All through the starlit hours of that
night John Keith trudged steadily into the Northwest.
For a long time his direction took him through slashings,
second-growth timber, and cleared lands; he followed
rough roads and worn trails and passed cabins that
were dark and without life in the silence of midnight.
Twice a dog caught the stranger scent in the air and
howled; once he heard a man’s voice, far away,
raised in a shout. Then the trails grew rougher.
He came to a deep wide swamp. He remembered that
swamp, and before he plunged into it, he struck a match
to look at his compass and his watch. It took
him two hours to make the other side. He was
in the deep and uncut timber then, and a sense of
relief swept over him.
The forest was again his only friend.
He did not rest. His brain and his body demanded
the action of steady progress, though it was not through
fear of what lay behind him. Fear had ceased to
be a stimulating part of him; it was even dead within
him. It was as if his energy was engaged in fighting
for a principle, and the principle was his life; he
was following a duty, and this duty impelled him to
make his greatest effort. He saw clearly what
he had done and what was ahead of him. He was
twice a killer of men now, and each time the killing
had rid the earth of a snake. This last time
it had been an exceedingly good job. Even McDowell
would concede that, and Miriam Kirkstone, on her knees,
would thank God for what he had done. But Canadian
law did not split hairs like its big neighbor on the
south. It wanted him at least for Kirkstone’s
killing if not for that of Kao, the Chinaman.
No one, not even Mary Josephine, would ever fully
realize what he had sacrificed for the daughter of
the man who had ruined his father. For Mary Josephine
would never understand how deeply he had loved her.
It surprised him to find how naturally
he fell back into his old habit of discussing things
with himself, and how completely and calmly he accepted
the fact that his home-coming had been but a brief
and wonderful interlude to his fugitivism. He
did not know it at first, but this calmness was the
calmness of a despair more fatal than the menace of
the hangman.
“They won’t catch me,”
he encouraged himself. “And she won’t
tell them where I’m going. No, she won’t
do that.” He found himself repeating that
thought over and over again. Mary Josephine would
not betray him. He repeated it, not as a conviction,
but to fight back and hold down another thought that
persisted in forcing itself upon him. And this
thing, that at times was like a voice within him, cried
out in its moments of life, “She hates you-and
she will tell where you are going!”
With each hour it was harder for him
to keep that voice down; it persisted, it grew stronger;
in its intervals of triumph it rose over and submerged
all other thoughts in him. It was not his fear
of her betrayal that stabbed him; it was the underlying
motive of it, the hatred that would inspire it.
He tried not to vision her as he had seen her last,
in the big chair, crushed, shamed, outraged-seeing
in him no longer the beloved brother, but an impostor,
a criminal, a man whom she might suspect of killing
that brother for his name and his place in life.
But the thing forced itself on him. It was reasonable,
and it was justice.
“But she won’t do it,”
he told himself. “She won’t do it.”
This was his fight, and its winning
meant more to him than freedom. It was Mary Josephine
who would live with him now, and not Conniston.
It was her spirit that would abide with him, her voice
he would hear in the whispers of the night, her face
he would see in the glow of his lonely fires, and
she must remain with him always as the Mary Josephine
he had known. So he crushed back the whispering
voice, beat it down with his hands clenched at his
side, fought it through the hours of that night with
the desperation of one who fights for a thing greater
than life.
Toward dawn the stars began to fade
out of the sky. He had been tireless, and he
was tireless now. He felt no exhaustion.
Through the gray gloom that came before day he went
on, and the first glow of sun found him still traveling.
Prince Albert and the Saskatchewan were thirty miles
to the south and east of him.
He stopped at last on the edge of
a little lake and unburdened himself of his pack for
the first time. He was glad that the premonition
of just such a sudden flight as this had urged him
to fill his emergency grub-sack yesterday morning.
“Won’t do any harm for us to be prepared,”
he had laughed jokingly to Mary Josephine, and Mary
Josephine herself had made him double the portion
of bacon because she was fond of it. It was hard
for him to slice that bacon without a lump rising in
his throat. Pork and love! He wanted to
laugh, and he wanted to cry, and between the two it
was a queer, half-choked sound that came to his lips.
He ate a good breakfast, rested for a couple of hours,
and went on. At a more leisurely pace he traveled
through most of the day, and at night he camped.
In the ten days following his flight from Prince Albert
he kept utterly out of sight. He avoided trappers’
shacks and trails and occasional Indians. He
rid himself of his beard and shaved himself every
other day. Mary Josephine had never cared much
for the beard. It prickled. She had wanted
him smooth-faced, and now he was that. He looked
better, too. But the most striking resemblance
to Derwent Conniston was gone. At the end of
the ten days he was at Turtle Lake, fifty miles east
of Fort Pitt. He believed that he could show
himself openly now, and on the tenth day bartered with
some Indians for fresh supplies. Then he struck
south of Fort Pitt, crossed the Saskatchewan, and
hit between the Blackfoot Hills and the Vermillion
River into the Buffalo Coulee country. In the
open country he came upon occasional ranches, and
at one of these he purchased a pack-horse. At
Buffalo Lake he bought his supplies for the mountains,
including fifty steel traps, crossed the upper branch
of the Canadian Pacific at night, and the next day
saw in the far distance the purple haze of the Rockies.
It was six weeks after the night in
Kao’s place that he struck the Saskatchewan
again above the Brazeau. He did not hurry now.
Just ahead of him slumbered the mountains; very close
was the place of his dreams. But he was no longer
impelled by the mighty lure of the years that were
gone. Day by day something had worn away that
lure, as the ceaseless grind of water wears away rock,
and for two weeks he wandered slowly and without purpose
in the green valleys that lay under the snow-tipped
peaks of the ranges. He was gripped in the agony
of an unutterable loneliness, which fell upon and
scourged him like a disease. It was a deeper
and more bitter thing than a yearning for companionship.
He might have found that. Twice he was near camps.
Three times he saw outfits coming out, and purposely
drew away from them. He had no desire to meet
men, no desire to talk or to be troubled by talking.
Day And night his body and his soul cried out for
Mary Josephine, and in his despair he cursed those
who had taken her away from him. It was a crisis
which was bound to come, and in his aloneness he fought
it out. Day after day he fought it, until his
face and his heart bore the scars of it. It was
as if a being on whom he had set all his worship had
died, only it was worse than death. Dead, Mary
Josephine would still have been his inspiration; in
a way she would have belonged to him. But living,
hating him as she must, his dreams of her were a sacrilege
and his love for her like the cut of a sword.
In the end he was like a man who had triumphed over
a malady that would always leave its marks upon him.
In the beginning of the third week he knew that he
had conquered, just as he had triumphed in a similar
way over death and despair in the north. He would
go into the mountains, as he had planned. He would
build his cabin. And if the Law came to get him,
it was possible that again he would fight.
On the second day of this third week
he saw advancing toward him a solitary horseman.
The stranger was possibly a mile away when he discovered
him, and he was coming straight down the flat of the
valley. That he was not accompanied by a pack-horse
surprised Keith, for he was bound out of the mountains
and not in. Then it occurred to him that he might
be a prospector whose supplies were exhausted, and
that he was easing his journey by using his pack as
a mount. Whoever and whatever he was, Keith was
not in any humor to meet him, and without attempting
to conceal himself he swung away from the river, as
if to climb the slope of the mountain on his right.
No sooner had he clearly signified the new direction
he was taking, than the stranger deliberately altered
his course in a way to cut him off. Keith was
irritated. Climbing up a narrow terrace of shale,
he headed straight up the slope, as if his intention
were to reach the higher terraces of the mountain,
and then he swung suddenly down into a coulee, where
he was out of sight. Here he waited for ten minutes,
then struck deliberately and openly back into the
valley. He chuckled when he saw how cleverly his
ruse had worked. The stranger was a quarter of
a mile up the mountain and still climbing.
“Now what the devil is he taking
all that trouble for?” Keith asked himself.
An instant later the stranger saw
him again. For perhaps a minute he halted, and
in that minute Keith fancied he was getting a round
cursing. Then the stranger headed for him, and
this time there was no escape, for the moment he struck
the shelving slope of the valley, he prodded his horse
into a canter, swiftly diminishing the distance between
them. Keith unbuttoned the flap of his pistol
holster and maneuvered so that he would be partly
concealed by his pack when the horseman rode up.
The persistence of the stranger suggested to him that
Mary Josephine had lost no time in telling McDowell
where the law would be most likely to find him.
Then he looked over the neck of his
pack at the horseman, who was quite near, and was
convinced that he was not an officer. He was still
jogging at a canter and riding atrociously. One
leg was napping as if it had lost its stirrup-hold;
the rider’s arms were pumping, and his hat was
sailing behind at the end of a string.
“Whoa!” said Keith.
His heart stopped its action.
He was staring at a big red beard and a huge, shaggy
head. The horseman reined in, floundered from
his saddle, and swayed forward as if seasick.
“Well, I’ll be-”
“Duggan!”
“Johnny-Johnny Keith!”