As they listened the cry came again.
This time Philip caught in it a note that he had not
detected before. It was not a challenge but the
long-drawn ma-too-ee of an Eskimo who answers the inquiring
hail of a comrade.
“He thinks it is the man in
the cabin,” exclaimed Philip, turning to survey
the fringe of forest through which their trail had
come. “If the others don’t warn him
there’s going to be one less Eskimo on earth
in less than three minutes!”
Another sound had drawn Celie back
to the door. “When she looked in the man
she had stunned with the club was moving. Her
call brought Philip, and placing her in the open door
to keep watch he set swiftly to work to make sure
of their prisoner. With the babiche thong he had
taken from his enemies he bound him hand and foot.
A shaft of light fell full on the giant’s face
and naked chest where it had been laid bare in the
struggle and Philip was about to rise when a purplish
patch, of tattooing caught his eyes. He made
out first the crude picture of a shark with huge gaping
jaws struggling under the weight of a ship’s
anchor, and then, directly under this pigment colored
tatu, the almost invisible letters of a name.
He made them out one by one-B-l-a-k-e.
Before the surname was the letter G.
“Blake,” he repeated,
rising to his feet. “George Blake-a
sailor-and a white man!”
Blake, returning to consciousness,
mumbled incoherently. In the same instant Celie
cried out excitedly at the door.
“Oo-ee, Philip-Philip! Se det!
Se! Se!”
She drew back with, a sudden movement
and pointed out the door. Concealing himself
as much as possible from outside observation Philip
peered forth. Not more than a hundred and fifty
yards away a dog team was approaching. There
were eight dogs and instantly he recognized them as
the small fox-faced Eskimo breed from the coast.
They were dragging a heavily laden sledge and behind
them came the driver, a furred and hooded figure squat
of stature and with a voice that came now in the sharp
clacking commands that Philip had heard in the company
of Bram Johnson. From the floor came a groan,
and for an instant Philip turned to find Blake’s
bloodshot eyes wide open and staring at him. The
giant’s bleeding lips were gathered in a snarl
and he was straining at the babiche thongs that bound
him. In that same moment Philip caught a glimpse
of Celie. She, too, was staring-and
at Blake. Her lips were parted, her eyes were
big with amazement and as she looked she clutched
her hands convulsively at her breast and uttered a
low, strange cry. For the first time she saw
Blake’s face with the light full upon it.
At the sound of her cry Blake’s eyes went to
her, and for the space of a second the imprisoned
beast on the floor and the girl looking down on him
made up a tableau that held Philip spellbound.
Between them was recognition-an amazed
and stone like horror on the girl’s part, a
sudden and growing glare of bestial exultation in the
eyes of the man.
Suddenly there came the Eskimo’s
voice and the yapping of dogs. It was the first
Blake had heard. He swung his head toward the
door with a great gasp and the babiche cut like whipcord
under the strain of his muscles. Swift as a flash
Philip thrust the muzzle of the big Colt against his
prisoner’s head.
“Make a sound and you’re
a dead man, Blake!” he warned. “We
need that team, and if you so much as whisper during
the next ten seconds I’ll scatter your brains
over the floor!”
They could hear the cold creak of
the sledge-runners now, and a moment later the patter
of many feet outside the door. In a single leap
Philip was at the door. Another and he was outside,
and an amazed Eskimo was looking into the round black
eye of his revolver. It required no common language
to make him understand what was required of him.
He backed into the cabin with the revolver within
two feet of his breast. Celie had caught up the
rifle and was standing guard over Blake as though
fearful that he might snap his bonds. Philip laughed
joyously when he saw how quickly she understood that
she was to level the rifle at the Kogmollock’s
breast and hold it there until he had made him a prisoner.
She was wonderful. She was panting in her excitement.
From the floor Blake had noticed that her little white
finger was pressing gently against the trigger of
the rifle. It had made him shudder. It made
the Eskimo cringe a bit now as Philip tied his hands
behind him. And Philip saw it, and his heart
thumped. Celie was gloriously careless.
It was over inside of two minutes,
and with an audible sigh of relief she lowered her
rifle. Then she leaned it against the wall and
ran to Blake. She was tremendously excited as
she pointed down into the bloodstained face and tried
to explain to Philip the reason for that strange and
thrilling recognition he had seen between them.
From her he looked at Blake. The look in the
prisoner’s face sent a cold shiver through him.
There was no fear in it. It was filled with a
deep and undisguised exultation. Then Blake looked
at Philip, and laughed outright.
“Can’t understand her,
eh?” he chuckled. “Well, neither can
I. But I know what she’s trying to tell you.
Damned funny, ain’t it?”
It was impossible for him to keep
his eyes from shifting to the door. There was
expectancy in that glance. Then his glance shot
almost fiercely at Philip.
“So you’re Philip Raine,
of the R. N. M. P., eh? Well, you’ve got
me guessed out. My name is Blake, but the G don’t
stand for George. If you’ll cut the cord
off’n my legs so I can stand up or sit down I’ll
tell you something. I can’t do very much
damage with my hands hitched the way they are, and
I can’t talk layin’ down cause of my Adam’s
apple chokin’ me.”
Philip seized the rifle and placed
it again in Celie’s hands, stationing her once
more at the door.
“Watch-and listen,” he said.
He cut the thongs that bound his prisoner’s
ankles and Blake struggled to his feet. When
he fronted Philip the big Colt was covering his heart.
“Now-talk!”
commanded Philip. “I’m going to give
you half a minute to begin telling me what I want
to know, Blake. You’ve brought the Eskimos
down. There’s no doubt of that. What
do you want of this girl, and what have you done with
her people?”
He had never looked into the eyes
of a cooler man than Blake, whose blood-stained lips
curled in a sneering smile even as he finished.
“I ain’t built to be frightened,”
he said, taking his time about it. “I know
your little games an’ I’ve throwed a good
many bluffs of my own in my time. You’re
lyin’ when you say you’ll shoot, an’
you know you are. I may talk and I may not.
Before I make up my mind I’m going to give you
a bit of brotherly advice. Take that team out
there and hit across the Barren-alone.
Understand? Alone. Leave the girl here.
It’s your one chance of missing what happened
to-”
He grinned and shrugged his huge shoulders.
“You mean Anderson-Olaf
Anderson-and the others up at Bathurst
Inlet?” questioned Philip chokingly.
Blake nodded.
Philip wondered if the other could
hear the pounding of his heart. He had discovered
in this moment what the Department had been trying
to learn for two years. It was this man-Blake-who
was the mysterious white leader of the Kogmollocks,
and responsible for the growing criminal record of
the natives along Coronation Gulf. And he had
just confessed himself the murderer of Olaf Anderson!
His finger trembled for an instant against the trigger
of his revolver. Then, staring into Blake’s
face, he slowly lowered the weapon until it hung at
his side. Blake’s eyes gleamed as he saw
what he thought was his triumph.
“It’s your one chance,”
he urged. “And there ain’t no time
to lose.”
Philip had judged his man, and now
he prayed for the precious minutes in which to play
out his game. The Kogmollocks who had taken up
their trail could not be far from the cabin now.
“Maybe you’re right, Blake,”
he said hesitatingly. “I think, after her
experience with Bram Johnson that she is about willing
to return to her father. Where is he?”
Blake made no effort to disguise his
eagerness. In the droop of Philip’s shoulder,
the laxness of the hand that held the revolver and
the change in his voice Blake saw in his captor an
apparent desire to get out of the mess he was in.
A glimpse of Celie’s frightened face turned
for an instant from the door gave weight to his conviction.
“He’s down the Coppermine-about
a hundred miles. So, Bram Johnson-”
His eyes were a sudden blaze of fire.
“Took care of her until your
little rats waylaid him on the trail and murdered
him,” interrupted Philip. “See here,
Blake. You be square with me and I’ll be
square with you. I haven’t been able to
understand a word of her lingo and I’m curious
to know a thing or two before I go. Tell me who
she is, and why you haven’t killed her father,
and what you’re going to do with her and I won’t
waste another minute.”
Blake leaned forward until Philip
felt the heat of his breath.
“What do I want of her?”
he demanded slowly. “Why, if you’d
been five years without sight of a white woman, an’
then you woke up one morning to meet an angel like
her on the trail two thousand miles up in nowhere
what would you want of her? I was stunned, plumb
stunned, or I’d had her then. And after
that, if it hadn’t been for that devil with his
wolves-”
“Bram ran away with her just
as you were about to get her into your hands,”
supplied Philip, fighting to save time. “She
didn’t even know that you wanted her, Blake,
so far as I can find out. It’s all a mystery
to her. I don’t believe she’s guessed
the truth even now. How the devil did you do
it? Playing the friend stunt, eh! And keeping
yourself in the background while your Kogmollocks did
the work? Was that it?”
Blake nodded. His face was darkening
as he looked at Philip and the light in his eyes was
changing to a deep and steady glare. In that
moment Philip had failed to keep the exultation out
of his voice. It shone in his face. And
Blake saw it. A throaty sound rose out of his
thick chest and his lips parted in a snarl as there
surged through him a realization that he had been
tricked.
In that interval Philip spoke.
“If I never sent up a real prayer
to God before I’m sending it now, Blake,”
he said. “I’m thanking Him that you
didn’t have time to harm Celie Armin, an’
I’m thanking Him that Bram Johnson had a soul
in his body in spite of his warped brain and his misshapen
carcass. And now I’m going to keep my word.
I’m not going to lose another minute. Come!”
“You-you mean-”
“No, you haven’t guessed
it. We’re not going over the Barren.
We’re going back to that cabin on the Coppermine,
and you’re going with us. And listen to
this, Blake-listen hard! There may
be fighting. If there is I want you to sort of
harden yourself to the fact that the first shot fired
is going straight through your gizzard. Do I make
myself clear? I’ll shoot you deader than
a salt mackerel the instant one of your little murderers
shows up on the trail. So tell this owl-faced
heathen here to spread the glad tidings when his brothers
come in-and spread it good. Quick
about it! I’m not bluffing now.”