He learned in the end never to trust the distances given in an unmeasured land. Rounding one of the endless bends toward five o'clock, they became aware of a new, indefinable, fresher smell on the air; and they increased their pace with an eager sense of a discovery awaiting them in the next vista. The next point proved to be the last; looking around it, the wind buffeted their faces fresh and cool; the river stretched away for half a mile, straight as a ca.n.a.l and there, away beyond, leapt the waves of Caribou Lake on the bar.
Natalie cheered. "Hooray for the crew of the _Flat-iron_!" she cried.
"We've actually done it!" She reached back. "Shake, partner!"
Near the head of the river, in the wild waste of sand on the lake sh.o.r.e, squatted a weather-beaten little log cabin, almost eave-deep behind the dunes. Smoke arose from the chimney.
"Good!" cried Garth in high satisfaction. "You can dry your clothes here, anyway."
A glance up and down the sh.o.r.e of the river revealed no trace of the canoes or the outfit of the expedition they were in pursuit of.
"We've missed him again," said Garth grimly.
They landed, dripping and stiff; and plodded through the sand to the tiny door. The outlook was desolate in the extreme; there was no sign of life anywhere, save only the wisp of smoke from the chimney. At their left hand, the lake spread bleakly to the horizon, torn and white under the west wind, and with great billows tumbling on the beach.
"The _Flat-iron_ could never negotiate that," remarked Garth.
He knocked on the little door.
"Come in!" rang instantly from within.
They looked at each other in astonishment.
"An English voice!" she whispered.
"A white man! Thank G.o.d!" said he.
IX
THE HEART OF A BOY
It was a youth who presently faced them on the threshold of the hut; an apple-cheeked boy of seventeen, who bared two rows of shining white teeth; and whose blue eyes, at the sight of them, sparkled with the purest enthusiasm of welcome.
"Come right in, and dry out!" he cried. "I certainly am glad to see you!" The haunting reed of boyhood still vibrated faintly in the manlier notes of his voice.
Here was a greeting from a stranger to warm the hearts of the wet and weary wayfarers! It presented the North in a new aspect. Natalie in especial, beamed on their young host; he was wholly a boy after her own heart.
Looking at Natalie more particularly, the boy blushed and faltered a little. "It isn't much of a place to receive a lady in," he said apologetically. "I haven't been on my own long enough to get anything much together."
It was a characteristically boyish abode. The furniture was limited to the cook-stove in the centre of the room; and a home-made table and a bench. His bed was spread on straw in one corner; and another corner was given up to the heterogeneous a.s.sortment of his belongings and his grub. Apparently the cabin had long served as a casual storehouse to the boatmen of the river; for pieces of mouldy sails were hung over the rafters; oars and a mast crossed from beam to beam; and in a third corner were a pile of chain and an anchor, slowly mouldering into rust.
In wet weather, the present tenant evidently did his chopping within doors, the floor was littered with chips and broken wood. As they came in, a yellow and white kitten, retreating to the darkest corner of the cabin, elevated his back and growled threateningly.
"That's my partner, Musq'oosis," explained the boy. "He'll make friends directly. He plays with me by the hour; you'd laugh yourself sick to see the comical way he carries on. He's great company when you're batching alone!"
Natalie liked this boy more and more.
"Say, I'm having no end of company these days," he went on, with his happy-go-lucky air. "The Bishop's outfit was here all day yesterday; they went up on the last of the east wind, this morning. The old woman--that's what we call Mrs. Bishop, you know; no disrespect--she baked me a batch of her bread before she went. Real outside bread with a crackly crust to it! Oh my! Oh my!--with brown sugar! Say, we'll have a loaf of it for supper!"
Natalie in the meantime sat on the bench; and taking off her moccasins, put her feet on the oven sill to dry. Garth sat on a box; and their host squatted on the floor between.
"By the way," said this youth; "I'm Charley Landrum."
Garth introduced himself and Natalie.
"Hope you'll stay a couple of days," said Charley anxiously--"or longer.
There's great duck-shooting on the sloughs; and we might get a goose or a wavy around the lake sh.o.r.e. It would be a pleasant change of meat for the lady."
Charley addressed all his remarks to Garth, without ever once looking at Natalie; it was clear, nevertheless, that he was acutely conscious of her presence; for he blushed whenever she spoke; and his eyes were continually drawn to her, though he dared not raise them quite to her face. To Garth and Natalie the nicest thing about this boy was the way he took her presence for granted. Of all the males they had met in the North, he alone had not gaped at her in vulgar wonder; and to his honest heart there was nothing out-of-the-way in the fact that she was Miss Bland, and Garth Mr. Pevensey.
"We're obliged to get on as soon as we can," said Garth. "We've been chasing the Bishop all the way from the Landing."
"How did you come up the little river?" asked Charley.
"I bought a boat from Pierre Toma."
"I know her," he said with a chuckle; "cranky as a bath-tub! You couldn't go up the lake in her!"
"Not while it blows like this," said Garth.
"Then I hope it hits it up for a week!" said Charley, apparently addressing the hem of Natalie's skirt.
"I was told one Wall-eye Macgregor had a strong boat," Garth said.
"Nothing doing!" returned the boy. "He's got it up at the head of the lake."
"Then I must try to strengthen the bath-tub and coast around the sh.o.r.e,"
said Garth.
"I'll help you!" said Charley. "We'll pitch in first thing to-morrow."
"How long have you been in the country, Mr. Landrum?" asked Natalie softly.
The boy blushed for pure pleasure; and his voice deepened as he replied: "Two years next March, Miss. I came in over the ice with a freighter. I ran away from school. What was the use?--I got a head like a hickory nut; and I couldn't keep out of trouble. They gave me a bad name; and everything that happened was put on me. So I cleared out and came North."
Gradually the whole nave, boyish tale came out.
"I had a lot of fool ideas about the country then; but they were soon knocked out of me. All the kids that run away soon come sneaking home and have to eat their brags; and I wasn't going to do that. So I stuck it out. At first I admit I pretty near caved in with homesickness; but I'm hardened now. The first year I worked for a trader up at Ostachegan creek; and this spring I bought this cabin on credit. Frank Shefford up at Nine-Mile-Point is going to lend me his team and mower when his hay is put up; and I'll put up hay myself."
The boy's eyes glowed, as he announced his brave plans for the future.
"Next winter I'm going to keep a stopping-house for freighters. I've got a good location here, and stable room already for eight teams. I'll build to it later. There's money in that; and it's a pleasant life for a man--plenty of company. And when I get a little money ahead, I'll trade; there's good chances for a free trader that knows the ropes; and in a few years I'll branch out and have a whole string of trading posts, like Nick Grylls. There's a smart one! They say he could sell out for a hundred thousand any day!"
Garth was reminded of his own hopeful, spouting youth.
"I hope you won't be like Nick Grylls," said Natalie gently.