The trader’s house sat back
of the post, farther up on the hill. It was a
large, sleepy house, sprawling against the sunny side
of the slope, as if it had sought the southern exposure
for warmth, and had dozed off one sultry afternoon
and never waked up from its slumber. It was of
great, square-hewn timbers, built in the Russian style,
the under side of each log hollowed to fit snugly
over its fellow underneath, upon which dried moss
had previously been spread, till in effect the foot-thick
walls were tongued and grooved and, through years of
seasoning, become so tinder dry that no frosts or heats
could penetrate them. Many architects had worked
on it as it grew, room by room, through the years,
and every man had left behind the mark of his individuality,
from Pretty Charlie the pilot, who swung an axe better
than any Indian on the river, to Larsen the ship’s
carpenter, who worked with an adze and who starved
the summer following on the Koyukuk. It had stretched
a bit year by year, for the trader’s family
had been big in the early days when hunters and miners
of both breeds came in to trade, to loaf, and to swap
stories with him. Through the winter days, when
the caribou were in the North and the moose were scarce,
whole families of natives came and camped there, for
Alluna, his squaw, drew to her own blood, and they
felt it their due to eat of the bounty of him who
ruled them like an overlord; but when the first goose
honked they slipped away until, by the time the salmon
showed, the house was empty again and silent, save
for Alluna and the youngsters. In return these
people brought him many skins and much fresh meat,
for which he paid no price, and, with the fall, his
cache was filled with fish of which the bulk were
dried king salmon as long as a grown man’s leg
and worth a dollar apiece to any traveller.
There are men whose wits are quick
as light, and whose muscles have been so tempered
and hardened by years of exercise that they are like
those of a wild animal. Of such was John Gale;
but with all his intelligence he was very slow at
reading, hence he chose to spend his evenings with
his pipe and his thoughts, rather than with a book,
as lonesome men are supposed to do. He did with
little sleep, and many nights he sat alone till Alluna
and Necia would be awakened by his heavy step as he
went to his bed. That he was a man who could really
think, and that his thoughts were engrossing, no one
doubted who saw him sitting enthralled at such a time,
for he neither rocked, nor talked, nor moved a muscle
hour after hour, and only his eyes were alive.
To-night the spell was on him again, and he sat bulked
up in his chair, rocklike and immovable.
From the open door of the next room
he could hear Necia and the little ones. She
had made them ready for bed, and was telling them the
tale of the snow-bird’s spot.
“So when all the other birds
had failed,” he heard her say, “the little
snowbird asked for a chance to try. He flew and
flew, and just before he came to the edge of the world
where the two Old Women lived he pulled out all of
his feathers. When he came to them he said:”
“‘I am very cold. May I warm myself
at your fire?’”
“They saw how little and naked
he was, and how he shivered, so they did not throw
sticks at him, but allowed him to creep close.
He watched his chance, and when they were not looking
he picked up a red-hot coal in his beak and flew back
home with it as fast as ever he could and
that is how fire came to the Indian people.”
“Of course the coal was hot,
and it burned his throat till a drop of blood came
through, so ever since that day the snowbird has had
a red spot on his throat.”
The two children spoke out in their
mother’s tongue, clamoring for the story of
the Good Beaver who saved the hunter’s life,
and she began, this time in the language of the Yukon
people, while Gale listened to the low music of her
voice, muffled and broken by the log partition.
His squaw came in, her arrival unannounced
except by the scuff of her moccasins, and seated herself
against the wall. She did not use a chair, of
which there were several, but crouched upon a bear-skin,
her knees beneath her chin, her toes a trifle drawn
together. She sat thus for a long time, while
Necia continued her stories and put the little ones
to bed. Soon the girl came to say good-night.
John Gale had never kissed his daughter,
and, as it was not a custom of her mother’s
race, she never missed the caresses. On rare occasions
the old man romped with the little ones and took them
in his arms and acted as other fathers act, but he
had never done these things with her. When she
had gone he spoke without moving.
“She’ll never marry Poleon Doret.”
“Why?” inquired Alluna.
“He ain’t her kind.”
“Poleon is a good man.”
“None better. But she’ll marry some some
white man.”
“Poleon is white,” the squaw declared.
“He is and he ain’t.
I mean she’ll marry an ‘outside’
man. He ain’t good enough, and well,
he ain’t her kind.” Alluna’s
grunt of indignation was a sufficient answer to this,
but he resumed, jerking his head in the direction
of the barracks. “She’s been talking
a lot with this this soldier.”
“Him good man, too, I guess,” said the
wife.
“The hell he is!” cried
the trader, fiercely. “He don’t mean
any good to her.”
“Him got a woman, eh?” said the other.
“No, no! I reckon he’s
single all right, but you don’t understand.
He’s different from us people. He’s he’s ”
Gale paused, at a loss for words to convey his meaning.
“Well, he ain’t the kind that would marry
a half-breed.”
Alluna pondered this cryptic remark
unsuccessfully, and was still seeking its solution
when her lord continued:
“If she really got to loving
him it would be bad for all of us.”
Evidently Alluna read some hidden
meaning back of these words, for she spoke quickly,
but in her own tongue now, as she was accustomed to
do when excited or alarmed.
“Then this thing must cease
at once. The risk is too great. Better that
you kill him before it is too late."’
“Hardly that,” said the trader.
“Think of the little ones and
of me,” the squaw insisted, and, encouraged
by his silence, continued: “Why not?
Soon the nights will grow dark. The river runs
swiftly, and it never gives up its dead. I can
do it if you dare not. No one would suspect me.”
Gale rose and laid his big hand firmly on her shoulder.
“Don’t talk like that.
There has been too much blood let already. We’ll
allow things to run along a bit as they are. There’s
time enough to worry.”
He rose, but instead of going to his
room he strode out of the house and walked northward
up the trail, passing through the town and out of
sight. Alluna sat huddled up in the doorway, her
shawl drawn close about her head, and waited for him
until the late sun which at this time of
year revolves in a great circle overhead dipped
down below the distant mountains for the midnight
hour, then rolled slanting out again a few points
farther north, to begin its long journey anew; but
he did not return. At last she crept stiffly
in-doors, like an old and weary woman, the look of
fright still staring in her eyes.
About nine o’clock the next
morning a faint and long-drawn cry came from the farthest
limits of the little camp. An instant later it
was echoed closer, and then a dog began to howl.
Before its voice had died away another took it up
sadly, and within three breaths, from tip and down
the half-mile of scanty water-front, came the cry of
“Steam-bo-o-a-t!” Cabin doors opened
and men came out, glanced up the stream and echoed
the call, while from sleepy nooks and sun-warmed roofs
wolf-dogs arose, yawning and stretching. Those
who had slept late dressed as they hurried towards
the landing-place, joining in the plaint, till men
and malamutes united in the shrill, slow cry.
Down-stream came the faint-sighing
whoof-whoof of a steamer, and then out from behind
the bend she burst, running on the swift spring current
with the speed of a deer. She blew hoarsely before
the tardy ones had reached the bank, and when abreast
of the town her bell clanged, the patter of her great
wheel ceased, she reversed her engines and swung gracefully
till her bow was up against the current, then ploughed
back, inching in slowly until, with much shouting
and the sound of many gongs, she slid her nose quietly
into the bank beneath the trading-post and was made
fast. Her cabin-deck was lined with passengers,
most of whom were bound for the “outside,”
although still clad in mackinaw and overalls.
They all gazed silently at the hundred men of Flambeau,
who stared back at them till the gang-plank was placed,
when they came ashore to stretch their legs.
One of them, however, made sufficient noise to make
up for the silence of the others. Before the steamer
had grounded he appeared among the Siwash deck-hands,
his head and shoulders towering above them, his white
teeth gleaming from a face as dark as theirs, shouting
to his friends ashore and pantomiming his delight
to the two Gale children who had come with Alluna to
welcome him.
“Who’s dose beeg, tall
people w’at stan’ ’longside of you,
Miz Gale?” he called to her; then, shading his
eyes elaborately, he cried, in a great voice:
“Wall! wal! I b’lieve dat’s
M’sieu Jean an’ Mam’selle Mollee.
Ba Gar! Dey get so beeg w’ile I’m
gone I don’ know dem no more!”
The youthful Gales wriggled at this
delicious flattery and dug their tiny moccasined toes
into the sand. Molly courtesied nervously and
continuously as she clung to her mother, and the boy
showed a gap where two front teeth had been and was
now filled by a very pink tongue.
“Wen you goin’ stop grow,
anyhow, you two, eh?” continued the Frenchman,
and then, in a tone of sadness: “If I t’ink
you ack lak’ dis, I don’ buy all
dese present. Dese t’ing ain’ no good
for olé folks. I guess I’ll t’row
dem away.” He made as if to heave a
bundle that he carried into the river, whereupon the
children shrieked at him so shrilly that he laughed
long and incontinently at the success of his sally.
Lieutenant Burrell had come with the
others, for the arrival of a steamboat called for
the presence of every soul in camp, and, spying Necia
in the outskirts of the crowd, he took his place beside
her. He felt constrained, after what had happened
on the previous evening, but she seemed to have forgotten
the episode, and greeted him with her usual frankness.
Even had she remembered it, there was nothing he could
say in explanation or in apology. He had lain
awake for hours thinking of her, and had fallen asleep
with her still in his mind, for the revelation of
her blood had come as a shock to him, the full force
of which he could not appreciate until he had given
himself time to think of it calmly.
He had sprung from a race of Slave-holders,
from a land where birth and breed are more than any
other thing, where a drop of impure blood effects
an ineradicable stain; therefore the thought of this
girl’s ignoble parentage was so repugnant to
him that the more he pondered it the more pitiful
it seemed, the more monstrous. Lying awake and
thinking of her in the stillness of his quarters, it
had seemed a very unfortunate and a very terrible
thing. During his morning duties the vision of
her had been fresh before him again, and his constant
contemplation of the matter had wrought a change in
his attitude towards the girl, of which he was uncomfortably
conscious and which he was glad to see she did not
perceive.
“There are some of the lucky
men from El Dorado Creek,” she informed him,
pointing out certain people on the deck. “They
are going out to the States to get something to eat.
They say that nothing like those mines have ever been
heard of in the world. I wish father had gone
up last year when the news came.”
“Why didn’t he?”
asked the Lieutenant. “Surely he must have
been among the first to learn of it.”
“Yes. ‘Stick’
George sent him word a year ago last fall, when he
made the first discovery, but for some reason father
wouldn’t go.”
The men were pouring off the boat
now, and through the crowd came the tall Frenchman,
bearing in the hollow of each arm a child who clasped
a bundle to its breast. His eyes grew brighter
at sight of Necia, and he broke into a flood of patois;
they fairly bombarded each other with quick questions
and fragmentary answers till she remembered her companion,
who had fallen back a pace and was studying the newcomer,
whereupon she turned.
“Oh, I forgot my manners.
Lieutenant Burrell, this is Napoleon Doret our
Poleon!” she added, with proud emphasis.
Doret checked his volubility and stared
at the soldier, whom he appeared to see for the first
time. The little brown people in his arms stared
likewise, and it seemed to Burrell that a certain distrust
was in each of the three pairs of eyes, only in those
of the man there was no shyness. Instead, the
Canadian looked him over gravely from head to heel,
seeming to note each point of the unfamiliar attire;
then he inquired, without removing his glance:
“Were’bouts you live, eh?”
“I live at the post yonder,” said the
Lieutenant.
“Wat biznesse you work at?”
“I am a soldier.”
“Wat for you come ‘ere? Dere’s
nobody fightin’ roun’ dis place.”
“The Lieutenant has been stationed
here, foolish,” said Necia. “Come
up to the store quick and tell me what it’s
like at Dawson.” With a farewell nod to
Burrell, she went off with Doret, whose speech was
immediately released again.
In spite of the man’s unfriendliness,
Burrell watched him with admiration. There were
no heels to his tufted fur boots, and yet he stood
a good six feet two, as straight as a pine sapling,
and it needed no second glance to tell of what metal
he was made. His spirit showed in his whole body,
in the set of his head, and, above all, in his dark,
warm face, which glowed with eagerness when he talked,
and that was ever when he was not singing.
“I never see so many people
since I lef Quebec,” he was saying. “She’s
jus’ lak’ beeg city mus’
be t’ree, four t’ousan’ people.
Every day some more dey come, an’ all night
dey dance an’ sing an’ drink w’iskee.
Ba gosh, dat’s fine place!”
“Are there lots of white women?” asked
the girl.
“Yes, two, t’ree hondred.
Mos’ of dem is work in dance-halls.
Dere’s one fine gal I see, name’ Marie
Bourgette. I tell you ’bout her by-an’-by.”
“Oh, Poleon, you’re in love!” cried
Necia.
“No, siree!” he denied.
“Dere’s none of dem gal look half
so purty lak’ you.” He would have
said more, but spying the trader at the entrance of
the store, he went to him, straightway launching into
the details of their commercial enterprise, which,
happily, had been most successful. Before they
could finish, the crowd from the boat began to drift
in, some of them buying drinks at the bar and others
making purchases of tobacco and so forth, but for
the main part merely idling about curiously.
Among the merchandise of the Post
there were for sale a scanty assortment of fire-arms,
cheap shot-guns, and a Winchester or two, displayed
in a rack behind the counter in a manner to attract
the eye of such native hunters as might need them,
and with the rest hung a pair of Colt’s revolvers.
One of the new arrivals, who had separated from the
others at the front, now called to Gale:
“Are those Colts for sale?
Mine was stolen the other day.” Evidently
he was accustomed to Yukon prices, for he showed no
surprise at the figure the trader named, but took
the guns and tested each of them, whereupon the old
man knew that here was no “Cheechako,”
as tenderfeet are known in the North, although the
man’s garb had deceived him at first glance.
The stranger balanced the weapons, one in either hand,
then he did the “double roll” neatly,
following which he executed a move that Gale had not
witnessed for many years. He extended one of the
guns, butt foremost, as if surrendering it, the action
being free and open, save for the fact that his forefinger
was crooked and thrust through the trigger-guard;
then, with the slightest jerk of the wrist, the gun
spun about, the handle jumped into his palm, and instantly
there was a click as his thumb flipped the hammer.
It was the old “road-agent spin,” which
Gale as a boy had practised hours at a time; but that
this man was in earnest he showed by glancing upward
sharply when the trader laughed.
“This one hangs all right,”
he said; “give me a box of cartridges.”
He emptied his gold-sack in payment
for the gun and ammunition, then remarked: “That
pretty nearly cleans me. If I had the price I’d
take them both.”
Gale wondered what need induced this
fellow to spend his last few dollars on a fire-arm,
but he said nothing until the man had loosened the
bottom buttons of his vest and slipped the weapon inside
the band of his trousers, concealing its handle beneath
the edge of his waistcoat. Then he inquired:
“Bound for the outside?”
“No. I’m locating here.”
The trader darted a quick glance at him. He did
not like this man.
“There ain’t much doing
in this camp; it’s a pretty poor place,”
he said, guardedly.
“I’ll put in with you,
from its looks,” agreed the other. “It’s
got too many soldiers to be worth a damn.”
He snarled this bitterly, with a peculiar leering
lift of his lip, as if his words tasted badly.
“Most of the boys are going up-river,”
said Gale.
“Well, those hills look as if
they had gold in them,” said the stranger, pointing
vaguely. “I’m going to prospect.”
Gale knew instinctively that the fellow
was lying, for his hands were not those of a miner;
but there was nothing to be said. His judgment
was verified, however, when Poleon drew him aside later
and said:
“You know dat feller?”
“No.”
“He’s bad man.”
“How do you know?”
“She’s leave Dawson damn
queeck. Dose Mounted Police t’row ’im
on de boat jus’ before we lef.” Then
he told a story that he had heard. The man, it
seemed, had left Skagway between two suns, upon the
disruption of Soapy Smith’s band of desperadoes,
and had made for the interior, but had been intercepted
at the Pass by two members of the Citizens’
Committee who came upon him suddenly. Pretending
to yield, he had executed some unexpected coup as
he delivered his gun, for both men fell, shot through
the body. No one knew just what it was he did,
nor cared to question him overmuch. The next
heard of him was at Lake Bennett, over the line, where
the Mounted Police recognized him and sent him on.
They marked him well, however, and passed him on from
post to post as they had driven others whose records
were known; but he had lost himself in the confusion
at Dawson for a few weeks, until the scarlet-coated
riders searched him out, disarmed him, and forced him
sullenly aboard this steamer. The offscourings
of the Canadian frontier were drifting back into their
native country to settle.
Old Man Gale cared little for this,
for he had spent his life among such men, but as he
watched the fellow a scheme outlined itself in his
head. Evidently the man dared not go farther down
the river, for there was nothing save Indian camps
and a Mission or two this side of St. Michael’s,
and at that point there was a court and many soldiers,
where one was liable to meet the penalty of past misdeeds,
hence he was probably resolved to stop here, and,
judging by his record, he was a man of settled convictions.
Continued persecution is wont to stir certain natures
to such reckless desperation that interference is
dangerous, and Gale, recalling his sullen look and
ill-concealed contempt for the soldiers, put the stranger
down as a man of this type. Furthermore, he had
been impressed by the fellow’s remarkable dexterity
of wrist.
The trader stepped to the door, and,
seeing Burrell on the deck of the steamer, went down
towards him. It was a long chance, but the stakes
were big and worth the risk. He had thought much
during the night previous in fact, for
many hours and the morning had found him
still undecided, wherefore he took this course.
“Necia tells me that you aim
to keep law and order here,” he began, abruptly,
having drawn the young man aside.
“Those are my instructions,”
said Burrell, “but they are so vague ”
“Well! This camp is bigger
than it was an hour ago, and it ’ain’t
improved any in the growth. Yonder goes the new
citizen.” He pointed to the stranger, who
had returned to the steamer for his baggage and was
descending the gang-plank beneath them, a valise in
each hand. “He’s a thief and a murderer,
and we don’t want him here. Now, it’s
up to you.”
“I don’t understand,”
said the Lieutenant, whereupon the trader told him
Doret’s tale. “You and your men were
sent here to keep things peaceable,” he concluded,
“and I reckon when a man is too tough for the
Canuck police he is tough enough for you to tackle.
There ain’t a lock and key in the camp, and
we ain’t had a killing or a stealing in ten
years. We’d like to keep it that way.”
“Well you see I
know nothing of that shooting affray, so I doubt if
my authority would permit me to interfere,” the
soldier mused, half to himself.
“I allowed you were to use your
own judgment,” said the elder man.
“So I am, I suppose. There
is one chance, Mr. Gale. If you’ll back
me up I’ll send him on down to St. Michael’s.
That is the most I can do.”
The Lieutenant outlined his plan,
and as he went on the trader nodded approval.
The young man gazed back at him so
squarely, his eyes were so pleasant and friendly,
his whole person breathed such straight-up honesty
and freshness, that shame arose in the old man, and
he had hard shift to keep his glance from wavering.
Without forethought he answered, impulsively:
“He’s desperate and he’s
dangerous. I sold him a ‘45’ just
now.” He was about to tell him where the
man wore it, and to add a word concerning his dexterity
with the gun, when the very fearless deliberation of
the youth deterred him. On second thought, Gale
yielded to an impulse to wait and see how Meade Burrell
would act under fire. If the soldier emerged
scathless, it would give him a line on his character;
if he did not well, that would be even
better. The sight of his blue and brass awoke
in the elder man dread and cowardice, emotions he had
never experienced before. Anyhow, he owed it
to himself, to Necia, and to the others to find out
what kind of man this soldier was.
The crowd was coming back to the steamer,
which had discharged her few bundles of freight, and
there was no one inside the log post as they entered
except Doret and the stranger, who had deposited his
baggage at the rear and was talking with the Frenchman
at the bar. At sight of the Lieutenant he became
silent, and turned carelessly, although with a distrustful
stare. Burrell wasted no time.
“Are you going to locate here?” he began.
“Yes.”
“I notice you go skeleton-rigged,”
the soldier continued, indicating the man’s
baggage. “Pretty small outfit for a miner,
isn’t it?”
“It’s plenty for me.”
“Have you enough money to buy your season’s
grub?”
“I guess that’s my business.”
“Pardon me, it is my business also.”
“What is this a hold-up?”
The man laughed harshly, at the same time swinging
around till he faced his questioner. Gale noted
that his right hand now hung directly over the spot
where his suspenders buttoned on the right side.
The trader moved aside and took up a position at some
distance.
“My orders are to see that all
new-comers either have an outfit or are able to buy
one,” said Burrell. “Those that are
not equipped properly are to be sent down-river to
St. Michael’s, where there is plenty of everything
and where they will be taken care of by the government.
Mr. Gale has only sufficient provisions to winter
the men already in this district.”
“I can take care of myself,”
said the man, angrily, “whether I’m broke
or not, and I don’t want any of your interference.”
He shot a quick glance at Poleon Doret, but the Frenchman’s
face was like wood, and his hand still held the neck
of the whiskey bottle he had set out for the stranger
before the others entered. Gale leaned against
the opposite counter, his countenance inert but for
the eyes, which were fixed upon the Lieutenant.
“Come,” said the officer,
peremptorily, “I have heard all about you, and
you are not the kind of citizen we want here, but if
you have enough money for an outfit I can’t
send you away. If you haven’t ”
“I’m broke,” said
the man, but at the note in his voice Poleon Doret’s
muscles tightened, and Burrell, who also read a sinister
message in the tone, slid his heavy service revolver
from its holster beneath his coat.
He had never done this thing before,
and it galled him. He had never drawn a weapon
on a man, and this playing at policeman became suddenly
most repugnant, stirring in him the uncomfortable feeling
that he was doing a mean thing, and not only a mean
thing, but one of which he ought to be heartily ashamed.
He felt decidedly amateurish, especially when he saw
that the man apparently intended no resistance and
made no move. However, he was in for it now,
and must end as he had begun.
“Give me your gun,” he
said; “I’ll unload it and give it back
to you at the gang-plank.”
“All right, you’ve got
the upper hand,” said the man through lips that
had gone white. Drawing his weapon from beneath
his vest, he presented it to the officer, butt foremost,
hammer underneath. The cylinder reposed naturally
in the palm of his hand, and the tip of his forefinger
was thrust through the trigger-guard.
Burrell lowered the barrel of his
revolver and put out his left hand for the other’s
weapon. Suddenly the man’s wrist jerked,
the soldier saw a blue flicker of sunlight on the
steel as it whirled, saw the arm of Poleon Doret fling
itself across the bar with the speed of a striking
serpent, heard a smash of breaking glass, felt the
shock of a concussion, and the spatter of some liquid
in his face. Then he saw the man’s revolver
on the floor half-way across the room, saw fragments
of glass with it, and saw the fellow step backward,
snatching at the fingers of his right hand. A
smell of powder-smoke and rank whiskey was in the
air.
There are times when a man’s
hand will act more swiftly than his tongue. Napoleon
Doret had seen the manner of the stranger’s surrender
of his gun, and, realizing too late what it meant,
had acted. At the very instant of the fellow’s
treachery, Doret struck with his bottle just in time
to knock the weapon from his hand, but not in time
to prevent its discharge. The bullet was lodged
in the wall a foot from where Gale stood. As
the stranger staggered back, the Frenchman vaulted
the bar, but, though swift as a cat, the soldier, who
had also leaped, was before him. Aiming a sweeping
downward blow with his Colt, Burrell clipped the Skagway
man just above the ear, and he reeled; then as he
fell the officer struck wickedly again at his opponent’s
skull, but Doret seized him by the arm.
“Ba Gar, don’t kill ’im twice!”
Burrell wrenched his arm free and
turned on Doret a face that remained long in the Frenchman’s
memory, a face suffused with fury and convulsed like
that of a sprinter at the finish of a race. The
two men stared at each other over the fallen figure
for a brief moment, until the soldier gained mastery
of himself and sheathed his weapon, when Poleon smiled.
“I spoil’ a quart of good
w’iskee on you. Dat’s wort’
five dollar.”
The Lieutenant wiped the liquor from his face.
“Quick work, Doret,” he said. “I
owe you one.”
Gale’s face was hidden as he
bent over the prostrate man, fingering a long and
ragged cut which laid the fellow’s scalp open
from back of the ear to the temple, but he mumbled
something unintelligible.
“Is he hurt badly?”
“No, you chipped him too low,” said the
trader. “I told you he was bad.”
“He’s goin’ have
nice birt’-mark, anyhow,” said Doret, going
back of the bar for some water. They revived
the man, then bound up his injury hastily, and as
the steamer cast off they led him to the bank and
passed his grip-sacks to a roustabout. He said
no word as he walked unsteadily up the plank, but
turned and stared malignantly at them from the deck;
then, as the craft swung outward into the stream, he
grinned through the trickle of blood that stole down
from beneath his wide hat, if the convulsive grimace
he made could be termed a grin, and cried:
“I’d like to introduce
myself, for I’m coming back to winter with you,
Lieutenant! My name is Runnion.” And
until the steamer was hidden behind the bend below
they saw him standing there gazing back at them fixedly.
As Burrell left the two men at the
store, he gave his hand frankly to the French-Canadian,
and said, while his cheeks flushed:
“I want to thank you for saving
me from my own awkwardness.”
Doret became even more embarrassed
than the Lieutenant at this show of gratitude, and
grunted churlishly. But when the young man had
gone he turned to Gale, who had watched them silently,
and said:
“He’s nice young feller,
olé man. Sapre! Wen he’s mad his
eye got so red lak’ my ondershirt.”
But the trader made no reply.