Before the last of the cries had died
away Philip flung far to one side of the trail the
javelin he carried, and followed it up with Celie’s,
impressing on her that every ounce of additional weight
meant a handicap for them now. After the javelins
went his club.
“It’s going to be the
biggest race I’ve ever run,” he smiled
at her. “And we’ve got to win.
If we don’t-”
Celie’s eyes were aglow as she
looked at him, He was splendidly calm. There
was no longer a trace of excitement in his face, and
he was smiling at her even as he picked her up suddenly
in his arms. The movement was so unexpected that
she gave a little gasp. Then she found herself
borne swiftly over the trail. For a distance of
a hundred yards Philip ran with her before he placed
her on her feet again. In no better way could
he have impressed on her that they were partners in
a race against death and that every energy must be
expended in that race. Scarcely had her feet
touched the snow than she was running at his side,
her hand clasped in his. Barely a second was lost.
With the swift directness of the trained
man-hunter Philip had measured his chances of winning.
The Eskimos, first of all, would gather about their
dead. After one or two formalities they would
join in a chattering council, all of which meant precious
time for them. The pursuit would be more or less
cautious because of the bullet hole in the Kogmollock’s
forehead.
If it had been possible for Celie
to ask him just what he expected to gain by following
the strange snowshoe trail he would have had difficulty
in answering. It was, like his single shot with
Celie’s little revolver, a chance gamble against
big odds. A number of possibilities had suggested
themselves to him. It even occurred to him that
the man who was hurrying toward the east might be a
member of the Royal Northwest Mounted Police.
Of one thing, however, he was confident. The
maker of the tracks would not be armed with javelins.
He would have a rifle. Friend or foe, he was
after that rifle. The trick was to catch sight
of him at the earliest possible moment.
How much of a lead the stranger had
was a matter at which he could guess with considerable
accuracy. The freshness of the trail was only
slightly dimmed by snow, which was ample proof that
it had been made at the very tail-end of the storm.
He believed that it was not more than an hour old.
For a good two hundred yards Philip
set a dog-trot pace for Celie, who ran courageously
at his side. At the end of that distance he stopped.
Celie was panting for breath. Her hood had slipped
back and her face was flushed like a wildflower by
her exertion. Her eyes shone like stars, and
her lips were parted a little. She was temptingly
lovely, but again Philip lost not a second of unnecessary
time. He picked her up in his arms again and
continued the race. By using every ounce of his
own strength and endurance in this way he figured that
their progress would be at least a third faster than
the Eskimos would follow. The important question
was how long he could keep up the pace.
Against his breast Celie was beginning
to understand his scheme as plainly as if he had explained
it to her in words. At the end of the fourth
hundred yards she let him know that she was ready to
run another lap. He carried her on fifty yards
more before he placed her on her feet. In this
way they had gone three-quarters of a mile when the
trail turned abruptly from its easterly course to
a point of the compass due north. So sharp was
the turn that Philip paused to investigate the sudden
change in direction. The stranger had evidently
stood for several minutes at this point, which was
close to the blasted stub of a dead spruce. In
the snow Philip observed for the first time a number
of dark brown spots.
“Here is where he took a new
bearing-and a chew of tobacco,” said
Philip, more to himself than to Celie. “And
there’s no snow in his tracks. By George,
I don’t believe he’s got more than half
an hour’s start of us this minute!”
It was his turn to carry Celie again,
and in spite of her protest that she was still good
for another run he resumed their pursuit of the stranger
with her in his arms. By her quick breathing and
the bit of tenseness that had gathered about her mouth
he knew that the exertion she had already been put
to was having its effect on her. For her little
feet and slender body the big moccasins and cumbersome
fur garments she wore were a burden in themselves,
even at a walk. He found that by holding her
higher in his arms, with her own arms encircling his
shoulders, it was easier to run with her at the pace
he had set for himself. And when he held her
in this way her hair covered his breast and shoulders
so that now and then his face was smothered in the
velvety sweetness of it. The caress of it and
the thrill of her arms about him spurred him on.
Once he made three hundred yards. But he was
gulping for breath when he stopped. That time
Celie compelled him to let her run a little farther,
and when they paused she was swaying on her feet,
and panting. He carried her only a hundred and
fifty yards in the interval after that. Both
realized what it meant. The pace was telling
on them. The strain of it was in Celie’s
eyes. The flower-like flush of her first exertion
was gone from her face. It was pale and a little
haggard, and in Philip’s face she saw the beginning
of the things which she did not realize was betraying
itself so plainly in her own. She put her hands
up to his cheeks, and smiled. It was tremendous-that
moment;-her courage, her splendid pride
in him, her manner of telling him that she was not
afraid as her little hands lay against his face.
For the first time he gave way to his desire to hold
her close to him, and kiss the sweet mouth she held
up to his as her head nestled on his breast.
After a moment or two he looked at
his watch. Since striking the strange trail they
had traveled forty minutes. In that tine they
had covered at least three miles, and were a good
four miles from the scene of the fight. It was
a big start. The Eskimos were undoubtedly a half
that distance behind them, and the stranger whom they
were following could not be far ahead.
They went on at a walk. For the
third time they came to a point in the trail where
the stranger had stopped to make observations.
It was apparent to Philip that the man he was after
was not quite sure of himself. Yet he did not
hesitate in the course due north.
For half an hour they continued in
that direction. Not for an instant now did Philip
allow; his caution to lag. Eyes and ears were
alert for sound or movement either behind or ahead
of them, and more and more frequently he turned to
scan the back trail. They were at least five
miles from the edge of the open where the fight had
occurred when they came to the foot of a ridge, and
Philip’s heart gave a sudden thump of hope.
He remembered that ridge. It was a curiously formed
“hog-back”-like a great windrow
of snow piled up and frozen. Probably it was
miles in length. Somewhere he and Bram had crossed
it soon after passing the first cabin. He had
not tried to tell Celie of this cabin. Time had
been too precious. But now, in the short interval
of rest he allowed themselves, he drew a picture of
it in the snow and made her understand that it was
somewhere close to the ridge and that it looked as
though the stranger was making for it. He half
carried Celie up the ridge after that. She could
not hide from him that her feet were dragging even
at a walk. Exhaustion showed in her face, and
once when she tried to speak to him her voice broke
in a little gasping sob. On the far side of the
ridge he took her in his arms and carried her again.
“It can’t be much farther,”
he encouraged her. “We’ve got to overtake
him pretty soon, dear. Mighty soon.”
Her hand pressed gently against his cheek, and he
swallowed a thickness that in spite of his effort
gathered in his throat. During that last half
hour a different look had come into her eyes.
It was there now as she lay limply with her head on
his breast-a look of unutterable tenderness,
and of something else. It was that which brought
the thickness into his throat. It was not fear.
It was the soft glow of a great love-and
of understanding. She knew that even he was almost
at the end of his fight. His endurance was giving
out. One of two things must happen very soon.
She continued to stroke his cheek gently until he
placed her on her feet again, and then she held one
of his hands close to her breast as they looked behind
them, and listened. He could feel the soft throbbing
of her heart. If he needed greater courage then
it was given to him.
They went on. And then, so suddenly
that it brought a stifled cry from the girl’s
lips, they came upon the cabin. It was not a hundred
yards from them when they first saw it. It was
no longer abandoned. A thin spiral of smoke was
rising from the chimney. There was no sign of
life other than that.
For half a minute Philip stared at
it. Here, at last, was the final hope. Life
or death, all that the world might hold for him and
the girl at his side, was in that cabin. Gently
he drew her so that she would be unseen. And
then, still looking at the cabin, he drew off his coat
and dropped it in the snow. It was the preparation
of a man about to fight. The look of it was in
his face and the stiffening of his muscles, and when
he turned to his little companion she was as white
as the snow under her feet.
“We’re in time,” he breathed.
“You-you stay here.”
She understood. Her hands clutched
at him as he left her. A gulp rose in her throat.
She wanted to call out. She wanted to hold him
back-or go with him. Yet she obeyed.
She stood with a heart that choked her and watched
him go. For she knew, after all, that it was the
thing to do. Sobbingly she breathed his name.
It was a prayer. For she knew what would happen
in the cabin.