THE HOODED MAN
The mere suggestion of the possibility
of a woman’s presence had rudely broken up the
even calm of Ralph and Nick Westley’s lives.
To turn back to the peace of their mountain home without
an effort to discover so fair and strange a creature
as this White Squaw would have been impossible.
These men had known no real youth.
They had fought the battle of life from the earliest
childhood, they had lived lives as dispassionate and
cold as the glaciers of their mountain home. Recreation
was almost unknown to them. Toil, unremitting,
arduous, had been their lot. Thus Nature had
been defied; and now she was coming back on them as
inevitably as the sun rises and sets, and the seasons
come and go. They failed to realize their danger;
they had no understanding of the passions that moved
them, and so they hurried headlong upon the trail
that was to lead them they knew not whither, but which
was shadowed by disaster every foot of the way.
To them temptation was irresistible for they had never
known the teaching of restraint; it was the passionate
rending of the bonds which had all too long stifled
their youth.
Even the dogs realized the change
in their masters. Nick’s lash fell heavily
and frequently, and the hardy brutes, who loved the
toil of the trace, and the incessant song of the trailing
sled, fell to wondering at the change, and the pace
they were called upon to make. It was not their
nature to complain; their pride was the stubborn, unbending
pride of savage power, and their reply to the wealing
thong was always the reply their driver sought.
Faster and faster they journeyed as the uncooling
ardour of their master’s spirits rose.
The snow lay thick and heavy, and
every inch of the wild, unmeasured trail had to be
broken. The Northland giants thronged about them,
glistening in their impenetrable armour and crested
by the silvery burnish of their glacial headpieces.
They frowned vastly, yet with a sublime contempt,
at the puny intrusion of their solitude. But the
fiery spirit impelling the brothers was a power which
defied the overwhelming grandeur of the mountain world,
and rendered insignificant the trials they encountered.
The cry was “On!” and the dogs laboured
as only these burden-bearers of the North can labour.
The dark day ripened; and, as the
dull sun crept out from behind the greyness, and revealed
the frost in the air, the temperature dropped lower
and lower. And the animal world peeped furtively
out upon the strange sight of creatures like themselves
toiling at the command of beings whose voices had
not even the power to smite the mountainsides with
boastful defiance as theirs were wont to do.
Then the daylight waned. The
sky returned to its greyness as the night shades rose,
and a bitter breeze shuddered through the woods and
along the valleys. The sounds of the forest rose
in mournful cadence, and, as the profundity of the
mountain night settled heavily upon the world, the
timber-wolf, the outlaw of the region, moved abroad,
lifting his voice in a cry half-mournful, half-exultant.
Camp was pitched well clear of the
forest and a large fire kindled; and the savage night-prowlers
drew forth from the woodland shadows. The men
proceeded silently with their various tasks. Ralph
prepared their own food, and soon a savoury odour
tickled the nostrils of those beyond the circle of
the firelight. Nick thawed out the dogs’
evening meal and distributed it impartially, standing
over the hungry beasts with a club to see that each
got the full benefit of his portion. It was a
strange sight for the furtive eyes that looked on,
and a tantalizing one, but they dared not draw near,
for the fire threatened them, and, besides, they possessed
a keen instinct of caution.
After supper the men rested in spells,
one always sitting up by the fire whilst the other
slept in the comfort of his fur-lined “Arctic
bag.” And presently the blackness about
lightened, and the dark shadows prowling became visible
to the eyes of the sentry. The moon had risen,
but was still hidden somewhere behind the great mountains.
Its light had effect, that was all. And as the
night wore on the shadows grew bolder and their presence
kept the sentry ever on the alert. For the most
part he sat still, swathed to the eyes in his furs;
he huddled down over the fire smoking, every now and
then pausing to thaw the nicotine in the stem of his
pipe. But his eyes seemed to be watching in every
direction at once. Nor was the vaguest shadow
lost to their quick flashing glances.
The dogs, sleeping in their snow-burrows,
rested their muscles, dreaming peacefully of happy
hunting-grounds. Their safety was assured under
the watchful eyes of their masters; the forest world
had no terrors for them.
Towards dawn Nick was on the watch.
The aspect of the night had quite changed. The
moon, large, full, brilliant, was directly overhead,
and the stars, like magnificent dewdrops, hung richly
in the sky. Away to the north, just clear of
a stretch of heaven-high peaks, the scintillating
shafts of the northern lights shuddered convulsively,
like skeleton arms outstretched to grasp the rich
gems which hung just beyond their reach. The
moving shadows had changed to material forms.
Lank, gaunt, hungry-looking beasts crowded just beyond
the fire-lit circle; shaggy-coated creatures, with
manes a-bristle and baleful eyes which gazed angrily
upon the camp.
Nick saw all these; could have counted
them, so watchful was he. The wolves were of
small account, but there were other creatures which
needed his most vigilant attention. Twice in the
night he had seen two green-glowing eyes staring down
upon him from among the branches of one of the trees
on the edge of the forest. He knew those eyes,
as who of his calling would not; a puma was crouching
along the wide-spreading bough.
He stealthily drew his gun towards
him. He was in the act of raising it to his shoulder
when the eyes were abruptly withdrawn. The time
passed on. He knew that the puma had not departed,
and he waited, ready. The eyes reappeared.
Up leapt the rifle, but ere his hand had compressed
the trigger a sound from behind arrested him.
His head turned instantly, and, gazing through the
light, drifting fire smoke, he beheld the outline
of a monstrous figure bearing down upon the camp in
an almost human manner. In size the newcomer
dwarfed the trapper; it came slowly with a shuffling
gait. Suddenly it dropped to all-fours and came
on quicker. Nick hesitated only for a second.
His mouth set firmly and his brows contracted.
He knew that at all hazards he must settle the puma
first. He glanced at the sleeping Ralph.
He was about to rouse him; then he changed his mind
and swung round upon the puma, leaving the fire between
himself and the other. He took a long and deadly
aim. The glowing eyes offered a splendid target
and he knew he must not miss. A report rang out,
followed almost instantaneously by a piteous, half-human
shriek of pain; then came the sound of a body falling,
and the eyes had vanished. After firing Nick
swung round to the figure beyond the fire. It
loomed vast in the yellow light and was reared to
its full height not ten yards away. A low, snarling
growl came from it, and the sound was dreadful in
its suppressed ferocity. Ralph was now sitting
up gazing at the oncoming brute, a magnificent
grizzly. Nick stooped, seized a blazing log from
the fire, and dashed out to meet the intruder.
It was a strange and impressive sight,
this encounter of man and beast. But Nick, with
his wide experience, was master of the situation.
He boldly went up to within two yards of his savage
and fearless foe and dashed the burning brand into
the creature’s face. Down dropped the grizzly
upon all-fours again, and, with a roar of pain and
terror, ambled hastily away into the forest.
“B’ar?” questioned
Ralph, from the shelter of his fur bag.
“Yes an’ puma,”
replied Nick unconcernedly, as he returned to his seat
to await the coming of morning.
And so the long night passed, and
the slow day broke over the bleak, pitiless world.
The dogs awoke, and clambered from their warm, snowy
couches. The routine of the “long trail”
obtained, and once more the song of the sled rang
out at the heels of the eager beasts.
Nor was the short day and long weary
night in such a region without effect upon the men.
A feeling of superstitious uneasiness seized upon
Nick. He said nothing, he was possibly too ashamed
of it to do so, but the dread steadily grew, and no
effort of his seemed to have power to dispel it.
As he moved along beside his dogs he would shoot swift,
fearful glances at the heights above, or back over
the trail, or on ahead to some deep, dark gorge they
might be approaching. He grew irritable.
The darkness of the woods would sometimes hold his
attention for hours, while the expression of his eyes
would tell of the strange thoughts passing behind
them. And Ralph, though more unemotional than
his brother, was scarcely less affected. It was
startling in such men, yet was it hardly to be wondered
at in so overpowering a waste.
It was still the morning of the second
day. Nick’s whip had been silent for a
long time. His eyes were gazing out afar.
Sometimes up at the lowering sky, where the peaks
were lost in a sea of dark cloud, sometimes down,
with a brooding fire, into the forest depths.
Ralph had observed the change in his brother and sympathy
prompted him to draw up alongside him.
“What’s ailin’ ye?” he asked.
Nick shook his head; he could not say that anything
ailed him.
“Thought, maybe ther’
was somethin’ amiss,” went on his brother,
half-apologetically. He felt himself that he must
talk.
Then Nick was seized with a desire
to confide in the only lifelong friend he had ever
known.
“Ther’ ain’t nothin’
amiss, zac’ly,” he said. And he got
no farther.
“Hah!”
Ralph looked round sharply. It
seemed as if something were stirring about him.
He waited expectantly. There was nothing unusual
in sight. A wild panorama of snowy grandeur;
mountain and valley and wood, that was all.
They traipsed on in silence, but now
they journeyed side by side. Both men were strangely
moved. Both had heard of the “Dread of the
Wild,” but they would have scoffed at the idea
of its assailing them. But the haunting clung,
and at each step they felt that the next might be the
signal for a teeming spirit life to suddenly break
up the dreadful calm.
They passed a hollow where the snow
was unusually deep and soft. The dogs laboured
wearily. They reached the rising end of it, and
toiled up the sharp ascent. The top was already
in sight and a fresh vista of the interminable peaks
broke up their view. Without apparent reason Nick
suddenly drew up and a sharp exclamation broke from
him. The dogs lay down in the traces, and both
men gazed back into the hollow they had left.
Nick towered erect, and, with eyes staring, pointed
at a low hill on the other side of it.
Ralph followed the direction of the
outstretched arm. And as he looked he held his
breath, for something seemed to grip his throat.
Then a moment later words, sounding
hoarse and stifled, came from the depths of his storm-collar.
“Who who is it?”
Nick did not answer. Both were
staring out across the hollow at the tall motionless
figure of a man, and their eyes were filled with an
expression of painful awe. The figure was aggressively
distinct, silhouetted as it was against a barren,
snow-clad crag. They might have been gazing at
a statue, so still the figure stood. It was enveloped
in fur, so far as the watchers could tell, but what
impressed them most was the strange hood which covered
the head. The figure was too distant for them
to have distinguished the features of the face had
they been visible, but, as it was, they were lost
within the folds of the grey hood.
There came an ominous click from behind.
Ralph turned suddenly and seized his brother’s
arm as he was in the act of raising his rifle to his
shoulder. The gun was lowered, and the intense
face of Nick scowled at the author of the interruption.
“It’s it ain’t a human
crittur,” he said hoarsely.
“It’s a man,” retorted Ralph, without
releasing his hold.
And the two brothers became silent.
They stood watching for a long time.
Neither spoke again, they had nothing to say.
Their thoughts occupied them with strange apprehension
while the dogs sprawled in the snow in the spiritless
manner of their kind when the labour of the traces
is not demanded of them. The figure on the hill
stood quite still. The silence of the wild was
profound. No wind stirred to relieve it, and
even under their warm furs the two men watching shivered
as with cold.
At last the movement they had awaited
came. The Hooded Man turned towards them.
One long arm was raised and he pointed away at a tall
hill. Then his arm moved, and he seemed to be
pointing out certain landmarks for his own benefit.
Again, on a sudden, as he fronted the direction where
the brothers stood, he dropped his arm, and, a moment
later, disappeared on the other side of the hill.
The two men remained gazing out across the hollow
for some while longer, but as the Hooded Man did not
return they turned back to their dogs and continued
their journey.
Nick shook his head in a dissatisfied
manner. Ralph said nothing for awhile. He
was beginning to doubt his own assertion.
The dogs leapt at their breast-draws
and the sled moved forward. The two men ran side
by side. When Nick at length spoke it was to reiterate
his fears.
“Ther’ wa’n’t no face showed,”
he said abruptly.
“No,” replied Ralph.
Then he added thoughtfully: “He hadn’t
no dogs, neither.”
“He was alone, seemly. Ther’ wa’n’t
no camp outfit.”
Ralph shook his head and brushed away
the ice about his mouth with the back of his beaver
mitt.
There was a painful atmosphere of
disquiet about the two men. Their backward glances
spoke far louder than words. Had their mission
been in the nature of their ordinary calling they
would possibly have felt nothing but curiosity, and
their curiosity would have led them to investigate
further, but as it was, all their inclinations tended
in the opposite direction. “The Dread of
the Wild” had come to them.
When they camped at midday things
were no better. They had seen nothing more to
disturb them, but the thoughts of both had turned upon
the night, so long and drear, which was to come; and
the “dread” grew stronger.
After the noon meal Nick harnessed
the dogs while Ralph stowed the chattels. They
were on a hillside overlooking a wide valley of unbroken
forest. All was ready for a start and Nick gave
a wide, comprehensive glance around. The magic
word “Mush,” which would send the dogs
headlong at their breast harness, hovered on his lips,
but ere he gave it utterance it changed into an ejaculation
of horror.
“By Gar!” Then after a thrilling pause,
“The Hood!”
Ralph, standing ready to break the sled out, turned.
“Hey!” he ejaculated; and horror was in
his tone, too.
There, in the hazy distance, more
than three miles away, was the dim figure of the Hooded
Man racing over the snow. His course lay on the
far side of the valley and he was to the rear of them.
Nick turned back to the dogs, the
command “Mush!” rang out with biting emphasis,
and the dogs and men, as though both were animated
by the same overwhelming fear, raced down the virgin
trail. Their pace was a headlong flight.
Night came, and they camped in the
open. The night was blacker, and longer, more
weary and shadowy than the first, by reason of the
“dread” which had now become the “Dread
of the Hooded Man.” Even thoughts of the
White Squaw took a secondary place in the minds of
the brothers, for, at every turn, they felt that their
steps were dogged by that other strange creature of
the wild. When morning came they knew, without
looking, that somewhere, coldly surveying their camp,
the grey-hooded figure would be watching and waiting
for them to move on. And sure enough, as the eager
eyes looked out over the snow and forest, the grim,
silent figure was there, watching, watching; but no
nearer to them.
That night they came to the Moosefoot
Reserve, and both men experienced such nervous relief
as they had never before known. They camped within
sight of the Indian teepees and log huts, but they
waited for morning before they approached the chief.
Over their fire they discussed their
plans with seriousness. Neither of them could
speak the Moosefoot language, but they could talk both
Sioux and Cree, and they did not doubt but there would
be interpreters about the chief.
“We’ll see him first thing,
I guess,” said the eager Nick. “Guess
them two black foxes’ll fix him good. He’ll
git a goodish bit o’ trade for ’em.”
“An’ we’ll promise
him powder, an’ slugs, an’ essences,”
said the cautious Ralph. “We’ll get
his yarn first an’ pay after,” he added,
as he sipped his coffee.
Nick nodded.
“We’ll fin’ that crittur, sure,”
he said.
And he sat gazing upon the pictures
his mind conjured up as he watched the flaming logs.
In every tongue of flame he beheld the glowing face
Victor had told them of, and, as the smoke rolled up
into the black vault of night, he seemed to see the
elusive form of the White Squaw floating in its midst.
Ralph’s slower imagination was less fantastically,
but no less deeply, stirred.
At daybreak they sought Man-of-the-Snow-Hill’s
lodge. They found him a grizzled wreck of extreme
age. He was surrounded by his medicine-men, his
young chiefs and his squaws. And by the gathering
in the smoke-begrimed hut they knew that their approach
had been made known.
Perfect silence reigned as the white
men entered. An Indian silence; such silence
as it would be hard to find anywhere but in the primitive
dwelling. The atmosphere of the place was heavy
with the pungent odours of Killi-ka-nik.
Both men and women were smoking it in pipes of red
clay with reed stems, and they passed this sign of
friendship from one to another in solemn fashion.
All were clad in the parti-coloured blanket, and sat
hunched upon their quarters more like beasts than human
creatures, yet with that perfect air of dignity which
the Indian seldom loses.
Man-of-the-Snow-Hill alone differed
in his dress and attitude. He was wrapped in
a large buffalo robe, and was stretched out upon a
pile of skins to ease his rheumatics, while, spread
out before him, were a number of charms and much “med’cine,”
which had been so set by his wise men to alleviate
his ailments. In the centre of the throng a fire
smouldered, and the smoke therefrom rose sullenly upon
the dense air and drifted out through a hole in the
flat roof. Man-of-the-Snow-Hill blinked his watery
eyes as the strangers entered, and passed his pipe
to his favourite squaw, a buxom, sleepy-eyed beauty
who sat upon his right. Then he grunted intelligently
as he saw the visitors deposit their pile of presents
upon the floor, and, in the manner of the neche, seat
themselves beside it.
Ralph spoke his greeting in Indian fashion.
“How,” he said.
“How!” replied Man-of-the-Snow-Hill,
in a thin, reedy voice. And his followers echoed
the sentiment in chorus.
Then the aged chief held out his hand
in further greeting. And each neche in turn shook
the white men by the hand.
The visitors filled and lighted their
pipes, and passed their plugs of tobacco to the others.
Then Ralph began to speak in Cree.
“We come far to speak with Man-of-the-Snow-Hill,”
he began.
The watery-eyed chief shook his head,
grunting. The squaws laughed, and the med’cine-men
closed their eyes in sign of not understanding the
tongue in which he spoke. Then a young chief harangued
his comrades. He could understand the tongue
and would interpret. The old chief nodded approval
and continued to gaze greedily at the presents.
Now the conversation proceeded quite smoothly.
“We wish to speak with the great
Man-of-the-Snow-Hill in private,” Ralph said.
“We have much to say, and many presents.”
The chief blinked with satisfaction,
and grunted appreciation. His lined face lit
up. He waved one shaking arm and his followers
reluctantly departed. All except the interpreter
and the chief squaw.
Then Ralph went on. Nick had
care of the presents, and on him the cunning old chief
kept his eyes. He opened a large bag of beads
and emptied some on a spread of cheap print.
The squaw’s eyes smiled greedily.
“We wish the great chief well,”
said Ralph, using all the flowery embellishments of
the Cree tongue, “and we would live in peace.
We have tobacco, beads, skins, prints, and blankets.
And we would lay them all at the feet of the great
man, the mighty hunter, if he would help us to find
that which we seek.”
Ralph signed to his brother and Nick
laid out an array of presents and passed them with
due solemnity to the old man.
“Ow-ow!” grunted Man-of-the-Snow-Hill,
as he waved the things away to his squaw. He
was not satisfied, and his eyes watered as though he
were weeping.
Then Ralph went on.
“We have come on the ‘long
trail’ through the mountains. And we seek
the White Squaw of the Moosefoot Indians.”
The chief remained quite calm, but
his bleared old eyes shot a sidelong gleam at the
speaker in which there was little friendliness.
No other movement was allowed to give evidence of
disquiet. It is part of the upbringing of the
neche to eschew all outward signs of emotion.
The Sun Dance, when the braves are made, is the necessary
education in this direction. Ralph saw the look
but failed to take its meaning. The squaw watched
the white men with keen interest. Nick was groping
about in the depths of a gunny-sack.
Ralph plunged into the fantastic story
which he and Nick had prepared. The language
of the Cree helped him, for the natural colouring of
the Indian tongues is as flowery as that of any Eastern
race.
“We come from beyond the mountains,
from the hunting-grounds of forest and river where
the great fathers of the Moosefoot Indians dwelt.
We come to tell the White Squaw that the land cries
out for her, and the return of the children of the
Moose. We come to speak with her of these things,
for the time has come when she must leave her forest
home and return to her own land. Man-of-the-Snow-Hill
must show us the way. We have many presents which
we will give him.”
“It is well,” said the
great man, closing his eyes while the water oozed
from between the compressed lids. “The white
men are the friends of the Moosefoot people, and they
have many presents. Have they fire-water?”
Nick produced some bottles and the
great man reached for them greedily. But the
other withheld them.
“What will Man-of-the-Snow-Hill
do for the fire-water?” Ralph asked.
The interpreter passed the word.
“He will send his favourite
squaw to guide the white men,” he answered at
once. “He can do no more.”
A dozen bottles of vanilla essence
passed over to the chief. A number of other presents
were handed to him. Then without a word the squaw
arose and accompanied the white men out.
And without further delay the brothers
continued their journey. Fleet of foot, untiring,
silent as only an Indian woman can be, the squaw led
the way. North, north; always north they travelled,
over hill, through forest and deep white valley, without
let-up to their eager speed. The superstitious
dread which had hitherto so afflicted the white men
now fell away from them. Night came on swift
and silent, and camp was pitched on the edge of a
dense forest.
Ere the daylight had quite died out
the squaw took the two men to the crest of a hill.
She looked out across the virgin carpet of towering
pines below them and pointed with one blanket-covered
arm outstretched. She was silent while she indicated
several points in the vast panorama before her.
Then she tried to tell them something.
But her language was the language
of her tribe, and neither of the men could understand
her. Then she spoke in the language of signs,
which all Indians speak so well.
She raised her hand, pointing eastward,
till it reached a point directly overhead. Then
she pointed to her feet, and her hand moved slowly
in a northern direction, after which she made a running
movement with her feet. Then she bent her body
and appeared to be gazing about her, searching.
Finally she pointed to two very large trees which stood
out apart from their fellows. Then again came
the motion of running, which finished quickly, and
she pointed first to Nick’s face and then to
herself. After that she stood motionless, with
arms folded over her bosom. And the two men read
her meaning.
At daylight they were to start out
northward and travel until midday. Then they
were to halt and search the outskirts of the forest
until they found two mammoth trees standing apart.
The space between them was the mouth of a pathway
into the heart of the forest. They were to traverse
this path a short distance, and they would discover
the White Squaw.
Ralph nodded his head slowly in token
of comprehension. He waited to see if she had
aught further to say. But the woman remained standing
where she was, slightly aloof and with her arms folded.
Her sleepy eyes were watching the last dying gleam
of daylight away in the west. Suddenly, out upon
the still air, came a doleful cry. It was long-drawn-out
and mournful, but it travelled as mountain cries will
travel. It came waving upon the air with a certain
rise and fall in it like the rippling of water.
It rose up, up, and then lingeringly died out.
The men listened, and looked in the direction whence
it came, and, as they looked, a feeling of awe swept
over them. In a rush the old “dread”
awoke, and their gaze was filled with the expression
of it.
Out to the west the forest lay gloomy,
brooding; and within a few hundred yards of them stood
the mighty sentry trees which the squaw had pointed
out. But now between them, breaking up the dead
white carpet which covered the earth, the tall form
of the Hooded Man stood silhouetted. Grim and
ghostly he looked, as, motionless, he gazed upon the
watchers.
With the instinct of self-defence
which the wild teaches so insistently, Nick unslung
his rifle. Ere Ralph could stay him the shot rang
out, echoing away over the tree-tops. The figure
had disappeared, and the unblemished carpet of snow
was as it had been before. Nick stood aghast,
for he was a dead shot. Ralph gazed helplessly
at the spot where the man had stood.
Suddenly Nick gasped.
“It it ain’t human.”
And Ralph had no answer to make.
Then presently they turned to where
the Moosefoot squaw had stood. She, too, had
gone; vanished as completely as had the Hooded Man.
There was the trail of her snow-shoes ruffling the
snow, and the men ran following it as far as the forest
edge; but here they stood. They could follow no
further. Night was upon them. Slowly they
returned to camp.
The next day they continued their
journey with almost fanatical persistence. They
found no sentry-trees such as the squaw had described.
Forest, yes, but where in that region could they fail
to find forest? The abode of the White Squaw
was nowhere to be found.
That night they decided upon their
next move in the quiet, terse manner of men who cannot
bring themselves to speak of the strange feelings
which possess them; who are ashamed of their own weakness,
and yet must acknowledge it to themselves.
“An’ to-morrow ”
said Nick, glancing apprehensively around beyond the
fire, over which they were sitting, fighting the deadly
cold of the night.
“To-morrow?” echoed Ralph.
“Where?” asked Nick, looking away towards
the south.
Ralph followed the direction of his brother’s
gaze.
“Um.” And he nodded.
“What south?”
“South.”
“An’ the Wh ”
Ralph shook his head, and smoked on solemnly.