them.