<h4>XIX</h4>
<h4>A PILGRIMAGE TO THE BARREN</h4>
<p>The fourth night after he had left the plague-stricken cabin Billy was camped
on Lame Otter Creek, one hundred and eighty miles from Fort Churchill, over on
Hudson’s Bay. He had eaten his supper, and was smoking his pipe. It was a clear
and glorious night, with the sky afire with stars and a full moon. Several times
Billy had stared at the moon. It was what the Indians called “the bleeding
moon”— red as blood, with an uneven, dripping edge. It was the Indian
superstition that it meant misfortune to those who did not keep it at their
backs. For seven consecutive nights it had made a red trail through the skies in
that terrible year of plague nineteen years before, when a quarter of the forest
population of the north had died. Since then it had been known as the “plague
moon.” Billy had seen it only twice before. He was not superstitious, but
to-night he was filled with a strange sensation of uneasiness. He laughed an
unpleasant laugh as he stared into the crackling birch flames and wondered what
new misfortune could come to him.</p>
<p>And then, slowly, something seemed to come to him from out of the wonderful
night like a quieting hand to still the pain in his broken heart. At last, once
more, he was <i>home.</i> For the wind-swept Barrens and the forest had been his
home, and more than once he had told himself that life away from them would be
impossible for him. More deeply than ever this thought came to him to-night. He
had become a part of them and they a part of him. And as he looked up again at
the red moon the sight of it no longer brought him uneasiness, but a strange
sort of joy. For an hour he sat there, and the fire died down. About him the
rustle and whisper of the wild closed in nearer. It was <i>his</i> world, and he
breathed more deeply and listened. Lonely and sick at heart, he felt the life
and sympathy and love of it creeping into him, grieving with him in his grief,
warming him with its hope, pledging him again the eternal friendship of its
trees, its mountains, and all of the wild that it held therein. A hundred times,
in that strange man-play that comes of loneliness in the far north, he had given
life and form to the star shadows about him, to the shadows of the tall spruce,
the twisted shrub, the rocks, and even the mountains. And now it was no longer
play. With each hour that passed this night, and with each day and night that
followed, they became more real to MacVeigh; and the fires he built in the black
gloom painted him pictures as they had never painted them before; and the trees
and the rocks and the twisted shrub comforted him more and more in his
loneliness, and gave to him the presence of life in their movement, in the
coming and going of their shadow forms. Everywhere they were the same old
friends, unvarying and changeless. The spruce shadow of to-night, nodding to him
in its silent way, was the same that nodded to him last night— a hundred nights
ago; the stars were the same, the winds whispering to him in the tree-tops were
the same, everything was as it was yesterday— years ago. He knew that in these
things, and in these things alone, he would always possess Isobel. She would
return to civilization, and the shifting scenes of life down there would soon
make her forget him— almost. But in <i>his</i> world there was no change. Ten
years from now he might go over their old trail and still find the charred
remains of the campfire he had built for her that night beside the Barren. The
wilderness would bear memory of her so long as he was a part of it; and now, as
he came nearer to Churchill, he knew that he would always be a part of it.</p>
<p>Three weeks after he had left Couchée’s cabin he came into Fort Churchill. A
month had changed him so that the factor did not recognize him at first. The
inspector in charge stared at him twice, and then cried, “My God, is it you,
MacVeigh?” To Pelliter alone, who was waiting for him, did Billy tell all that
had happened down on the Little Beaver. There were several letters waiting for
him at Churchill, and one of these told him that a silver property in which he
was interested over at Cobalt had turned out well and that his share in the sale
was something over ten thousand dollars. He used this unexpected piece of
good-fortune as an excuse to the inspector when he refused to re-enlist. A week
after his arrival at Churchill Bucky Smith was dishonorably discharged from the
Service. There were several near them when Bucky came up to him with a smile on
his face and offered to shake hands.</p>
<p>“I don’t bear you any ill-will, Billy,” he said, loud enough for the others
to hear. “Only you’ve made a big mistake.” And then, in words for Billy’s ears
alone, he added: “Remember what I promised you! I’ll kill you for this if I have
to hunt you round the world!”</p>
<p>A few days later Pelliter left on the last of the slush snows in an effort to
reach Nelson House before the sledging was gone.</p>
<p>“I wish you’d go with me, Billy,” he entreated for the hundredth time. “My
girl ’d love to have you come, an’ you know how <i>I’d</i> like it.”</p>
<p>But Billy could not be moved.</p>
<p>“I’ll come and see you some day— when you’ve got the kid,” he promised,
trying to laugh, as he shook hands for the last time with his old comrade.</p>
<p>For three days after Pelliter’s departure he remained at the post. On the
morning of the fourth, with his pack on his back and without dogs, he struck off
into the north and west.</p>
<p>“I think I’ll spend next winter at Fond du Lac,” he told the inspector. “If
there’s any mail for me you can send it there if you have a chance, and if I’m
not at Fond du Lac it can be returned to Churchill.”</p>
<p>He said Fond du Lac because Deane’s grave lay between Churchill and the old
Hudson’s Bay Company’s post over in the country of the Athabasca. The Barrens
were the one thing that called to him now— the one thing to which he dared
respond. He would keep his promise to Isobel and visit Scottie’s grave. At least
he tried to make himself believe that he was keeping a promise. But deep in him
there was an undercurrent of feeling which he could not explain. It was as if
there were a spirit with him at times, walking at his side, and hovering about
his campfire at nights, and when he gave himself up to the right mood he felt
that it was the presence of Deane. He believed in strong friendship, but he had
never believed in the love of man for man. He had not thought that such a thing
could exist, except, perhaps, between father and son. With him, in all the
castles he had built and the dreams he had dreamed, the alpha and omega of love
had remained with woman. For the first time he knew what it meant to love a man—
the memory of a man.</p>
<p>Something held him from telling the secret of his mission at Churchill even
to Pelliter. The evening before he left he had smuggled an ax into the edge of
the forest, and the second day he found use for this. He came to a
straight-grained, thick birch, eighteen inches in diameter, and he put up his
tent fifty paces from it. Before he rolled himself in his blankets that night he
had cut down the tree. The next day he chopped off the butt, and before another
nightfall had hewn out a slab two inches thick, a foot wide, and three feet
long. When he took up the trail into the north and west again the following
morning he left the ax behind.</p>
<p>The fourth night he worked with his hunting-knife and his belt-ax, thinning
down the slab and making it smooth. The fifth and the sixth nights he passed in
the same way, and he ended the sixth night by heating the end of a small iron
rod in the fire and burning the first three letters of Deane’s epitaph on the
slab. For a time he was puzzled, wondering whether he should use the name
Scottie or David. He decided on David.</p>
<p>He did not travel fast, for to him spring was the most beautiful of all
seasons in the wilderness. It was underfoot and overhead now. The snow-floods
were singing between the ridges and gathering in the hollows. The poplar buds
were swollen almost to the bursting point, and the bakneesh vines were as red as
blood with the glow of new life. Seventeen days after he left Churchill he came
to the edge of the big Barren. For two days he swung westward, and early in the
forenoon of the third looked out over the gray waste, dotted with moving
caribou, over which he and Pelliter had raced ahead of the Eskimos with little
Isobel. He went to the cabin first and entered. It was evident that no one had
been there since he had left, On the bunk where Deane had died he found one of
baby Isobel’s little mittens. He had wondered where she had lost it, and had
made her a new one of lynx-skin on the way down to Couchée’s cabin. The tiny bed
that he had made for her on the floor was as she had last slept in it, and in
the part of a blanket that he had used as a pillow was still the imprint of her
head. On the wall hung a pair of old trousers that Deane had worn. Billy looked
at these things, standing silently, with his pack at his feet. There was
something in the cabin that closed in about him and choked him, and he struggled
to overcome it by whistling. His lips seemed thick. At last he turned and went
to the grave.</p>
<p>The foxes had been there, and had dug a little about the sapling cross. There
was no other change. During the remainder of the forenoon Billy cut down a
heavier sapling and sunk the butt of it three feet into the half-frozen earth at
the head of Deane’s grave. Then, with spikes he had brought with him, he nailed
on the slab. He believed that no one would ever know what the words on that slab
meant— no one except himself and the spirit of Scottie Deane. With the end of
the heated rod he had burned into the wood:</p>
<h4>DAVID DEANE</h4>
<h4><i>Died Feb. 27, 1908</i></h4>
<h4>BELOVED OF ISOBEL AND THE ONE</h4>
<h4>WHO WISHES HE COULD TAKE</h4>
<h4>YOUR PLACE AND GIVE</h4>
<h4>YOU BACK TO</h4>
<h4>HER</h4>
<h4><i>W. M. April 15, 1908</i></h4>
<p>He did not stop when it was time for dinner, but carried rocks from a ridge a
couple of hundred yards away, and built a cairn four feet high around the
sapling, so that storm or wild animals could not knock it down. Then he began a
search in the warmest and sunniest parts of the forest, where the green tips of
plant life were beginning to reveal themselves. He found snowflowers, redglow,
and bakneesh, and dug up root after root, and at last, peeping out from between
two rocks, he found the arrowlike tip of a blue flower. The bakneesh roots he
planted about the cairn, and the blue flower he planted by itself at the head of
the grave.</p>
<p>It was long past midday when he returned to the cabin, and once more he was
oppressed by the appalling loneliness of it. It was not as he had thought it
would be. Deane’s spirit and companionship had seemed to be nearer to him beside
his campfires and in the forest. He cooked a meal over the stove, but the
snapping of the fire seemed strange and unnatural in the deserted room. Even the
air he breathed was heavy with the oppression of death and broken hopes. He
found it difficult to swallow the food he had cooked, though he had eaten
nothing since morning. When he was done he looked at his watch. It was four
o’clock. The northern sun had dropped behind the distant forests and was
followed now by the thickening gloom of early evening. For a few moments Billy
stood motionless outside the cabin. Behind him an owl hooted its lonely
mating-song. Over his head a brush sparrow twittered. It was that hour, just
between the end of day and the beginning of night, when the wilderness holds its
breath and all is still. Billy clenched his hands and listened. He could not
keep back the break that was in his breath. Something out there in the silence
and the gathering darkness was calling him— calling him away from the cabin,
away from the grave, and the gray, dead waste of the Barren. He turned back into
the cabin and put his things into the pack. He took the little mitten to keep
with his other treasures, and then he went out and closed the door behind him.
He passed close to the grave and for the last time gazed upon the spot where
Deane lay buried.</p>
<p>“Good-by, old man,” he whispered. Goodby—”</p>
<p>The owl hooted louder as he turned his face into the west. It made him
shiver, and he hurried his steps into the unbroken wilderness that lay for
hundreds of miles between him and the post at Fond du Lac.</p>
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