<h4>XV</h4>
<h4>LE MORT ROUGE— AND ISOBEL</h4>
<p>Until late that night Billy sat beside his campfire with the snow-man.
Strange and new thoughts had come to him, and among these was the wondering one
asking himself why he had never built a snow-man before. When he went to bed he
dreamed of the snow-man and of little Isobel; and the little girl’s laughter and
happiness when she saw the curious form the dissolving snow-man had taken in the
heat of the fire when she awoke the following morning filled him again with
those boyish visions of happiness that he had seen just ahead of him. At other
times he would have told himself that he was no longer reasonable. After they
had breakfasted and started on the day’s journey he laughed and talked with baby
Isobel, and a dozen times in the forenoon he picked her up in his arms and
carried her behind the dogs.</p>
<p>“We’re going home,” he kept telling her over and over again. “We’re going
home— down to mama— mama— <i>mama!”</i> He emphasized that; and each time
Isobel’s pretty mouth formed the word mama after him his heart leaped
exultantly. By the end of that day it had become the sweetest word in the world
to him. He tried mother, but his little comrade looked at him blankly, and he
did not like it himself. <i>“Mama, mama, mama,”</i> he said a hundred times that
night beside their campfire, and before he tucked her away in her warm blankets
he said something to her about “Now I lay me down to sleep.” Isobel was too
tired and sleepy to comprehend much of that. Even after she was deep in slumber
and Billy sat alone smoking his pipe he whispered that sweetest word in the
world to himself, and took out the tress of shining hair and gazed at it
joyously in the glow of the fire. By the end of the next day little Isobel could
say almost the whole of the prayer his own mother had taught him years and years
and years ago, so far back that his vision of her was not that of a woman, but
of an elusive and wonderful angel; and the fourth day at noon she lisped the
whole of it without a word of assistance from him.</p>
<p>On the morning of the fifth day Billy struck the Gray Beaver, and little
Isobel grew serious at the change in him. He no longer amused her, but urged the
dogs along, never for an instant relaxing his vigilant quest for a sign of
smoke, a trail, a blazed tree. At his heart there began to burn a suspense that
was almost suffocating. In these last hours before he was to see Isobel there
came the inevitable reaction within him. Gloom oppressed him where a little
while before joyous anticipation had given him hope. The one terrible thought
drove out all others now— he was bringing her news of death, her
<i>husband’s</i> death. And to Isobel he knew that Deane had meant all that the
world held of joy or hope— Deane and the baby.</p>
<p>It was like a shock when he came suddenly upon the cabin, in the edge of a
small clearing. For a moment he hesitated. Then he took Isobel in his arms and
went to the door. It was slightly ajar, and after knocking upon it with his fist
he thrust it open and entered.</p>
<p>There was no one in the room in which he found himself, but there was a stove
and a fire. At the end of the room was a second door, and it opened slowly. In
another moment Isobel stood there. He had never seen her as he saw her now, with
the light from a window falling upon her. She was dressed in a loose gown, and
her long hair fell in disheveled profusion over her shoulders and bosom.
MacVeigh would have cried out her name— he had told himself a hundred times what
he would first say to her— but what he saw in her face startled him and held him
silent while their eyes met. Her cheeks were flushed. Her lips burned an
unnatural red. Her eyes were glowing with strange fires. She looked at him
first, and her hands clutched at her bosom, crumpling the masses of her lustrous
hair. Not until she had looked into his eyes did she recognize what he carried
in his arms. When he held the child out to her she sprang forward with the
strangest cry he had ever heard.</p>
<p>“My baby!” she almost shrieked. “My baby— my baby—”</p>
<p>She staggered back and sank into a chair near a table, with little Isobel
clasped to her breast. For a time Billy heard only those words in her dry,
sobbing voice as she crushed her burning face down against her child’s. He knew
that she was sick, that it was fever which had sent the hot flush into her
cheeks. He gulped hard, and went near to her. Trembling, he put out a hand and
touched her. She looked up. A bit of that old, glorious light leaped into her
eyes, the light which he had seen when in gratitude she had given him her lips
to kiss.</p>
<p>“You?” she whispered. “You— brought her—”</p>
<p>She caught his hand, and the soft smother of her loose hair fell over it. He
could feel the quick rise and fall of her bosom.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he said.</p>
<p>There was a demand in her face, her eyes, her parted lips. He went on, her
hand clasping his tighter, until he could feel the swift beating of her heart.
He had never thought that he could tell the story in as few words as he told it
now, with more and more of the glorious light creeping into Isobel’s eyes. She
stopped breathing when he told her of the fight in the cabin and the death of
the man who had stolen little Isobel. A hundred words more brought him to the
edge of the forest. He stopped there. But she still questioned him in silence.
She drew him down nearer, until he could feel her breath. There was something
terrible in the demand of her eyes. He tried to find words to say, but something
rose up in his throat and choked him. She saw his effort.</p>
<p>“Go on,” she said, softly.</p>
<p>“And then— I brought her to you,” he said.</p>
<p>“You met him?”</p>
<p>Her question was so sudden that it startled him, and in an instant he had
betrayed himself.</p>
<p>Little Isobel slipped to the floor, and Isobel stood up. She came near to
him, as she came that marvelous night out on the Barren, and in her eyes there
was the same prayer as she put her two hands up to him and looked straight into
his face.</p>
<p>He thought it would be easier. But it was terrible. She did not move. No
sound came from her tight-drawn lips as he told her of the meeting with Deane,
and of her husband’s illness. She guessed what was coming before he had spoken
it. At his words, telling of death, she drew away from him slowly. She did not
cry out. Her only evidence that she had heard and understood was the low moan
that fell from her lips. She covered her face with her hands and stood for a
moment an arm’s length away, and in that moment all the force of his great love
for her swept upon MacVeigh in an overwhelming flood. He opened his arms,
longing to gather her into them and comfort her as he would have comforted a
little child. In that love he would willingly have dropped dead at her feet if
he could have given back to her the man she had lost. She raised her head in
time to see his outstretched arms, she saw the love and the pleading in his
face, and into her own eyes there leaped the fire of a tigress.</p>
<p>“You— <i>you—”</i> she cried. “It was you who killed him! He had done no
wrong— save to protect me and avenge me from the insult of a brute! He had done
no wrong. But the Law— your Law— set you after him, and you hunted him like a
beast; you drove him from our home, from me and the baby. You hunted him until
he died up there— alone. You— you killed him.”</p>
<p>With a sudden cry she turned and caught up little Isobel and ran toward the
other door. <i>And</i> as she disappeared into the room from which she had first
appeared Billy heard her moaning those terrible words.</p>
<p>“You— you— you—”</p>
<p>Like a man who had been struck a blow he swayed back to the outer door. Near
his dogs and sledge he met Pierre Couchée and his half-French wife coming in
from their trap line. He scarcely knew what explanation he gave to the
half-breed, who helped him to put up his tent. But when the latter left to
follow his wife into the cabin he said:</p>
<p>“She ess seek, ver’ seek. An’ she grow more seek each day until— mon
<i>Dieu!— my</i> wife, she ess scare!”</p>
<p>He cut a few balsam boughs and spread out his blankets, but did not trouble
to build a fire. When the half-breed returned to say that supper was waiting he
told him that he was not hungry, and that he was going to sleep. He doubled
himself up under his blankets, silent and staring, even neglecting to feed the
dogs. He was awake when the stars appeared. He was awake when the moon rose. He
was still awake when the light went out in Pierre Couchée’s cabin. The snow-man
was gone from his vision— home and hope. He had never been hurt as he was hurt
now. He was yet awake when the moon passed far over his head, sank behind the
wilderness to the west, and blackness came. Toward dawn he fell into an uneasy
slumber, and from that sleep he was awakened by Pierre Couchée’s voice.</p>
<p>When he opened his eyes it was day, and the half-breed stood at the opening
of the tent. His face was filled with horror. His voice was almost a scream when
he saw that MacVeigh was awake and sitting up.</p>
<p>“The great God in heaven!” he cried. “It is the plague, m’sieur— <i>le mort
rouge—</i> the small pox! She is dying—”</p>
<p>MacVeigh was on his feet, gripping him by the arms.</p>
<p>He turned and ran toward the cabin, and Billy saw that the half-breed’s team
was harnessed, and that Pierre’s wife was bringing forth blankets and bundles.
He did not wait to question them, but hurried into the plague-stricken cabin.
From the woman’s room came a low moaning, and he rushed in and fell upon his
knees at her side. Her face was flushed with the fever, half hidden in the
disheveled masses of her hair. She recognized him, and her dark eyes burned
madly.</p>
<p>“Take— the baby!” she panted. “My God— go— go with her!”</p>
<p>Tenderly he put out a hand and stroked back her hair from her face.</p>
<p>“You are sick— sick with the bad fever,” he said, gently.</p>
<p>“Yes— yes, it is that. I did not think— until last night— what it might be.
You— you love me! Then take her— take the baby and go— go— <i>go!”</i></p>
<p>All his old strength came back to him now. He felt no fear. He smiled down
into her face, and the silken touch of her hair set his heart leaping and the
love into his eyes.</p>
<p>“I will take her out there,” he said. “But she is all right— Isobel.” He
spoke her name almost pleadingly. “She is all right. She will not take the
fever.”</p>
<p>He picked up the child and carried her out into the larger room. Pierre and
his wife were at the door. They were dressed for travel, as he had seen them
come in off the trap line the evening before. He dropped Isobel and sprang in
front of them.</p>
<p>“What do you mean?” he demanded. “You are not going away! You cannot go!” He
turned almost fiercely upon the woman. “She will die— if you do not stay and
care for her. You shall not run away!”</p>
<p>“It is the plague,” said Pierre. “It is death to remain!”</p>
<p>“You shall stay!” said MacVeigh, still speaking to Pierre’s wife. “You are
the one woman— the only woman— within a hundred miles. She will die without you.
You shall stay if I have to tie you!”</p>
<p>With the quickness of a cat Pierre raised the butt of the heavy dog-whip
which he held in his hand and it came down with a sickening thud on Billy’s
head. As he staggered into the middle of the cabin floor, groping blindly for a
moment before he fell, he heard a strange, terrified cry, and in the open inner
door he saw the white-robed figure of Isobel Deane. Then he sank down into a pit
of blackness.</p>
<p>It was Isobel’s face that he first saw when he came from out of that black
pit. He knew that it was her voice calling to him before he had opened his eyes.
He felt the touch of her hands, and when he looked up her loose, soft hair swept
his breast. His head was bolstered up, and so he could look straight into her
face. It frightened him. He knew now what she had been saying to him as he lay
there upon the floor.</p>
<p>“You must get up! You must go!” he heard her mooning. “You must take my baby
away. And you— <i>you—</i> must go!”</p>
<p>He pulled himself half erect, then rose to his feet, swaying a little. He
came to her then, with the look in his face she had first seen out on the Barren
when he had told her that he was going with her through the forest.</p>
<p>“No, I am not going away,” he said, firmly, and yet with that same old
gentleness in his voice. “If I go you will die. So I am going to stay.”</p>
<p>She stared at him, speechless.</p>
<p>“You— you can’t,” she gasped, at last. “Don’t you see— don’t you understand?
I’m a woman— and you can’t. You must take her— my baby— and go for help.”</p>
<p>“There is no help,” said MacVeigh, quietly. “Within a few hours you will be
helpless. I am going to stay and— and— I swear to God I will care for you— as
he— would have done. He made me promise that— to care for you— to stick by
you—”</p>
<p>She looked straight into his eyes. He saw the twitching of her throat, the
quiver of her lips. In another moment she would have fallen if he had not put a
supporting arm about her.</p>
<p>“If— anything— happens,” she gasped, brokenly, “you will take care— of her—
my baby—”</p>
<p>“Yes— always.”</p>
<p>“And if I— get well—”</p>
<p>Her head swayed dizzily and dropped to his breast.</p>
<p>“If I get— well—”</p>
<p>“Yes,” he urged. “Yes—”</p>
<p>“If I—”</p>
<p>He saw her struggle and fail.</p>
<p>“Yes, I know— I understand,” he cried, quickly, as she grew heavier in his
arms. “If you get well I will go. I swear to do that. I will go away. No one
will ever know— no one— in the whole world. And I will be good to you— and care
for you—”</p>
<p>He stopped, brushed back her hair, and looked into her face. Then he carried
her into the inner room; and when he came out little Isobel was crying.</p>
<p>“You poor little kid,” he cried, and caught her up in his arms. “You poor
little—”</p>
<p>The child smiled at him through her tears, and Billy suddenly sat down on the
edge of the table.</p>
<p>“You’ve been a little brick from the beginning, and you’re going to keep it
up, little one,” he said, taking her pretty face between his two big hands.
“You’ve got to be good, for we’re going to have a— a—” He turned away, and
finished under his breath. “We’re going to have a devil of a time !”</p>
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