Philip came up behind the windowless
end of the cabin. He noticed in passing with
Bram that on the opposite side was a trap-window of
saplings, and toward this he moved swiftly but with
caution. It was still closed when he came where
he could see. But with his ear close to the chinks
he heard a sound-the movement of some one
inside. For an instant he looked over his shoulder.
Celia was standing where he had left her. He
could almost feel the terrible suspense that was in
her eyes as she watched him.
He moved around toward the door.
There was in him an intense desire to have it over
with quickly. His pulse quickened as the thought
grew in him that the maker of the strange snowshoe
trail might be a friend after all. But how was
he to discover that fact? He had decided to take
no chances in the matter. Ten seconds of misplaced
faith in the stranger might prove fatal. Once
he held a gun in his hands he would be in a position
to wait for introductions and explanations. But
until then, with their Eskimo enemies close at their
heels-
His mind did not finish that final
argument. The end of it smashed upon him in another
way. The door came within his vision. As
it swung inward he could not at first see whether
it was open or closed. Leaning against the logs
close to the door was a pair of long snowshoes and
a bundle of javelins. A sickening disappointment
swept over him as he stared at the javelins.
A giant Eskimo and not a white man had made the trail
they had followed. Their race against time had
brought them straight to the rendezvous of their foes-and
there would be no guns. In that moment when all
the hopes he had built up seemed slipping away from
under him he could see no other possible significance
in the presence of the javelins. Then, for an
instant, he held his breath and sniffed the air like
a dog getting the wind. The cabin door was open.
And out through that door came the mingling aroma of
coffee and tobacco! An Eskimo might have tobacco,
or even tea. But coffee-never!
Every drop of blood in his body pounded
like tiny beating fists as he crossed silently and
swiftly the short space between the corner of the
cabin and the open door. For perhaps half a dozen
seconds he closed his eyes to give his snow-strained
vision an even chance with the man in the cabin.
Then he looked in.
It was a small cabin. It was
possibly not more than ten feet square inside, and
at the far end of it was a fireplace from which rose
the chimney through the roof. At first Philip
saw nothing except the dim outlines of things.
It was a moment or two before he made out the figure
of a man stooping over the fire. He stepped over
the threshold, making no sound. The occupant
of the cabin straightened himself slowly, lifting
with, extreme care a pot of coffee from the embers.
A glance at his broad back and his giant stature told
Philip that he was not an Eskimo. He turned.
Even then for an infinitesimal space he did not see
Philip as he stood fronting the door with the light
in his face. It was a white man’s face-a
face almost hidden in a thick growth of beard and
a tangle of hair that fell to the shoulders. Another
instant and he had seen the intruder and stood like
one turned suddenly into stone.
Philip had leveled Celie’s little revolver.
“I am Philip Raine of His Majesty’s
service, the Royal Mounted,” he said. “Throw,
up your hands!”
The moment’s tableau was one
of rigid amazement on one side, of waiting tenseness
on the other. Philip believed that the shadow
of his body concealed the size of the tiny revolver
in his hand. Anyway it would be effective at
that distance, and he expected to see the mysterious
stranger’s hands go over his head the moment
he recovered from the shock that had apparently gone
with the command. What did happen he expected
least of all. The arm holding the pot of steaming
coffee shot out and the boiling deluge hissed straight
at Philip’s face. He ducked to escape it,
and fired. Before he could throw back the hammer
of the little single-action weapon for a second shot
the stranger was at him. The force of the attack
sent them both crashing back against the wall of the
cabin, and in the few moments that followed Philip
blessed the providential forethought that had made
him throw off his fur coat and strip for action.
His antagonist was not an ordinary man. A growl
like that of a beast rose in his throat as they went
to the floor, and in that death-grip Philip thought
of Bram.
More than once in watching the wolf-man
he had planned how he would pit himself against the
giant if it came to a fight, and how he would evade
the close arm-to-arm grapple that would mean defeat
for him. And this man was Bram’s equal
in size and strength. He realized with the swift
judgment of the trained boxer that open fighting and
the evasion of the other’s crushing brute strength
was his one hope. On his knees he flung himself
backward, and struck out. The blow caught his
antagonist squarely in the face before he had succeeded
in getting a firm clinch, and as he bent backward
under the force of the blow Philip exerted every ounce
of his strength, broke the other’s hold, and
sprang to his feet.
He felt like uttering a shout of triumph.
Never had the thrill of mastery and of confidence
surged through him more hotly than it did now.
On his feet in open fighting he had the agility of
a cat. The stranger was scarcely on his feet
before he was at him with a straight shoulder blow
that landed on the giant’s jaw with crushing
force. It would have put an ordinary man down
in a limp heap. The other’s weight saved
him. A second blow sent him reeling against the
log wall like a sack of grain. And then in the
half-gloom of the cabin Philip missed. He put
all his effort in that third blow and as his clenched
fist shot over the other’s shoulder he was carried
off his balance and found himself again in the clutch
of his enemy’s arms. This time a huge hand
found his throat. The other he blocked with his
left arm, while with his right he drove in short-arm
jabs against neck and jaw. Their ineffectiveness
amazed him. His guard-arm was broken upward, and
to escape the certain result of two hands gripping
at his throat he took a sudden foot-lock on his adversary,
flung all his weight forward, and again they went
to the floor of the cabin.
Neither caught a glimpse of the girl
standing wide-eyed and terrified in the door.
They rolled almost to her feet. Full in the light
she saw the battered, bleeding face of the strange
giant, and Philip’s fist striking it again and
again. Then she saw the giant’s two hands,
and why he was suffering that punishment. They
were at Philip’s throat-huge hairy
hands stained with his own blood. A cry rose to
her lips and the blue in her eyes darkened with the
fighting fire of her ancestors. She darted across
the room to the fire. In an instant she was back
with a stick of wood in her hands. Philip saw
her then-her streaming hair and white face
above them, and the club fell. The hands at his
throat relaxed. He swayed to his feet and with
dazed eyes and a weird sort of laugh opened his arms.
Celie ran into them. He felt her sobbing and
panting against him. Then, looking down, he saw
that for the present the man who had made the strange
snowshoe trail was as good as dead.
The air he was taking into his half
strangled lungs cleared his head and he drew away
from Celie to begin the search of the room. His
eyes were more accustomed to the gloom, and suddenly
he gave a cry of exultation. Against the end
of the mud and stone fireplace stood a rifle and over
the muzzle of this hung a belt and holster. In
the holster was a revolver. In his excitement
and joy his breath was almost a sob as he snatched
it from the holster and broke it in the light of the
door. It was a big Colt Forty-five-and
loaded to the brim. He showed it to Celie, and
thrust her to the door.
“Watch!” he cried, sweeping
his arm to the open. “Just two minutes
more. That’s all I want-two minutes-and
then-”
He was counting the cartridges in
the belt as he fastened it about his waist. There
were at least forty, two-thirds of them soft-nosed
rifle. The caliber was .303 and the gun was a
Savage. It was modern up to the minute, and as
he threw down the lever enough to let him glimpse inside
the breech he caught the glisten of cartridges ready
for action. He wanted nothing more. The
cabin might have held his weight in gold and he would
not have turned toward it.
With the rifle in his hands he ran
past Celie out into the day. For the moment the
excitement pounding in his body had got beyond his
power of control. His brain was running riot
with the joyous knowledge of the might that lay in
his hands now and he felt an overmastering desire to
shout his triumph in the face of their enemies.
“Come on, you devils! Come
on, come on,” he cried. And then, powerless
to restrain what was in him, he let out a yell.
From the door Celie was staring at
him. A few moments before her face had been dead
white. Now a blaze of color was surging back into
her cheeks and lips and her eyes shone with the glory
of one who was looking on more than triumph.
From her own heart welled up a cry, a revelation of
that wonderful thing throbbing in her breast which
must have reached Philip’s ears had there not
in that same instant come another sound to startle
them both into listening silence.
It was not far distant. And it
was unmistakably an answer to Philip’s challenge.