Following that first wild stare of
uncertainty and disbelief in the big Swede’s
eyes came a look of sudden and joyous recognition.
He was clutching at Philip’s hand like a drowning
man before he made an effort to speak, still with
his eyes on the other’s face as if he was not
quite sure they had not betrayed him. Then he
grinned. There was only one man in the world
who could grin like Olaf Anderson. In spite of
blood and swollen features it transformed him.
Men loved the red-headed Swede because of that grin.
Not a man in the service who knew him but swore that
Olaf would die with the grin on his face, because the
tighter the hole he was in the more surely would the
grin be there. It was the grin that answered
Philip’s question.
“Just in time-to
the dot,” said Olaf, still pumping Philip’s
hand, and grinning hard. “All dead but
me-Calkins, Harris, and that little Dutchman,
O’Flynn, Cold and stiff, Phil, every one of them.
I knew an investigating patrol would be coming up
pretty soon. Been looking for it every day.
How many men you got?”
He looked beyond Philip to the cabin
and the sledge. The grin slowly went out of his
face, and Philip heard the sudden catch in his breath.
A swift glance revealed the amazing truth to Olaf.
He dropped Philip’s hand and stepped back, taking
him in suddenly from head to foot.
“Alone!”
“Yes, alone,” nodded Philip.
“With the exception of Celie Armin. I brought
her back to her father. A fellow named Blake is
back there a little way with Upi’s tribe.
We beat them out, but I’m figuring it won’t
be long before they show up.”
The grin was fixed in Olaf’s face again.
“Lord bless us, but it’s
funny,” he grunted. “They’re
coming on the next train, so to speak, and right over
in that neck of woods is the other half of Upi’s
tribe chasing their short legs off to get me.
And the comical part of it is you’re alone!”
His eyes were fixed suddenly on the revolver.
“Ammunition?” he demanded eagerly.
“And-grub?”
“Thirty or forty rounds of rifle,
a dozen Colt, and plenty of meat-”
“Then into the cabin, and the
dogs with us,” almost shouted the Swede.
From the edge of the forest came the
report of a rifle and over their heads went the humming
drone of a bullet.
They were back at the cabin in a dozen
seconds, tugging at the dogs. It cost an effort
to get them through the door, with the sledge after
them. Half a dozen shots came from the forest.
A bullet spattered against the log wall, found a crevice,
and something metallic jingled inside. As Olaf
swung the door shut and dropped the wooden bar in place
Philip turned for a moment toward Celie. She went
to him, her eyes shining in the semi-gloom of the
cabin, and put her arms up about his shoulders.
The Swede, looking on, stood transfixed, and the white-bearded
Armin stared incredulously. On her tip-toes Celie
kissed Philip, and then turning with her arms still
about him said something to the older man that brought
an audible gasp from Olaf. In another moment
she had slipped away from Philip and back to her father.
The Swede was flattening his face against a two inch
crevice between the logs when Philip went to his side.
“What did she say, Olaf?” he entreated.
“That she’s going to marry
you if we ever get out of this hell of a fix we’re
in,” grunted Olaf. “Pretty lucky dog,
I say, if it’s true. Imagine Celie Armin
marrying a dub like you! But it will never happen.
If you don’t believe it fill your eyes with that
out there!”
Philip glued his eyes to the long
crevice between the logs and found the forest and
the little finger of plain between straight in his
vision. The edge of the timber was alive with
men. There must have been half a hundred of them,
and they were making no effort to conceal themselves.
For the first time Olaf began to give him an understanding
of the situation.
“This is the fortieth day we’ve
held them off,” he said, in the quick-cut, business-like
voice he might have used in rendering a report to
a superior. “Eighty cartridges to begin
with and a month’s ration of grub for two.
All but the three last cartridges went day before
yesterday. Yesterday everything quiet. On
the edge of starvation this morning when I went out
on scout duty and to take a chance at game. Surprised
a couple of them carrying meat and had a tall fight.
Others hove into action and I had to use two of my
cartridges. One left-and they’re
showing themselves because they know we don’t
dare to use ammunition at long range. My caliber
is thirty-five. What’s yours?”
“The same,” replied Philip
quickly, his blood beginning to thrill with the anticipation
of battle. “I’ll give you half.
I’m on duty from Fort Churchill, off on a tangent
of my own.” He did not take his eyes from
the slit in the wall as he told Anderson in a hundred
words what had happened since his meeting with Bram
Johnson. “And with forty cartridges we’ll
give ’em a taste of hell,” he added.
He caught his breath, and the last
word half choked itself from his lips. He knew
that Anderson was staring as hard as he. Up from
the river and over the level sweep of plain between
it and the timber came a sledge, followed by a second,
a third, and a fourth. In the trail behind the
sledges trotted a score and a half of fur-clad figures.
“It’s Blake!” exclaimed Philip.
Anderson drew himself away from the
wall. In his eyes burned a curious greenish flame,
and his face was set with the hardness of iron.
In that iron was molded indistinctly the terrible
smile with which he always went into battle or fronted
“his man.” Slowly he turned, pointing
a long arm at each of the four walls of the cabin.
“That’s the lay of the
fight,” he said, making his words short and to
the point. “They can come at us on all sides,
and so I’ve made a six-foot gun-crevice in each
wall. We can’t count on Armin for anything
but the use of a club if it comes to close quarters.
The walls are built of saplings and they’ve
got guns out there that get through. Outside
of that we’ve got one big advantage. The
little devils are superstitious about fighting at
night, and even Blake can’t force them into
it. Blake is the man I was after when I ran across
Armin and his people. Gad!”
There was an unpleasant snap in his
voice as he peered through the gun-hole again.
Philip looked across the room to Celie and her father
as he divided the cartridges. They were both listening,
yet he knew they did not understand what he and Olaf
were saying. He dropped a half of the cartridges
into the right hand pocket of the Swede’s service
coat, and advanced then toward Armin with both his
hands held out in greeting. Even in that tense
moment he saw the sudden flash of pleasure in Celie’s
eyes. Her lips trembled, and she spoke softly
and swiftly to her father, looking at Philip.
Armin advanced a step, and their hands met. At
first Philip had taken him for an old man. Hair
and beard were white, his shoulders were bent, his
hands were long and thin. But his eyes, sunken
deep in their sockets, had not aged with the rest of
him. They were filled with the piercing scrutiny
of a hawk’s as they looked into his own, measuring
him in that moment so far as man can measure man.
Then he spoke, and it was the light in Celie’s
eyes, her parted lips, and the flush that came swiftly
into her face that gave him an understanding of what
Armin was saying.
From the end of the cabin Olaf’s
voice broke in. With it came the metallic working
of his rifle as he filled the chamber with cartridges.
He spoke first to Celie and Armin in their own language,
then to Philip.
“It’s a pretty safe gamble
we’d better get ready for them,” he said.
“They’ll soon begin. Did you split
even on the cartridges?”
“Seventeen apiece.”
Philip examined his rifle, and looked
through the gun-crevice toward the forest. He
heard Olaf tugging at the dogs as he tied them to the
bunk posts; he heard Armin say something in a strained
voice, and the Swede’s unintelligible reply,
followed by a quick, low-voiced interrogation from
Celie. In the same moment his heart gave a sudden
jump. In the fringe of the forest he saw a long,
thin line of moving figures-advancing.
He did not call out a warning instantly. For a
space in which he might have taken a long breath or
two his eyes and brain were centered on the moving
figures and the significance of their drawn-out formation.
Like a camera-flash his eyes ran over the battleground.
Half way between the cabin and that fringe of forest
four hundred yards away was a “hogback”
in the snow, running a curving parallel with the plain.
It formed scarcely more than a three or four foot
rise in the surface, and he had given it no special
significance until now. His lips formed words
as the thrill of understanding leapt upon him.
“They’re moving!”
he called to Olaf. “They’re going
to make a rush for the little ridge between us and
the timber. Good God, Anderson, there’s
an army of them!”
“Not more’n a hundred,”
replied the Swede calmly, taking his place at the
gun-crevice. “Take it easy, Phil. This
will be good target practice. We’ve got
to make an eighty percent kill as they come across
the open. This is mighty comfortable compared
with the trick they turned on us when they got Calkins,
Harris and O’Flynn. I got away in the night.”
The moving line had paused just within
the last straggling growth of trees, as if inviting
the fire of the defenders.
Olaf grunted as he looked along the barrel of his
rifle.
“Strategy,” he mumbled. “They
know we’re shy of ammunition.”
In the moments of tense waiting Philip
found his first opportunity to question the man at
his side. First, he said:
“I guess mebby you understand,
Olaf. We’ve gone through a hell together,
and I love her. If we get out of this she’s
going to be my wife. She’s promised me
that, and yet I swear to Heaven I don’t know
more than a dozen words of her language. What
has happened? Who is she? Why was she with
Bram Johnson? You know their language, and have
been with them-”
“They’re taking final
orders,” interrupted Olaf, as if he had not
heard. “There’s something more on
foot than a rush to the ridge. It’s Blake’s
scheming. See those little groups forming?
They’re going to bring battering-rams, and make
a second rush from the ridge.” He drew
in a deep breath, and without a change in the even
tone of his voice, went on: “Calkins, Harris
and O’Flynn went down in a good fight. Tell
you about that later. Hit seven days’ west,
and run on the camp of Armin, his girl, and two white
men-Russians-guided by two Kogmollocks
from Coronation Gulf. You can guess some of the
rest. The little devils had Blake and his gang
about us two days after I struck them. Bram Johnson
and his wolves came along then-from nowhere-going
nowhere. The Kogmollocks think Bram is a great
Devil, and that each of his wolves is a Devil.
If it hadn’t been for that they would have murdered
us in a hurry, and Blake would have taken the girl.
They were queered by the way Bram would squat on his
haunches, and stare at her. The second day I
saw him mumbling over something, and looked sharp.
He had one of Celie’s long hairs, and when he
saw me he snarled like an animal, as though he feared
I would take it from him. I knew what was coming.
I knew Blake was only waiting for Bram to get away
from his Kogmollocks-so I told Celie to
give Bram a strand of her hair. She did-with
her own hands, and from that minute the madman watched
her like a dog. I tried to talk with him, but
couldn’t. I didn’t seem to be able
to make him understand. And then-”
The Swede cut himself short.
“They’re moving, Phil!
Take the men with the battering rams-and
let them get half way before you fire! ... You
see, Bram and his wolves had to have meat. Blake
attacked while he was gone. Russians killed-Armin
and I cornered, fighting for the girl behind us, when
Bram came back like a burst of thunder. He didn’t
fight. He grabbed the girl, and was off with
her like the wind with his wolf-team. Armin and
I got into this cabin, and here-forty days
and nights-”
His voice stopped ominously.
A fraction of a second later it was followed by the
roar of his rifle, and at the first shot one of Blake’s
Kogmollocks crumpled up with a grunt half way between
the snow-ridge and the forest.