WHICH TELLS OF THE WHITE SQUAW
The stormy day was followed by an
equally stormy night. Inside the dugout it was
possible, in a measure, to forget the terrors of the
blizzard raging outside. The glowing stove threw
out its comforting warmth, and even the rank yellow
light of the small oil lamp, which was suspended from
one of the rafters, gave a cheering suggestion of comfort
to the rough interior. Besides, there were within
food and shelter and human association, and the mind
of man is easily soothed into a feeling of security
by such surroundings.
The trappers had brought the rescued
trader to the shelter of their humble abode; they
had refreshed him with warmth and good food; they had
given him the comfort of a share of their blankets,
the use of their tobacco, all the hospitality they
knew how to bestow.
The three men were ranged round the
room in various attitudes of repose. All were
smoking heavily. On the top of the stove stood
a tin billy full to the brim of steaming coffee, the
scent of which, blending with the reek of strong tobacco,
came soothingly to their nostrils.
Victor Gagnon was lying full length
upon a pile of outspread blankets. His face was
turned towards the stove, and his head was supported
upon one hand. He looked none the worse for his
adventure in the storm. He was a small, dark
man of the superior French half-breed class. He
had a narrow, ferret face which was quite good looking
in a mean small way. He was clean shaven, and
wore his straight black hair rather long. His
clothes, now he had discarded his furs, showed to be
of orthodox type, and quite unlike those of his hosts.
He was a trader who kept a store away to the northeast
of the dugout. He worked in connection with one
of the big fur companies of the East, as an agent
for the wholesale house dealing directly with trappers
and Indians.
This was the man with whom the Westleys
traded, and they were truly glad that chance had put
it in their power to befriend him. Their associations
with him, although chiefly of a business nature, were
decidedly friendly.
Now they were listening to his slow,
quiet, thoughtful talk. He was a man who liked
talking, but he always contrived that his audience
should be those who gave information. These two
backwoodsmen, simple as the virgin forests to which
they belonged, were not keen enough to observe this.
Victor Gagnon understood such men well. His life
had been made up of dealings with the mountain world
and those who peopled it.
Nick, large and picturesque, sat tailor-fashion
on his blankets, facing the glowing stove with the
unblinking, thoughtful stare of a large dog.
Ralph was less luxurious. He was propped upon
his upturned bucket, near enough to the fire to dispense
the coffee without rising from his seat.
“Yup. It’s a long
trail for a man to make travellin’ light an’
on his lone,” Victor was saying, while his black
eyes flashed swiftly upon his companions. “It’s
not a summer picnic, I guess. Maybe you’re
wonderin’ what I come for.”
He ceased speaking as a heavy blast
shook the roof, and set the lamp swinging dangerously.
“We’re good an’
pleased to see you ” began Ralph,
in his deliberate way; but Victor broke in upon him
at once.
“O’ course you are.
It’s like you an’ Nick there to feel that
way. But human natur’s human natur’,
an’ maybe som’eres you are jest wonderin’
what brought me along. Anyway, I come with a red-hot
purpose. Gee! but it’s blowin’.
I ain’t like to forget this storm.”
Gagnon shuddered as he thought of his narrow escape.
“Say,” he went on, with
an effort at playfulness. “You two boys
are pretty deep pretty deep.”
He repeated himself reflectively. “An’
you seem so easy and free, too. I do allow I’d
never ‘a’ thought it. Ha, ha!”
He turned a smiling face upon his
two friends and looked quizzically from one to the
other. His look was open, but behind it shone
something else. There was a hungriness in his
sharp, black eyes which would have been observed by
any one other than these two backwoodsmen.
“You allus was a bit fancy
in your way o’ speakin’, Victor,”
observed Nick, responding to the man’s grin.
“Hit the main trail, man. We ain’t
good at guessin’.”
Ralph had looked steadily at the trader
while he was speaking; now he turned slowly and poured
out three pannikins of coffee. During the operation
he turned his visitor’s words over in his mind
and something of their meaning came to him. He
passed a tin to each of the others and sipped meditatively
from his own, while his eyes became fixed upon the
face of the half-breed.
“Ther’ was some fine pelts
in that last parcel o’ furs you brought along,”
continued Victor. “Three black foxes.
But your skins is always the best I get.”
Ralph nodded over his coffee, whilst
he added his other hand to the support of the tin.
Nick watched his brother a little anxiously. He,
too, felt uneasy.
“It’s cur’us that
you git more o’ them black pelts around here
than anybody else higher up north. You’re
a sight better hunters than any durned neche on the
Peace River. An’ them hides is worth more’n
five times their weight in gold. You’re
makin’ a pile o’ bills. Say, you keep
them black pelts snug away wi’ other stuff o’
value.”
Gagnon paused and took a deep draught at his coffee.
“Say,” he went on, with
a knowing smile. “I guess them black foxes
lived in a gold mine ”
He broke off and watched the effect
of his words. The others kept silence, only their
eyes betrayed them. The smoke curled slowly up
from their pipes and hung in a cloud about the creaking
roof. The fire burned fiercely in the stove,
and with every rush of wind outside there came a corresponding
roar of flame up the stovepipe.
“Maybe you take my meanin’,”
said the Breed, assured that his words had struck
home. “Them black furs was chock full o’
grit an’ that grit was gold-dust.
Guess that dust didn’t grow in them furs; an’
I ’lows foxes don’t fancy a bed o’
such stuff. Say, boys, you’ve struck gold
in this layout o’ yours. That’s what’s
brought me out in this all-fired storm.”
The two brothers exchanged rapid glances
and then Ralph spoke for them both.
“You’re smart, Victor.
That’s so. We’ve been workin’
a patch o’ pay-dirt for nigh on to twelve month.
But it’s worked out; clear out to the bedrock.
It wa’n’t jest a great find, though I ’lows,
while it lasted, we took a tidy wage out o’
it ”
“An’ what might you call
a ’tidy wage’?” asked the Breed,
in a tone of disappointment. He knew these men
so well that he did not doubt their statement; but
he was loth to relinquish his dream. He had come
there to make an arrangement with them. If they
had a gold working he considered that, provided he
could be of use to them, there would be ample room
for him in it. This had been the object of his
hazardous journey. And now he was told that it
had worked out. He loved gold, and the news came
as a great blow to him.
He watched Ralph keenly while he awaited
his reply, sitting up in his eagerness.
“Seventy-fi’ dollars
a day,” Ralph spoke without enthusiasm.
Victor’s eyes sparkled.
“Each?” he asked.
“No, on shares.”
There was another long silence while
the voice of the storm was loud without. Victor
Gagnon was thinking hard, but his face was calm, his
expression almost indifferent. More coffee was
drunk, and the smoke continued to rise.
“I ’lows you should know if it’s
worked out, sure.”
The sharp eyes seemed to go through Ralph.
“Dead sure. We ain’t
drawn a cent’s worth o’ colour out o’
it fer nine months solid.”
“‘Tain’t worth prospectin’
fer the reef?”
“Can’t say. I ain’t
much when it comes to prospectin’ gold.
I knows the colour when I sees it.”
Nick joined in the conversation at this point.
“Guess you’d a notion
you fancied bein’ in it,” he said, smiling
over at the Breed.
Victor laughed a little harshly.
“That’s jest what.”
The two brothers nodded. This they had understood.
“I’d have found all the
plant fer big work,” went on the trader
eagerly. “I’d have found the cash
to do everything. I’d have found the labour.
An’ us three ’ud have made a great syndicate.
We’d ‘a’ run it dead secret.
Wi’ me in it we could ‘a’ sent our
gold down to the bank by the dogs, an’, bein’
as my shack’s so far from here, no one ’ud
ever ‘a’ found whar the yeller come from.
It ’ud ‘a’ been a real fine game a
jo-dandy game. An’ it’s worked
clear out?” he asked again, as though to make
certain that he had heard aright.
“Bottomed right down to the
bedrock. Maybe ye’d like to see fer
yourself?”
“Guess I ken take your word,
boys; ye ain’t the sort to lie to a pal.
I’m real sorry.” He paused and shifted
his position. Then he went on with a slightly
cunning look. “I ’lows you’re
like to take a run down to Edmonton one o’ these
days. A feller mostly likes to make things hum
when he’s got a good wad.” Gagnon’s
tone was purely conversational. But his object
must have been plain to any one else. He was bitterly
resentful at the working out of the placer mine, and
his anger always sent his thoughts into crooked channels.
His nature was a curious one; he was honest enough,
although avaricious, while his own ends were served.
It was different when he was balked.
“We don’t notion a city any,” said
Nick, simply.
“Things is confusin’ to
judge by the yarns folks tell,” added Ralph,
with a shake of his shaggy head.
“Them fellers as comes up to
your shack, Victor, mostly talks o’ drink, an’
shootin’, an’ an’ women,”
Nick went on. “Guess the hills’ll
do us. Maybe when we’ve done wi’
graft an’ feel that it ’ud be good to laze,
likely we’ll go down an’ buy a homestead
on the prairie. Maybe, I sez.”
Nick spoke dubiously, like a man who
does not convince himself.
“Hah, that’s ’cause
you’ve never been to a city,” said the
Breed sharply.
“Jest so,” observed Ralph
quietly, between the puffs at his pipe.
Gagnon laughed silently. His
eyes were very bright and he looked from one brother
to the other with appreciation. An idea had occurred
to him and he was mentally probing the possibilities
of carrying it out. What he saw pleased him,
for he continued to smile.
“Well, well, maybe you’re
right,” he said indulgently. Then silence
fell.
Each man was rapt in his own thoughts,
and talk without a definite object was foreign to
at least two of the three. The brothers were
waiting in their stolid Indian fashion for sleep to
come. The trader was thinking hard behind his
lowered eyelids, which were almost hidden by the thick
smoke which rose from his pipe.
The fire burned down and was replenished.
Ralph rose and gathered the pannikins and threw them
into a biscuit-box. Then he laid out his blankets
while Nick went over and bolted the door. Still
the trader did not look up. When the two men
had settled themselves comfortably in their blankets
the other at last put his pipe away.
“No,” he said, as he too
negotiated his blankets, “guess we want good
sound men in these hills, anyway. I reckon you’ve
no call to get visitin’ the prairie, boys; you’re
the finest hunters I’ve ever known. D’ye
know the name your shack here goes by among the down-landers?
They call it the ‘Westley Injun Reserve.’”
“White Injuns,” said Nick,
with a grin followed by a yawn.
“That’s what,” observed
Victor, curling himself up in his blankets. “I’ve
frequent heard tell of the White Squaw, but White Injuns
sounds like as it wa’n’t jest possible.
Howsum, they call you real white buck neches, an’
I ‘lows ther’ ain’t no redskin in
the world to stan’ beside you on the trail o’
a fur.”
The two men laughed at their friend’s
rough tribute to their attainments. Ralph was
the quieter of the two, but his appreciation was none
the less. He was simple-hearted, but he knew his
own worth when dealing with furs. Nick laughed
loudly. It tickled him to be considered a White
Indian at the calling which was his, for his whole
pride was in his work.
Nick was not without a romantic side
to his nature. The life of the mountains had
imbued him with a half-savage superstition which revelled
in the uncanny lore of such places. This was not
the first time he had heard of a White Squaw, and,
although he did not believe such a phenomenon possible,
it appealed seductively to his love of the marvellous.
Victor had turned over to sleep, but Nick was very
wide awake and interested. He could not let such
an opportunity slip. Victor was good at a yarn.
And, besides, Victor knew more of the mountain-lore
than any one else. So he roused the Breed again.
“You was sayin’ about
a White Squaw, Victor,” he said, in a shamefaced
manner. His bronzed cheeks were deeply flushed
and he glanced over at his brother to see if he were
laughing at him. Ralph was lying full length
upon his blankets and his eyes were closed, so he went
on. “Guess I’ve heerd tell
of a White Squaw. Say, ain’t it that they
reckon as she ain’t jest a human crittur?”
Victor opened his eyes and rolled
over on his back. If there was one weakness he
had it was the native half-breed love of romancing.
He was ever ready to yarn. He revelled in it
when he had a good audience. Nick was the very
man for him, simple, honest, superstitious. So
he sat up and answered readily enough.
“That’s jest how, pard.
An’ it ain’t a yarn neither. It’s
gospel truth. I know.”
“Hah!” ejaculated Nick,
while a strange feeling passed down his spine.
Ralph’s eyes had slowly opened, but the others
did not notice him.
“I’ve seen her!” went on the trader
emphatically.
“You’ve seen her!” said Nick, in
an awed whisper.
An extra loud burst of the storming
wind held the men silent a moment, then, as it died
away, Victor went on.
“Yes, I see her with my own
two eyes, an’ I ain’t like to ferget it
neither. Say, ye’ve seen them Bible ’lustrations
in my shanty? Them pictur’s o’ lovesome
critturs wi’ feathery wings an’ sech?”
“I guess.”
“Wal, clip them wings sheer off, an’ you’ve
got her dead right.”
“Mush! But she must be
a dandy sight,” exclaimed Nick, with conviction.
“How come ye to ”
“Guess it’s a long yarn, an’ maybe
ye’re wantin’ to sleep.”
“Say, I ’lows I’d
like that yarn, Victor. I ain’t worried
for sleep, any.”
Nick deliberately refilled his pipe
and lit it, and passed his tobacco to the trader.
Victor took the pouch. Ralph’s eyes had
closed again.
“You allus was a great
one fer a yarn, Nick,” began the half-breed,
with a laugh. “Guess you most allus
gets me gassin’; but say, this ain’t no
yarn, in a way. It’s the most cur’us
bit o’ truth, as maybe you’ll presently
allow. But I ain’t goin’ to tell it
you if ye ain’t believin’, ’cause
it’s the truth.” The trader’s
face had become quite serious and he spoke with unusual
earnestness. Nick was impressed, and Ralph’s
eyes had opened again.
“Git goin’, pard; guess
your word’s good fer me,” Nick
said eagerly. “You was sayin’ ”
“Ye’ve heard tell o’
the Moosefoot Injuns?” began the trader slowly.
Nick nodded. “They’re a queer lot
o’ neches. I used to do a deal o’
trade wi’ them on the Peace River, ’fore
they was located on a reserve. They were the
last o’ the old-time redskin hunters. Dessay
they were the last to hunt the buffalo into the drives.
They’re pretty fine men now, I guess, as neches
go, but they ain’t nothin’ to what they
was. I guess that don’t figger anyway,
but they’re different from most Injuns, which
is what I was coming to. Their chief ain’t
a ‘brave,’ same as most, which, I ’lows,
is unusual. Maybe that’s how it come they
ain’t allus on the war-path, an’
maybe that’s how it come their river’s
called Peace River. Their chief is a Med’cine
Man; has been ever since they was drove across the
mountains from British Columbia. They was pretty
nigh wiped out when that happened, so they did away
wi’ havin’ a ‘brave’ fer
a chief, an’ took on a ‘Med’cine
Man.’
“Wal, it ain’t quite clear
how it come about, but the story, which is most gener’ly
believed, says that the first Med’cine Man was
pertic’ler cunnin’, an’ took real
thick with the white folks’ way o’ doin’
things. Say, he learned his folk a deal o’
farmin’ an’ sech, an’ they took to
trappin’ same as you understand it. There
wa’n’t no scrappin’, nor war-path
yowlin’; they jest come an’ settled right
down an’ took on to the land. Wal, this
feller, ’fore he died, got the Mission’ry
on his trail, an’ got religion; but he couldn’t
git dead clear o’ his med’cine, an’
he got to prophesyin’. He called all his
folk together an’ took out his youngest squaw.
She was a pretty crittur, sleek as an antelope fawn;
I ‘lows her pelt was nigh as smooth an’
soft. Her eyes were as black an’ big as
a moose calf’s, an’ her hair was as fine
as black fox fur. Wal, he up an’ spoke
to them folk, an’ said as ther’ was a White
Squaw comin’ amongst ’em who was goin’
to make ’em a great people; who was goin’
to lead ’em to victory agin their old enemies
in British Columbia, where they’d go back to
an’ live in peace. An’ he told ’em
as this squaw was goin’ to be the instrument
by which the comin’ of the White Squaw was to
happen. Then they danced a Med’cine Dance
about her, an’ he made med’cine for three
days wi’out stoppin’. Then they built
her a lodge o’ teepees in the heart o’
the forest, where she was to live by herself.
“Wal, time went on an’
the squaw give birth to a daughter, but she wa’n’t
jest white, so the men took and killed her, I guess.
Then came another; she was whiter than the first,
but she didn’t jest please the folk, an’
they killed her too. Then came another, an’
another, each child whiter than the last, an’
they were all killed, ’cause I guess they wa’n’t
jest white. Till the seventh come along.
The seventh was the White Squaw. Say, fair as
a pictur, wi’ black hair that shone in the sun,
an’ wi’ eyes that blue as ’ud shame
the summer sky.”
The half-breed paused, and sat staring
with introspective gaze at the iron side of the stove.
Nick was gazing at him all eyes and ears for the story.
Ralph, too, was sitting up now.
“Wal, she was taken care of
an’ treated like the queen she was. On’y
the headman was allowed to look at her. She grew
an’ grew, an’ all the tribe was thinkin’
of war, an’ gettin’ ready. They made
‘braves’ nigh every week, an’ their
Sun Dances was the greatest ever known. They danced
Ghost Dances, too, to keep away Evil Spirits, I guess,
an’ things was goin’ real good. Then
sudden comes the white folk, an’ after a bit
they was all herded on to a Reserve an’ kep’
there. But that White Squaw never left her home
in the forest, ’cause no one but the headman
knew where she was. She was on’y a young
girl then; I guess she’s grown now. Wal,
fer years them pore critturs reckoned on her comin’
along an’ leadin’ them out on the war-path.
But she didn’t come; she jest stayed right along
with her mother in that forest, an’ didn’t
budge.
“That’s the yarn as it
stan’s,” Victor went on, after another
pause, “but this is how I come to see her.
It was winter, an’ I was tradin’ on the
Reserve there. It was a fine, cold day, an’
the snow was good an’ hard, an’ I set
out to hunt an old bull moose that was runnin’
with its mates in the location. I took two neches
with me, an’ we had a slap-up time fer
nigh on to a week. We hunted them moose hard the
whole time, but never came up wi’ ’em.
Then it came on to storm, an’ we pitched camp
in a thick pine forest. We was there fer
nigh on three days while it stormed a’mighty
hard. Then it cleared an’ we set out, an’,
wi’in fifty yards o’ our camp, we struck
the trail o’ the moose. We went red-hot
after them beasts, I’m figgerin’, an’
they took us into the thick o’ the forest.
Then we got a couple o’ shots in; my slugs got
home, but, fer awhiles, we lost them critturs.
Next day we set out again, an’ at noon we was
startled by hearin’ a shot fired by som’un
else. We kep’ right on, an’ bimeby
we came to a clearin’. There we saw four
teepees an’ a shack o’ pine logs all smeared
wi’ colour; but what came nigh to par’lyzin’
me was the sight o’ my moose lyin’ all
o’ a heap on the ground, an’, standin’
beside its carcass, leanin’ on a long muzzle-loader,
was a white woman. She was wearin’ the blanket
right enough, but she was as white as you are.
Say, she had six great huskies wi’ her, an’
four women. An’ when they see us they put
hard into the woods. I was fer goin’
to have a look at the teepees, but my neches wouldn’t
let me. They told me the lodge was sacred to the
White Squaw, who we’d jest seen. An’
I ’lows, they neches wa’n’t jest
easy till we cleared them woods.”
“An’ she was beautiful,
an’ an’ fine?” asked Nick,
as the trader ceased speaking. “Was she
that beautiful as you’d heerd tell of?”
His voice was eager with suppressed
excitement. His pipe had gone out, and he had
forgotten everything but the story the Breed had told.
“Ay, that she was; her skin
was as clear as the snow she trod on, an’ her
eyes gee! but I’ve never seen the
like. Man, she was wonderful.”
Victor threw up his hands in a sort
of ecstasy and looked up at the creaking roof.
“An’ her hair?” asked Nick, wonderingly.
“A black fox pelt was white aside it.”
“An’ didn’t ye foller her?”
The question came abruptly from Ralph, whom the others
had forgotten.
“I didn’t jest know you
was awake,” said Victor. “Wal, no,
to own the truth, I ‘lows I was scart to death
wi’ what them neches said. Maybe I wa’n’t
sorry to light out o’ them woods.”
They talked on for a few moments longer,
then Ralph’s stertorous breathing told of sleep.
Victor was not long in following his example.
Nick sat smoking thoughtfully for some time; presently
he rose and put out the lamp and stoked up the fire.
Then he, too, rolled over in his blankets, and, thinking
of the beautiful White Squaw, dropped off to sleep
to continue his meditations in dreamland.