For a matter of ten seconds neither
of the two men moved. Keith was stunned.
Andy Duggan’s eyes were fairly popping out from
under his bushy brows. And then unmistakably
Keith caught the scent of bacon in the air.
“Andy-Andy Duggan,”
he choked. “You know me-you know
Johnny Keith-you know me-you-”
Duggan answered with an inarticulate
bellow and jumped at Keith as if to bear him to the
ground. He hugged him, and Keith hugged, and then
for a minute they stood pumping hands until their faces
were red, and Duggan was growling over and over:
“An’ you passed me there
at McCoffin’s Bend-an’ I didn’t
know you, I didn’t know you, I didn’t
know you! I thought you was that cussed Conniston!
I did. I thought you was Conniston!” He
stood back at last. “Johnny-Johnny
Keith!”
“Andy, you blessed old devil!”
They pumped hands again, pounded shoulders
until they were sore, and in Keith’s face blazed
once more the love of life.
Suddenly old Duggan grew rigid and
sniffed the air. “I smell bacon!”
“It’s in the pack, Andy.
But for Heaven’s sake don’t notice the
bacon until you explain how you happen to be here.”
“Been waitin’ for you,”
replied Duggan in an affectionate growl. “Knew
you’d have to come down this valley to hit the
Little Fork. Been waitin’ six weeks.”
Keith dug his fingers into Duggan’s arm.
“How did you know I was coming here?”
he demanded. “Who told you?”
“All come out in the wash, Johnny.
Pretty mess. Chinaman dead. Johnny Keith,
alias Conniston, alive an’ living with Conniston’s
pretty sister. Johnny gone-skipped.
No one knew where. I made guesses. Knew
the girl would know if anyone did. I went to her,
told her how you’n me had been pals, an’
she give me the idée you was goin’ up to
the river’s end. I resigned from the Betty
M., that night. Told her, though, that she was
a ninny if she thought you’d go up there.
Made her believe the note was just a blind.”
“My God,” breathed Keith hopelessly, “I
meant it.”
“Sure you did, Johnny.
I knew it. But I didn’t dare let her
know it. If you could ha’ seen that pretty
mouth o’ hern curlin’ up as if she’d
liked to have bit open your throat, an’ her hands
clenched, an’ that murder in her eyes-Man,
I lied to her then! I told her I was after you,
an’ that if she wouldn’t put the police
on you, I’d bring back your head to her, as
they used to do in the old times. An’ she
bit. Yes, sir, she said to me, ’If you’ll
do that, I won’t say a word to the police!’
An’ here I am, Johnny. An’ if I keep
my word with that little tiger, I’ve got to
shoot you right now. Haw! Haw!”
Keith had turned his face away.
Duggan, pulling him about by the shoulders,
opened his eyes wide in amazement.-“Johnny-”
“Maybe you don’t understand,
Andy,” struggled Keith. “I’m
sorry-she feels-like that.”
For a moment Duggan was silent.
Then he exploded with a sudden curse. “Sorry!
What the devil you sorry for, Johnny? You treated
her square, an’ you left her almost all of Conniston’s
money. She ain’t no kick comin’,
and she ain’t no reason for feelin’ like
she does. Let ’er go to the devil, I say.
She’s pretty an’ sweet an’ all that-but
when anybody wants to go clawin’ your heart
out, don’t be fool enough to feel sorry about
it. You lied to her, but what’s that?
There’s bigger lies than yourn been told, Johnny,
a whole sight bigger! Don’t you go worryin’.
I’ve been here waitin’ six weeks, an’
I’ve done a lot of thinkin’, and all our
plans are set an’ hatched. An’ I’ve
got the nicest cabin all built and waitin’ for
us up the Little Fork. Here we are. Let’s
be joyful, son!” He laughed into Keith’s
tense, gray face. “Let’s be joyful!”
Keith forced a grin. Duggan didn’t
know. He hadn’t guessed what that “little
tiger who would have liked to have bit open his throat”
had been to him. The thick-headed old hero, loyal
to the bottom of his soul, hadn’t guessed.
And it came to Keith then that he would never tell
him. He would keep that secret. He would
bury it in his burned-out soul, and he would be “joyful”
if he could. Duggan’s blazing, happy face,
half buried in its great beard, was like the inspiration
and cheer of a sun rising on a dark world. He
was not alone. Duggan, the old Duggan of years
ago, the Duggan who had planned and dreamed with him,
his best friend, was with him now, and the light came
back into his face as he looked toward the mountains.
Off there, only a few miles distant, was the Little
Fork, winding into the heart of the Rockies, seeking
out its hidden valleys, its trailless canons, its hidden
mysteries. Life lay ahead of him, life with its
thrill and adventure, and at his side was the friend
of all friends to seek it with him. He thrust
out his hands.
“God bless you, Andy,”
he cried. “You’re the gamest pal that
ever lived!”
A moment later Duggan pointed to a
clump of timber half a mile ahead. “It’s
past dinner-time,” he said. “There’s
wood. If you’ve got any bacon aboard, I
move we eat.”
An hour later Andy was demonstrating
that his appetite was as voracious as ever. Before
describing more of his own activities, he insisted
that Keith recite his adventures from the night “he
killed that old skunk, Kirkstone.”
It was two o’clock when they
resumed their journey. An hour later they struck
the Little Fork and until seven traveled up the stream.
They were deep in the lap of the mountains when they
camped for the night. After supper, smoking his
pipe, Duggan stretched himself out comfortably with
his back to a tree.
“Good thing you come along when
you did, Johnny,” he said. “I been
waitin’ in that valley ten days, an’ the
eats was about gone when you hove in sight. Meant
to hike back to the cabin for supplies tomorrow or
next day. Gawd, ain’t this the life!
An’ we’re goin’ to find gold, Johnny,
we’re goin’ to find it!”
“We’ve got all our lives to-to
find it in,” said Keith.
Duggan puffed out a huge cloud of
smoke and heaved a great sigh of pleasure. Then
he grunted and chuckled. “Lord, what a little
firebrand that sister of Conniston’s is!”
he exclaimed. “Johnny, I bet if you’d
walk in on her now, she’d kill you with her own
hands. Don’t see why she hates you so,
just because you tried to save your life. Of course
you must ha’ lied like the devil. Couldn’t
help it. But a lie ain’t nothin’.
I’ve told some whoppers, an’ no one ain’t
never wanted to kill me for it. I ain’t
afraid of McDowell. Everyone said the Chink was
a good riddance. It’s the girl. There
won’t be a minute all her life she ain’t
thinkin’ of you, an’ she won’t be
satisfied until she’s got you. That is,
she thinks she won’t. But we’ll fool
the little devil, Johnny. We’ll keep our
eyes open-an’ fool her!”
“Let’s talk of pleasanter
things,” said Keith. “I’ve got
fifty traps in the pack, Andy. You remember how
we used to plan on trapping during the winter and
hunting for gold during the summer?”
Duggan rubbed his hands until they
made a rasping sound; he talked of lynx signs he had
seen, and of marten and fox. He had panned “colors”
at a dozen places along the Little Fork and was ready
to make his affidavit that it was the same gold he
had dredged at McCoffin’s Bend.
“If we don’t find it this
fall, we’ll be sittin’ on the mother lode
next summer,” he declared, and from then until
it was time to turn in he talked of nothing but the
yellow treasure it had been his lifelong dream to
find. At the last, when they had rolled in their
blankets, he raised himself on his elbow for a moment
and said to Keith:
“Johnny, don’t you worry
about that Conniston girl. I forgot to tell you
I’ve took time by the forelock. Two weeks
ago I wrote an’ told her I’d learned you
was hittin’ into the Great Slave country, an’
that I was about to hike after you. So go to
sleep an’ don’t worry about that pesky
little rattlesnake.”
“I’m not worrying,” said Keith.
Fifteen minutes later he heard Duggan
snoring. Quietly he unwrapped his blanket and
sat up. There were still burning embers in the
fire, the night-like that first night of
his flight-was a glory of stars, and the
moon was rising. Their camp was in a small, meadowy
pocket in the center of which was a shimmering little
lake across which he could easily have thrown a stone.
On the far side of this was the sheer wall of a mountain,
and the top of this wall, thousands of feet up, caught
the glow of the moon first. Without awakening
his comrade, Keith walked to the lake. He watched
the golden illumination as it fell swiftly lower over
the face of the mountain. He could see it move
like a great flood. And then, suddenly, his shadow
shot out ahead of him, and he turned to find the moon
itself glowing like a monstrous ball between the low
shoulders of a mountain to the east. The world
about him became all at once vividly and wildly beautiful.
It was as if a curtain had lifted so swiftly the eye
could not follow it. Every tree and shrub and
rock stood out in a mellow spotlight; the lake was
transformed to a pool of molten silver, and as far
as he could see, where shoulders and ridges did not
cut him out, the moonlight was playing on the mountains.
In the air was a soft droning like low music, and from
a distant crag came the rattle of loosened rocks.
He fancied, for a moment, that Mary Josephine was
standing at his side, and that together they were
drinking in the wonder of this dream at last come true.
Then a cry came to his lips, a broken, gasping man-cry
which he could not keep back, and his heart was filled
with anguish.
With all its beauty, all its splendor
of quiet and peace, the night was a bitter one for
Keith, the bitterest of his life. He had not believed
the worst of Mary Josephine. He knew he had lost
her and that she might despise him, but that she would
actually hate him with the desire for a personal vengeance
he had not believed. Was Duggan right? Was
Mary Josephine unfair? And should he in self-defense
fight to poison his own thoughts against her?
His face set hard, and a joyless laugh fell from his
lips. He knew that he was facing the inevitable.
No matter what had happened, he must go on loving
Mary Josephine.
All through that night he was awake.
Half a dozen times he went to his blanket, but it
was impossible for him to sleep. At four o’clock
he built up the fire and at five roused Duggan.
The old river-man sprang up with the enthusiasm of
a boy. He came back from the lake with his beard
and head dripping and his face glowing. All the
mountains held no cheerier comrade than Duggan.
They were on the trail at six o’clock
and hour after hour kept steadily up the Little Fork.
The trail grew rougher, narrower, and more difficult
to follow, and at intervals Duggan halted to make sure
of the way. At one of these times he said to
Keith:
“Las’ night proved there
ain’t no danger from her, Johnny. I had
a dream, an’ dreams goes by contraries an’
always have. What you dream never comes true.
It’s always the opposite. An’ I dreamed
that little she-devil come up on you when you was
asleep, took a big bread-knife, an’ cut your
head plumb off! Yessir, I could see her holdin’
up that head o’ yourn, an’ the blood was
drippin’, an’ she was a-laughin’-”
“Shut up!” Keith
fairly yelled the words. His eyes blazed.
His face was dead white.
With a shrug of his huge shoulders
and a sullen grunt Duggan went on.
An hour later the trail narrowed into
a short canon, and this canon, to Keith’s surprise,
opened suddenly into a beautiful valley, a narrow
oasis of green hugged in between the two ranges.
Scarcely had they entered it, when Duggan raised his
voice in a series of wild yells and began firing his
rifle into the air.
“Home-coming,” he explained
to Keith, after he was done. “Cabin’s
just over that bulge. Be there in ten minutes.”
In less than ten minutes Keith saw
it, sheltered in the edge of a thick growth of cedar
and spruce from which its timbers had been taken.
It was a larger cabin than he had expected to see-twice,
three times as large.
“How did you do it alone!”
he exclaimed in admiration. “It’s
a wonder, Andy. Big enough for-for
a whole family!”
“Half a dozen Indians happened
along, an’ I hired ’em,” explained
Duggan. “Thought I might as well make it
big enough, Johnny, seein’ I had plenty of help.
Sometimes I snore pretty loud, an’-”
“There’s smoke coming out of it,”
cried Keith.
“Kept one of the Indians,”
chuckled Duggan. “Fine cook, an’ a
sassy-lookin’ little squaw she is, Johnny.
Her husband died last winter, an’ she jumped
at the chance to stay, for her board an’ five
bucks a month. How’s your Uncle Andy for
a schemer, eh, Johnny?”
A dozen rods from the cabin was a
creek. Duggan halted here to water his horse
and nodded for Keith to go on.
“Take a look, Johnny; go ahead
an’ take a look! I’m sort of sot up
over that cabin.”
Keith handed his reins to Duggan and
obeyed. The cabin door was open, and he entered.
One look assured him that Duggan had good reason to
be “sot up.” The first big room reminded
him of the Shack. Beyond that was another room
in which he heard someone moving and the crackle of
a fire in a stove. Outside Duggan was whistling.
He broke off whistling to sing, and as Keith listened
to the river-man’s bellowing voice chanting
the words of the song he had sung at McCoffin’s
Bend for twenty years, he grinned. And then he
heard the humming of a voice in the kitchen.
Even the squaw was happy.
And then-and then-
“Great god in heaven-”
In the doorway she stood, her arms
reaching out to him, love, glory, triumph in her face-Mary
Josephine!
He swayed; he groped out; something
blinded him-tears-hot, blinding
tears that choked him, that came with a sob in his
throat. And then she was in his arms, and her
arms were around him, and she was laughing and crying,
and he heard her say: “Why-why
didn’t you come back-to me-that
night? Why-why did you-go
out-through the-window?
I-I was waiting-and I-I’d
have gone-with you-”
From the door behind them came Duggan’s
voice, chuckling, exultant, booming with triumph.
“Johnny, didn’t I tell you there was lots
bigger lies than yourn? Didn’t I?
Eh?”