<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XVII </h2>
<p>From the cabin McKay went first to the great rock that jutted from the
broken shoulder of Cragg's Ridge, and as they stood there Peter heard the
strange something that was like a laugh, and yet was not a laugh, on his
master's lips. But his scraggly face did not look up. There was an
answering whimper in his throat. He had been slow in sensing the
significance of the mysterious thing that had changed his old home since
months ago. During the hours of afternoon, and these moonlit hours that
followed, he tried to understand. He knew this was home. Yet the green
grass was gone, and a million trees had changed into blackened stubs. The
world was no longer shut in by deep forests. And Cragg's Ridge was naked
where he and Nada had romped in sunshine and flowers, and out of it all
rose the mucky death-smell of the flame-swept earth. These things he
understood, in his dog way. But what he could not understand clearly was
why Nada was not in the cabin, and why they did not find her, even though
the world was changed.</p>
<p>He sat back on his haunches, and Jolly Roger heard again the whimpering
grief in his throat. It comforted the man to know that Peter remembered,
and he was not alone in his desolation. Gently he placed a soot-grimed
hand on his comrade's head.</p>
<p>"Peter, it was from this rock—right where we're standing now—that
I first saw her, a long time ago," he said, a bit of forced cheer breaking
through the huskiness of his voice. "Remember the little jackpine clump
down there? You climbed up onto her lap, a little know-nothing thing, and
you pawed in her loose curls, and growled so fiercely I could hear you.
And when I made a noise, and she looked up, I thought she was the most
beautiful thing I had ever seen—just a kid, with those eyes like the
flowers, and her hair shining in the sun, an' tear stains on her cheeks.
Tear stains, Pied-Bot—because of that snake who's dead over there.
Remember how you growled at me, Peter?"</p>
<p>Peter wriggled an answer.</p>
<p>"That was the beginning," said Jolly Roger, "and this—looks like the
end. But—"</p>
<p>He clenched his fists, and there was a sudden fierceness in the grotesque
movement of his shadow on the rock.</p>
<p>"We're going to find her before that end comes," he added defiantly.
"We're going to find her, Pied-Bot, even if it takes us to the settlements—right
up into the face of the law."</p>
<p>He set out over the rocks, his boots making hollow sounds in the deadness
of the world about them. Again he followed where once had been the trail
that led to Mooney's shack, over on the wobbly line of rail that rambled
for eighty miles into the wilderness from Fort William. The P. D. & W.
it was named—Port Arthur, Duluth & Western; but it had never
reached Duluth, and there were those who had nicknamed it Poverty,
Destruction & Want. Many times Jolly Roger had laughed at the queer
stories Nada told him about it; how a wrecking outfit was always carried
behind on the twice-a-week train, and how the crew picked berries in
season, and had their trapping lines, and once chased a bear half way to
Whitefish Lake while the train waited for hours. She called it the "Cannon
Ball," because once upon a time it had made sixty-nine miles in
twenty-four hours. But there was nothing of humor about it as Jolly Roger
and Peter came out upon it tonight. It stretched out both ways from them,
a thin, grim line of tragedy in the moonlight, and from where they stood
it appeared to reach into a black and abysmal sea.</p>
<p>Once more man and dog paused, and looked back at what had been. And the
whine came in Peter's throat again and something tugged inside him, urging
him to bark up into the face of the moon, as he had often barked for Nada
in the days of his puppyhood, and afterward.</p>
<p>But his master went on and Peter followed him, stepping the uneven ties
one by one. And with the black chaos of the world under and about them,
and the glorious light of the moon filling; the sky over their heads, the
journey they made seemed weirdly unreal. For the silver and gold of the
moon and the black muck of the fire refused to mingle, and while over
their heads they could see the tiniest clouds and beyond to the farthest
stars, all was black emptiness when they looked about them upon what once
had been a living earth. Only the two lines of steel caught the moon-glow
and the charred ends of the fire-shriven stubs that rose up out of the
earth shroud and silhouetted themselves against the sky.</p>
<p>To Peter it was not what he failed to see, but what he did not hear or
smell that oppressed him and stirred him to wide-eyed watchfulness against
impending evil. Under many moons he had traveled with his master in their
never-ending flight from the law, and many other nights with neither moon
nor stars had they felt out their trails together. But always, under him
and over him on all sides of him, there had been LIFE. And tonight there
was no life, nor smell of life. There was no chirp of night bird, or
flutter of owl's wing, no plash of duck or cry of loon. He listened in
vain for the crinkling snap of twig, and the whisper of wind in treetops.
And there was no smell—no musk of mink that had crossed his path, no
taste in the air of the strong scented fox, no subtle breath of partridge
and rabbit and fleshy porcupine. And even from the far distances there
came no sound, no howl of wolf, no castanet clatter of stout moose horns
against bending saplings—not even the howl of a trapper's dog.</p>
<p>The stillness was of the earth, and yet unearthly. It was even as if some
fearsome thing was smothering the sound of his master's feet. To McKay,
sensing these same things that Peter sensed, came understanding that
brought with it an uneasiness which changed swiftly into the chill of a
growing fear. The utter lifelessness told him how vast the destruction of
the fire had been. Its obliteration was so great no life had adventured
back into the desolated country, though the conflagration must have passed
in the preceding autumn, many months ago. The burned country was a grave
and the nearest edge of it, judged from the sepulchral stillness of the
night, was many miles away.</p>
<p>For the first time came the horror of the thought that in such a fire as
this people must have died. It had swept upon them like a tidal wave,
galloping the forests with the speed of a race horse, with only this thin
line of rail leading to the freedom of life outside. In places only a
miracle could have made escape possible. And here, where Nada had lived,
with the pitch-wood forests crowding close, the fire must have burned most
fiercely. In this moment, when fear of the unspeakable set his heart
trembling, his faith fastened itself grimly to the little old gray
Missioner, Father John, in whose cabin Nada had taken refuge many months
ago, when Jed Hawkins lay dead in the trail with his one-eyed face turned
up to the thunder and lightning in the sky. Father John, on that stormy
night when he fled north, had promised to care for Nada, and in silence he
breathed a prayer that the Missioner had saved her from the red death that
had swept like an avalanche upon them. He told himself it must be so. He
cried out the words aloud, and Peter heard him, and followed closer, so
that his head touched his master's leg as he walked.</p>
<p>But the fear was there. From a spark it grew into a red-hot spot in Jolly
Roger's heart. Twice in his own life he had raced against death in a
forest fire. But never had he seen a fire like this must have been. All at
once he seemed to hear the roar of it in his ears, the rolling thunder of
the earth as it twisted in the cataclysm of flame, the hissing shriek of
the flaming pitch-tops as they leapt in lightning fires against the
smoke-smothered sky. A few hours ago he had stood where Father John's
Cabin had been and the place was a ruin of char and ash. If the fire had
hemmed them in and they had not escaped—</p>
<p>His voice cried out in sudden protest.</p>
<p>"It can't be, Peter. It can't be! They made the rail—or the lake—and
we'll find them in the settlements. It couldn't happen. God wouldn't let
her die like that!"</p>
<p>He stopped, and stared into the moon-broken gloom on his left. Something
was there, fifty feet away, that drew him down through the muck which lay
knee deep in the right-of-way ditch. It was what was left of the cutter's
cabin, a clutter of burned logs, a wind scattered heap of ash. Even there,
within arm's reach of the railroad, there had been no salvation from the
fire.</p>
<p>He waded again through the muck of the ditch, and went on. Mentally and
physically he was fighting the ogre that was striving to achieve
possession of his brain. Over and over he repeated his faith that Nada and
the Missioner had escaped and he would find them in the settlements. Less
than ever he thought of the law in these hours. What happened to himself
was of small importance now, if he could find Nada alive before the menace
caught up with him from behind, or ambushed him ahead. Yet the necessity
of caution impinged itself upon him even in the recklessness of his
determination to find her if he had to walk into the arms of the law that
was hunting him.</p>
<p>For an hour they went on, and as the moon sank westward it seemed to turn
its face to look at them; and behind them, when they looked back, the
world was transformed into a black pit, while ahead—with the glow of
it streaming over their shoulders—ghostly shapes took form, and
vision reached farther. Twice they caught the silvery gleam of lakes
through the tree-stubs, and again they walked with the rippling murmur of
a stream that kept for a mile within the sound of their ears. But even
here, with water crying out its invitation to life, there was no life.</p>
<p>Another hour after that Jolly Roger's pulse beat a little faster as he
strained his eyes to see ahead. Somewhere near, within a mile or two, was
the first settlement with its sawmill and its bunkhouses, its one store
and its few cabins, with flat mountains of sawdust on one side of it, and
the evergreen forest creeping up to its doors on the other. Surely they
would find life here, where there had been man power to hold fire back
from the clearing. And it was here he might find Nada and the Missioner,
for more than once Father John had preached to the red-cheeked women and
children and the clear-eyed men of the Finnish community that thrived
there.</p>
<p>But as they drew nearer he listened in vain for the bark of a dog, and his
eyes quested as futilely for a point of light in the wide canopy of gloom.
At last, close together, they rounded a curve in the road, and crossed a
small bridge with a creek running below, and McKay knew his arm should be
able to send a stone to what he was seeking ahead. And then, a minute
later, he drew in a great gasping breath of unbelief and horror.</p>
<p>For the settlement was no longer in the clearing between him and the
rim-glow of the moon. No living tree raised its head against the sky, no
sign of cabin or mill shadowed the earth, and where the store had been,
and the little church with its white-painted cross, was only a chaos of
empty gloom.</p>
<p>He went down, as he had gone to the tie cutter's cabin, and for many
minutes he stared and listened, while Peter seemed to stand without
breathing. Then making a wide megaphone of his hands, he shouted. It was
an alarming thing to do and Peter started as if struck. For there were
only ghosts to answer back and the hollowness of a shriven pit for the cry
to travel in. Nothing was there. Even the great sawdust piles had shrunk
into black scars under the scourge of the fire.</p>
<p>A groaning agony was in the breath of Jolly Roger's lips as he went back
to the railroad and hurried on Death must have come here, death sudden and
swift. And if it had fallen upon the Finnish settlement, with its strong
women and its stronger men, what might it not have done in the cabin of
the little old gray Missioner—and Nada?</p>
<p>For a long time after that he forgot Peter was with him. He forgot
everything but his desire to reach a living thing. At times, where the
road-bed was smooth, he almost ran, and at others he paused for a little
to gather his breath and listen. And it was Peter, in one of these
intervals, who caught the first message of life. From a long distance away
came faintly the barking of a dog.</p>
<p>Half a mile farther on they came to a clearing where no stubs of trees
stood up like question marks against the sky, and in this clearing was a
cabin, a dark blotch that was without light or sound. But from behind it
the dog barked again, and Jolly Roger made quickly toward it. Here there
was no ash under his feet, and he knew that at last he had found an oasis
of life in the desolation. Loudly he knocked with his fist at the cabin
door and soon there was a response inside, the heavy movement of a man's
body getting out of bed, and after that the questioning voice of a woman.
He knocked again and the flare of a lighted match illumined the window.
Then came the drawing of a bar at the door and a man stood there in his
night attire, a man with a heavy face and bristling beard, and a lamp in
his hand.</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon for waking you," said Jolly Roger, "but I am just down
from the north, hoping to find my friends back here and I have seen
nothing but destruction and death. You are the first living soul I have
found to ask about them."</p>
<p>"Where were they?" grunted the man.</p>
<p>"At Cragg's Ridge."</p>
<p>"Then God help them," came the woman's voice from back in the room.</p>
<p>"Cragg's Ridge," said the man, "was a burning hell in the middle of the
night."</p>
<p>Jolly Roger's fingers dug into the wood at the edge of the door.</p>
<p>"You mean—"</p>
<p>"A lot of 'em died," said the man stolidly, as if eager to rid himself of
the one who had broken his sleep. "If it was Mooney, he's dead. An' if it
was Robson, or Jake the Swede, or the Adams family—they're dead,
too."</p>
<p>"But it wasn't," said Jolly Roger, his heart choking between fear and
hope. "It was Father John, the Missioner, and Nada Hawkins, who lived with
him—or with her foster-mother in the Hawkins' cabin."</p>
<p>The man shook his head, and turned down the wick of his lamp.</p>
<p>"I dunno about the girl, or the old witch who was her mother," he said,
"but the Missioner made it out safe, and went to the settlements."</p>
<p>"And no girl was with him?"</p>
<p>"No, there was no girl," came the woman's voice again, and Peter jerked up
his ears at the creaking of a bed. "Father John stopped here the second
day after the fire had passed, and he said he was gathering up the bones
of the dead. Nada Hawkins wasn't with him, and he didn't say who had died
and who hadn't. But I think—"</p>
<p>She stopped as the bearded man turned toward her.</p>
<p>"You think what?" demanded Jolly Roger, stepping half into the room.</p>
<p>"I think," said the woman, "that she died along with the others. Anyway,
Jed Hawkins' witch-woman was burned trying to make for the lake, and
little of her was left."</p>
<p>The man with the lamp made a movement as if to close the door.</p>
<p>"That's all we know," he growled.</p>
<p>"For God's sake—don't!" entreated Jolly Roger, barring the door with
his arm. "Surely there were some who escaped from Cragg's Ridge and
beyond!"</p>
<p>"Mebby a half, mebby less," said the man. "I tell you it burned like hell,
and the worst of it came in the middle of the night with a wind behind it
that blew a hurricane. We've twenty acres cleared here, with the cabin in
the center of it, an' it singed my beard and burned her hair and scorched
our hands, and my pigs died out there from the heat of it. Mebby it's a
place to sleep in for the night you want, stranger?"</p>
<p>"No, I'm going on," said Jolly Roger, the blood in his veins running with
the chill of water. "How far before I come to the end of fire?"</p>
<p>"Ten miles on. It started this side of the next settlement."</p>
<p>Jolly Roger drew back and the door closed, and standing on the railroad
once more he saw the light go out and after that the occasional barking of
the settler's dog grew fainter and fainter behind them.</p>
<p>He felt a great weariness in his bones and body now. With hope struck down
the exhaustion of two nights and a day without sleep seized upon him and
his feet plodded more and more slowly over the uneven ties of the road.
Even in his weariness he fought madly against the thought that Nada was
dead and he repeated the word "impossible—impossible" so often that
it ran in sing-song through his brain. And he could not keep away from him
the white, thin face of the Missioner, who had promised on his faith In
God to care for Nada, and who had passed the settler's cabin ALONE.</p>
<p>Another two hours they went on and then came the first of the green
timber. Under the shelter of some balsams Jolly Roger found a resting
place and there they waited for the break of dawn. Peter stretched out and
slept. But Jolly Roger sat with his head and shoulders against the bole of
a tree, and not until the light of the moon was driven away by the
darkness that preceded dawn by an hour or two did his eyes close in
restless slumber. He was roused by the wakening twitter of birds and in
the cold water of a creek that ran near he bathed his face and hands.
Peter wondered why there was no fire and no breakfast this morning.</p>
<p>The settlement was only a little way ahead and it was very early when they
reached it. People were still in their beds and out of only one chimney
was smoke rising into the clear calm of the breaking day. From this cabin
a young man came, and stood for a moment after he had closed the door,
yawning and stretching his arms and looking up to see what sort of promise
the sky held for the day. After that he went to a stable of logs, and
Jolly Roger followed him there.</p>
<p>He was unlike the bearded settler, and nodded with a youthful smile of
cheer.</p>
<p>"Good morning," he said. "You're traveling early, and—"</p>
<p>He looked more keenly as his eyes took in Jolly Roger's boots and clothes,
and the gray pallor in his face.</p>
<p>"Just get in?" he asked kindly. "And—from the burnt country?"</p>
<p>"Yes, from the burnt country. I've been away a long time, and I'm trying
to find out if my friends are among the living or the dead. Did you ever
hear of Father John, the Missioner at Cragg's Ridge?"</p>
<p>The young man's face brightened.</p>
<p>"I knew him," he said. "He helped me to bury my brother, three years ago.
And if it's him you seek, he is safe. He went up to Fort William a week
after the fire, and that was in September, eight months past."</p>
<p>"And was there with him a girl named Nada Hawkins?" asked Jolly Roger,
trying hard to speak calmly as he looked into the other's face.</p>
<p>The youth shook his head.</p>
<p>"No, he was alone. He slept in my cabin overnight, and he said nothing of
a girl named Nada Hawkins."</p>
<p>"Did he speak of others?"</p>
<p>"He was very tired, and I think he was half dead with grief at what had
happened. He spoke no names that I remember."</p>
<p>Then he saw the gray look in Jolly Roger's face grow deeper, and saw the
despair which could not hide itself in his eyes.</p>
<p>"But there were a number of girls who passed here, alone or with their
friends," he said hopefully. "What sort of looking girl was Nada Hawkins?"</p>
<p>"A—kid. That's what I called her," said Jolly Roger, in a dead, cold
voice. "Eighteen, and beautiful, with blue eyes, and brown hair that she
couldn't keep from blowing in curls about her face. So like an angel you
wouldn't forget her if you'd seen her—just once."</p>
<p>Gently the youth placed a hand on Jolly Roger's arm.</p>
<p>"She didn't come this way," he said, "but maybe you'll find her somewhere
else. Won't you have breakfast with me? I've a stranger in the cabin,
still sleeping, who's going into the fire country from which you've come.
He's hunting for some one, and maybe you can give him information. He's
going to Cragg's Ridge."</p>
<p>"Cragg's Ridge!" exclaimed Jolly Roger. "What is his name?"</p>
<p>"Breault," said the youth. "Sergeant Breault, of the Royal Northwest
Mounted Police."</p>
<p>Jolly Roger turned to stroke the neck of a horse waiting for its morning
feed. But he felt nothing of the touch of flesh under his hand. Cold as
iron went his heart, and for half a minute he made no answer. Then he
said:</p>
<p>"Thanks, friend. I breakfasted before it was light and I'm hitting out
into the brush west and north, for the Rainy River country. Please don't
tell this man Breault that you saw me, for he'll think badly of me for not
waiting to give him information he might want. But—you understand—if
you loved the brother who died—that it's hard for me to talk with
anyone just now."</p>
<p>The young man's fingers touched his arm again.</p>
<p>"I understand," he said, "and I hope to God you'll find her."</p>
<p>Silently they shook hands, and Jolly Roger hurried away from the cabin
with the rising spiral of smoke.</p>
<p>Three days later a man and a dog came from the burned country into the
town of Fort William, seeking for a wandering messenger of God who called
himself Father John, and a young and beautiful girl whose name was Nada
Hawkins. He stopped first at the old mission, in whose shadow the Indians
and traders of a century before had bartered their wares, and Father
Augustine, the aged patriarch who talked with him, murmured as he went
that he was a strange man, and a sick one, with a little madness lurking
in his eyes.</p>
<p>And it was, in fact, a madness of despair eating out the life in Jolly
Roger's heart. For he no longer had hope Nada had escaped the fire, even
though at no place had he found a conclusive evidence of her death. But
that signified little, for there were many of the missing who had not been
found between the last of September and these days of May. What he did
find, with deadly regularity, was the fact that Father John had escaped—and
that he had traveled to safety ALONE.</p>
<p>And Father Augustine told him that when Father John stopped to rest for a
few days at the Mission he was heading north, for somewhere on Pashkokogon
Lake near the river Albany.</p>
<p>There was little rest for Peter and his master at Fort William town. That
Breault must be close on their trail, and following it with the merciless
determination of the ferret from which he had been named, there was no
shadow of doubt in the mind of Jolly Roger McKay. So after outfitting his
pack at a little corner shop, where Breault would be slow to enquire about
him, he struck north through the bush toward Dog Lake and the river of the
same name. Five or six days, he thought, would bring him to Father John
and the truth which he dreaded more and more to hear.</p>
<p>The despondency of his master had sunk, in some mysterious way, into the
soul of Peter. Without the understanding of language he sensed the
oppressive gloom of tragedy behind and about him and there was a wolfish
slinking in the manner of his travel now, and his confidence was going as
he caught the disease of despair of the man who traveled with him. But
constantly and vigilantly his eyes and scent were questing about them,
suspicious of the very winds that whispered in the treetops. And at night
after they had built their little cooking fire in the deepest heart of the
bush he would lie half awake during the hours of darkness, the
watchfulness of his senses never completely dulled in the stupor of sleep.</p>
<p>Since the night they had stopped at the settler's cabin Jolly Roger's face
had grown grayer and thinner. A number of times he had tried to assure
himself what he would do in that moment which was coming when he would
stand face to face with Breault the man-hunter. His caution, after he left
Fort William, was in a way an automatic instinct that worked for
self-preservation in face of the fact that he was growing less and less
concerned regarding Breault's appearance. It was not in his desire to
delay the end much longer. The chase had been a long one, with its thrills
and its happiness at times, but now he was growing tired and with Nada
gone there was only hopeless gloom ahead. If she were dead he wanted to go
to her. That thought was a dawning pleasure in his breast, and it was warm
in his heart when he tied in a hard knot the buckskin string which locked
the flap of his pistol holster. When Breault overtook him the law would
know, because of the significance of this knot, that he had welcomed the
end of the game.</p>
<p>Never in the northland had there come a spring more beautiful than this of
the year in which McKay and his dog went through the deep wilds to
Pashkokogon Lake. In a few hours, it seemed, the last chill died out of
the air and there came the soft whispers of those bridal-weeks between May
and Summer, a month ahead of their time. But Jolly Roger, for the first
time in his life, failed to respond to the wonder and beauty of the
earth's rejoicing. The first flowers did not fill him with the old joy. He
no longer stood up straight, with expanding chest, to drink in the rare
sweetness of air weighted with the tonic of balsams and cedar spruce.
Vainly he tried to lift up his soul with the song and bustle of mating
things. There was no longer music for him in the flood-time rushing of
spring waters. An utter loneliness filled the cry of the loon. And all
about him was a vast emptiness from which the spirit of life had fled for
him.</p>
<p>Thus he came at last to a stream in the Burntwood country which ran into
Pashkokogon Lake; and it was this day, in the mellow sunlight of late
afternoon, that they heard coming to them from out of the dense forest the
chopping of an axe.</p>
<p>Toward this they made their way, with caution and no sound, until in a
little clearing in a bend of the stream they saw a cabin. It was a newly
built cabin, and smoke was rising from the chimney.</p>
<p>But the chopping was nearer them, in the heart of a thick cover of
evergreen and birch. Into this Jolly Roger and Peter made their way and
came within a dozen steps of the man who was wielding the axe. It was then
that Jolly Roger rose up with a cry on his lips, for the man was Father
John the Missioner.</p>
<p>In spite of the tragedy through which he had passed the little gray man
seemed younger than in that month long ago when Jolly Roger had fled to
the north. He dropped his axe now and stood as if only half believing, a
look of joy shining in his face as he realized the truth of what had
happened. "McKay," he cried, reaching out his hands. "McKay, my boy!"</p>
<p>A look of pity mellowed the gladness in his eyes as he noted the change in
Jolly Roger's face, and the despair that had set its mark upon it.</p>
<p>They stood for a moment with clasped hands, questioning and answering with
the silence of their eyes. And then the Missioner said:</p>
<p>"You have heard? Someone has told you?"</p>
<p>"No," said Jolly Roger, his head dropping a little. "No one has told me,"
and he was thinking of Nada, and her death.</p>
<p>Father John's fingers tightened.</p>
<p>"It is strange how the ways of God bring themselves about," he spoke in a
low voice. "Roger, you did not kill Jed Hawkins!"</p>
<p>Dumbly, his lips dried of words, Jolly Roger stared at him.</p>
<p>"No, you didn't kill him," repeated Father John. "On that same night of
the storm when you thought you left him dead in the trail, he stumbled
back to his cabin, alive. But God's vengeance came soon.</p>
<p>"A few days later, while drunk, he missed his footing and fell from a
ledge to his death. His wife, poor creature, wished him buried in sight of
the cabin door—"</p>
<p>But in this moment Roger McKay was thinking less of Breault the Ferret and
the loosening of the hangman's rope from about his neck than he was of
another thing. And Father John was saying in a voice that seemed far away
and unreal:</p>
<p>"We've sent out word to all parts of the north, hoping someone would find
you and send you back. And she has prayed each night, and each hour of the
day the same prayer has been in her heart and on her lips. And now—"</p>
<p>Someone was coming to them from the direction of the cabin—someone,
a girl, and she was singing,</p>
<p>McKay's face went whiter than the gray ash of fire.</p>
<p>"My God," he whispered huskily. "I thought—she had died!"</p>
<p>It was only then Father John understood the meaning of what he had seen in
his face.</p>
<p>"No, she is alive," he cried. "I sent her straight north through the bush
with an Indian the day after the fire. And later I left word for you with
the Fire Relief Committee at Fort William, where I thought you would first
enquire."</p>
<p>"And it was there," said Jolly Roger, "that I did not enquire at all!"</p>
<p>In the edge of the clearing, close to the thicket of timber, Nada had
stopped. For across the open space a strange looking creature had raced at
the sound of her voice; a dog with bristling Airedale whiskers, and a
hound's legs, and wild-wolf's body hardened and roughened by months of
fighting in the wilderness. As in the days of his puppyhood, Peter leapt
up against her, and a cry burst from Nada's lips, a wild and sobbing cry
of PETER, PETER, PETER—and it was this cry Jolly Roger heard as he
tore away from Father John.</p>
<p>On her knees, with her arms about Peter's shaggy head, Nada stared wildly
at the clump of timber, and in a moment she saw a man break out of it, and
stand still, as if the mellow sunlight blinded him, and made him unable to
move. And the same choking weakness was at her own heart as she rose up
from Peter, and reached out her arms toward the gray figure in the edge of
the wood, sobbing, trying to speak and yet saying no word.</p>
<p>And a little slower, because of his age, Father John came a moment later,
and peered out with the knowledge of long years from a thicket of young
banksians, and when he saw the two in the open, close in each other's
arms, and Peter hopping madly about them, he drew out a handkerchief and
wiped his eyes, and went back then for the axe which he had dropped in the
timber clump.</p>
<p>There was a great drumming in Jolly Roger's head, and for a time he failed
even to hear Peter yelping at their side, for all the world was drowned in
those moments by the breaking sobs in Nada's breath and the wild thrill of
her body in his arms; and he saw nothing but the upturned face, crushed
close against his breast, and the wide-open eyes, and the lips to kiss.
And even Nada's face he seemed to see through a silvery mist, and he felt
her arms strangely about his neck, as if it was all half like a dream—a
dream of the kind that had come to him beside his campfire. It was a
little cry from Nada that drove the unreality away.</p>
<p>"Roger—you're—breaking me," she cried, gasping for her breath
in his arms, yet without giving up the clasp of her own arms about his
neck in the least; and at that he sensed the brutality of his strength,
and held her off a little, looking into her face.</p>
<p>Pride and happiness and the courage in his heart would have slunk away
could he have seen himself then, as Father John saw him, coming from the
edge of the bush, and as Nada saw him, held there at the end of his arms.
Since the day he had come with Peter to Cragg's Ridge the blade of a razor
had not touched his face, and his beard was like a brush, and with it his
hair unkempt and straggling; and his eyes were red from sleeplessness and
the haunting of that grim despair which had dogged his footsteps.</p>
<p>But these things Nada did not see. Or, if she did, there must have been
something beautiful about them for her. For it was not a little girl, but
a woman who was standing there before Jolly Roger now—Nada grown
older, very much older it seemed to McKay, and taller, with her hair no
longer rioting free about her, but gathered up in a wonderful way on the
crown of her head. This change McKay discovered as she stood there, and it
swept upon him all in a moment, and with it the prick of something swift
and terrorizing inside him. She was not the little girl of Cragg's Ridge.
She was a WOMAN. In a year had come this miracle of change, and it
frightened him, for such a creature as this that stood before him now Jed
Hawkins would never have dared to curse or beat, and he—Roger McKay—was
afraid to gather her back into his arms again.</p>
<p>And then, even as his fingers slowly drew themselves away from her
shoulders, he saw that which had not changed—the wonder-light in her
eyes, the soul that lay as open to him now as on that other day in Indian
Tom's cabin, when Mrs. Captain Kidd had bustled and squeaked on the pantry
shelf, and Peter had watched them as he lay with his broken leg in the
going down of the sun. And as he hesitated it was Nada herself who came
into his arms, and laid her head on his breast, and trembled and laughed
and cried there, while Father John came up and patted her shoulder, and
smiled happily at McKay, and then went on to the cabin in the clearing.
For a time after that Jolly Roger crushed his face in Nada's hair, and
neither said a word, but there was a strange throbbing of their hearts
together, and after a little Nada reached up a hand to his cheek, and
stroked it tenderly, bristly beard and all.</p>
<p>"I'll never let you run away from me again—Mister—Jolly
Roger," she said, and it was the little Nada of Cragg's Ridge who
whispered the words, half sobbing; but in the voice there was also
something very definite and very sure, and McKay felt the glorious thrill
of it as he raised his face from her hair, and saw once more the
sun-filled world about him.</p>
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