<h4>XIII</h4>
<h4>THE TWO GODS</h4>
<p>It was little Isobel who pulled MacVeigh together, and after a little he rose
with her in his arms and turned her from the wall while he covered Deane’s face
with the end of a blanket. Then he went to the door. The Eskimos were building
fires. Pelliter was seated on the sledge a short distance from the cabin, and at
Billy’s call he came toward him.</p>
<p>“If you don’t mind, you can take her over to one of the fires for a little
while,” said Billy. “Scottie is dead. Try and make the chief understand,”</p>
<p>He did not wait for Pelliter to question him, but closed the door quietly and
went back to Deane. He drew off the blanket and gazed for a moment into the
still, bearded face.</p>
<p>“My Gawd, an’ <i>she’s</i> waitin’ for you, ’n’ looking for you, an’ thinks
you’re coming back soon,” he whispered. “You ’n’ the kid!”</p>
<p>Reverently he began the task ahead of him. One after another he went into
Deane’s pockets and drew forth what he found. In one pocket there was a small
knife, some cartridges, and a match box. He knew that Isobel would prize these
and keep them because her husband had carried them, and he placed them in a
handkerchief along with other things he found. Last of all he found in Deane’s
breast pocket a worn and faded envelope. He peered into the open end before he
placed it on the little pile, and his heart gave a sudden throb when he saw the
blue flower petals Isobel had given him. When he was done he crossed Deane’s
hands upon his breast. He was tying the ends of the handkerchief when the door
opened softly behind him.</p>
<p>The little dark chief entered. He was followed by four other Eskimos. They
had left their weapons outside. They seemed scarcely to breathe as they ranged
themselves in a line and looked down upon Scottie Deane. Not a sign of emotion
came into their expressionless faces, not the flicker of an eyelash did the
immobility of their faces change. In a low, clacking monotone they began to
speak, and there was no expression of grief in their voices. Yet Billy
understood now that in the hearts of these little brown men Scottie Deane stood
enshrined like a god. Before he was cold in death they had come to chant his
deeds and his virtues to the unseen spirits who would wait and watch at his side
until the beginning of the new day. For ten minutes the monotone continued. Then
the five men turned and without a word, without looking at him, went out of the
cabin. Billy followed them, wondering if Deane had convinced them that he and
Pelliter were his friends. If he had not done that he feared that there would
still be trouble over little Isobel. He was delighted when he found Pelliter
talking with one of the men.</p>
<p>“I’ve found a flunkey here whose lingo I can get along with,” cried Pelliter.
“I’ve been telling ’em what bully friends we are, and have made ’em understand
all about Blake. I’ve shaken hands with them all three or four times, and we
feel pretty good. Better mix a little. They don’t like the idea of giving us the
kid, now that Scottie’s dead. They’re asking for the woman.”</p>
<p>Half an hour later MacVeigh and Pelliter returned to the cabin. At the end of
that time he was confident that the Eskimos would give them no further trouble
and that they expected to leave Isobel in their possession. The chief, however,
had given Billy to understand that they reserved the right to bury Deane.</p>
<p>Billy felt that he was now in a position where he would have to tell Pelliter
some of the things that had happened to him on his return to Churchill. He had
reported Deane’s death as having occurred weeks before as the result of a fall,
and when he returned to Fort Churchill he knew that he would have to stick to
that story. Unless Pelliter knew of Isobel, his love for her, and his own
defiance of the Law in giving them their freedom, his comrade might let out the
truth and ruin him.</p>
<p>In the cabin they sat down at the table. Pelliter’s arm was in a sling. His
face was drawn and haggard and blackened by powder. He drew his revolver,
emptied it of cartridges, and gave it to little Isobel to play with. He kept up
his spirits among the Eskimos, but he made no effort to conceal his dejection
now.</p>
<p>“I’ve lost her,” he said, looking at Billy. “You’re going to take her to her
mother?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“It hurts. You don’t know how it’s goin’ to hurt to lose her,” he said.</p>
<p>MacVeigh leaned across the table and spoke earnestly.</p>
<p>“Yes, I know what it means, Pelly,” he replied. “I know what it means to love
some one— and lose. I know. Listen.”</p>
<p>Quickly he told Pelliter the story of the Barren, of the coming of Isobel,
the mother, of the kiss she had given him, and of the flight, the pursuit, the
recapture, and of that final moment when he had taken the steel cuffs from
Deane’s wrists. Once he had begun the story he left nothing untold, even to the
division of the blue-flower petals and the tress of Isobel’s hair. He drew both
from his pocket and showed them to Pelliter, and at the tremble in his voice
there came a mistiness in his comrade’s eyes. When he had finished Pelliter
reached across with his one good arm and gripped the other’s hand.</p>
<p>“An’ what she said about the blue flower is comin’ true, Billy,” he
whispered. “It’s bringing happiness to you, just as she said, for you’re going
down to her—”</p>
<p>MacVeigh interrupted him.</p>
<p>“No, it’s not,” he said, softly. “She loved him— as much as the girl down
there will ever love you, Pelly, and when I tell her what has happened— her
heart will break. <i>That</i> can’t bring happiness— for me !”</p>
<p>The hours of that day bore leaden weights for Billy. The two men made their
plans. A number of the Eskimos agreed to accompany Pelliter as far as Eskimo
Point, whence he would make his way alone to Churchill. Billy would strike south
to the Little Beaver in search of Couchée’s cabin and Isobel. He was glad when
night came. It was late when he went to the door, opened it, and looked out.</p>
<p>In the edge of the timber-line it was black, black not only with the gloom of
night, but with the concentrated darkness of spruce and balsam and a sky so low
and thick that one could almost hear the wailing swish of it overhead like the
steady sobbing of surf on a seashore. It was black, save for the small circles
of light made by the Eskimo fires, about which half a hundred of the little
brown men sat or crouched. The masters of the camp were all awake, but twice as
many dogs, exhausted and footsore, lay curled in heaps, as inanimate as if dead.
There was present a strange silence and a strange and unnatural gloom that was
not of the night alone, a silence broken only by the low moaning of the wind out
on the Barren, the restlessness in the air above the tree-tops, and the
crackling of the fires. The Eskimos were as motionless as so many dead men.
Their round, expressionless eyes were wide open. They sat or crouched with their
backs to the Barren, their faces turned into the still deeper blackness of the
forest. Some distance away, like a star, there gleamed the small and steady
light in the cabin window. For two hours the eyes of those about the fires had
been fixed on that light. And at intervals there had risen from among the
stony-faced watchers the little chief, whose clacking voice joined for a few
moments each time the wailing of the wind, the swish of the low-hanging sky, and
the crackling of the fires. But there was sound of no other voice or movement.
He alone moved and spoke, for to the others the clacking sounds he made was
speech, words spoken each time for the man who lay dead in the cabin.</p>
<p>A dozen times Pelliter and MacVeigh had looked out to the fires, and looked
each time at the hour. This time Billy said:</p>
<p>“They’re moving, Pelly! They’re jumping to their feet and coming this way!”
He looked at his watch again. “They’re mighty good guessers. It’s a quarter
after twelve. When a chief or a big man dies they bury him in the first hour of
the new day. They’re coming after Deane.”</p>
<p>He opened the door and stepped out into the night. Pelliter joined him. The
Eskimos advanced without a sound and stopped in a shadowy group twenty paces
from the cabin. Five of these little fur-clad men detached themselves from the
others and filed into the cabin, with the chief man at their head. As they bent
over Deane they began to chant a low monotone which awakened little Isobel, who
sat up and stared sleepily at the strange scene. Billy went to her and gathered
her close in his arms. She was sleeping again when he put her down among the
blankets. The Eskimos were gone with their burden. He could hear the low
chanting of the tribe.</p>
<p>“I found her, and I thought she was mine,” said Pelliter’s low voice at his
side. “But she ain’t, Billy. She’s yours.”</p>
<p>MacVeigh broke in on him as though he had not heard.</p>
<p>“You better get to bed, Pelly,” he warned. “That arm needs rest. I’m going
out to see where they bury him.”</p>
<p>He put on his cap and heavy coat and went as far as the door, then turned
back. From his kit he took a belt-ax and nails.</p>
<p>The wind was blowing more strongly over the Barren, and MacVeigh could no
longer hear the low lament of the Eskimos. He moved toward their fires, and
found them deserted of men, only the dogs rema g in their deathlike sleep. And
then, far down the edge of the timber, he saw a flare of light. Five minutes
later he stood hidden in a deep shadow, a few paces from the Eskimos. They had
dug the grave early in the evening, out on the great snow-plain, free of the
trees; and as the fire they had built lighted up their dark, round faces
MacVeigh saw the five little black men who had borne forth Scottie Deane leaning
over the shallow hole in the frozen earth. Scottie was already gone. The earth
and ice and frozen moss were falling in upon him, and not a sound fell now from
the thick lips of his savage mourners. In a few minutes the crude work was done,
and like a thin black shadow the natives filed back to their camp. Only one
remained, sitting cross-legged at the head of the grave, his long narwhal spear
at his back. It was O-gluck-gluck, the Eskimo chief, guarding the dead man from
the devils who come to steal body and soul during the first few hours of
burial.</p>
<p>Billy went deeper into the forest until he found a thin, straight sapling,
which he cut down with half a dozen strokes of his belt-ax. From the sapling he
stripped the bark, and then he chopped off a third of its length and nailed it
crosswise to what remained. After that he sharpened the bottom end and returned
to the grave, carrying the cross over his shoulder. Stripped to whiteness, it
gleamed in the firelight. The Eskimo watcher stared at it for a moment, his dull
eyes burning darker in the night, for he knew that after this two gods, and not
one, were to guard the grave. Billy drove the cross deep, and as the blows of
his ax fell upon it the Eskimo slunk back until he was swallowed in the gloom.
When MacVeigh was done he pulled off his cap. But it was not to pray.</p>
<p>“I’m sorry, old man,” he said to what was under the cross. “God knows I’m
sorry. I wish you was alive. I wish you was going back to her— with the kid—
instid o’ me. But I’ll keep that promise. I swear it. I’ll do— what’s right— by
her.”</p>
<p>From the forest he looked back. The Eskimo chief had returned to his somber
watch. The cross gleamed a ghostly white against the thick blackness of the
Barren. He turned his face away for the last time, and there filled him the
oppression of a leaden hand, a thing that was both dread and fear. Scottie Deane
was dead— dead and in his grave, and yet he walked with him now at his side. He
could feel the presence, and that presence was like a warning, stirring strange
thoughts within him. He turned back to the cabin and entered softly. Pelliter
was asleep. Little Isobel was breathing the sweet forgetfulness of childhood. He
stooped and kissed her silken curls, and for a long time he stood with one of
those soft curls between his fingers. In a few years more, he thought, it would
be the darker gold and brown of the woman’s hair— of the woman he loved. Slowly
a great peace entered into him. After all, there was more than hope ahead for
him. She— the older Isobel— knew that he loved her as no other man in the world
could love her. He had given proof of that. And now he was going to her.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />