haunting dread and deep-lying fear of the northern winter. But that dread season was gone now, yielding for a few happy months to a gay invader from the South; and the whole forest world rejoiced.
Both Beatrice and Ben could sense the new wakening and revival in the still depths about them. The forest was hushed, tremulous, yet vibrant and ecstatic with renewed life. The old grizzly bear had left his winter lair; and good feeding was putting the fat again on his bones; the old cow moose had stolen away into the farther marshes for some mystery and miracle of her own. Everywhere young calves of caribou were breathing the air for the first time, trying to stand on wobbly legs and pushing with greedy noses into overflowing udders. The rich new grass yielded milk in plenty for all these wilderness nurslings. Even the she-wolf forgot her wicked savagery to nurse and fondle her whelps in the lair; even the she-lynx, hunting with renewed fervor through the branches, knew of a marvelous secret in a hollow log that she would be torn to scraps of fur rather than reveal.
The she-ermine, her white hair falling out, was brooding a litter of cutthroats and murderers in a nest of grass and twigs, and each one of them was a source of pride and joy to her mother heart. Even the wolverine had some wicked-eyed little cubs that, to her, were precious beyond rubies; but which would ultimately receive all the oaths in the language for stealing bait on the trap lines out from the settlements.
Beatrice, a woods creature herself, knew the stir and thrill of spring; but there were also more personal, more deeply hidden reasons why she was happy to-day. She was certainly a very girlish-girl in most ways, with even more than the usual allowance of romance and sentiment, and the idea of an all-day picnic with this stalwart forester went straight home to her imagination. She had been tremendously impressed with him from the first, and the day’s ride out from Snowy Gulch had brought him very close to her indeed. And what might not the day bring forth! What mystery and wonder might come to pass!
Her dark eyes were lustrous, and the haunting sadness they often held was quite gone. Her face was faintly flushed, her red lips wistful, every motion eager and happy as a child’s. But Ben looked at her unmoved.
Coldly his eye leaped over her supple, slender form. He saw with relief that she was stoutly clad in middy and skirt of wool, wool stockings, and solid little boots. The heavy coat she had brought was not particularly noteworthy in these woods, but it would have drawn instant admiration from knowing people of a great city. It was not cut with particular style, neither was it beautifully lined, but the fabric itself was plucked otter,–the dark, well-wearing fur of many lights and of matchless luster and beauty.
“For goodness sake, Mr. Darby,” the girl cried. “What have you got in this boat? Surely that isn’t just the lunch–” She pointed to the pile of supplies, covered by the blankets, in the center of the craft.
“It looks like we had enough to stay a month, doesn’t it?” he laughed. “There’s blankets there, of course–for table cloths and to make us comfortable–and the lunch, and a pillow or two–and some little surprises. The rest is just some stores that I’m going to take this opportunity to put across the river–to my next camp. Now, Miss Neilson–if you’ll take the seat in the bow. Fenris is going to ride in the middle–“
The girl’s eyes fell with some apprehension on the shaggy wolf. “I haven’t established very friendly relations with Fenris–“
“I’d leave him at home, but he won’t stand for it. Besides I’d like to teach him how to retrieve grouse. Lie down, old boy.” Ben motioned, and Fenris sprawled at his feet. “Now come here and pet him, Miss Neilson. His fur, at this season, is wonderful–“
Reluctant to show her fear before Ben, the girl drew near. The wolf shivered as the soft hand touched his side and moved slowly to his fierce head; but he gave no further sign of enmity.
“He understands,” Ben explained. “He realizes that I’ve accepted you, and you’re all right. Until he’s given orders otherwise, he’ll treat you with the greatest respect.”
She was deeply and sincerely pleased. It did not occur to her, in the least, little degree, that occasion could possibly arise whereby contradictory orders would be given. Ben started to help her into the boat.
“You’ve not forgotten anything?” he asked casually.
“Nothing I can think of.”
“Got plenty of extra shells?”
“Part of a box. It’s a small caliber automatic, you see, and a box holds fifty.”
“It is, eh?” Ben’s tone indicated deep interest. “May I see ’em a minute? I think I had a gun like it once. Not the gun–just the box of shells.”
She had strapped the weapon around her waist, by now, so she didn’t attempt to put it in his hands. From her pocket she procured a small box of shells, and these she passed to him. He examined them with a great show of interest, balancing their weight in the palm of his hand; then he carelessly threw the box down among the duffle in front of the stern seat. Presently he started to push off.
“You’re not taking the other paddle?” the girl asked curiously.
“No. I don’t believe in letting young ladies work when I take ’em on an outing. You are just to sit in the bow and enjoy yourself. Fenris, sit still and don’t rock the boat!”
Just one moment more he hesitated. From his pocket he drew a piece of paper, carefully folded and sealed with tallow. This he inserted into a little crack in the blade of the second paddle–the one that was to be left at the landing.
“Just a little note for your father,” he explained, “to tell him where we are, in case he worries about you.”
“That’s very considerate of you,” the girl answered in a thoughtful voice.
She wondered at the curious glowings, lurid as red coals, that came and went in his eyes.
XIX
After the manner of backwoods fathers Jeffery Neilson had offered no objections to his daughter’s all-day excursion with Ben. The ways of the frontier are informal; and besides, he had every confidence in her ability to take care of herself. The only unfortunate phase of the affair concerned Ray. The latter would look with no favor upon the venture; and in all probability a disagreeable half-hour would ensue with him if he found it out.
The control of Ray Brent had been an increasingly difficult problem. Always sullen and envious, once or twice he had not been far from open rebellion. There is a certain dread malady that comes to men at the sight of naked gold, and Ray’s degenerate type was particularly subject to it. Every day the mine had shown itself increasingly rich, and Ray’s ambition had given way to greed, and his greed to avarice of the most dangerous sort. For instance, he had a disquieting way of gathering the nuggets into his hands, fondling them with an unholy love. Neilson realized perfectly, now, that the younger man would not be content with a fourth share or less; and on the other hand he resolutely refused to yield any of his own, larger share. Sometime the issue would bring them to grips. Ray’s dreadful crime of a few days past had given him an added insolence and self-assurance that complicated the problem still further. The leopard that has once tasted human flesh is not to be trusted again. Finally, there remained this matter of Beatrice.
Neilson’s love for his daughter forbade that he should force her to receive unwelcome attentions. Ray, on the other hand, had always insisted that his chief allow him a clear field. He would be infuriated when he heard of the trip she was taking with Ben to-day. Neilson straightened, resolving to meet the issue with old-time firmness.
When he heard his daughter’s voice on the canoe landing, one hundred yards below, he was inordinately startled. She had not told him that their picnic would take them on to the water. The reason had been, of course, that Beatrice knew her father’s distrust of the treacherous stream and either feared his refusal to her plan or wished to save him worry. Even now they were starting. He could hear the first stroke of the paddle through the hushed woods.
He turned toward the door, instinctively alarmed; then hesitated. After all, he could not tell her to come back. Beatrice would be mortified; and besides, there was nothing definite to fear. The river was almost as still as a lake for a long stretch immediately in front of the landing; even a poor canoeist could cross with ease. It was true that rapids, mile after mile of them past counting, lay just below, but surely the canoeists would stay at a safe distance above them. And if by any chance this young prospector had no skill with a canoe, Beatrice herself was an expert.
Yet what, in reality, did he know of Ben Darby? He had liked the man’s face: whence he came and what was his real business on the Yuga he had not the least idea. All at once a baffling apprehension crept like a chill through his frame.
He could not laugh it away. It laid hold of him, refusing to be dispelled. It was as if an inner voice was warning him, telling him to rush down to the river bank and check that canoe ride at all costs. It occurred to him, for the moment, that this might be premonition of a disastrous accident, yet vaguely he sensed a plot, an obscure design that filled him with ghastly terror. Once more the man started for the door.
Unaware of his ground, he did not hurry at first. He hardly knew what to say, by what excuse he could call Beatrice back to the landing. His heart was racing incomprehensibly in his breast, and all at once he started to run.
At the first step he fell sprawling, and stark panic was upon him when he got to his feet again. And when he reached the landing the canoe was already near the opposite shore, heading swiftly downstream.
He saw in one glance that the craft was rather heavily laden, Fenris atop the pile of duffle, and that Ben was paddling with a remarkably fast, easy stroke. “Come back, Beatrice,” he shouted. “You’ve forgotten something.”
The girl turned, waving, but Ben’s voice drowned out hers. “We’ll see you later,” he called in a gay voice. “We can’t come back now.”
“Come back!” Neilson called again. “I order you–“
He stared intently, hoping that the man would turn. Already they were practically out of hearing; and not even Beatrice was dipping her paddle in obedience to his command. Looking more closely, he saw that the man only was paddling.
Then his eye fell to the landing on which he stood, instinctively trying to locate the second paddle. It lay at his feet. A foolhardy thing to do, he thought, a broken paddle, out there above the rapids, would mean death and no other thing. Helpless in the current, the canoe could not be guided through those fearful gates of peril below. If by a thousandth chance it escaped the rocks, it would be carried for unnumbered miles into a land unknown, a territory that could be entered only by the greatest difficulty–packing day after day over range and through thicket with a great train of pack horses–and from which the egress, except by the same perilous water route, would be almost impossible. But the thought passed as he discerned the white paper that had been fastened in the paddle blade.
He bent for it with eager hand. He knew instinctively that it contained an all-important and sinister message for him. His eyes leaped over the bold writing on the exterior.
“To Ezra Melville’s murderers,” Ben had written. And with that reading Jeffery Neilson knew a terror beyond any experienced in the darkest nightmare of his iniquitous life.
It did not occur to him to bring the note, unopened, to Ray Brent. As yet he did not fully understand; yet he knew that the issue was one of seconds. _Seconds_ must decide everything; his whole world hung in the balance. His hand ripped apart the sealed fold, and he held the sheet before his eyes.
Possessing only an elementary education Jeffery Neilson was not, ordinarily, a fast reader. Usually he sounded out his words only with the greatest difficulty. But to-day, one glance at the page conveyed to him the truth: from half a dozen words he got a general idea of the letter’s full, dread meaning. Ben had written:
TO NEILSON AND HIS GANG:–
When you get this, Beatrice will be on her way to Back There–either there or on her way to hell.
Ezra Melville was my pard. A letter leaving his claim to me is in my pocket, and I alone know where Hiram’s will is, leaving it to Ezram. Your title will never stand as long as those papers aren’t destroyed. If you don’t care enough about saving your daughter from me, at least you’ll want those letters. Come and get them. I’ll be waiting for you.
BEN DARBY.
As the truth flashed home, Neilson’s first thought was of his rifle. He was a wilderness man, trained to put his trust in the weapon of steel; and if it were only in his hands, there might yet be time to prevent the abduction. One well-aimed bullet over the water, shooting with all his old-time skill, might yet hurl the avenger to his death in the moment of his triumph. Just one keen, long gaze over the sights,–heaven or earth could not yield him a vision half so glorious as this! For all his terror he knew that he could shoot as he had never shot before, true as a light-ray. His remorseless eyes for once could see clear and sure. One shot–and then Beatrice could seize the paddle and save herself. And he cursed himself, more bitterly than he had ever cursed an enemy, when his empty hands showed him that he had left his rifle in his cabin.
His pistol, however, was at his belt, and his hand reached for it. But the range was already too far for any hope of accurate pistol fire. His hard eyes gazed along the short, black barrel. His steady finger pressed back against the trigger.
The first shot fell far short. The pistol was of large caliber but small velocity; and a hundred yards was its absolute limit of point-blank range. He lifted the gun higher and shot again. Again he shot low. But the third bullet fell just a few feet on the near side of the canoe.
He had the range now, and he shot again. It was like a dream, outside his consciousness, that Beatrice was screaming with fear and amazement. She was already too far to give or receive a message: all hope lay in the pistol alone. The fifth shot splashed water beyond the craft.
Once more he fired, but the boat was farther distant now, and the bullet went wild. The pistol was empty. Like a moose leaping through a marsh he turned back to his cabin for his rifle.
But already he knew that he was lost. Before ever he could climb up the hundred yards to the cabin, and back again, the craft would be around the bend in the river. Heavy brush would hide it from then on. He hastened frantically up the narrow, winding trail.
XX
Ben was fully aware, as he pushed the canoe from landing, that the success of his scheme was not yet guaranteed. Long ago, in the hard school of the woods, he had found out life; and one of the things he had learned was that nothing on earth is infallible and no man’s plans are sure. There are always coincidents of which the scheming brain has not conceived: the sudden interjection of unexpected circumstances. The unforeseen appearance of Beatrice’s father on the landing had been a case in point.
Most of all he had been afraid that Beatrice herself would leap from the canoe and attempt to swim to safety. He had learned in his past conversations with her that she had at least an elementary knowledge of swimming. Had she not confessed at the same time fear of the water, his plan could have never been adopted. The northern girls have few opportunities to obtain real proficiency in swimming. Their rivers are icy cold, their villages do not afford heated natatoriums. Yet he realized that he must quiet her suspicions as long as possible.
“I’ve got the landing picked out,” he told her as they started off. “I’ve been all over the river this morning. It is quite a way down–around the bend–but it’s perfectly safe. So don’t be afraid.”
“I’m not afraid–with you. And how fast you paddle!”
It was true: in all her days by rivers she had never seen such perfect control of a canoe. He paddled as if without effort, but the streaming shore line showed that the boat moved at an astonishing rate. He was a master canoeist, and whatever fears she might have had vanished at once.
She talked gayly to him, scarcely aware that they were heading across and down the stream.
When her father had appeared on the bank, calling, she had not been in the least alarmed. Ben’s gay shouts kept her from understanding exactly what he was saying. And when the old man had drawn his pistol and fired, and the bullet had splashed in the water some twenty yards toward shore, her mind had refused to accept the evidence of her senses.
The second shot followed the first, and the third the second, resulting in, for her part, only the impotence of bewilderment. Her first thought was that her father’s fierce temper, long known to her, had engulfed him in murderous rage. Trusting Ben wholly, the real truth did not occur to her.
She screamed shrilly at the fourth shot; and Ben looked up to find her pale as the foam from his flashing paddle. “Turn around and go back,” she cried to Ben. “He’ll kill you if you don’t! Oh, please–turn around–“
“And get in range of him so he _can_ kill me?” Ben replied savagely. “Can’t you see he’s shooting at me?”
“Then throw up your hands–it’s all some dreadful mistake. Can’t you hear me–turn and go back.”
The fifth and sixth shots were fired by now; and Neilson had gone to his cabin for his rifle. Ben smiled grimly into her white face.
“We’d better keep on going to our landing place,” he advised. “There’s no place to land above it–I went all over the shore this morning. That will give him time to cool down. I only want to get around this curve before he comes with his rifle.”
She stared at him aghast, too confused and terrified to make rational answer. He was pale, too; but she had a swift feeling that the cold, rugged face was in some way exultant, too. The first chill of fear of him brushed her like a cold wind.
But they were around the bend by now, and Ben’s breath caught as if in a triumphant gasp. Already all opportunity for the girl to swim to shore was irremediably past. While he could still control the canoe with comparative ease, the river was a swift-moving sheet of water that would carry any one but the strongest swimmer remorselessly into the rapids below. Ben smiled, like a man who has come into a great happiness, and rested on his paddle.
“Push into shore,” the girl urged. “The home shore–if you can. Then I’ll go and find him and try to quiet him. He’ll kill you if you don’t.”
A short pause followed the girl’s words. The man smiled coldly into her eyes.
“He’ll kill me, will he?” he repeated.
The response to the simple question was simply unmitigated terror, swift and deadly, surging through the girl’s frame. It caught and twisted her throat muscles like a cruel hand; and her childish eyes widened and darkened under his contemptuous gaze.
“What do you mean?” she asked breathlessly. “What–are you going to do?”
“He won’t kill me,” Ben went on. “I may kill him–and I will if I can–but he won’t kill me. See–we’re going faster all the time.”
It was true. Strokes of the paddle were no longer necessary to propel the craft at the breakneck pace. It sped like an arrow–straight toward the perilous cataracts below.
The girl watched him with transcending horror, and slowly the truth went home. The supplies in the boat, her father’s desperate attempt to rescue her, even at the risk of her own life and the cost of Ben’s, this white, exultant face before her, more terrible than that of the wolf between, the cold reptile eyes so full of some unhallowed emotion,–at last she saw their meaning and relation. Was it _death_–was _that_ what this mad man in the stern had for her? She remembered what she had told him the day before, her description of the cataracts that lay below. She struggled to shake off the trance that her terror had cast about her.
“Turn into the shore,” she told him, half-whispering. There was no pleading in her tone: the hard eyes before her told her only too plainly how futile her pleas would be. “You still have time to steer into shore. I’ll jump overboard if you don’t.”
He shook his head. “Don’t jump overboard, Beatrice,” he answered, some of the harshness gone from his tones. “It isn’t my purpose to kill you–and to jump over into this stream only means to die–‘for any one except the most powerful swimmer. You’d be carried down in an instant.”
The girl knew he spoke the truth. Only death dwelt in those cold and rushing waters. “What do you mean to do?” she asked.
Her tone was more quiet now, and he waited an instant before he answered. The canoe glided faster–ever faster down the stream. Somewhat afraid, but still trusting in the imperial mind of his master, the wolf raised his head to watch the racing shore line.
“It’s just a little debt I owe your father–and his gang,” Ben explained. “I’ll tell you some time, in the days to come. It was a debt of blood–“
The girl’s dark eyes charged with red fire. “And you, a coward, take your payment on a woman. Turn the canoe into the bank.”
“The payment won’t be taken from you,” he explained soberly. “You’ll be safe enough–even the fate that Neilson fears for you won’t happen. I hate him too much to take _that_ payment from you. I’d die before I’d touch the flesh of his flesh to mine! Do you understand that?”
His fury had blazed up, for the instant, and she saw the deadly zeal of a fanatic in his gray eyes. A hatred beyond all naming, a bitterness and a rage such as she had never dreamed could blast a human heart was written in his brown, rugged face. Her woman’s intuition gave her added vision, and she glimpsed something of the fire that smoldered and seared behind his eyes. They were of one blood, this man in the stern and the wolf on the duffle.
“Then why–“
“You’re safe with me–the daughter of Jeff Neilson can’t ever be anything but safe with me–as far as the thing you fear is concerned. Don’t be afraid for that. I’m simply paying an honest debt, and you’re the unfortunate agent. Don’t you know the things he’s fearing now are more torment to him than anything I could do to his flesh? If we should be killed in these rapids that are coming, it will be fair enough too; he’ll know what it is to lose the dearest thing on earth he has. For you and me it will only be a minute that won’t greatly matter. For him it will be weeks–months! But that’s only a part of it. I hope to bring you through. The main thing is–that sooner or later they’ll come for you–into a country where I’ll have every advantage. Where there won’t be any escape or chance for them. Where I can watch the trails, and shatter them–every one–as slow or as fast as I like. Where they’ll have to hunt for me, week on week and month on month, their fears eating into them. That’s my game, Beatrice. There will be discomfort for you–and some danger–but I’ll make it as light as I can. And in another moment–“
“You’ve still got time to turn back,” the girl answered him, seemingly without feeling. “Glide into shore, and we’ll try to catch an overhanging limb. It’s my last warning.”
It was true that a few seconds remained in which they might, with heroic effort, save themselves. But these were passing: already they could see the gleaming whitecaps of the cataract below.
The roar of the wild waters was in their ears. Ahead they could see great rocks, emerging like fangs above the water, sharp-edged and wet with spray. The boat was shuddering; the water seemed to covet them, and a great force, like the hand of a river god, reached at them from beneath as if to crush them in a merciless grasp. A hundred yards farther the smooth, swift water fell into a seething, roaring cataract–such a manifestation of the mighty powers of nature as checks the breath and awes the heart–a death stream in which seemingly the canoe would be shattered to pieces in an instant.
Ben shook his head. The girl’s white hand flashed to her side, then rose sure and steady, holding her pistol. “Turn quick, or I’ll fire,” she said.
He felt that, if such action were in her power, she told the truth. No mercy dwelt in her clear gaze. His eye fell to the box of cartridges, now fallen safely among the duffle. Presently he smiled into her eyes.
“Your gun is empty, Beatrice,” he told her quietly. He heard her sob, and he smiled a little, reassuringly. “Never mind–and pray for a good voyage,” he advised. “We’re going through.”
XXI
The craft and its occupants were out of sight by the time Jeffery Neilson reached the river bank with his rifle. The flush had swept from his bronze skin, leaving it a ghastly yellow, and for once in his life no oaths came to his lips. He could only mutter, strangely, from a convulsed throat.
Like an insane man he hastened down the river bank, fighting his way through the brush. The thickets were dense, ordinarily impenetrable to any mortal strength except to that mighty, incalculable power of the moose and grizzly; yet they could not restrain him now. The tough clothes he wore were nearly torn from his body; his face and hands were scratched as if by the claws of a lynx; but he did not pause till he reached the bank of the gray river.
Only one more glimpse of the canoe was vouchsafed him, and that glimpse came too late. He saw the light barge just as it hovered at the crest of the rapids. Even if he could have shot straight at so great a range and had killed the man in the stern, no miracle could have saved his daughter. She would have been instantly swept to her death against the crags.
Some measure of self-control returned to him then, and he made his way fast as he could toward the claim. Sensing the older man’s distress, Ray straightened from his work at the sight of him.
The face before him was drawn and white; but there was no time for questions. Hard hands seized his arm.
“Ray, do you know of a canoe anywhere–up or down this river?”
“There’s one at the landing. None other I know of.”
“Think, man! You don’t know where we can get one?”
“No. Old Hiram’s canoe was the only one. What’s the matter?”
“Do you think there’s one chance in a million of getting down through those rapids on a raft?”
Ray’s eyes opened wide. “A raft!” he echoed. “Man, are you crazy? Even at this high water a canoe wouldn’t have a chance in ten of making it. The river’s falling every hour–“
“I know it. Do you suppose there’s a canoe in town?”
“No! Of course there isn’t–one that you could even dream about shooting those rapids in. Besides, by the time we got there and packed it up–it would take two days to pack it the best we could do–the river would be too far down to tackle the trip at all. And it won’t come up again till fall–you know that. Tell me what’s the matter. Has Beatrice–“
“Beatrice has gone down, that’s all.”
“Then she’s dead–no hope of anything else. Only an expert could hope to take her through, and there’s nothing to live on Back There. What’s the use of trying to follow–?”
Neilson straightened, his eyes searching Ray’s. “She’s got food, I suppose. And she’s got an expert paddler to take her there.”
Ray’s face seemed to darken before his eyes. His hands half closed, shook in his face, then caught at Neilson’s shoulders. “You don’t mean–she’s run away?”
“Don’t be a fool. Not run away–abducted. The prospector I told you about–Darby–was the old man’s partner. He’s paying us back. Heaven only knows what the girl’s fate will be–I don’t dare to think of it. Ray, I wish to God I had died before I ever saw this day!”
Ray stared blankly. “Then he found out–about the murder?” he gasped.
“Yes. Here’s his letter. Take time–and read it. There’s no use to try to act before we think–how to act. If I could only see a way–“
Ray read the letter carefully, crumpling it at last in savage wrath. “It’s your fault!” he cried. “Why didn’t you save her for me as I’ve always asked you to do; why did you let her go out with him at all? I’ll bet she wanted to go–“
“I’d rather she had, instead of being taken by force!” The older man–aged incredibly in a few little minutes–slowly straightened. “But don’t storm at me, Ray!” he warned, carefully and quietly. “I’ve stood a lot from you, but to-day I’d kill you for one word!”
They faced each other in black disdain, but Ray knew he spoke the truth. There was no toying with this man’s wrath to-day.
“And if you’d let me croak this devil like I wanted to, it wouldn’t have happened either. But there’s no use crying about either one. The girl’s a goner, sure; she’s deep in the rapids by now.”
“Yes, and it’s part of this man’s hellish plan to take her clear through to Back There. You see, he dares us to come for her–and he’ll be waiting and ready for us, mark my words. My God, she’s probably dead–smashed to pieces–already!”
“He says he’s got the old man’s letter, leaving the claim to him. That messes up things even worse.”
“I wish I’d never heard of the claim. There’s only one thing to do, and that’s to rush into Snowy Gulch and get a big outfit–all the horses and supplies we can find–and go after her by land.”
“Yes, and walk right into his trap. Think again, Neilson. It would take weeks and months to get in that way. Besides, what would happen to the claim while we’re gone?”
“You needn’t fear for the claim! Of course, I’d expect you to think of that first–you who loved Beatrice so dearly!” Neilson’s face was white with disdain. “It’ll be recorded in our names, by then–likely Chan is already in Bradleyburg–and Darby himself is the only man on earth we have to fear.” He paused, putting his faith in desperate craft. “If you want to cinch the claim, the first thing to do is go and stamp the life out of Darby; otherwise he’ll turn up and make us trouble, just as he says.”
“He can’t do much if the claim’s recorded in our names!”
“He can make us plenty of trouble. If you want the girl, Ray–don’t lose a minute. Put your things together as fast as you can. We’ll try to get some men in Snowy Gulch to come with us–to join in the hunt–and we’ll hire every pack horse in the country. Get busy, and get busy quick.”
Reluctant to leave his gold, yet seeing the truth in Neilson’s words, Ray hastened to his cabin to get such few supplies as would be needed for the day’s march into Snowy Gulch. In less than five minutes they were on their way–tramping in file down the narrow moose trail.
They crossed the divide, thus reaching the headwaters of Poor Man’s Creek; then took the trail down toward the settlements. But the two claim-jumpers had not yet learned all the day’s ill news. Half-way to the mouth of the stream they met Chan Heminway on his way back to the claim.
At the first sight of him, riding in the rear of a long train of laden pack horses, they could hardly believe their eyes. It was not to be credited that he had made the trip to Bradleyburg and back in the few days he had been absent. Only an aeroplane could have made so fast a trip. Could it be that in spite of his definite orders he was returning with the duty of recording the claim still unperformed? To Neilson, however, the sight of the long pack train brought some measure of satisfaction. Here were horses laden with the summer supplies that Chan had been told to procure, and they could be utilized in the pursuit of Beatrice. Two days at least could be saved.
“What in the devil you coming back for?” Ray shouted, when Chan’s identity became certain.
Chan rode nearer as if he had not heard. He checked his horse deliberately, undoubtedly inwardly excited by the news he had to tell and perhaps somewhat triumphant because he was its bearer. “I’m coming back because there ain’t no use in staying at Snowy Gulch any longer,” he answered at last. “I’ve got the supplies, and I’m packin’ up to the claim, just as I was told.”
“But why didn’t you go to Bradleyburg and record the claim?” Ray stormed. “Don’t you know until that’s done we’re likely to be chased off any minute?”
Chan looked into his partner’s angry eyes, and his own lips drew in a scowl. “Because there wasn’t any use in goin’ to Bradleyburg.”
Ray was stricken with terror, and his words faltered. “You mean you could tend to it in Snowy Gulch–“
“I don’t mean nothing of the kind. Shut up a minute, and I’ll tell you about it. A few days ago Steve Morris got a letter addressed to old Hiram Melville–in care of Steve. He opened it and read it, and I heard about it soon as I got into town. There ain’t no use of our trying to record that claim.”
“For God’s sake, why?”
“Because it’s already recorded, that’s why. We all felt so sure, and we wasn’t sure at all. Before old Hiram died he wrote a letter–one of them two letters you heard about, Neilson–and which you wished you’d got hold of. Who that letter was to was an official in Bradleyburg–an old friend of Hiram’s–and in it was a description of the claim. This letter Morris got was a notice that his claim was all properly filed in his–Hiram’s–name. Whatever formalities was necessary was cut out because the old man had been too sick to make the trip–the recorder got special permission from Victoria. To be plain, I didn’t file the claim because it’s already filed, and I didn’t want to show myself up as a claim-jumper quite as bad as that.”
“It’s all over town–about the claim?”
“Sure, but there won’t be a rush. There’s quite a movement over Bradleyburg way for one thing; for another, this is a pocket country, once and for always.”
For some seconds thereafter his partners could make no intelligent response. This bitter blow had been anticipated by neither. But Ray was a strong man, and his self-control quickly returned to him.
“You see what that means, don’t you?” he asked Neilson.
“It means we’ve lost!”
The eyes before him narrowed and gleamed. “So that’s what it means to you! Well, I don’t look at it just that way. It means to me that we’ve got to take these supplies and these pack horses and start out and find Ben Darby–and never stop hunting till we’ve found him.”
“Of course we’ve got to rescue Beatrice–“
“Rescuing Beatrice isn’t all of it now, by a long shot. For the Lord’s sake, Neilson–use your head a minute. Didn’t old Hiram leave a will, giving this claim to his brother Ezra? If the claim wasn’t recorded that will wouldn’t mean much–but it is. And hasn’t this Ben got a letter from Ezra leaving the claim to him? Now do you want to know who owns that claim? Ben Darby owns it, and as long as he can kick, that quarter of a million in gold can never be ours.”
“You mean we’ve got to find him–and destroy that letter–“
“We’ve got to; that’s all. He wrote us he had it, just to taunt us, and we’ve got to burn that up whether we find the girl or not. But that ain’t all we’ve got to destroy–that piece of paper. You see that, don’t you?”
Neilson breathed heavily. “It’s all plain enough.”
“I want it to be plain, so next time I want to let daylight through a man you won’t stand in the way. It ain’t just enough to burn up that letter. We’ve got to get the man who owns it, too. If we don’t he’d still have a good enough case against us–with a good lawyer. Likely enough lots of people knew of their partnership, maybe have seen the letter–and they’d all be good witnesses in a suit. Our reputation ain’t so good, after that Jenkins deal, that we’d shine very bright in a suit. Even if he couldn’t prove his own claim, he could lug out the will old Hiram left–he alone knows where it’s hid–and then his next nearest relatives would come in and get the claim. On the other hand, if we smash him, the thing will all quiet down; there’ll be no claimants to work the mine; and after a few months we can step in and put up our own notices. But we’ve got to do that first–smash him wide-open as soon as we can catch up with him. He’ll be way out in Back There, and no man would ever know what became of him, and there’d be nobody left to oppose us any more. But we can’t be safe any other way.”
Neilson nodded slowly. His subordinate had put the matter clearly; and there was truth in his words. In Ben’s murder alone lay their safety.
He had always been adverse to bloodshed; but further reluctance meant ruin. Ben was one whom he could strike down without mercy or regret. And the blow would not be for expediency alone. There would be a personal debt to pay after the long months of searching. He could not forget that Beatrice was helpless in his hands.
“The thing to do is to turn back with Chan, at once,” he said.
“Of course,” Ray agreed. “That plan of yours to get help in chasing ’em down don’t go any more. We don’t want any spectators for what’s ahead of us. Here’s grub and horses a-plenty, and we needn’t lose any time.”
So they turned back toward the Yuga, on their quest of hate.
XXII
Beatrice Neilson was a mountain girl, with the strong thews of Jael, yet she hid her face as the canoe shot into the crest of the rapids. It seemed incredible to her that the light craft should buffet that wild cataract and yet live. She was young and she loved life; and death seemed very near.
The scene that her eyes beheld in that last little instant in which the boat seemed to hang, shuddering, at the crest of the descent was branded indelibly on her memory. She saw Ben’s face, set like iron, the muscles bunching beneath his flannel sleeves as he set his paddle. He was leaning forward, aware of nothing in the world but the forthcoming crisis. And in that swift flash of vision she saw not only the steel determination and the brutal savagery of the avenger. A little glimpse of the truth went home to her, and she beheld something of the misdirected idealism of the man, the intensity and steadfastness that were the dominant traits of his nature. She could not doubt his belief in the reality of his cause. Whether fancied or real the injury, deep wells of emotion in his heart had broken their seals and flowed forth.
The wolf crouched on the heap of supplies, fearful to the depths of his wild heart of this mighty stream, yet still putting his faith in his master in the stern. Beatrice saw his wild, frightened eyes as he gazed down into the frightful whirlpools. The banks seemed to whip past.
Then the rushing waters caught the craft and seemed to fling it into the air. There was the swift sense of lightning and incredible movement, of such incalculable speed as that with which a meteor blazes through the sky, and then a mighty surging, struggle; an interminable instant of ineffable and stupendous conflict. The bow dipped, split the foam; then the raging waters seized the craft again, and with one great impulse hurled it through the clouds of spray, down between the narrow portals of rocks.
Beatrice came to herself with the realization that she had uttered a shrill cry. Part of the impulse behind it was simply terror; but it was also the expression of an intensity of sensation never before experienced. She could have understood, now, the lure of the rapids to experienced canoeists. She forced herself to look into the wild cataract.
The boat sped at an unbelievable pace. Ben held his paddle like iron, yet with a touch as delicate as that of a great musician upon piano keys, and he steered his craft to the last inch. His face was still like metal, but the eyes, steely, vivid, and magnetic, had a look of triumph. The first of the great tests had been passed.
Sudden confidence in Ben’s ability to guide her through to safety began to warm the girl’s frozen heart. There were no places more dangerous than that just past; and he had handled his craft like a master. He was a voyageur: as long as his iron control was sustained, as long as his nerve was strong and his eye true she had every chance of coming out alive. But they had irremediably cast their fortunes upon the river, now. They could not turn back. She was in his whole charge, an agent of vengeance against her own father and his confederates.
Hot, blinding tears suddenly filled her eyes. Her frantic fear of the river had held them back for a time; but they flowed freely enough now the first crisis was past. In utter misery and despair her head bowed in her hands; and her brown hair, disheveled, dropped down.
Ben gazed at her with a curious mingling of emotions. It had not been part of his plan to bring sorrow to this girl. After all, she was not in the least responsible for her father’s crimes. He had sworn to have no regrets, no matter what innocent flesh was despoiled in order that he might strike the guilty; yet the sight of that bowed, lovely head went home to him very deeply indeed. She was the instrument of his vengeance, necessary to his cause, but there was nothing to be gained by afflicting her needlessly. At least, he could give her his pity. It would not weaken him, dampen his fiery resolution, to give her that.
As he guided his craft he felt growing compassion for her; yet it was a personal pity only and brought no regrets that he had acted as he did.
“I wish you wouldn’t cry,” he said, rather quietly.
Amazed beyond expression at the words, Beatrice looked up. For the instant her woe was forgotten in the astounding fact that she had won compassion from this cast-iron man in the stern.
“I’ll try not to,” she told him, her dark eyes ineffably beautiful with their luster of tears. “I don’t see why I should try–why I should try to do anything you ask me to–but yet I will–“
Further words came to him, and he could not restrain them. “You’re sort of–the goat, Beatrice,” he told her soberly. “It was said, long ago, that the sins of the father must be visited upon the children; and maybe that’s the way it is with you. I can’t help but feel sorry–that you had to undergo this–so that I could reach your father and his men. If you had seen old Ezram lying there–the life gone from, his kind, gray old face–the man who brought me home and gave me my one chance–maybe you’d understand.”
They were speechless a long time, Beatrice watching the swift leap of the shore line, Ben guiding, with steady hand, the canoe. Neither of them could guess at what speed they traveled this first wild half-hour; but he knew that the long miles–so heart-breaking with their ridges and brush thickets to men and horses–were whipping past them each in a few, little breaths. Ever they plunged deeper into the secret, hushed heart of the wild–a land unknown to the tread of white men, a region so still and changeless that it seemed excluded from the reign and law of, time. The spruce grew here, straight and dark and tall, a stalwart army whose measureless march no human eyes beheld. Already they had come farther than a pack train could travel, through the same region, in weary days.
Already they were at the border of Back There. They had cut the last ties with the world of men. There were no trails here, leading slowly but immutably to the busy centers of civilization; not a blaze on a tree for the eyes of a woodsman riding on some forest venture, not the ashes of a dead camp fire or a charred cooking rack, where an Indian had broiled his caribou flesh. Except by the slow process of exploration with pack horses, traveling a few miles each day, fording unknown rivers and encircling impassable ranges, or by waiting patiently until the fall rains swelled the river, they might never leave this land they had so boldly entered. They could not go out the way they had come–over those seething waters–and the river, falling swiftly, would soon be too low to permit them to push down to its lower waters where they might find Indian encampments.
Nothing was left but the wilderness, ancient and unchanged. The spruce forest had a depth and a darkness that even Ben had never seen; the wild creatures that they sometimes glimpsed on the bank stared at them wholly without knowledge as to what they were, and likely amazed at the strength whereby they had braved this seething torrent that swept through their sylvan home. Here was a land where the grizzly had not yet learned of a might greater than his, where he had not yet surrendered his sovereignty to man. Here the moose–mightiest of the antlered herd–reached full maturity and old age without ever mistaking the call of a birch-bark horn for that of his rutting cow. Young bulls with only a fifty-inch spread of horns and ten points on each did not lead the herds, as in the more accessible provinces of the North. All things were in their proper balance, since the forest had gone unchanged for time immemorial; and as the head-hunters had not yet come the bull moose did not rank as a full-grown warrior until he wore thirty points and had five feet of spread, and he wasn’t a patriarch until he could no longer walk free between two tree trunks seventy inches apart. Certain of the lesser forest people were not in unwonted numbers because that fierce little hunter, the marten, had been exterminated by trappers; the otter, yet to know the feel of cold iron, fished to his heart’s content in rivers where an artificial fly had never fallen and the trout swarmed in uncounted numbers in the pools.
Darting down the rapids Ben felt the beginnings of an exquisite exhilaration. Part of it arose from the very thrill and excitement of their headlong pace; but partly it had a deeper, more portentous origin. Here was his own country–this Back There. While all the spruce forest in which he had lived had been his natural range and district–his own kind of land with which he felt close and intimate relations–this was even more his home than his own birthplace. By light of a secret quality, hard to recognize, he was of it, and it was of him. He felt the joy of one who sees the gleam of his own hearth through a distant window.
He _knew_ this land; it was as if he had simply been away, through the centuries, and had come home. The shadows and the stillness had the exact depth and tone that was true and right; the forest fragance was undefiled; the dark sky line was like something he had dreamed come true. He felt a strange and growing excitement, as if magnificent adventure were opening out before him. His gaze fell, with a queer sense of understanding, to Fenris.
The wolf had recovered from his fear of the river, by now, and he was crouched, alert and still, in his place. His gaze was fast upon the shore line; and the green and yellow fires that mark the beast were ablaze again in his eyes. Fenris too made instinctive response to those breathless forests; and Ben knew that the bond between them was never so close as now.
Fenris also knew that here was his own realm, the land in which the great Fear had not yet laid its curse. The forest still thronged with game, the wood trails would be his own. Here was the motherland, not only to him but to his master, too. They were its fierce children: one by breed, the other because he answered, to the full, the call of the wild from which no man is wholly immune.
Ben could have understood the wolf’s growing exultation. The war he was about to wage with Neilson. would be on his own ground, in a land that enhanced and developed his innate, natural powers, and where he had every advantage. The wolf does not run into the heart of busy cities in pursuit of his prey. He tries to decoy it into his own fastnesses.
A sudden movement on the part of Beatrice, in the bow of the canoe, caught his eye. She had leaned forward and was reaching among the supplies. His mind at once leaped to the box of shells for her pistol that he had thrown among the duffle, but evidently this was not the object of her search. She lifted into her hands a paper parcel, the same she had brought from her cabin early that morning.
He tried to analyze the curious mingling of emotions in her face. It was neither white with disdain nor dark with wrath; and the tears were gone from her eyes. Rather her expression was speculative, pensive. Presently her eyes met his.
His heart leaped; why he did not know. “What is, it?” he asked.
“Ben–I called you that yesterday and there’s no use going back to last names now–I’ve made an important decision.”
“I hope it’s a happy one,” he ventured.
“It’s as happy as it can be, under the circumstances. Ben, I came of a line of frontiersmen–the forest people–and if the woods teach one thing it is to make the best of any bad situation.”
Ben nodded. For all his long training he had not entirely mastered this lesson himself, but he knew she spoke true.
“We’ve found out how hard Fate can hit–if I can make it plain,” she went on. “We’ve found out there are certain powers–or devils–or something else, and what I don’t know–that are always lying in wait for people, ready to strike them down. Maybe you would call it Destiny. But the Destiny city men know isn’t the Destiny we know out here–I don’t have to tell you that. We see Nature just as she is, without any gay clothes, and we know the cruelty behind her smile, and the evil plans behind her gentle words.”
The man was amazed. Evidently the stress and excitement of the morning had brought out the fanciful and poetic side of the girl’s nature.
“We don’t look for good luck,” she told him. “We don’t expect to live forever. We know what death is, and that it is sure to come, and that misfortune comes always–in the snow and the cold and the falling tree–and when we have good luck we’re glad–we don’t take it for granted. Living up here, where life is real, we’ve learned that we have to make the best of things in order to be happy at all.”
“And you mean–you’re going to try to make the best of _this_?” His voice throbbed ever so slightly, because he could not hold it even.
“There’s nothing else I can do,” she replied. “You’ve taken me here and as yet I don’t see how I can get away. This doesn’t mean I’ve gone over to your side.”
He nodded. He understood _that_ very well.
“I’m just admitting that at present I’m in your hands–helpless–and many long weeks in before us,” she went on. “I’m on my father’s side, last and always, and I’ll strike back at you if the chance comes. Expect no mercy from me, in case I ever see my way to strike.”
The man’s eyes suddenly gleamed. “Don’t you know–that you’d have a better chance of fighting me–if you didn’t put me on guard?”
“I don’t think so. I don’t believe you’d be fooled that easy. Besides–I can’t pretend to be a friend–when I’m really an enemy.”
For one significant instant the man looked down. This was what he had done–pretended friendship when he was a foe. But his was a high cause!
“I’m warning you that I’m against you to the last–and will beat you if I see my way,” the girl went on. “But at the same time I’m going to make the best of a bad situation, and try to get all the comfort I can. I’m in your hands at present, and we’re foes, but just the same we can talk, and try to make each other comfortable so that we can be comfortable ourselves, and try not to be any more miserable than we can help. I’m not going to cry any more.”
As she talked she was slowly unwrapping the little parcel she had brought. Presently she held it out to him.
It was just a box of homemade candy–fudge made with sugar and canned milk–that she had brought for their day’s picnic. But it was a peace offering not to be despised. A heavy load lifted from Ben’s heart.
He waited his chance, guiding the boat with care, and then reached a brown hand. He crushed a piece of the soft, delicious confection between his lips. “Thanks, Beatrice,” he said. “I’ll remember all you’ve told me.”
XXIII
It is a peculiar fact that no one is more deeply moved by the great works and phenomena of nature than those who live among them. It is the visitor from distant cities, or the callow youth with tawdry clothes and tawdry thoughts who disturbs the great silences and austerity of majestic scenes with half-felt effusive words or cheap impertinences. Oddly enough, the awe that the wilderness dweller knows at the sight of some great, mysterious canyon or towering peak seems to increase, rather than decrease, with familiarity. His native scenes never grow old to him. Their beauty and majesty is eternal.
Perhaps the reason lies in the fact that the native woodsman knows nature as she really is: living ever close to her he knows her power over his life. Perhaps there is a religious side to the matter, too. In the solitudes the religious instincts receive an impulse that is impossible to those who know only the works of man. The religion that this gives is true and deep, and the eye instinctively lifts in reverence to the manifestations of divine might.
When the swirling waters carried the canoe down into the gorge of the Yuga both Ben and Beatrice were instinctively awed and stilled. Ever the walls of the gorge grew more steep, until the sunlight was cut off and they rode as if in twilight. The stone of the precipices presented a marvellous array of color; and the spruce, almost black in the subdued light, stood in startling contrast. Ben saw at once that even were they able to land they could not–until they had emerged from the gorge–climb to the highlands. A mountain goat, most hardy of all mountaineers, could scarcely scale the abrupt wall.
During this time of half-light they saw none of the larger forest creatures that at first had gazed at them with such wonder from the banks. The reason was simply that they could not descend and ascend the steep walls.
Mostly Ben had time only for an occasional glimpse at the colossus above him. His work was to guide the craft between the perilous boulders. Occasionally the river slackened its wild pace, and at such times he stretched his arms and rested his straining eyes.
Both had largely forgotten the danger of the ride. Because she was trying bravely to make the best of a tragic situation Beatrice had resolved to keep danger from her thoughts. Ben had known from the first that danger was an inevitable element in his venture, and he accepted it just as he had considered it,–with entire coldness. Yet both of them knew, in their secret thoughts, that the balance of life and death was so fine that the least minor incident might cast them into darkness. It would not have to be a great disaster, a wide departure from the commonplace. They were traveling at a terrific rate of speed, and a sharp rock too close to the surface would rip the bottom from their craft. Any instant might bring the shock and shudder of the end.
There would scarcely be time to be afraid. Both would be hurled into the stream; and the wild waters, pounding against the rocks, would close the matter swiftly. It awed them and humbled them to realize with what dispatch and ease this wilderness power could snuff out their mortal lives. There would be no chance to fight back, no element of uncertainty in the outcome. Here was a destiny against which the strength of man was as thistledown in the wind! The thought was good spiritual medicine for Ben, just as it would have been for most other men, and his egoism died a swift and natural death.
One crash, one shock, and then the darkness and silence of the end! The river would rage on, unsatiated by their few pounds of flesh, storming by in noble fury; but no man would know whither they had gone and how they had died. The walls of the gorge would not tremble one whit, or notice; and the spruce against the sky would not bow their heads to show that they had seen.
But the canyon broke at last, and the craft emerged into the sunlight. It was good to see the easy slope of the hills again, the spruce forests, and the forms of the wild creatures on the river bank, startled by their passing. Noon came and passed, and for lunch they ate the last of the fudge. And now a significant change was manifest in both of them.
Psychologists are ever astounded at the ability of mortals, men and animals, to become adjusted to any set of circumstances. The wax of habit sets almost in a day. The truth was, that in a certain measure with very definite and restricted limits, both Ben and Beatrice were becoming adjusted even to this amazing situation in which they found themselves. This did not mean that Beatrice was in the least degree reconciled to it. She had simply accepted it with the intention of making the best of it. She had been abducted by an enemy of her father and was being carried down an unknown and dangerous river; but the element of surprise, the life of which is never but a moment, was already passing away. Sometimes she caught herself with a distinct start, remembering everything with a rage and a bitter load on her heart; but the mood would pass quickly.
It is impossible, through any ordinary change of fortune, for a normal person to lose his sense of self-identity. As long as that remains exterior conditions can make no vital change, or make him feel greatly different than he felt before. The change from a peasant to a millionaire brings only a moment’s surprise, and then readjustment. Beatrice was still herself; the man in the stern remained Ben Darby and no one else. Very naturally she began to talk to him, and he to answer her.
The fact that they were bitter foes, one the victim of the other, did not decree they could not have friendly conversation, isolated as they were. From time to time Ben pointed out objects of interest on the shore; and she found herself remarking, in a casual voice, about them. And before the afternoon he had made her laugh, in spite of herself,–a gay sound in which fear and distress had little echo.
“We’re bound to see a great deal of each other in the next few weeks,” he had said; and this fact could not be denied. The sooner both became adjusted to it the better. Actual fear of him she had none; she remembered only too well the steel in his eyes and the white flame on his cheeks as he had assured her of her safety.
In mid-afternoon Ben began to think of making his night’s camp. From time to time the bank became an upright precipice where not even a tree could find foothold; and it had occurred to him, with sudden vividness, that he did not wish the darkness to overtake him in such a place. The river rocks would make short work of him, in that case. It was better to pick out a camp site in plenty of time lest they could not find one at the day’s end.
In one of the more quiet stretches of water he saw the place–a small cove and a green, tree-clad bank, with the gorge rising behind. Handling his canoe with greatest care he slanted toward it. A moment later he had caught the brush at the water’s edge, stepped off into shallow water, and was drawing the canoe up onto the bank.
“We’re through for the day,” he said happily, as he helped Beatrice out of the boat. “I’ll confess I’m ready to rest.”
Beatrice made no answer because her eyes were busy. Coolly and quietly she took stock of the situation, trying to get an idea of the geographical features of the camp site. She saw in a glance, however, that there was no path to freedom up the gorge behind her. The rocks were precipitate: besides, she remembered that over a hundred miles of impassable wilderness lay between her and her father’s cabin. Without food and supplies she could not hope to make the journey.
The racing river, however, wakened a curious, inviting train of thought. The torrent continued largely unabated for at least one hundred miles more, she knew, and the hours that it would be passable in a canoe were numbered. The river had fallen steadily all day; driftwood was left on the shore; rocks dried swiftly in the sun, cropping out like fangs above the foam of the stream. Was there still time to drift on down the Yuga a hundred or more miles to the distant Indian encampment? She shut the thought from her mind, at present, and turned her attention to the work of making camp.
With entire good humor she began to gather such pieces of dead wood as she could find for their fire.
“Your prisoner might as well make herself useful,” she said.
Ben’s face lighted as she had not seen it since their outward journey from Snowy Gulch. “Thank God you’re taking it that way, Beatrice,” he told her fervently. “It was a proposition I couldn’t help–“
But the girl’s eyes flashed, and her lips set in a hard line. “I’m doing it to make my own time go faster,” she told him softly, rather slowly. “I want you to remember that.”
But instantly both forgot their words to listen to a familiar clucking sound from a near-by shrub. Peering closely they made out the plump, genial form of Franklin’s grouse,–a bird known far and wide in the north for her ample breast and her tender flesh.
“Good Lord, there’s supper!” Ben whispered. “Beatrice, get your pistol–“
Her eyes smiled as she looked him in the face. “You remember–my pistol isn’t loaded!”
“Excuse me. I forgot. Give it to me.”
She handed him the little gun, and he slipped in the shells he had taken from it. Then–for the simple and sensible reason that he didn’t want to take any chance on the loss of their dinner–he stole within twenty feet of the bird. Very carefully he drew down on the plump neck.
“Dinner all safe,” he remarked rather gayly, as the grouse came tumbling through the branches.
XXIV
Quietly Beatrice retrieved the bird and began to remove its feathers. Ben built the fire, chopped sturdily at a half-grown spruce until it shattered to the earth, and then chopped it into lengths for fuel. When the fire was blazing bright, he cut away the green branches and laid them, stems overlapping, into a fragrant bed.
“Here’s where you sleep to-night, Beatrice,” he informed her.
She stopped in her work long enough to try the springy boughs with her arms; then she gave him an answering smile. Even a tenderfoot can make some sort of a comfortable pallet out of evergreen boughs–ends overlapping and plumes bent–but a master woodsman can fashion a veritable cradle, soft as silk with never a hard limb to irritate the flesh, and yielding as a hair mattress. Such softness, with the fragrance of the balsam like a sleeping potion, can not help but bring sweet dreams.
Ben had been wholly deliberate in the care with which he had built the pallet. He had simply come to the conclusion that she was paying a high price for her father’s sins; and from now on he intended to make all things as easy as he could for her. Moreover, she had been a sportswoman of the rarest breed and merited every kindness he could do for her.
He was not half so careful with his own bed, built sixty feet on the opposite side of the fire. He threw it together rather hastily. And when he walked back to the fire he found an amazing change.
Already Beatrice had established sovereignty over the little patch of ground they had chosen for the camp,–and the wilderness had drawn back. This spot was no longer mere part of the far-spreading, trackless wilds. It had been set off and marked so that the wilderness creatures could no longer mistake it for part of their domain. Over the fire she had erected a cooking rack; and water was already boiling in a small bucket suspended from it. In another container a fragrant mixture was in the process of cooking. She had spread one of the blankets on the grass for a tablecloth.
As twilight lowered they sat down to their simple meal,–tea, sweetened with sugar, and vegetables and meat happily mingled in a stew. It was true that the vegetable end was held up by white grains of rice alone, but the meat was the white, tender flesh of grouse, permeating the entire dish with its tempting flavor. As a whole, the stew was greatly satisfying to the inner man.
“I wish I’d brought more tea,” Ben complained, as he sipped that most delightful of all drinks, the black tea beloved of the northern men.
“You a woodsman, and don’t know how to remedy that!” the girl responded. “I know of a native substitute that’s almost as good as the real article.”
About the embers of the fire they sat and watched the tremulous wings of night close round them. The copse grew breathless. The distant trees blended into shadow, the nearer trunks dimmed and finally faded; the large, white northern stars emerged in infinite troops and companies, peering down through the rifts in the trees. Here about their fire they had established the domain of man. For a few short hours they had routed the forces of the wilderness; but the foe pressed close upon them. Just at the fluctuating ring of firelight he waited, clothed in darkness and mystery,–the infinite, brooding spirit of the ancient forest.
They had never known such silence, broken only by the prolonged chord of the river, as descended upon them now. It was new and strange to the conscious life of Ben, himself, the veritable offspring of the woods; although infinitely old and familiar to a still, watching, secret self within him. It was as if he had searched forever for this place and had just found it, and it answered, to the full, a queer mood of silence in his own heart. The wind had died down now. The last wail of a coyote–disconsolate on a far-away ridge–had trembled away into nothingness; the voices of the Little People who had chirped and rustled in the tree aisles during the daylight hours were stilled with a breathless, dramatic stillness. Such sound as remained over the interminable breadth of that dark forest was only the faint stirrings and rustlings of the beasts of prey going to their hunting; and this was only a moving tone in the great chord of silence.
To Ben the falling night brought a return of his most terrible moods. Beatrice sensed them in his pale, set face and his cold, wolfish eyes. The wolf sat beside him, swept by his master’s mood, gazing with deadly speculations into the darkness. Beatrice saw them as one breed to-night. The wild had wholly claimed this repatriated son. The paw of the Beast was heavy upon him; the softening influences of civilization seemed wholly dispelled. There was little here to remind her that this was the twentieth century. The primitive that lies just under the skin in all men was in the ascendancy; and there was little indeed to distinguish him from the hunter of long ago, a grizzled savage at the edge of the ice who chased the mammoth and wild pony, knowing no home but the forest and no gentleness unknown to the wolf that ran at his heels…. The tenderness and sympathy he had had for her earlier that day seemed quite gone now. She searched for it in vain in the dark and savage lines of his pale face.
Because it has always been that the happiness of women must depend upon the mood of men, her own spirits fell. The despair that descended upon her brought also resentment and rage; and soon she slipped away quietly to her bed. She drew the blankets over her face; but no tears wet her cheeks to-night. She was dry-eyed, thoughtful–full of vague plans.
She lay awake a long time, until at last a little, faint ray of hope beamed bright and clear. More than a hundred miles farther down the Yuga, past the mouth of Grizzly River, not far from the great, north-flowing stream of which the Yuga was a tributary, lay an Indian village–and if only she could reach it she might enlist the aid of the natives and make a safe return, by a long, roundabout route, to her father’s arms. The plan meant deliverance from Ben and the defeat of all his schemes of vengeance,–perhaps the salvation of her father and his subordinates.
She realized perfectly the reality of her father’s danger. She had read the iron resolve in Ben’s face. She knew that if she failed to make an immediate escape from him, all his dreadful plans were likely to succeed: his enemies would follow him into the unexplored mazes of Back There to effect her rescue and fall helpless in his trap. What quality of mercy he would extend to them then she could readily guess.
Just to get down to the Indian village: this was her whole problem. But it was Ben’s plan to land and enter the interior somewhere in the vast wilderness between, from which escape could not be made until the flood waters of fall. The way would remain open but a few hours more, due to the simple fact that the waters were steadily falling and the river-bottom crags, forming impassable barriers at some points, would be exposed. _If she made her escape at all it must be soon._
Yet she could not attempt it at night. She could not see to guide the canoe while the darkness lay over the river. Just one further chance remained–to depart in the first gray of dawn.
She fell into troubled sleep, but true to her resolution, wakened when the first ribbon of light stretched along the eastern horizon. She sat up, laying the blankets back with infinite care. This was her chance: Ben still lay asleep.
Just to steal down to the water’s edge, push off the canoe, and trust her life to the doubtful mercy of the river. The morning soon would break; if she could avoid the first few crags, she had every chance to guide her craft through to deliverance and safety. By no conceivable chance could Ben follow her. He would be left in the shadow of the gorge, a prisoner without hope or prayer of deliverance. There was no crossing the cliffs that lifted so stern and gray just behind. Before he could build any kind of a craft with axe and fire, the waters would fall to a death level, beyond any hope of carrying him to safety. The tables would be turned; he would be left as helpless to follow her as Neilson had been to follow him.
The plan meant deliverance for her; but surely it meant _death_ to him. Starvation would drive him to the river and destruction, before men could ever come the long way to rescue him. But this was not her concern. She was a forest girl and he her enemy: he must pay the price for his own deeds.
She got to her feet, stalking with absolute silence. She must not waken him now. Softly she pressed her unshod foot into the grass. He stirred in his sleep; and she paused, scarcely breathing.
She looked toward him. Dimly she could see his face, tranquil in sleep and gray in the soft light; and an instantaneous surge of remorse sped through her. There was a sweetness, a hint of kindly boyishness in his face now, so changed since she had left him beside the glowing coals. Yet he was her deadly enemy; and she must not let her woman’s heart cost her her victory in its moment of fulfillment. She crept on down to the water.
She could discern the black shadow of the canoe. One swift surge of her shoulders, one leap, the splash of the stern in the water and the swift stroke of the paddle, and she would be safe. She stepped nearer.
But at that instant a subdued note of warning froze her in her tracks. It was only a small sound, hushed and hardly sharp enough to arouse Ben from his sleep; but it was deadly, savage, unutterably sinister. She had forgotten that Ben did not wage war alone. For the moment she had given no thought to his terrible ally,–a pack brother faithful to the death.
A great, gaunt form raised up from the pile of duffle in the canoe; and his fangs showed ivory white in the wan light. It was Fenris, and he guarded the canoe. He crouched, ready to spring if she drew near.
The girl sobbed once, then stole back to her blankets.
XXV
Ben wakened refreshed, at peace with the world as far as he could ever be until his ends were attained; and immediately built a roaring fire. Beatrice still slept, exhausted from the stress and suspense of her attempt to escape. When the leaping flames had dispelled the frost from the grass about the fire Ben stepped to her side and touched her shoulder.
“It’s time to get up and go on,” he said. “We have only a few hours more of travel.”
It was true. The river had fallen appreciably during the night. Not many hours remained in which to make their permanent landing. Although the river was somewhat less violent from this point on, the lower water line would make traveling practically as perilous as on the preceding day.
The girl opened her eyes. “I’d rather hoped–I had dreamed it all,” she told him miserably.
The words touched him. He looked into her face, moved by the girlishness and appeal about the red, wistful mouth and the dark, brimming eyes. “It’s pretty tough, but I’m afraid it’s true,” he said, more kindly than he had spoken since they had left the landing. “Do you want me to cook breakfast and bring it to you here?”
“No, I want to do that part myself. It makes the time pass faster to have something to do.”
He went to look for fresh meat, and she slipped into her outer garments. She found water already hot in a bucket suspended from the cooking rack, permitting a simple but refreshing toilet. With Ben’s comb she straightened out the snarls in her dark tresses, parted them, and braided them into two dusky ropes to be worn Indian fashion in front of her shoulders. Then she prepared the meal.
It was a problem to tax the ingenuity of any housekeeper,–to prepare an appetizing breakfast out of such limited supplies. But in this art, particularly, the forest girls are trained. A quantity of rice had been left from the stew of the preceding night, and mixing it with flour and water and salt, she made a batter. Sooner or later fresh fat could be obtained from game to use in frying: to-day she saw no course other than to melt a piece of candle. The reverberating roar of the rifle a hundred yards down the river bank, however, suggested another alternative.
A moment later Ben appeared–and the breakfast problem was solved. It was another of the woods people that his rifle had brought down,–one that wore fur rather than feathers and which had just come in from night explorations along the river bank. It was a yearling black bear–really no larger than a cub–and he had an inch of fat under his furry hide.
The fat he yielded was not greatly different from lard; and the pancakes–or fritters, as Ben termed them–were soon frying merrily. Served with hot tea they constituted a filling and satisfactory breakfast for both travelers.
After breakfast they took to the river, yielding themselves once more to the whims of the current. Once more the steep banks whipped past them in ever-changing vista; and Ben had to strain at his paddle to guide the craft between the perilous crags. The previous day the high waters had carried them safely above the boulders of the river bed: to-day some of the larger crags all but scraped the bottom of the canoe. It did not tend toward peace of mind to know that any instant they might encounter a submerged crag that would rip their craft in twain. Ben felt a growing eagerness to land.
But within an hour they came out once more upon the open forest. The river broadened, sped less swiftly, the bank sloped gradually to the distant hills. This was the heart of Back There,–a virgin and primeval forest unchanged since the piling-up of the untrodden ranges. The wild pace of the craft was checked, and they kept watch for a suitable place to land.
There was no need to push on through the seething cataracts that lay still farther below. Shortly before the noon hour Ben’s quick eye saw a break in the heavy brushwood that lined the bank and quickly paddled toward it. In a moment it was revealed as the mouth, of a small, clear stream, flowing out of a beaver meadow where the grass was rank and high. In a moment more he pushed the canoe into the mud of the creek bank.
They both got out, rather sober of mien, and she helped him haul the canoe out upon the bank. They unloaded it quickly, carrying the supplies in easy loads fifty yards up into the edge of the forest, on well-drained dry ground.
The entire forest world was hushed and breathless, as if startled by this intrusion. Neither of the two travelers felt inclined to speak. And the silence was finally broken by the splashing feet of a moose, running through a little arm of the marsh that the forest hid from view.
“Is this our permanent camp?” the girl asked at last.
“Surely not,” was the reply. “It’s too near the river for one thing–too easily found. It’s too low, too–there’ll be mosquitoes in plenty in that marsh two months from now. The first thing is–to look around and find a better site.”
“You want me to come?”
“I’d rather, if you don’t mind.”
She understood perfectly. He did not intend to give her complete freedom until the river fell so low that the rapids farther down would be wholly impassable.
“I’ll come.” Beatrice smiled grimly. “We can have that picnic we planned, after all.”
They found a moose trail leading into the forest, and leaving the wolf on guard over the supplies, they filed swiftly along it in that peculiar, shuffling, mile-speeding gait that all foresters learn. At once both were aware of a subdued excitement. In the first place, this was unknown country and they experienced the incomparable thrill of exploration. Besides they were seeking a permanent camp where their fortunes would be cast, the drama of their lives be enacted, for weeks to come.
Almost at once they began to catch glimpses of wild life,–a squirrel romping on a limb; or a long line of grouse, like children in school, perched on a fallen log. The trapper had not yet laid his lines in this land, and the tracks of the little fur-bearers weaved a marvelous and intricate pattern on the moose trail. Once a marten with orange throat peered at them from a covert, and once a caribou raced away, too fast for a shot.
Mostly the wild things showed little fear or understanding of the two humans. The grouse relied on their protective coloration, just as when menaced by the beasts of prey. An otter, rarely indeed seen in daylight, hovered a moment beside a little stream to consider them; and a coyote, greatest of all cowards, lingered in their trail until they were within fifty feet of his grey form, then trotted shyly away.
“We won’t starve for meat, that’s certain,” Ben informed her. His voice was subdued; he had fallen naturally into the mood of quietness that dwells ever in the primeval forest.
Because the trail seemed to be leading them too far from the waterways, they took a side trail circling about a wooded hill. Ever Ben studied the landmarks, looked carefully down the draws and tried to learn as much as possible of the geography of the country; and Beatrice understood his purpose with entire clearness. He wished to locate his camp so that it would have every natural advantage and insurance against surprise attack. He desired that every advantage of warfare be in his favor when finally he came to grips with Neilson and his men.
They crossed a low ridge, following down another of the thousand creeks that water the northern lands. In a moment it led them to a long, narrow lake, blue as a sapphire in its frame of dusky spruce.
For a moment both of them halted on its bank, held by its virgin beauty. Lost in the solitudes as it was, perhaps never before gazed upon by the eyes of men, still it gave no impression of bleakness and stagnation. Rather it was a scene of scintillating life, vivid past all expression. Far out of range on the opposite shore a huge bull moose stood like a statue in black marble, gazing out over the shimmering expanse. Trout leaped, flashing silver, anywhere they might look; and a flock of loon shrieked demented cries from its center. The burnished wings of a flock of mallard flashed in the air, startled by some creeping hunter.
Slowly, delighted in spite of themselves by the lovely spot, they followed along its shore. They climbed the bank; and now Ben began to examine his surroundings with great care.
He had suddenly realized that he was in a region wonderfully fitted for his permanent camp. The low ridge between the lake and the creek gave a clear view of a large part of the surrounding country, affording him every chance of seeing his enemies before they saw him. If they came along the river–the course they would naturally follow–they would be obliged to cross the beaver marsh–a half-mile of open grassland with no protecting coverts. Beatrice saw, dismayed, that his gray eyes were kindling with unholy fire under his heavy, dark brows.
What if he should see them, deep in the wet grass, filing across the open marsh! How many shots would be needed to bring his war to a triumphant end? There were no thickets in which they might find shelter: hidden himself, they could not return his fire. Before they could break and run to cover he could destroy them all!
Should they cross the narrow neck of the marsh, higher up, he would have every chance to see them on the lake shore. The site was good from the point of health and comfort–high enough to escape the worst of the insect pests, close to fresh water, plenty of fuel, and within a few hundred yards of a lake that simply swarmed with fish and waterfowl.
Still following a narrow, racing trout stream that flowed into the lake they advanced a short distance farther, clear to the base of a rock wall. And all at once Beatrice, walking in front, drew up with a gasp.
She stood at the edge of a little glade, perhaps thirty yards across, laying at the base of the cliff. The creek flowed through it, the grass was green and rich, beloved by the antlered herds that came to graze, the tall spruce shaded it on three sides. But it was not these things that caught the girl’s eye. Just at the edge of a glade a dark hole yawned in the face of the cliff.
In an instant more they were beside it, gazing into its depths. It was a natural cavern with rock walls and a clean floor of sand–a roomy place, and yet a perfect stronghold against either mortal enemies or the powers of wind and rain.
“It’s home,” the man said simply.
XXVI
Ben and Beatrice went together back to the canoe, and in two trips they carried the supplies to the cave. By instinct a housekeeper, Beatrice showed him where to stow the various supplies, what part of the cave was to be used for provisions, where their cots would be laid, and where to erect the cooking rack. Shadows had fallen over the land before they finished the work.
Tired from the hard tramp, yet sustained by a vague excitement neither of them could name or trace, they began to prepare for the night. Ben cut boughs as before, placing Beatrice’s bed within the portals of the cave and his own on the grass outside. He cut fuel and made his fire: Beatrice prepared the evening meal.
The flesh of the cub-bear they had procured that morning would have to serve them to-night; but more delicious meat could be procured to-morrow. Ben knew that the white-maned caribou fed in the high park lands. Beatrice made biscuits and brewed tea; and they ate the simple food in the firelight. Already the darkness was pressing close upon them, tremulous, vaguely sinister, inscrutably mysterious.
They had talked gayly at first; but they grew silent as the fire burned down to coals. A great preoccupation seemed to hold them both. When one spoke the other started, and word did not immediately come in answer. Beatrice’s despair was not nearly so dominating to-night; and Ben harbored a secret excitement that was almost happiness.
Its source and origin Ben could not trace. Perhaps it was just relief that the perilous journey was over. The strain of his hours at the paddle had been severe; but now they were safe upon the sustaining earth. Yet this fact alone could hardly have given him such a sense of security,–an inner comfort new to his adventurous life.
The forest was oppressive to-night, tremulous with the passions of the Young World; yet he did not respond to it as before. The excitement that sparkled in the red wine of his veins was not of the chase and death, and he had difficulty in linking it up with the thoughts of his forthcoming vengeance. Rather it was a mood that sprang from their surroundings here, their shelter at the mouth of the cave. He felt deeply at peace.
The fire blazed warmly at the cavern maw; the wolf stood tense and still, by means of the secret wireless of the wild fully aware of the tragic drama, the curtain of which was the dark just fallen; yet Ben’s wild, bitter thoughts of the preceding night did not come readily back to him. There was a quality here–in the firelight and the haven of the cave–that soothed him and comforted him. The powers of the wild were helpless against him now. The wind might hurl down the dead trees, but the rock of the cavern Wall would stand against them. Even the dreaded avalanche could roar and thunder on the steep above in vain.
There was no peril in the hushed, breathless forest for him to-night. This was his stronghold, and none could assail it. And it was a significant fact that his sense of intimate relationship with the wolf, Fenris, Was someway lessened. Fenris was a creature of the open forest, sleeping where he chose on the trail; but his master had found a cavern home. There was a strange and bridgeless chasm between such breeds as roamed abroad and those that slept, night after night, in the shelter of the same walls.
He watched the girl’s face, ruddy in the firelight, and it was increasingly hard to remember that she was of the enemy camp,–the daughter of his arch foe. To-night she was just a comrade, a habitat of his own cave.
For the first time since he had found Ezram’s body–so huddled and impotent in the dead leaves–he remembered the solace of tobacco. He hunted through his pockets, found his pipe and a single tin of the weed, and began to inhale the fragrant, peace-giving smoke. When he raised his eyes again he found the girl studying him with intent gaze.
She looked away, embarrassed, and he spoke to put her at ease. “You are perfectly comfortable, Beatrice?” he asked gently.
“As good as I could expect–considering everything. I’m awfully relieved that we’re off the water.”
“Of course.” He paused, looking away into the tremulous shadows. “Is that all? Don’t you feel something else, too–a kind of satisfaction?”
The coals threw their lurid glow on her lovely, deeply tanned face. “It’s for you to feel satisfaction, not me. You couldn’t expect me to feel very satisfied–taken from my home–as a hostage–in a feud with my father. But I think I know what you mean. You mean–the comfort of the fire, and a place to stay.”
“That’s it. Of course.”
“I feel it–but every human being does who has a fire when this big, northern night comes down and takes charge of things. It’s just an instinct, I suppose, a comfort and a feeling of safety–and likely only the wild beasts are exempt from it.” Her voice changed and softened, as her girlish fancy reached ever farther. “I suppose the first men that you were telling me about on the way out, the hairy men of long ago, felt the same way when the cold drove them to their caves for the first time. A great comfort in the protecting walls and the fire.”
“It’s an interesting thought–that perhaps the love of home sprang from that hour.”
“Quite possibly. Perhaps it came only when they had to fight for their homes–against beasts, and such other hairy men as tried to take their homes away from them. Perhaps, after all, that’s one of the great differences between men and beasts. Men have a place to live in and a place to fight for–and the fire is the symbol of it all. And the beasts run in the forest and make a new lair every day.”
Thoughts of the stone age were wholly fitting in this stone-age forest, and Ben’s fancy caught on fire quickly. “And perhaps, when the hairy men came to the caves to live, they forgot their wild passions they knew on the open trails–their blood-lust and their wars among themselves–and began to be men instead of beasts.” Ben’s voice had dropped to an even, low murmur. “Perhaps they got gentle, and the Brute died in their bodies.”
“Yes. Perhaps then they began to be tamed.”
The silence dropped about them, settling slowly; and all except the largest heap of red coals burned down to gray ashes. The darkness pressed ever nearer. The girl stretched her slender, brown arms.
“I’m sleepy,” she said. “I’m going in.”
He got up, with good manners; and he smiled, quietly and gently, into her sober, wistful face. “Sleep good,” he prayed. “You’ve got solid walls around you to-night–and some one on guard, too. Good night.”
A like good wish was on her lips, but she pressed it back. She had almost forgotten, for the moment, that this man was her abductor and her father’s enemy. She ventured into the darkness of the cave.
Scratching a match Ben followed her, so that she could see her way. For the instant the fireside was deserted. And then both of them grew breathless and alert as the brush cracked and rustled just beyond the glowing coals.
Some huge wilderness creature was venturing toward them, at the edge of the little glade.
XXVII
The match flared out in Ben’s fingers, and the only light that was left was the pale moonlight, like a cobweb on the floor of the glade, and the faint glow from the dying fire. About the glade ranged the tall spruce, Watching breathlessly; and for a termless second or two a profound and portentous silence descended on the camp. No leaf rustled, not a tree limb cracked. The creature that had pushed through the thickets to the edge of the glade was evidently standing motionless, deciding on his course.
Only the wild things seem to know what complete absence of motion means. To stand like a form in rock, not a muscle quivering or a hair stirring, is never a feat for ragged, over stretched human nerves; and it requires a perfect muscle control that is generally only known to the beasts of the forest. Only a few times in a lifetime in human beings are the little, outward motions actually suspended; perhaps under the paralysis of great terror or, with painstaking effort, before a photographer’s camera. But with the beasts it is an everyday accomplishment necessary to their survival. The fawn that can not stand absolutely motionless, his dappled skin blending perfectly with the background of shrubbery shot with sunlight, comes to an end quickly in the fangs of some great beast of prey. The panther that can not lurk, not a muscle quivering, in his ambush beside the deer trail, never knows full feeding. The creature on the opposite side of the glade seemed as bereft of motion as the spruce trees in the moonlight, or the cliff above the cave.
“What is it?” Beatrice whispered. The man’s eyes strained into the gloom.
“I don’t know. It may be just a moose, or maybe a caribou. But it may be–“
He tiptoed to the door of the cave, and his eye fell to the crouching form of Fenris. The creature outside was neither moose nor caribou. The great wolf of the North does not stand at bay to the antlered people. He was poised to spring, his fangs bared and his fierce eyes hot with fire, but he was not hunting. Whatever moved in the darkness without, the wolf had no desire to go forth and attack. Perhaps he would fight to the death to protect the occupants of the cave; but surely an ancient and devastating fear had hold of him. Evidently he recognized the intruder as an ancestral enemy that held sovereignty over the forest.
At that instant Ben leaped through the cavern maw to reach his gun. There was nothing to be gained by waiting further. This was a savage and an uninhabited land; and the great beasts of prey that ranged the forest had not yet learned the restraint born of the fear of man. And he knew one breathless instant of panic when his eye failed to locate the weapon in the faint light of the fire.
Holding hard, he tried to remember where he had left it. The form across the glade was no longer motionless. Straining, Ben saw the soft roll of a great shadow, almost imperceptible in the gloom–advancing slowly toward him. Then the faint glow of the fire caught and reflected in the creature’s eyes.
They suddenly glowed out in the half-darkness, two rather small circles of dark red, close together and just alike. This night visitor was not moose or caribou, or was it one of the lesser hunters, lynx or wolverine, or a panther wandered far from his accustomed haunts. The twin circles were too far above the ground. And whatever it was, no doubt remained but that the creature was steadily stalking him across the soft grass.
At that instant Ben’s muscles snapped into action. Only a second remained in which to make his defense–the creature had paused, setting his muscles for a death-dealing charge. “Go back into the cave–as far as you can,” he said swiftly to Beatrice. His own eyes, squinted and straining for the last iota of vision in that darkened scene, made a last, frantic search for his rifle. Suddenly he saw the gleam of its barrel as it rested against the wall of the cliff, fifteen feet distant.
At once he knew that his only course was to spring for it in the instant that remained, and trust to its mighty shocking power to stop the charge that would in a moment ensue. Yet it seemed to tear the life fiber of the man to do it. His inmost instincts, urgent and loud in his ear, told him to remain on guard, not to leave that cavern maw for an instant but to protect with his own body the precious life that it sheltered. His mind worked with that incredible speed that is usually manifest in a crisis; and he knew that the creature might charge into the cavern entrance in the second that he left it. Yet only in the rifle lay the least chance or hope for either of them.
“At him, Fenris!” he shouted. The wolf leaped forward like a thrown spear,–almost too fast for the eye to follow. He was deathly afraid, with full knowledge of the power of the enemy he went to combat, but his fears were impotent to restrain him at the first sound of that masterful voice. These were the words he had waited for. He could never disobey such words as these–from the lips of his god. And Ben’s mind had worked true; he knew that the wolf could likely hold the creature at bay until he could seize his rifle.
In an instant it was in his hands, and he had sprung back to his post in front of the cavern maw. And presently he remembered, heartsick, that the weapon was not loaded.
For his own safety he had kept it empty on the outward journey, partly to prevent accident, partly to be sure that his prisoner could not turn it against him. But he had shells in the pocket of his jacket. His hand groped, but his reaching fingers found but one shell, dropping it swiftly into the gun. And now he knew that no time remained to seek another. The beast in the darkness had launched into the charge.
Thereafter there was only a great confusion, event piled upon event with incredible rapidity, and a whole lifetime of stress and fear lived in a single instant. The creature’s first lunge carried him into the brighter moonlight; and at once Ben recognized its breed. No woodsman could mistake the high, rocking shoulders, the burly form, the wicked ears laid back against the flat, massive head, the fangs gleaming white, the long, hooked claws slashing through the turf as he ran. It was a terrible thing to see and stand against, in the half-darkness. The shadows accentuated the towering outline; and forgotten terrors, lurking, since the world was young, in the labyrinth of the germ plasm wakened and spread like icy streams through the mortal body and seemed to threaten to extinguish the warm flame of the very soul.
The grizzly bawled as he came, an explosive, incredible storm of sound. Few indeed are the wilderness creatures that can charge in silence: muscular exertion can not alone relieve their gathered flood of madness and fury. And at once Ben sensed the impulse behind the attack. He and the girl had made their home in the grizzly’s cave–perhaps the lair wherein he had hibernated through the winter and which he still slept in from time to time–and he had come to drive them out. Only death could pay for such insolence as this,–to make a night’s lair in the den of his sovereignty, the grizzly.
It is not the accustomed thing for a grizzly to make an unprovoked attack. He has done it many times, in the history of the west, but usually he is glad enough to turn aside, only launching into his terrible death-charge when a mortal wound obliterates his fear of man, leaving only his fear of death. But this grizzly, native to these uninhabited wilds, had no fear of man to forget. He did not know what man was, and he had not learned the death that dwells in the shining weapon he carries in his arms. No trappers mushed through his snows of spring; no woodsman rode his winding trails. True, from the first instant that the human smell had reached him on the wind he had been disturbed and discomfited; yet it was not grizzly nature to yield his den without a fight. The sight of the wolf–known to him of old–only wakened an added rage in his fierce heart.
The wolf met him at his first leap, springing with noble courage at his grizzled throat; and the bear paused in his charge to strike him away. He lashed out with his great forepaw; and if that blow had gone straight home the ribs of the wolf would have been smashed flat on his heart and lungs. The tough trunk of a young spruce would have been broken as quickly under that terrible, blasting full-stroke of a grizzly. The largest grizzly weighs but a thousand pounds, but that weight is simple fiber and iron muscle, of a might incredible to any one but the woodsmen who know this mountain king in his native haunts. But Fenris whipped aside, and the paw missed him.
Immediately the wolf sprang in again, with a courage scarcely compatible with lupine characteristics, ready to wage this unequal battle to the death. But his brave fight was tragically hopeless. For all that his hundred and fifty pounds were, every ounce, lightning muscle and vibrant sinew, it was as if a gopher had waged war with a lynx. Yet by the law of his wild heart he could not turn and flee. His master–his stalwart god whose words thrilled him to the uttermost depths–had given his orders, and he must obey them to the end.
The second blow missed him also, but the third caught a small shrub that grew twenty feet beyond the dying fire. The shrub snapped off under the blow, and its branchy end smote the wolf across the head and neck. As if struck by a tornado he was hurled into the air, and curtailed and indirect though the blow was, he sprawled down stunned and insensible in the grass. The bear paused one instant; then lunged forth again.
But the breath in which the wolf had stayed the charge had given Ben his chance. With a swift motion of his arm he had projected the single rifle shell into the chamber of the weapon. The stock snapped to his shoulder; and his keen, glittering eyes sought the sights.
XXVIII
Few wilderness adventures offer a more stern test to human nerves than the frightful rush of a maddened grizzly. It typifies all that is primal and savage in the wild: the insane rage that can find relief only in the cruel rending of flesh; the thundering power that no mere mortal strength can withstand. But Ben was a woodsman. He had been tried in the fire. He knew that not only his life, but that of the girl in the cavern depended upon this one shot; and it was wholly characteristic of Wolf Darby that his eye held true and his arm was steady as a vice of iron.
He was aware that he must wait until the bear was almost upon him, in order to be sure to send the bullet home to a vital place. This alone was a test requiring no small measure of self-control. The instinct was to fire at once. In the moonlight it was difficult to see his sights: his only chance was to enlarge his target to the last, outer limit of safety. He aimed for the great throat, below the slavering jaw.
His finger pressed back steadily against the trigger. The slightest flinching, the smallest motion might yet throw off his aim. The rifle spoke with a roar.
But this wilderness battle was not yet done. The ball went straight home, down through the throat, mushrooming and plowing on into the neck, inflicting a wound that was bound to be mortal within a few seconds. The bear recoiled; but the mighty engine of its life was not yet destroyed. Its incalculable fonts of vitality had not yet run down.
The grizzly bounded forward again. The ball had evidently missed the vertebrae and spinal column. His crashing, thunderous roar of pain smothered instantly the reechoing report of the rifle and stifled the instinctive cry that had come to Ben’s lips. He was a forester; and he had known of old what havoc a mortally wounded bear can wreak in a few seconds of life. In that strange, vivid instant Ben knew that his own and the girl’s life still hung in the balance, with the beam inclining toward death.
The grizzly was in his death-agony, nothing more; yet in that final convulsion he could rip into shreds the powerful form that opposed him. Ben knew, with a cold, sure knowledge, that if he failed to slay the beast, it would naturally crawl into its lair for its last breath. As this dreadful thought flashed home he dropped the empty rifle and seized the axe that leaned against a log of spruce beside the fire.
There was no time at all to search out another shell and load his rifle. If the shock of the heavy bullet had not slackened the bear’s pace he would not even have had time to seize the axe. Finally, if the bear had not been all but dead, in his last, threshing agony, Ben’s mortal strength could not have sent home one blow. As it was they found themselves facing each other over the embers of the fire, well-matched contestants whose stake was life and whose penalty was death. The grizzly turned his head, caught sight of Ben, identified him as the agent of his agony, and lurched forward.
Just in time Ben sprang aside, out of the reach of those terrible forearms; and his axe swung mightly in the air. Its blade gleamed and descended–a blow that might have easily broken the bear’s back if it had gone true but which now seemed only to infuriate him the more. The bear reared up, reeled, and lashed down; and dying though he was, he struck with incredible power. One slashing stroke of that vast forepaw, one slow closing of those cruel fangs upon skull or breast, and life would have gone out like a light. But Ben leaped aside again, and again swung down his axe.
These were but the first blows of a terrific battle that carried like a storm through the still reaches of the forest. Far in the distant tree aisles the woods people paused in their night’s occupation to listen, stirred and terrified by the throb and thrill in the air; the grazing caribou lifted his growing horns and snorted in terror; the beasts of prey paused in the chase, growling uneasily, gazing with fierce, luminous eyes in the direction of the battle.
It is beyond the ken of man whether or not, in their wild hearts, these forest folk sensed what was taking place,–that their gray monarch, the sovereign grizzly, was at the death-fight with some dreadful invader from the South. They heard the bear’s fierce bawls, unimitatable by any other voice as he lashed down blow after blow; and they heard the thud