<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XX"></SPAN>CHAPTER XX</h2>
<br/>
<p>In that way, with the beautiful world swimming in sunshine and
golden tundra haze until foothills and mountains were like castles
in a dream, Alan Holt set off with Tautuk and Amuk Toolik, leaving
Stampede and Keok and Nawadlook at the corral bars, with Stampede
little regretting that he was left behind to guard the range. For a
mighty resolution had taken root in the prospector's heart, and he
felt himself thrilled and a bit trembling at the nearness of the
greatest drama that had ever entered his life. Alan, looking back
after the first few minutes, saw that Keok and Nawadlook stood
alone. Stampede was gone.</p>
<p>The ridge beyond the coulée out of which Mary Standish
had come with wild flowers soon closed like a door between him and
Sokwenna's cabin, and the straight trail to the mountains lay
ahead, and over this Alan set the pace, with Tautuk and Amuk Toolik
and a caravan of seven pack-deer behind him, bearing supplies for
the herdsmen.</p>
<p>Alan had scarcely spoken to the two men. He knew the driving
force which was sending him to the mountains was not only an
impulse, but almost an inspirational thing born of necessity. Each
step that he took, with his head and heart in a swirl of
intoxicating madness, was an effort behind which he was putting a
sheer weight of physical will. He wanted to go back. The urge was
upon him to surrender utterly to the weakness of forgetting that
Mary Standish was a wife. He had almost fallen a victim to his
selfishness and passion in the moment when she stood at Nawadlook's
door, telling him that she loved him. An iron hand had drawn him
out into the day, and it was the same iron hand that kept his face
to the mountains now, while in his brain her voice repeated the
words that had set his world on fire.</p>
<p>He knew what had happened this morning was not the merely
important and essential incident of most human lives; it had been a
cataclysmic thing with him. Probably it would be impossible for
even the girl ever fully to understand. And he needed to be alone
to gather strength and mental calmness for the meeting of the
problem ahead of him, a complication so unexpected that the very
foundation of that stoic equanimity which the mountains had bred in
him had suffered a temporary upsetting. His happiness was almost an
insanity. The dream wherein he had wandered with a spirit of the
dead had come true; it was the old idyl in the flesh again, his
father, his mother--and back in the cabin beyond the ridge such a
love had cried out to him. And he was afraid to return. He laughed
the fact aloud, happily and with an unrepressed exultation as he
strode ahead of the pack-train, and with that exultation words came
to his lips, words intended for himself alone, telling him that
Mary Standish belonged to him, and that until the end of eternity
he would fight for her and keep her. Yet he kept on, facing the
mountains, and he walked so swiftly that Tautuk and Amuk Toolik
fell steadily behind with the deer, so that in time long dips and
swells of the tundra lay between them.</p>
<p>With grim persistence he kept at himself, and at last there
swept over him in its ultimate triumph a compelling sense of the
justice of what he had done--justice to Mary Standish. Even now he
did not think of her as Mary Graham. But she was Graham's wife. And
if he had gone to her in that moment of glorious confession when
she had stood at Nawadlook's door, if he had violated her faith
when, because of faith, she had laid the world at his feet, he
would have fallen to the level of John Graham himself. Thought of
the narrowness of his escape and of the first mad desire to call
her back from Nawadlook's room, to hold her in his arms again as he
had held her in the cottonwoods, brought a hot fire into his face.
Something greater than his own fighting instinct had turned him to
the open door of the cabin. It was Mary Standish--her courage,
the-glory of faith and love shining in her eyes, her measurement of
him as a man. She had not been afraid to say what was in her heart,
because she knew what he would do.</p>
<p>Mid-afternoon found him waiting for Tautuk and Amuk Toolik at
the edge of a slough where willows grew deep and green and the
crested billows of sedge-cotton stood knee-high. The faces of the
herdsmen were sweating. Thereafter Alan walked with them, until in
that hour when the sun had sunk to its lowest plane they came to
the first of the Endicott foothills. Here they rested until the
coolness of deeper evening, when a golden twilight filled the land,
and then resumed the journey toward the mountains.</p>
<p>Midsummer heat and the winged pests of the lower lands had
driven the herds steadily into the cooler altitudes of the higher
plateaux and valleys. Here they had split into telescoping columns
which drifted in slowly moving streams wherever the doors of the
hills and mountains opened into new grazing fields, until Alan's
ten thousand reindeer were in three divisions, two of the greatest
traveling westward, and one, of a thousand head, working north and
east. The first and second days Alan remained with the nearest and
southward herd. The third day he went on with Tautuk and two
pack-deer through a break in the mountains and joined the herdsmen
of the second and higher multitude of feeding animals. There began
to possess him a curious disinclination to hurry, and this aversion
grew in a direct ratio with the thought which was becoming stronger
in him with each mile and hour of his progress. A multitude of
emotions were buried under the conviction that Mary Standish must
leave the range when he returned. He had a grim sense of honor, and
a particularly devout one when it had to do with women, and though
he conceded nothing of right and justice in the relationship which
existed between the woman he loved and John Graham, he knew that
she must go. To remain at the range was the one impossible thing
for her to do. He would take her to Tanana. He would go with her to
the States. The matter would be settled in a reasonable and
intelligent way, and when he came back, he would bring her with
him.</p>
<p>But beneath this undercurrent of decision fought the thing which
his will held down, and yet never quite throttled completely--that
something which urged him with an unconquerable persistence to hold
with his own hands what a glorious fate had given him, and to
finish with John Graham, if it ever came to that, in the madly
desirable way he visioned for himself in those occasional moments
when the fires of temptation blazed hottest.</p>
<p>The fourth night he said to Tautuk:</p>
<p>"If Keok should marry another man, what would you do?"</p>
<p>It was a moment before Tautuk looked at him, and in the
herdsman's eyes was a wild, mute question, as if suddenly there had
leaped into his stolid mind a suspicion which had never come to him
before. Alan laid a reassuring hand upon his arm.</p>
<p>"I don't mean she's going to, Tautuk," he laughed. "She loves
you. I know it. Only you are so stupid, and so slow, and so
hopeless as a lover that she is punishing you while she has the
right--before she marries you. But if she <i>should</i> marry
someone else, what would you do?"</p>
<p>"My brother?" asked Tautuk.</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>"A relative?"</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>"A friend?"</p>
<p>"No. A stranger. Someone who had injured you, for instance;
someone Keok hated, and who had cheated her into marrying him."</p>
<p>"I would kill him," said Tautuk quietly.</p>
<p>It was this night the temptation was strongest upon Alan. Why
should Mary Standish go back, he asked himself. She had surrendered
everything to escape from the horror down there. She had given up
fortune and friends. She had scattered convention to the four
winds, had gambled her life in the hazard, and in the end had come
to him! Why should he not keep her? John Graham and the world
believed she was dead. And he was master here. If--some day--Graham
should happen to cross his path, he would settle the matter in
Tautuk's way. Later, while Tautuk slept, and the world lay about
him in a soft glow, and the valley below was filled with misty
billows of twilight out of which came to him faintly the curious,
crackling sound of reindeer hoofs and the grunting contentment of
the feeding herd, the reaction came, as he had known it would come
in the end.</p>
<p>The morning of the fifth day he set out alone for the eastward
herd, and on the sixth overtook Tatpan and his herdsmen. Tatpan,
like Sokwenna's foster-children, Keok and Nawadlook, had a
quarter-strain of white in him, and when Alan came up to him in the
edge of the valley where the deer were grazing, he was lying on a
rock, playing Yankee Doodle on a mouth-organ. It was Tatpan who
told him that an hour or two before an exhausted stranger had come
into camp, looking for him, and that the man was asleep now,
apparently more dead than alive, but had given instructions to be
awakened at the end of two hours, and not a minute later. Together
they had a look at him.</p>
<p>He was a small, ruddy-faced man with carroty blond hair and a
peculiarly boyish appearance as he lay doubled up like a
jack-knife, profoundly asleep. Tatpan looked at his big, silver
watch and in a low voice described how the stranger had stumbled
into camp, so tired he could scarcely put one foot ahead of the
other; and that he had dropped down where he now lay when he
learned Alan was with one of the other herds.</p>
<SPAN name="333.jpg"></SPAN>
<p class="right"><SPAN href="Images/333.jpg"><ANTIMG src="Images/333.jpg"
width="50%" alt=""></SPAN><br/>
<b>The man wore a gun ... within reach of his hand.</b></p>
<p>"He must have come a long distance," said Tatpan, "and he has
traveled fast."</p>
<p>Something familiar about the man grew upon Alan. Yet he could
not place him. He wore a gun, which he had unbelted and placed
within reach of his hand on the grass. His chin was pugnaciously
prominent, and in sleep the mysterious stranger had crooked a
forefinger and thumb about his revolver in a way that spoke of
caution and experience.</p>
<p>"If he is in such a hurry to see me, you might awaken him," said
Alan.</p>
<p>He turned a little aside and knelt to drink at a tiny stream of
water that ran down from the snowy summits, and he could hear
Tatpan rousing the stranger. By the time he had finished drinking
and faced about, the little man with the carroty-blond hair was on
his feet. Alan stared, and the little man grinned. His ruddy cheeks
grew pinker. His blue eyes twinkled, and in what seemed to be a
moment of embarrassment he gave his gun a sudden snap that drew an
exclamation of amazement from Alan. Only one man in the world had
he ever seen throw a gun into its holster like that. A sickly grin
began to spread over his own countenance, and all at once Tatpan's
eyes began to bulge.</p>
<p>"Stampede!" he cried.</p>
<p>Stampede rubbed a hand over his smooth, prominent chin and
nodded apologetically.</p>
<p>"It's me," he conceded. "I had to do it. It was give one or
t'other up--my whiskers <i>or her</i>. They went hard, too. I
flipped dice, an' the whiskers won. I cut cards, an' the whiskers
won. I played Klondike ag'in' 'em, an' the whiskers busted the
bank. Then I got mad an' shaved 'em. Do I look so bad, Alan?"</p>
<p>"You look twenty years younger," declared Alan, stifling his
desire to laugh when he saw the other's seriousness.</p>
<p>Stampede was thoughtfully stroking his chin. "Then why the devil
did they laugh!" he demanded. "Mary Standish didn't laugh. She
cried. Just stood an' cried, an' then sat down an' cried, she
thought I was that blamed funny! And Keok laughed until she was
sick an' had to go to bed. That little devil of a Keok calls me
Pinkey now, and Miss Standish says it wasn't because I was funny
that she laughed, but that the change in me was so sudden she
couldn't help it. Nawadlook says I've got a character-ful
chin--"</p>
<p>Alan gripped his hand, and a swift change came over Stampede's
face. A steely glitter shot into the blue of his eyes, and his chin
hardened. Nature no longer disguised the Stampede Smith of other
days, and Alan felt a new thrill and a new regard for the man whose
hand he held. This, at last, was the man whose name had gone before
him up and down the old trails; the man whose cool and calculating
courage, whose fearlessness of death and quickness with the gun had
written pages in Alaskan history which would never be forgotten.
Where his first impulse had been to laugh, he now felt the grim
thrill and admiration of men of other days, who, when in Stampede's
presence, knew they were in the presence of a master. The old
Stampede had come to life again. And Alan knew why. The grip of his
hand tightened, and Stampede returned it.</p>
<p>"Some day, if we're lucky, there always comes a woman to make
the world worth living in, Stampede," he said.</p>
<p>"There does," replied Stampede.</p>
<p>He looked steadily at Alan.</p>
<p>"And I take it you love Mary Standish," he added, "and that
you'd fight for her if you had to."</p>
<p>"I would," said Alan.</p>
<p>"Then it's time you were traveling," advised Stampede
significantly. "I've been twelve hours on the trail without a rest.
She told me to move fast, and I've moved. I mean Mary Standish. She
said it was almost a matter of life and death that I find you in a
hurry. I wanted to stay, but she wouldn't let me. It's <i>you</i>
she wants. Rossland is at the range."</p>
<p>"<i>Rossland</i>!"</p>
<p>"Yes, Rossland. And it's my guess John Graham isn't far away. I
smell happenings, Alan. We'd better hurry."</p>
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