The Eskimos were advancing at a trot
now over the open space. Philip was amazed at
their number. There were at least a hundred, and
his heart choked with a feeling of despair even as
he pulled the trigger for his first shot. He
had seen the effect of Olaf’s shot, and following
the Swede’s instructions aimed for his man in
the nearest group behind the main line. He did
not instantly see the result, as a puff of smoke shut
out his vision, but a moment later, aiming again, he
saw a dark blotch left in the snow. From his end
of the crevice Olaf had seen the man go down, and
he grunted his approbation. There were five of
the groups bearing tree trunks for battering-rams,
and on one of these Philip concentrated the six shots
in his rifle. Four of the tree-bearers went down,
and the two that were left dropped their burden and
joined those ahead of them. Until Philip stepped
back to reload his gun he had not noticed Celie.
She was close at his side, peering through the gun-hole
at the tragedy out on the plain. Once before he
had been astounded by the look in her face when they
had been confronted by great danger, and as his fingers
worked swiftly in refilling the magazine of his rifle
he saw it there again. It was not fear, even
now. It was a more wonderful thing than that.
Her wide-open eyes glowed with a strange, dark luster;
in the center of each of her cheeks was a vivid spot
of color, and her lips were parted slightly, so that
he caught the faintest gleam of her teeth. Wonderful
as a fragile flower she stood there with her eyes
upon him, her splendid courage and her faith in him
flaming within her like a fire.
And then he heard Anderson’s voice:
“They’re behind the ridge. We got
eight of them.”
In half a dozen places Philip had
seen where bullets had bored the way through the cabin,
and leaning his gun against the wall, he sprang to
Celie and almost carried her behind the bunk that was
built against the logs.
“You must stay here,” he cried. “Do
you understand! Here!”
She nodded, and smiled. It was
a wonderful smile-a flash of tenderness
telling him that she knew what he was saying, and that
she would obey him. She made no effort to detain
him with her hands, but in that moment-if
life had been the forfeit-Philip would have
stolen the precious time in which to take her in his
arms. For a space he held her close to him, his
lips crushed to hers, and faced the wall again with
the throb of her soft breast still beating against
his heart. He noticed Armin standing near the
door, his hand resting on a huge club which, in turn,
rested on the floor. Calmly he was waiting for
the final rush. Olaf was peering through the
gun-hole again. And then came what he had expected-a
rattle of fire from the snow-ridge. The pit-pit-pit
of bullets rained against the cabin in a dull tattoo.
Through the door came a bullet, sending a splinter
close to Armin’s face. Almost in the same
instant a second followed it, and a third came through
the crevice so close to Philip that he felt the hissing
breath of it in his face. One of the dogs emitted
a wailing howl and flopped among its comrades in uncanny
convulsions.
Olaf staggered back, and faced Philip.
There was no trace of the fighting grin in his face
now. It was set like an iron mask.
“Get down!”
he shouted. “Do you hear, get down!”
He dropped on his knees, crying out the warning to
Armin in the other’s language. “They’ve
got enough guns to make a sieve of this kennel if their
ammunition holds out-and the lower logs
are heaviest. Flatten yourself out until they
stop firing, with your feet toward ’em, like
this,” and he stretched himself out on the floor,
parallel with the direction of fire.
In place of following the Swede’s
example Philip ran to Celie. Half way a bullet
almost got him, flipping the collar of his shirt.
He dropped beside her and gathered her up completely
in his arms, with his own body between her and the
fire. A moment later he thanked God for the protection
of the bunk. He heard the ripping of a bullet
through the saplings and caught distinctly the thud
of it as the spent lead dropped to the floor.
Celie’s head was close on his breast, her eyes
were on his face, her soft lips so near he could feel
their breath. He kissed her, unbelieving even
then that the end was near for her. It was monstrous-impossible.
Lead was finding its way into the cabin like raindrops.
He heard the Swede’s voice again, crying thickly
from the floor:
“Hug below the lower log.
You’ve got eight inches. If you rise above
that they’ll get you.” He repeated
the warning to Armin.
As if to emphasize his words there
came a howl of agony from another of the dogs.
Still closer Philip held the girl
to him. Her hands had crept convulsively to his
neck. He crushed his face down against hers, and
waited. It came to him suddenly that Blake must
be reckoning on this very protection which he was
giving Celie. He was gambling on the chance that
while the male defenders of the cabin would be wounded
or killed Celie would be sheltered until the last
moment from their fire. If that was so, the firing
would soon cease until Blake learned results.
Scarcely had he made this guess when
the fusillade ended. Instead of rifle-fire there
came a sudden strange howl of voices and Olaf sprang
to his feet. Philip had risen, when the Swede’s
voice came to him in a choking cry. Prepared
for the rush he had expected, Olaf was making an observation
through the gun-crevice. Suddenly, without turning
his head, he yelled back at them:
“Good God-it’s Bram-Bram
Johnson!”
Even Celie realized the thrilling
import of the Swede’s excited words. Bram
Johnson! She was only a step behind Philip
when he reached the wall. With him she looked
out. Out of that finger of forest they were coming-Bram
and his wolves! The pack was free, spreading out
fan-shape, coming like the wind! Behind them was
Bram-a wild and monstrous figure against
the whiteness of the plain, bearing in his hand a
giant club. His yell came to them. It rose
above all other sound, like the cry of a great beast.
The wolves came faster, and then-
The truth fell upon those in the cabin
with a suddenness that stopped the beating of their
hearts.
Bram Johnson and his wolves were attacking the Eskimos!
From the thrilling spectacle of the
giant mad-man charging over the plain behind his ravenous
beasts Philip shifted his amazed gaze to the Eskimos.
They were no longer concealing themselves. Palsied
by a strange terror, they were staring at the onrushing
horde and the shrieking wolf-man. In those first
appalling moments of horror and stupefaction not a
gun was raised or a shot fired. Then there rose
from the ranks of the Kogmollocks a strange and terrible
cry, and in another moment the plain between the forest
and the snow-ridge was alive with fleeing creatures
in whose heavy brains surged the monstrous thought
that they were attacked not by man and beast, but by
devils. And in that same moment it seemed that
Bram Johnson and his wolves were among them.
From man to man the beasts leapt, driven on by the
shrieking voice of their master; and now Philip saw
the giant mad-man overtake one after another of the
running figures, and saw the crushing force of his
club as it fell. Celie swayed back from the wall
and stood with her hands to her face. The Swede
sprang past her, flung back the bar to the door, and
opened it. Philip was a step behind him.
Prom the front of the cabin they began firing, and
man after man crumpled down under their shots.
If Bram and his wolves sensed the shooting in the ferocity
of their blood-lust they paid no more attention to
it than to the cries for mercy that rose chokingly
out of the throats of their enemies. In another
sixty seconds the visible part of it was over.
The last of the Kogmollocks disappeared into the edge
of the forest. After them went the wolf-man and
his pack.
Philip faced his companion. His
gun was hot-and empty. The old grin
was in Olaf’s face. In spite of it he shuddered.
“We won’t follow,”
he said. “Bram and his wolves will attend
to the trimmings, and he’ll come back when the
job is finished. Meanwhile we’ll get a
little start for home, eh? I’m tired of
this cabin. Forty days and nights-ugh!
it was hell. Have you a spare pipeful of
tobacco, Phil? If you have-let’s
see, where did I leave off in that story about Princess
Celie and the Duke of Rugni?”
“The-the-what?”
“Your tobaeco, Phil!”
In a dazed fashion Philip handed his tobacco pouch
to the Swede.
“You said-Princess Celie-the
Duke of Rugni-”
Olaf nodded as he stuffed his pipe bowl.
“That’s it. Armin
is the Duke of Rugni, whatever Rugni is. He was
chased off to Siberia a good many years ago, when Celie
was a kid, that somebody else could get hold of the
Dukedom. Understand? Millions in it, I suppose.
He says some of Rasputin’s old friends were behind
it, and that for a long time he was kept in the dungeons
of the fortress of St. Peter and St. Paul, with the
Neva River running over his head. The friends
he had, most of them in exile or chased out of the
country, thought he was dead, and some of these friends
were caring for Celie. Just after Rasputin was
killed, and before the Revolution broke out, they
learned Armin was alive and dying by inches somewhere
up on the Siberian coast. Celie’s mother
was Danish-died almost before Celie could
remember; but some of her relatives and a bunch of
Russian exiles in London framed up a scheme to get
Armin back, chartered a ship, sailed with Celie on
board, and-”
Olaf paused to light his pipe.
“And they found the Duke,”
he added. “They escaped with him before
they learned of the Revolution, or Armin could have
gone home with the rest of the Siberian exiles and
claimed his rights. For a lot of reasons they
put him aboard an American whaler, and the whaler missed
its plans by getting stuck in the ice for the winter
up in Coronation Gulf. After that they started
out with dogs and sledge and guides. There’s
a lot more, but that’s the meat of it, Phil.
I’m going to leave it to you to learn Celie’s
language and get the details first-hand from her.
But she’s a right enough princess, old man.
And her Dad’s a duke. It’s up to
you to Americanize ’em. Eh, what’s
that?”
Celie had come from the cabin and
was standing at Philip’s side, looking up into
his face, and the light which Olaf saw unhidden in
her eyes made him laugh softly:
“And you’ve got the job
half done, Phil. The Duke may go back and raise
the devil with the people who put him in cold storage,
but Lady Celie is going to like America. Yessir,
she’s going to like it better’n any other
place on the face of the earth!”
It was late that afternoon, traveling
slowly southward over the trail of the Coppermine,
when they heard far behind them the wailing cry of
Bram Johnson’s wolves. The sound came only
once, like the swelling surge of a sudden sweep of
wind, yet when they camped at the beginning of darkness
Philip was confident the madman and his pack were close
behind them. Utter exhaustion blotted out the
hours for Celie and himself, while Olaf, buried in
two heavy Eskimo coats he had foraged from the field
of battle, sat on guard through the night. Twice
in the stillness of his long vigil he heard strange
cries. Once it was the cry of a beast. The
second time it was that of a man.
The second day, with dogs refreshed,
they traveled faster, and it was this night that they
camped in the edge of timber and built a huge fire.
It was such a fire as illumined the space about them
for fifty paces or more, and it was into this light
that Bram Johnson stalked, so suddenly and so noiselessly
that a sharp little cry sprang from Celie’s
lips, and Olaf and Philip and the Duke of Rugni stared
in wide-eyed amazement. In his right hand the
wolf-man bore a strange object. It was an Eskimo
coat, tied into the form of a bag, and in the bottom
of this improvision was a lump half the size of a
water pail. Bram seemed oblivious of all presence
but that of Celie. His eyes were on her alone
as he advanced and with a weird sound in his throat
deposited the bundle at her feet. In another
moment he was gone. The Swede rose slowly from
where he was sitting, and speaking casually to Celie,
took the wolf-man’s gift up in his hands.
Philip observed the strange look in his face as he
turned his back to Celie in the firelight and opened
the bag sufficiently to get a look inside. Then
he walked out into the darkness, and a moment later
returned without the bundle, and with a laugh apologized
to Celie for his action.
“No need of telling her what
it was,” he said to Philip then. “I
explained that it was foul meat Bram had brought in
as a present. As a matter of fact it was Blake’s
head. You know the Kogmollocks have a pretty
habit of pleasing a friend by presenting him with the
head of a dead enemy. Nice little package for
her to have opened, eh?”
After all, there are some very strange
happenings in life, and the adventurers of the Royal
Northwest Mounted Police come upon their share.
The case of Bram Johnson, the mad wolf-man of the Upper
Country, happened to be one of them, and filed away
in the archives of the Department is a big envelope
filled with official and personal documents, signed
and sworn to by various people. There is, for
instance, the brief and straightforward deposition
of Corporal Olaf Anderson, of the Fort Churchill Division,
and there is the longer and more detailed testimony
of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Raine and the Duke of Rugni;
and attached to these depositions is a copy of an official
decision pardoning Bram Johnson and making of him a
ward of the great Dominion instead of a criminal.
He is no longer hunted. “Let Bram Johnson
alone” is the word that had gone forth to the
man-hunters of the Service. It is a wise and
human judgment. Bram’s country is big and
wild. And he and his wolves still hunt there under
the light of the moon and the stars.