<h4>XVII</h4>
<h4>ISOBEL FACES THE ABYSS</h4>
<p>It was not the face of MacVeigh— the old MacVeigh— that Rookie McTabb, the
ex-constable, looked into a few moments later. Days of sickness could have laid
no heavier hand upon him than had those few minutes in the darkened room of the
cabin. His face was white and drawn. There were tense lines at the corners of
his mouth and something strange and disquieting in his eyes. McTabb did not see
the change until he came out into what remained of the day with little Isobel in
his arms. Then he stared.</p>
<p>“That blow got you bad,” he said. “You look sick. Mebbe I’d better stay with
you here to-night.”</p>
<p>“No, you hadn’t,” replied Billy, trying to throw off what he knew the other
saw. “Take the kid over to the cabin. A night’s sleep and I’ll be as lively as a
cat. I’m going to vaccinate her before you go.”</p>
<p>He went into the tent and dug out from his pack the small rubber pouch in
which he carried a few medicines and a roll of medicated cotton. In a small
bottle there were three vaccine points. He returned with these and the
cotton.</p>
<p>“Watch her close,” he said, as he rolled back the child’s sleeve. “I’m going
to give you an extra point, and if this doesn’t work by the seventh or eighth
day you must do the job over again.”</p>
<p>With the point of his knife he began to work gently on baby Isobel’s tender
pink skin. He had expected that she would cry. But she was not frightened, and
her big blue eyes followed his movements wonderingly. At last it began to hurt,
and her lips quivered. But she made no sound, and as tears welled into her eyes
Billy dropped his knife and caught her up close to his breast.</p>
<p>“God bless your dear little heart,” he cried, smothering his face in her
silken curls. “You’ve been hurt so much, an’ you’ve froze, an’ you’ve starved,
an’ you ain’t never said a word about it since that day up at Fullerton! Little
sweetheart—”</p>
<p>McTabb heard him whispering things, and little Isobel’s arms crept tightly
about his neck. After a little Billy held her out to him again, and a part of
what Rookie had seen in his face was gone.</p>
<p>“It won’t hurt any more,” he said, as he rubbed the vaccine point over the
red spot on her arm. “You don’t want to be sick, do you? And that ’ll keep you
from being sick. There—”</p>
<p>He wound a strip of the cotton about her arm, tied it, and gave part of what
remained to McTabb. Then he took her in his arms again and kissed her warm face
and her soft curls, and after that bundled her in furs and put her on the
sledge. Rookie was straightening out the dogs when, like a thief, he clipped off
one of the curls with his knife. Isobel laughed gleefully when she saw the curl
between his fingers. Before McTabb had turned it was in his pocket.</p>
<p>“I won’t see her again— soon,” MacVeigh said; and he tried to keep a
thickness out of his voice. “That is, I— I won’t see her to— to <i>handle</i>
her. I’ll come over now and then an’ look at her from the edge of the woods. You
bring ’er out, Rookie, an’ don’t you dare to let her know I’m out there. She
wouldn’t know what it meant if I didn’t come to her.”</p>
<p>He watched them as they disappeared into the gloom of night, and when they
had gone a groan of anguish broke from his lips. For he knew that little Isobel
was going from him forever. He would see her again— from the edge of the forest;
but he would never hold her in his arms, nor feel again her tender arms about
his neck or the soft smother of her hair against his face. Long before the dread
menace of the plague was lifted from the cabin and from himself he would be
gone. For that was what Isobel, the mother, had demanded, and he would keep his
promise to her. She would never know what happened in these days of her
delirium. She would not have to face him afterward. He knew already how he would
go. When help came he would slip away quietly some night, and the big wilderness
would swallow him up. His plans seemed to come without thought on his own part.
He would go to Fort Churchill and testify against Bucky Smith. And then he would
quit the Service. His term of enlistment expired in a month, and he would not
re-enlist. <i>“It was the Law that killed him— and you are the Law. It kills—
kills— kills— and it never gives back when it makes a mistake.”</i> Under the
dark sky those words seemed never to end in his ears, and each moment they added
to his hatred of the thing of which he had been a part for years. He seemed to
hear Isobel’s accusing voice in the low soughing of the night wind in the spruce
tops; and in the stillness of the world that hung heavy and close about him the
words chased each other through his brain until they seemed to leave behind them
a path of fire.</p>
<p><i>“It kills— kills— kills— and it never gives back when it makes a
mistake.”</i></p>
<p>His lips were set tensely as he faced the cabin. He remembered now more than
one instance where the Law had killed and had never given back. That was a part
of the game of man-hunting. But he had never thought of it in Isobel’s way until
she had painted for him in those few half-mad, accusing words a picture of
himself. The fact that he had fought for Scottie Deane and had given him his
freedom did not exonerate himself in his own eyes now. It was because of himself
and Pelliter chiefly that Deane and Isobel had been forced to seek refuge among
the Eskimos. From Fullerton they had watched and hunted for him as they would
have hunted for an animal. He saw himself as Isobel must see him now— the
murderer of her husband. He was glad, as he returned to the cabin, that he had
happened to come in the second or third day of her fever. He dreaded her sanity
now more than her delirium,</p>
<p>He lighted a tin lamp in the cabin and listened for a moment at the inner
door. Isobel was quiet. For the first time he made a more careful note of the
cabin. Couchée and his wife had left plenty of food. He had noticed a frozen
haunch of venison hanging outside the cabin, and he went out and chopped off
several pieces of the meat. He did not feel hungry enough to prepare food for
himself, but put the meat in a pot and placed it on the stove, that he might
have broth for Isobel.</p>
<p>He began to find signs of her presence in the room as he moved about. Hanging
on a wooden peg in the log wall he saw a scarf which he knew belonged to her.
Under the scarf there was a pair of her shoes, and then he noticed that the
crude cabin table was covered with a litter of stuff which he had not observed
before. There were needles and thread, some cloth, a pair of gloves, and a red
bow of ribbon which Isobel had worn at her throat. What held his eyes were two
bundles of old letters tied with blue ribbon, and a third pile, undone and
scattered. In the light of the lamp he saw that all of the writing on the
envelopes was in the same hand. The top envelope on the first pile was addressed
to “Mrs. Isobel Deane, Prince Albert, Saskatchewan”; the first envelope of the
other bundle to “Miss Isobel Rowland, Montreal, Canada.” Billy’s heart choked
him as he gathered the loose letters in his hands and placed them, with the
others, on a little shelf above the table. He knew that they were letters from
Deane, and that in her fever and loneliness Isobel had been reading them when he
brought to her news of her husband’s death.</p>
<p>He was about to remove the other articles from the table where a folded
newspaper clipping was uncovered by the removal of the cloth. It was a half page
from a Montreal daily, and out of it there looked straight up at him the face of
Isobel Deane. It was a younger, more girlish-looking face, but to him it was not
half so beautiful as the face of the Isobel who had come to him from out of the
Barren. His fingers trembled and his breath came more quickly as he held the
paper in the light and read the few lines under the picture:</p>
<BLOCKQUOTE>ISOBEL ROWLAND, ONE OF THE LAST OF MONTREAL’S DAUGHTERS OF THE
NORTH, WHO HAS SACRIFICED A FORTUNE FOR LOVE OF A YOUNG ENGINEER</BLOCKQUOTE>
<p>In spite of the feeling of shame that crept over him at thus allowing himself
to be drawn into a past sacred to Isobel and the man who had died, Billy’s eyes
sought the date-line. The paper was eight years old. And then he read what
followed. In those few minutes, as the cold, black type revealed to him the
story of Isobel and Deane, he forgot that he was in the cabin, and that he could
almost hear the breathing of the woman whose sweet romance had ended now in
tragedy. He was with Deane that day, years ago, when he had first looked into
Isobel’s eyes in the little old cemetery of nameless and savage dead at Ste.
Anne de Beaupré; he heard the tolling of the ancient bell in the church that had
stood on the hillside for more than two hundred and fifty years; and he could
hear Deane’s voice as he told Isobel the story of that bell and how, in the days
of old, it had often called the settlers in to fight against the Indians. And
then, as he read on, he could feel the sudden thrill in Deane’s blood when
Isobel had told him who she was, and that Pierre Radisson, one of the great
lords of the north, had been her great-grandfather; that he had brought
offerings to the little old church, and that he had fought there and died close
by, and that his body was somewhere among the nameless and unmarked dead. It was
a beautiful story, and MacVeigh saw more of it between the lines than could ever
have been printed. Once he had gone to Ste. Anne de Beaupré to see the pilgrims
and the miracles there, and there flashed before him the sunlit slope
overlooking the broad St. Lawrence, where Isobel and Deane had afterward met,
and where she had told him how large a part the little old cracked bell, the
ancient church, and the plot of nameless dead had played in her life ever since
she could remember. His blood grew hot as he read of what followed the beginning
of love at the pilgrims’ shrine. Isobel had no father or mother, the paper said.
Her uncle and guardian was an iron master of the old blood— the blood that had
been a part of the wilderness and the great company since the day the first
“gentlemen adventurers” came over with Prince Rupert. He lived alone with Isobel
in a big white house on the top of a hill, shut in by stone walls and iron
pickets, and looked out upon the world with the cold hauteur of a feudal lord.
He was young David Deane’s enemy from the moment he first heard about him,
largely because he was nothing more than a struggling mining engineer, but
chiefly because he was an American and had come from across the border. The
stone walls and iron pickets were made a barrier to him. The heavy gates never
opened for him. Then had come the break. Isobel, loyal in her love, had gone to
Deane. The story ended there.</p>
<p>For a few moments Billy stood with the paper in his hand, the type a blur
before his eyes. He could almost see Isobel’s old home in Montreal. It was on
the steep, shaded road leading up to Mount Royal, where he had once watched a
string of horses “tacking” with their two-wheeled carts of coal in their arduous
journey to Sir George Allen’s basement at the end of it. He remembered how that
street had held a curious sort of fascination for him, with its massive stone
walls, its old French homes, and that old atmosphere still clinging to it of the
Montreal of a hundred years ago. Twelve years before he had gone there first and
carved his name on the wooden stairway leading to the top of the mountain.
Isobel had been there then. Perhaps it was she he had heard singing behind one
of the walls.</p>
<p>He put the paper with the letters, making a note of the uncle’s name. If
anything happened it would be his duty to send word to him— perhaps. And then,
deliberately, he tore into little pieces the slip of paper on which he had
written the name. Geoffrey Renaud had cast off his niece. And if she died why
should he— Billy MacVeigh— tell him anything about little Isobel? Since Isobel’s
terrible castigation of himself and the Law duty had begun to hold a diferent
meaning for him.</p>
<p>Several times during the next hour Billy listened at the door. Then he made
some tea and toast and took the broth from the stove. He went into the room,
leaving these on the hearth of the stove so that they would not grow cold. He
heard Isobel move, and as he went to her side she gave a little breathless
cry.</p>
<p>“David— David— is it you?” she moaned. “Oh, David, I’m so glad you have
come!”</p>
<p>Billy stood over her. In the darkness his face was ashen gray, for like a
flash of fire in the lightless room the truth rushed upon him. Shock and fever
had done their work. And in her delirium Isobel believed that he was Deane, her
husband. In the gloom he saw that she was reaching up her arms to him.</p>
<p>“David!” she whispered; and in her voice there were a love and gladness that
thrilled and terrified him to the quick of his soul.</p>
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