copyright,
Kellscraft Studio 1999-2004 (Return to Web Text-ures) |
Click Here to return to |
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
THE next morning Challoner's
outfit of three teams and four men left north and west for the Reindeer Lake
country on the journey to his new post at the mouth of the Cochrane. An hour
later Challoner struck due west with a light sledge and a five-dog team for the
Jackson's Knee. Behind him followed one of MacDonnell's Indians with the team
that was to bring Nanette to Fort O' God.
He saw nothing more of
Durant and Grouse Piet, and accepted MacDonnell's explanation that they had
undoubtedly left the Post shortly after their assault upon him in the cabin. No
doubt their disappearance had been hastened by the fact that a patrol of the
Royal Northwest Mounted Police on its way to York Factory was expected at Fort
O' God that day.
Not until the final moment
of departure was Miki brought from the cabin and tied to the gee-bar of
Challoner's sledge. When he saw the five dogs squatted on their haunches he
grew rigid and the old snarl rose in his throat. Under Challoner's quieting
words he quickly came to understand that these beasts were not enemies, and
from a rather suspicious toleration of them he very soon began to take a new
sort of interest in them. It was a friendly team, bred in the south and without
the wolf strain.
Events had come to pass so
swiftly and so vividly in Miki's life during the past twenty-four hours that
for many miles after they left Fort O' God his senses were in an unsettled
state of anticipation. His brain was filled with a jumble of strange and thrilling pictures. Very far away, and
almost indistinct, were the pictures of things that had happened before he
was made a prisoner by Jacques Le Beau. Even the memory of Neewa was fading
under the thrill of events at Nanette's cabin and at Fort O' God. The pictures
that blazed their way across his brain now were of men, and dogs, and many
other, things that he had never seen before. His world had suddenly transformed
itself into a host of Henri Durants and Grouse Piets and Jacques Le Beaus,
two-legged beasts who had clubbed him, and, half-killed him, and who had made
him fight to keep the life in his body. He had tasted their blood in his
vengeance. And he watched for them now. The pictures told him they were
everywhere. He could imagine them as countless as the wolves, and as he had
seen them crowded round the big cage in which he had slain the wolf-dog.
In all of this excited and
distorted world there was only one Challoner, and one Nanette, and one baby.
All else was a chaos of uncertainty and of dark menace. Twice when the Indian
came up close behind them Miki whirled about with. a savage snarl. Challoner
watched him, and understood.
Of the pictures in his brain
one stood out above all others, definite and unclouded, and that was the
picture of Nanette. Yes, even above Challoner himself. There lived in him the
consciousness of her gentle hands; her sweet, soft voice; the perfume of her
hair and clothes and body – the woman of her; and a part of the woman –
as the hand is a part of the body – was the baby. It was this part of Miki that
Challoner could not understand, and which puzzled him when they made camp that
night. He sat for a long time beside the fire trying to bring back the old
comradeship of the days of Miki's puppyhood. But he only partly succeeded. Miki
was restive. Every nerve in his body seemed on edge. Again and again he faced
the west, and always when he sniffed the air in that direction there came a low
whine in his throat.
That night, with doubt in
his heart, Challoner fastened him near the tent with a tough rope of babiche.
For a long time after
Challoner had gone to bed Miki sat on his haunches close to the spruce to which
he was fastened. It must have been ten o'clock, and the night was so still that
the snap of a dying ember in the fire was like the crack of a whip to his ears.
Miki's eyes were wide open and alert. Near the slowly burning logs, wrapped in
his thick blankets, he could make out the motionless form of the Indian,
asleep. Back of him the sledge-dogs had wallowed their beds in the snow and
were silent. The moon was almost
straight overhead, and a mile or two away a wolf pointed his muzzle to the
radiant glow of it and howled. The sound, like a distant, calling voice, added
new fire to the growing thrill in Miki's blood. He turned in the direction of
the wailing voice. He wanted to call back. He wanted to throw up his head and
cry out to the forests, and the moon, and the starlit sky. But only his jaws
clicked, and he looked at the tent in which Challoner was sleeping. He dropped
down upon his belly in the snow. But his head was still alert and listening.
The moon had already begun its westward decline. The fire burned out until the
logs were only a dull and slumbering glow; the hand of Challoner's watch passed
midnight, and still Miki was wide-eyed and restless in the thrill of the thing
that was upon him. And then at last The Call that was coming to him from out of
the night became his master, and he gnawed the babiche in two. It was the call
of the Woman – of Nanette and the baby.
In his freedom Miki sniffed
at the edge of Challoner's tent. His back sagged. His tail drooped. He knew
that in this hour he was betraying the master for whom he had waited so long,
and who had lived so vividly in his dreams. It was not reasoning, but an
instinctive oppression of fact. He would come back. That conviction burned
dully in his brain. But now – to-night – he must go. He slunk off into the
darkness. With the stealth of a fox he made his way between the sleeping dogs.
Not until he was a quarter of a mile
from the camp did he straighten out, and then a gray and fleeting shadow he
sped westward under the light of the moon. There was no hesitation in the
manner of his going. Free of the pain of his wounds, strong-limbed, deep-lunged
as the strongest wolf of the forests, he went on tirelessly. Rabbits bobbing
out of his path did not make him pause; even the strong scent of a fisher-cat
almost under his nose did not swerve him a foot from his trail. Through swamp
and deep forest, over lake and stream, across open barren and charred burns his
unerring sense of orientation led him on. Once he stopped to drink where the
swift current of a creek kept the water open. Even then he gulped in haste –
and shot on. The moon drifted lower and lower until it sank into oblivion. The
stars began to fade away. The little ones went out, and the big ones grew
sleepy and dull. A great snow-ghostly gloom settled over the forest world.
In the six hours between
midnight and dawn he covered thirty-five miles.
And then he stopped.
Dropping on his belly beside a rock at the crest of a ridge he watched the
birth of day. With drooling jaws and panting breath he rested, until at last
the dull gold of the winter sun began to paint the eastern sky. And then came
the first bars of vivid sunlight, shooting over the eastern ramparts as guns
flash from-behind their battlements, and Miki rose to his feet and surveyed the
morning wonder of his world. Behind him was Fort O' God, fifty miles away;
ahead of him the cabin – twenty. It was the cabin he faced as he went down from
the ridge.
As the miles between him and
the cabin grew fewer and fewer he felt again something of the oppression that
had borne upon him at Challoner's tent. And yet it was different. He had run
his race. He had answered The Call. And now, at the end, he was seized by a
fear of what his welcome would be. For at the cabin he had killed a man – and
the man had belonged to the woman. His progress became more hesitating.
Mid-forenoon found him only half a mile from the home of Nanette and the baby.
His keen nostrils caught the faint tang of smoke in the air. He did not follow
it up, but circled like a wolf, coming up stealthily and uncertainly until at
last he looked out into the little clearing where a new world had come into
existence for him. He saw the sapling cage in which Jacques Le Beau had kept
him a prisoner; the door of that cage was still open, as Durant had left it
after stealing him; he saw the ploughed-up snow where he had leapt upon the
man-brute – and he whined.
He was facing the cabin door
– and the door was wide open. He could see no life, but he could smell
it. And smoke was rising from the chimney. He slunk across the open. In the
manner of his going there was an abject humiliation – a plea for mercy if he
had done wrong, a prayer to the creatures he worshipped that he might not be
driven away.
He came to the door, and peered
in. The room was empty. Nanette was not there. Then his ears shot forward and
his body grew suddenly tense, and he listened, listened, listened to a soft, cooing sound that was coming from the crib. He
swallowed hard; the faintest whine rose in his throat and his claws clicked, clicked, clicked, across the floor and he thrust his
great head over the side of the little bed. The baby was there. With his warm
tongue he kissed it – just once – and then, with another deep breath, lay down
on the floor.
He heard footsteps. Nanette
came in with her arms filled with blankets; she carried these into the smaller
room, and returned, before she saw him. For a moment she stared. Then, with a
strange little cry, she ran to him; and once more he felt her arms about him;
and he cried like a puppy with his muzzle against her breast, and Nanette
laughed and sobbed, and in the crib the baby kicked and squealed and thrust her
tiny moccasined feet up into the air.
"Ao-oo tap-wa-mukun" ("When the devil goes heaven comes in,")
say the Crees. And with the death of Le Beau, her husband, the devil had gone
out of life for Nanette. She was more beautiful than ever. Heaven was in the
dark, pure glow of her eyes. She was no longer like a dog under the club and
the whip of a brute, and in the re-birth of her soul she was glorious. Youth
had come back to her – freed from the yoke of oppression. She was happy. Happy
with her baby, with freedom, with the sun and the stars shining for her again;
and with new hope, the greatest star of all. Again on the night of that first
day of his return Miki crept up to her when she was brushing her glorious hair.
He loved to put his muzzle in it; he loved the sweet scent of it; he loved to
put his head on her knees and feel it smothering him. And Nanette hugged him
tight, even as she hugged the baby, for it was Miki who had brought her
freedom, and hope, and life. What had passed was no longer a tragedy. It was
justice. God had sent Miki to do for her what a father or a brother would have
done.
And the second night after
that, when Challoner came early in the darkness, it happened that Nanette had
her hair down in that same way; and Challoner, seeing her thus, with the
lamp-glow shining in her eyes, felt that the world had taken a sudden swift
turn under his feet – that through all his years he had been working forward to
this hour.
Click the book image to continue to the next chapter