Jim Peace had not done too badly, however, in the
Company’s service. For an islander, he would be a rich
man now; he had not married, he had saved the greater
part of his salary, and even in the far-away Post where
he had spent so many years there had been occasional
opportunities of the kind common to new, wild countries[2]
where life and law are in the making. He had not hesitated
to take them. None of the big Company Posts, it
was true, had come his way, nor had he risen very high
in the service; in another two years his turn would have
come, yet he had left of his own accord before those two
years were up. His decision, judging by the strength
in the features, was not due to impulse; the move had
been deliberately weighed and calculated; he had renounced
his opportunity after full reflection. A man with those
steady eyes, with that square jaw and determined mouth,
certainly did not act without good reason.
A curious expression now flickered over his weather-hardened
face as he saw again his childhood’s home, and
the return, so often dreamed about, actually took place at
last. An uneasy light flashed for a moment in the deep-set
grey eyes, but was quickly gone again, and the tanned
visage recovered its accustomed look of stern composure.
His keen sight took in a dark knot of figures on
the landing-pier—his brother, he knew, among them. A
wave of home-sickness swept over him. He longed to see
his brother again, the old farm, the sweep of open country,
the sand-dunes, and the breaking seas. The smell
of long-forgotten days came to his nostrils with its sweet,
painful pang of youthful memories.
How fine, he thought, to be back there in the old
familiar fields of childhood, with sea and sand about him
instead of the smother of endless woods that ran a thousand
miles without a break. He was glad in particular
that no trees were visible, and that rabbits scampering
among the dunes were the only wild animals he need ever
meet....
Those thirty years in the woods, it seemed, oppressed
his mind; the forests, the countless multitudes of trees,
had wearied him. His nerves, perhaps, had suffered
finally. Snow, frost and sun, stars, and the wind had
been his companions during the long days and endless
nights in his lonely Post, but chiefly—trees. Trees, trees,[3]
trees! On the whole, he had preferred them in stormy
weather, though, in another way, their rigid hosts, ’mid
the deep silence of still days, had been equally oppressive.
In the clear sunlight of a windless day they assumed a
waiting, listening, watching aspect that had something
spectral in it, but when in motion—well, he preferred a
moving animal to one that stood stock-still and stared.
Wind, moreover, in a million trees, even the lightest breeze,
drowned all other sounds—the howling of the wolves, for
instance, in winter, or the ceaseless harsh barking of the
husky dogs he so disliked.
Even on this warm September afternoon a slight shiver
ran over him as the background of dead years loomed up
behind the present scene. He thrust the picture back,
deep down inside himself. The self-control, the strong,
even violent will that the face betrayed, came into operation
instantly. The background was background; it belonged
to what was past, and the past was over and done
with. It was dead. Jim meant it to stay dead.
The figure waving to him from the pier was his brother.
He knew Tom instantly; the years had dealt easily with
him in this quiet island; there was no startling, no unkindly
change, and a deep emotion, though unexpressed,
rose in his heart. It was good to be home again, he realized,
as he sat presently in the cart, Tom holding the
reins, driving slowly back to the farm at the north end of
the island. Everything he found familiar, yet at the
same time strange. They passed the school where he used
to go as a little bare-legged boy; other boys were now
learning their lessons exactly as he used to do. Through
the open window he could hear the droning voice of the
schoolmaster, who, though invisible, wore the face of Mr.
Lovibond, his own teacher.
“Lovibond?” said Tom, in reply to his question. “Oh,
he’s been dead these twenty years. He went south, you
know—Glasgow, I think it was, or Edinburgh. He got
typhoid.”[4]
Stands of golden plover were to be seen as of old in
the fields, or flashing overhead in swift flight with a whir
of wings, wheeling and turning together like one huge
bird. Down on the empty shore a curlew cried. Its piercing
note rose clear above the noisy clamour of the gulls.
The sun played softly on the quiet sea, the air was keen
but pleasant, the tang of salt mixed sweetly with the clean
smells of open country that he knew so well. Nothing
of essentials had changed, even the low clouds beyond the
heaving uplands were the clouds of childhood.
They came presently to the sand-dunes, where rabbits
sat at their burrow-mouths, or ran helter-skelter across the
road in front of the slow cart.
“They’re safe till the colder weather comes and trapping
begins,” he mentioned. It all came back to him in
detail.
“And they know it, too—the canny little beggars,” replied
Tom. “Any rabbits out where you’ve been?” he
asked casually.
“Not to hurt you,” returned his brother shortly.
Nothing seemed changed, although everything seemed
different. He looked upon the old, familiar things, but
with other eyes. There were, of course, changes, alterations,
yet so slight, in a way so odd and curious, that
they evaded him; not being of the physical order, they
reported to his soul, not to his mind. But his soul, being
troubled, sought to deny the changes; to admit them meant
to admit a change in himself he had determined to conceal
even if he could not entirely deny it.
“Same old place, Tom,” came one of his rare remarks.
“The years ain’t done much to it.” He looked into his
brother’s face a moment squarely. “Nor to you, either,
Tom,” he added, affection and tenderness just touching
his voice and breaking through a natural reserve that was
almost taciturnity.
His brother returned the look; and something in that
instant passed between the two men, something of understanding[5]
that no words had hinted at, much less expressed.
The tie was real, they loved each other, they were loyal,
true, steadfast fellows. In youth they had known no
secrets. The shadow that now passed and vanished left
a vague trouble in both hearts.
“The forests,” said Tom slowly, “have made a silent
man of you, Jim. You’ll miss them here, I’m thinking.”
“Maybe,” was the curt reply, “but I guess not.”
His lips snapped to as though they were of steel and
could never open again, while the tone he used made Tom
realize that the subject was not one his brother cared to
talk about particularly. He was surprised, therefore, when,
after a pause, Jim returned to it of his own accord. He
was sitting a little sideways as he spoke, taking in the
scene with hungry eyes. “It’s a queer thing,” he observed,
“to look round and see nothing but clean empty
land, and not a single tree in sight. You see, it don’t
look natural quite.”
Again his brother was struck by the tone of voice, but
this time by something else as well he could not name.
Jim was excusing himself, explaining. The manner, too,
arrested him. And thirty years disappeared as though
they had not been, for it was thus Jim acted as a boy when
there was something unpleasant he had to say and wished
to get it over. The tone, the gesture, the manner, all were
there. He was edging up to something he wished to say,
yet dared not utter.
“You’ve had enough of trees then?” Tom said sympathetically,
trying to help, “and things?”
The instant the last two words were out he realized
that they had been drawn from him instinctively, and that
it was the anxiety of deep affection which had prompted
them. He had guessed without knowing he had guessed,
or rather, without intention or attempt to guess. Jim had
a secret. Love’s clairvoyance had discovered it, though not
yet its hidden terms.
“I have——” began the other, then paused, evidently[6]
to choose his words with care. “I’ve had enough of trees.”
He was about to speak of something that his brother had
unwittingly touched upon in his chance phrase, but instead
of finding the words he sought, he gave a sudden
start, his breath caught sharply. “What’s that?” he exclaimed,
jerking his body round so abruptly that Tom automatically
pulled the reins. “What is it?”
“A dog barking,” Tom answered, much surprised. “A
farm dog barking. Why? What did you think it was?”
he asked, as he flicked the horse to go on again. “You
made me jump,” he added, with a laugh. “You’re used to
huskies, ain’t you?”
“It sounded so—not like a dog, I mean,” came the slow
explanation. “It’s long since I heard a sheep-dog bark, I
suppose it startled me.”
“Oh, it’s a dog all right,” Tom assured him comfortingly,
for his heart told him infallibly the kind of tone to
use. And presently, too, he changed the subject in his
blunt, honest fashion, knowing that, also, was the right
and kindly thing to do. He pointed out the old farms
as they drove along, his brother silent again, sitting stiff
and rigid at his side. “And it’s good to have you back,
Jim, from those outlandish places. There are not too
many of the family left now—just you and I, as a matter
of fact.”
“Just you and I,” the other repeated gruffly, but in
a sweetened tone that proved he appreciated the ready
sympathy and tact. “We’ll stick together, Tom, eh?
Blood’s thicker than water, ain’t it? I’ve learnt that
much, anyhow.”
The voice had something gentle and appealing in it,
something his brother heard now for the first time. An
elbow nudged into his side, and Tom knew the gesture
was not solely a sign of affection, but grew partly also
from the comfort born of physical contact when the heart
is anxious. The touch, like the last words, conveyed an[7]
appeal for help. Tom was so surprised he couldn’t believe
it quite.
Scared! Jim scared! The thought puzzled and afflicted
him who knew his brother’s character inside out,
his courage, his presence of mind in danger, his resolution.
Jim frightened seemed an impossibility, a contradiction
in terms; he was the kind of man who did not
know the meaning of fear, who shrank from nothing,
whose spirits rose highest when things appeared most hopeless.
It must, indeed, be an uncommon, even a terrible
danger that could shake such nerves; yet Tom saw the
signs and read them clearly. Explain them he could not,
nor did he try. All he knew with certainty was that his
brother, sitting now beside him in the cart, hid a secret
terror in his heart. Sooner or later, in his own good time,
he would share it with him.
He ascribed it, this simple Orkney farmer, to those
thirty years of loneliness and exile in wild desolate places,
without companionship, without the society of women, with
only Indians, husky dogs, a few trappers or fur-dealers like
himself, but none of the wholesome, natural influences
that sweeten life within reach. Thirty years was a long,
long time. He began planning schemes to help. Jim
must see people as much as possible, and his mind ran
quickly over the men and women available. In women
the neighbourhood was not rich, but there were several
men of the right sort who might be useful, good fellows
all. There was John Rossiter, another old Hudson Bay
man, who had been factor at Cartwright, Labrador, for
many years, and had returned long ago to spend his last
days in civilization. There was Sandy McKay, also back
from a long spell of rubber-planting in Malay.... Tom
was still busy making plans when they reached the old
farm and presently sat down to their first meal together
since that early breakfast thirty years ago before Jim
caught the steamer that bore him off to exile—an exile[8]
that now returned him with nerves unstrung and a secret
terror hidden in his heart.
“I’ll ask no questions,” he decided. “Jim will tell
me in his own good time. And meanwhile, I’ll get him
to see as many folks as possible.” He meant it too; yet
not only for his brother’s sake. Jim’s terror was so vivid
it had touched his own heart too.
“Ah, a man can open his lungs here and breathe!” exclaimed
Jim, as the two came out after supper and stood
before the house, gazing across the open country. He drew
a deep breath as though to prove his assertion, exhaling
with slow satisfaction again. “It’s good to see a clear
horizon and to know there’s all that water between—between
me and where I’ve been.” He turned his face
to watch the plover in the sky, then looked towards the
distant shore-line where the sea was just visible in the
long evening light. “There can’t be too much water for
me,” he added, half to himself. “I guess they can’t cross
water—not that much water at any rate.”
Tom stared, wondering uneasily what to make of it.
“At the trees again, Jim?” he said laughingly. He
had overheard the last words, though spoken low, and
thought it best not to ignore them altogether. To be
natural was the right way, he believed, natural and cheery.
To make a joke of anything unpleasant, he felt, was to
make it less serious. “I’ve never seen a tree come across
the Atlantic yet, except as a mast—dead,” he added.
“I wasn’t thinking of the trees just then,” was the
blunt reply, “but of—something else. The damned trees
are nothing, though I hate the sight of ’em. Not of much
account, anyway”—as though he compared them mentally
with another thing. He puffed at his pipe, a moment.
“They certainly can’t move,” put in his brother, “nor
swim either.”
“Nor another thing,” said Jim, his voice thick suddenly,
but not with smoke, and his speech confused, though[9]
the idea in his mind was certainly clear as daylight.
“Things can’t hide behind ’em—can they?”
“Not much cover hereabouts, I admit,” laughed Tom,
though the look in his brother’s eyes made his laughter as
short as it sounded unnatural.
“That’s so,” agreed the other. “But what I meant was”—he
threw out his chest, looked about him with an air of
intense relief, drew in another deep breath, and again
exhaled with satisfaction—“if there are no trees, there’s no
hiding.”
It was the expression on the rugged, weathered face
that sent the blood in a sudden gulping rush from his
brother’s heart. He had seen men frightened, seen men
afraid before they were actually frightened; he had also
seen men stiff with terror in the face both of natural and
so-called supernatural things; but never in his life before
had he seen the look of unearthly dread that now turned
his brother’s face as white as chalk and yet put the glow
of fire in two haunted burning eyes.
Across the darkening landscape the sound of distant
barking had floated to them on the evening wind.
“It’s only a farm-dog barking.” Yet it was Jim’s
deep, quiet voice that said it, one hand upon his brother’s
arm.
“That’s all,” replied Tom, ashamed that he had betrayed
himself, and realizing with a shock of surprise
that it was Jim who now played the rôle of comforter—a
startling change in their relations. “Why, what did you
think it was?”
He tried hard to speak naturally and easily, but his
voice shook. So deep was the brothers’ love and intimacy
that they could not help but share.
Jim lowered his great head. “I thought,” he whispered,
his grey beard touching the other’s cheek, “maybe
it was the wolves”—an agony of terror made both voice
and body tremble—“the Wolves of God!”[10]
2
The interval of thirty years had been bridged easily
enough; it was the secret that left the open gap neither
of them cared or dared to cross. Jim’s reason for hesitation
lay within reach of guesswork, but Tom’s silence
was more complicated.
With strong, simple men, strangers to affectation or
pretence, reserve is a real, almost a sacred thing. Jim
offered nothing more; Tom asked no single question. In
the latter’s mind lay, for one thing, a singular intuitive
certainty: that if he knew the truth he would lose his
brother. How, why, wherefore, he had no notion; whether
by death, or because, having told an awful thing, Jim
would hide—physically or mentally—he knew not, nor
even asked himself. No subtlety lay in Tom, the Orkney
farmer. He merely felt that a knowledge of the truth involved
separation which was death.
Day and night, however, that extraordinary phrase
which, at its first hearing, had frozen his blood, ran on
beating in his mind. With it came always the original,
nameless horror that had held him motionless where he
stood, his brother’s bearded lips against his ear: The
Wolves of God. In some dim way, he sometimes felt—tried
to persuade himself, rather—the horror did not belong
to the phrase alone, but was a sympathetic echo of
what Jim felt himself. It had entered his own mind and
heart. They had always shared in this same strange, intimate
way. The deep brotherly tie accounted for it. Of
the possible transference of thought and emotion he knew
nothing, but this was what he meant perhaps.
At the same time he fought and strove to keep it out,
not because it brought uneasy and distressing feelings
to him, but because he did not wish to pry, to ascertain,
to discover his brother’s secret as by some kind of subterfuge
that seemed too near to eavesdropping almost. Also,
he wished most earnestly to protect him. Meanwhile, in[11]
spite of himself, or perhaps because of himself, he watched
his brother as a wild animal watches its young. Jim was
the only tie he had on earth. He loved him with a
brother’s love, and Jim, similarly, he knew, loved him.
His job was difficult. Love alone could guide him.
He gave openings, but he never questioned:
“Your letter did surprise me, Jim. I was never so
delighted in my life. You had still two years to run.”
“I’d had enough,” was the short reply. “God, man, it
was good to get home again!”
This, and the blunt talk that followed their first meeting,
was all Tom had to go upon, while those eyes that
refused to shut watched ceaselessly always. There was
improvement, unless, which never occurred to Tom, it was
self-control; there was no more talk of trees and water,
the barking of the dogs passed unnoticed, no reference
to the loneliness of the backwoods life passed his lips;
he spent his days fishing, shooting, helping with the work
of the farm, his evenings smoking over a glass—he was
more than temperate—and talking over the days of long
ago.
The signs of uneasiness still were there, but they were
negative, far more suggestive, therefore, than if open and
direct. He desired no company, for instance—an unnatural
thing, thought Tom, after so many years of loneliness.
It was this and the awkward fact that he had given
up two years before his time was finished, renouncing,
therefore, a comfortable pension—it was these two big
details that stuck with such unkind persistence in his
brother’s thoughts. Behind both, moreover, ran ever the
strange whispered phrase. What the words meant, or
whence they were derived, Tom had no possible inkling.
Like the wicked refrain of some forbidden song, they
haunted him day and night, even his sleep not free from
them entirely. All of which, to the simple Orkney farmer,
was so new an experience that he knew not how to deal[12]
with it at all. Too strong to be flustered, he was at any
rate bewildered. And it was for Jim, his brother, he
suffered most.
What perplexed him chiefly, however, was the attitude
his brother showed towards old John Rossiter. He
could almost have imagined that the two men had met
and known each other out in Canada, though Rossiter
showed him how impossible that was, both in point of
time and of geography as well. He had brought them
together within the first few days, and Jim, silent, gloomy,
morose, even surly, had eyed him like an enemy. Old
Rossiter, the milk of human kindness as thick in his veins
as cream, had taken no offence. Grizzled veteran of the
wilds, he had served his full term with the Company and
now enjoyed his well-earned pension. He was full of
stories, reminiscences, adventures of every sort and kind;
he knew men and values, had seen strange things that
only the true wilderness delivers, and he loved nothing
better than to tell them over a glass. He talked with Jim
so genially and affably that little response was called for
luckily, for Jim was glum and unresponsive almost to
rudeness. Old Rossiter noticed nothing. What Tom noticed
was, chiefly perhaps, his brother’s acute uneasiness.
Between his desire to help, his attachment to Rossiter,
and his keen personal distress, he knew not what to do or
say. The situation was becoming too much for him.
The two families, besides—Peace and Rossiter—had
been neighbours for generations, had intermarried freely,
and were related in various degrees. He was too fond of
his brother to feel ashamed, but he was glad when the
visit was over and they were out of their host’s house.
Jim had even declined to drink with him.
“They’re good fellows on the island,” said Tom on
their way home, “but not specially entertaining, perhaps.
We all stick together though. You can trust ’em mostly.”
“I never was a talker, Tom,” came the gruff reply.
“You know that.” And Tom, understanding more than[13]
he understood, accepted the apology and made generous
allowances.
“John likes to talk,” he helped him. “He appreciates
a good listener.”
“It’s the kind of talk I’m finished with,” was the
rejoinder. “The Company and their goings-on don’t interest
me any more. I’ve had enough.”
Tom noticed other things as well with those affectionate
eyes of his that did not want to see yet would not
close. As the days drew in, for instance, Jim seemed
reluctant to leave the house towards evening. Once the
full light of day had passed, he kept indoors. He was
eager and ready enough to shoot in the early morning,
no matter at what hour he had to get up, but he refused
point blank to go with his brother to the lake for an
evening flight. No excuse was offered; he simply declined
to go.
The gap between them thus widened and deepened,
while yet in another sense it grew less formidable. Both
knew, that is, that a secret lay between them for the
first time in their lives, yet both knew also that at the
right and proper moment it would be revealed. Jim only
waited till the proper moment came. And Tom understood.
His deep, simple love was equal to all emergencies.
He respected his brother’s reserve. The obvious
desire of John Rossiter to talk and ask questions, for
instance, he resisted staunchly as far as he was able. Only
when he could help and protect his brother did he yield a
little. The talk was brief, even monosyllabic; neither
the old Hudson Bay fellow nor the Orkney farmer ran to
many words:
“He ain’t right with himself,” offered John, taking
his pipe out of his mouth and leaning forward. “That’s
what I don’t like to see.” He put a skinny hand on Tom’s
knee, and looked earnestly into his face as he said it.
“Jim!” replied the other. “Jim ill, you mean!” It
sounded ridiculous.[14]
“His mind is sick.”
“I don’t understand,” Tom said, though the truth bit
like rough-edged steel into the brother’s heart.
“His soul, then, if you like that better.”
Tom fought with himself a moment, then asked him to
be more explicit.
“More’n I can say,” rejoined the laconic old backwoodsman.
“I don’t know myself. The woods heal some
men and make others sick.”
“Maybe, John, maybe.” Tom fought back his resentment.
“You’ve lived, like him, in lonely places. You
ought to know.” His mouth shut with a snap, as though
he had said too much. Loyalty to his suffering brother
caught him strongly. Already his heart ached for Jim.
He felt angry with Rossiter for his divination, but perceived,
too, that the old fellow meant well and was trying
to help him. If he lost Jim, he lost the world—his all.
A considerable pause followed, during which both men
puffed their pipes with reckless energy. Both, that is,
were a bit excited. Yet both had their code, a code they
would not exceed for worlds.
“Jim,” added Tom presently, making an effort to meet
the sympathy half way, “ain’t quite up to the mark, I’ll
admit that.”
There was another long pause, while Rossiter kept his
eyes on his companion steadily, though without a trace of
expression in them—a habit that the woods had taught
him.
“Jim,” he said at length, with an obvious effort, “is
skeered. And it’s the soul in him that’s skeered.”
Tom wavered dreadfully then. He saw that old Rossiter,
experienced backwoodsman and taught by the Company
as he was, knew where the secret lay, if he did not
yet know its exact terms. It was easy enough to put the
question, yet he hesitated, because loyalty forbade.
“It’s a dirty outfit somewheres,” the old man mumbled
to himself.[15]
Tom sprang to his feet, “If you talk that way,” he
exclaimed angrily, “you’re no friend of mine—or his.”
His anger gained upon him as he said it. “Say that
again,” he cried, “and I’ll knock your teeth——”
He sat back, stunned a moment.
“Forgive me, John,” he faltered, shamed yet still angry.
“It’s pain to me, it’s pain. Jim,” he went on, after a
long breath and a pull at his glass, “Jim is scared, I know
it.” He waited a moment, hunting for the words that he
could use without disloyalty. “But it’s nothing he’s done
himself,” he said, “nothing to his discredit. I know that.”
Old Rossiter looked up, a strange light in his eyes.
“No offence,” he said quietly.
“Tell me what you know,” cried Tom suddenly, standing
up again.
The old factor met his eye squarely, steadfastly. He
laid his pipe aside.
“D’ye really want to hear?” he asked in a lowered
voice. “Because, if you don’t—why, say so right now.
I’m all for justice,” he added, “and always was.”
“Tell me,” said Tom, his heart in his mouth. “Maybe,
if I knew—I might help him.” The old man’s words
woke fear in him. He well knew his passionate, remorseless
sense of justice.
“Help him,” repeated the other. “For a man skeered
in his soul there ain’t no help. But—if you want to hear—I’ll
tell you.”
“Tell me,” cried Tom. “I will help him,” while rising
anger fought back rising fear.
John took another pull at his glass.
“Jest between you and me like.”
“Between you and me,” said Tom. “Get on with it.”
There was a deep silence in the little room. Only the
sound of the sea came in, the wind behind it.
“The Wolves,” whispered old Rossiter. “The Wolves
of God.”
Tom sat still in his chair, as though struck in the[16]
face. He shivered. He kept silent and the silence seemed
to him long and curious. His heart was throbbing, the
blood in his veins played strange tricks. All he remembered
was that old Rossiter had gone on talking. The
voice, however, sounded far away and distant. It was
all unreal, he felt, as he went homewards across the bleak,
wind-swept upland, the sound of the sea for ever in his
ears....
Yes, old John Rossiter, damned be his soul, had gone
on talking. He had said wild, incredible things. Damned
be his soul! His teeth should be smashed for that. It
was outrageous, it was cowardly, it was not true.
“Jim,” he thought, “my brother, Jim!” as he ploughed
his way wearily against the wind. “I’ll teach him. I’ll
teach him to spread such wicked tales!” He referred to
Rossiter. “God blast these fellows! They come home
from their outlandish places and think they can say anything!
I’ll knock his yellow dog’s teeth...!”
While, inside, his heart went quailing, crying for help,
afraid.
He tried hard to remember exactly what old John had
said. Round Garden Lake—that’s where Jim was located
in his lonely Post—there was a tribe of Redskins. They
were of unusual type. Malefactors among them—thieves,
criminals, murderers—were not punished. They were
merely turned out by the Tribe to die.
But how?
The Wolves of God took care of them. What were
the Wolves of God?
A pack of wolves the Redskins held in awe, a sacred
pack, a spirit pack—God curse the man! Absurd, outlandish
nonsense! Superstitious humbug! A pack of
wolves that punished malefactors, killing but never eating
them. “Torn but not eaten,” the words came back to
him, “white men as well as red. They could even cross
the sea....”[17]
“He ought to be strung up for telling such wild yarns.
By God—I’ll teach him!”
“Jim! My brother, Jim! It’s monstrous.”
But the old man, in his passionate cold justice, had
said a yet more terrible thing, a thing that Tom would
never forget, as he never could forgive it: “You mustn’t
keep him here; you must send him away. We cannot have
him on the island.” And for that, though he could scarcely
believe his ears, wondering afterwards whether he heard
aright, for that, the proper answer to which was a blow
in the mouth, Tom knew that his old friendship and affection
had turned to bitter hatred.
“If I don’t kill him, for that cursed lie, may God—and
Jim—forgive me!”
3
It was a few days later that the storm caught the
islands, making them tremble in their sea-born bed. The
wind tearing over the treeless expanse was terrible, the
lightning lit the skies. No such rain had ever been known.
The building shook and trembled. It almost seemed the
sea had burst her limits, and the waves poured in. Its
fury and the noises that the wind made affected both the
brothers, but Jim disliked the uproar most. It made him
gloomy, silent, morose. It made him—Tom perceived it
at once—uneasy. “Scared in his soul”—the ugly phrase
came back to him.
“God save anyone who’s out to-night,” said Jim anxiously,
as the old farm rattled about his head. Whereupon
the door opened as of itself. There was no knock. It flew
wide, as if the wind had burst it. Two drenched and
beaten figures showed in the gap against the lurid sky—old
John Rossiter and Sandy. They laid their fowling pieces
down and took off their capes; they had been up at the lake
for the evening flight and six birds were in the game bag.
So suddenly had the storm come up that they had been
caught before they could get home.[18]
And, while Tom welcomed them, looked after their
creature wants, and made them feel at home as in duty
bound, no visit, he felt at the same time, could have been
less opportune. Sandy did not matter—Sandy never did
matter anywhere, his personality being negligible—but
John Rossiter was the last man Tom wished to see just
then. He hated the man; hated that sense of implacable
justice that he knew was in him; with the slightest excuse
he would have turned him out and sent him on to his own
home, storm or no storm. But Rossiter provided no excuse;
he was all gratitude and easy politeness, more pleasant
and friendly to Jim even than to his brother. Tom
set out the whisky and sugar, sliced the lemon, put the
kettle on, and furnished dry coats while the soaked garments
hung up before the roaring fire that Orkney makes
customary even when days are warm.
“It might be the equinoctials,” observed Sandy, “if it
wasn’t late October.” He shivered, for the tropics had
thinned his blood.
“This ain’t no ordinary storm,” put in Rossiter, drying
his drenched boots. “It reminds me a bit”—he jerked
his head to the window that gave seawards, the rush of
rain against the panes half drowning his voice—“reminds
me a bit of yonder.” He looked up, as though to find
someone to agree with him, only one such person being
in the room.
“Sure, it ain’t,” agreed Jim at once, but speaking
slowly, “no ordinary storm.” His voice was quiet as a
child’s. Tom, stooping over the kettle, felt something
cold go trickling down his back. “It’s from acrost the
Atlantic too.”
“All our big storms come from the sea,” offered Sandy,
saying just what Sandy was expected to say. His lank
red hair lay matted on his forehead, making him look like
an unhappy collie dog.
“There’s no hospitality,” Rossiter changed the talk,
“like an islander’s,” as Tom mixed and filled the glasses.[19]
“He don’t even ask ‘Say when?’” He chuckled in his
beard and turned to Sandy, well pleased with the compliment
to his host. “Now, in Malay,” he added dryly,
“it’s probably different, I guess.” And the two men, one
from Labrador, the other from the tropics, fell to bantering
one another with heavy humour, while Tom made
things comfortable and Jim stood silent with his back to
the fire. At each blow of the wind that shook the building,
a suitable remark was made, generally by Sandy:
“Did you hear that now?” “Ninety miles an hour at
least.” “Good thing you build solid in this country!”
while Rossiter occasionally repeated that it was an “uncommon
storm” and that “it reminded” him of the
northern tempests he had known “out yonder.”
Tom said little, one thought and one thought only in
his heart—the wish that the storm would abate and his
guests depart. He felt uneasy about Jim. He hated Rossiter.
In the kitchen he had steadied himself already with
a good stiff drink, and was now half-way through a second;
the feeling was in him that he would need their help
before the evening was out. Jim, he noticed, had left his
glass untouched. His attention, clearly, went to the wind
and the outer night; he added little to the conversation.
“Hark!” cried Sandy’s shrill voice. “Did you hear
that? That wasn’t wind, I’ll swear.” He sat up, looking
for all the world like a dog pricking its ears to something
no one else could hear.
“The sea coming over the dunes,” said Rossiter.
“There’ll be an awful tide to-night and a terrible sea off
the Swarf. Moon at the full, too.” He cocked his head
sideways to listen. The roaring was tremendous, waves
and wind combining with a result that almost shook the
ground. Rain hit the glass with incessant volleys like
duck shot.
It was then that Jim spoke, having said no word for
a long time.[20]
“It’s good there’s no trees,” he mentioned quietly.
“I’m glad of that.”
“There’d be fearful damage, wouldn’t there?” remarked
Sandy. “They might fall on the house too.”
But it was the tone Jim used that made Rossiter turn
stiffly in his chair, looking first at the speaker, then at
his brother. Tom caught both glances and saw the hard
keen glitter in the eyes. This kind of talk, he decided,
had got to stop, yet how to stop it he hardly knew, for
his were not subtle methods, and rudeness to his guests
ran too strong against the island customs. He refilled
the glasses, thinking in his blunt fashion how best to
achieve his object, when Sandy helped the situation without
knowing it.
“That’s my first,” he observed, and all burst out laughing.
For Sandy’s tenth glass was equally his “first,” and
he absorbed his liquor like a sponge, yet showed no effects
of it until the moment when he would suddenly collapse
and sink helpless to the ground. The glass in question,
however, was only his third, the final moment still far
away.
“Three in one and one in three,” said Rossiter, amid
the general laughter, while Sandy, grave as a judge, half
emptied it at a single gulp. Good-natured, obtuse as a
cart-horse, the tropics, it seemed, had first worn out his
nerves, then removed them entirely from his body. “That’s
Malay theology, I guess,” finished Rossiter. And the
laugh broke out again. Whereupon, setting his glass down,
Sandy offered his usual explanation that the hot lands had
thinned his blood, that he felt the cold in these “arctic
islands,” and that alcohol was a necessity of life with him.
Tom, grateful for the unexpected help, encouraged him to
talk, and Sandy, accustomed to neglect as a rule, responded
readily. Having saved the situation, however, he now
unwittingly led it back into the danger zone.
“A night for tales, eh?” he remarked, as the wind
came howling with a burst of strangest noises against the[21]
house. “Down there in the States,” he went on, “they’d
say the evil spirits were out. They’re a superstitious
crowd, the natives. I remember once——” And he told
a tale, half foolish, half interesting, of a mysterious track
he had seen when following buffalo in the jungle. It ran
close to the spoor of a wounded buffalo for miles, a track
unlike that of any known animal, and the natives, though
unable to name it, regarded it with awe. It was a good
sign, a kill was certain. They said it was a spirit track.
“You got your buffalo?” asked Tom.
“Found him two miles away, lying dead. The mysterious
spoor came to an end close beside the carcass. It
didn’t continue.”
“And that reminds me——” began old Rossiter, ignoring
Tom’s attempt to introduce another subject. He told
them of the haunted island at Eagle River, and a tale of
the man who would not stay buried on another island
off the coast. From that he went on to describe the strange
man-beast that hides in the deep forests of Labrador, manifesting
but rarely, and dangerous to men who stray too
far from camp, men with a passion for wild life over-strong
in their blood—the great mythical Wendigo. And
while he talked, Tom noticed that Sandy used each pause
as a good moment for a drink, but that Jim’s glass still
remained untouched.
The atmosphere of incredible things, thus, grew in the
little room, much as it gathers among the shadows round
a forest camp-fire when men who have seen strange places
of the world give tongue about them, knowing they will
not be laughed at—an atmosphere, once established, it is
vain to fight against. The ingrained superstition that
hides in every mother’s son comes up at such times to
breathe. It came up now. Sandy, closer by several glasses
to the moment, Tom saw, when he would be suddenly
drunk, gave birth again, a tale this time of a Scottish
planter who had brutally dismissed a native servant for no
other reason than that he disliked him. The man disappeared[22]
completely, but the villagers hinted that he would—soon
indeed that he had—come back, though “not quite
as he went.” The planter armed, knowing that vengeance
might be violent. A black panther, meanwhile, was seen
prowling about the bungalow. One night a noise outside
his door on the veranda roused him. Just in time to see
the black brute leaping over the railings into the compound,
he fired, and the beast fell with a savage growl
of pain. Help arrived and more shots were fired into
the animal, as it lay, mortally wounded already, lashing
its tail upon the grass. The lanterns, however, showed
that instead of a panther, it was the servant they had shot
to shreds.
Sandy told the story well, a certain odd conviction in
his tone and manner, neither of them at all to the liking
of his host. Uneasiness and annoyance had been growing
in Tom for some time already, his inability to control the
situation adding to his anger. Emotion was accumulating
in him dangerously; it was directed chiefly against
Rossiter, who, though saying nothing definite, somehow
deliberately encouraged both talk and atmosphere. Given
the conditions, it was natural enough the talk should take
the turn it did take, but what made Tom more and more
angry was that, if Rossiter had not been present, he could
have stopped it easily enough. It was the presence of the
old Hudson Bay man that prevented his taking decided
action. He was afraid of Rossiter, afraid of putting his
back up. That was the truth. His recognition of it made
him furious.
“Tell us another, Sandy McKay,” said the veteran.
“There’s a lot in such tales. They’re found the world over—men
turning into animals and the like.”
And Sandy, yet nearer to his moment of collapse, but
still showing no effects, obeyed willingly. He noticed
nothing; the whisky was good, his tales were appreciated,
and that sufficed him. He thanked Tom, who just then
refilled his glass, and went on with his tale. But Tom,[23]
hatred and fury in his heart, had reached the point where
he could no longer contain himself, and Rossiter’s last
words inflamed him. He went over, under cover of a
tremendous clap of wind, to fill the old man’s glass. The
latter refused, covering the tumbler with his big, lean
hand. Tom stood over him a moment, lowering his face.
“You keep still,” he whispered ferociously, but so that no
one else heard it. He glared into his eyes with an intensity
that held danger, and Rossiter, without answering,
flung back that glare with equal, but with a calmer, anger.
The wind, meanwhile, had a trick of veering, and each
time it shifted, Jim shifted his seat too. Apparently, he
preferred to face the sound, rather than have his back
to it.
“Your turn now for a tale,” said Rossiter with purpose,
when Sandy finished. He looked across at him, just
as Jim, hearing the burst of wind at the walls behind him,
was in the act of moving his chair again. The same moment
the attack rattled the door and windows facing him.
Jim, without answering, stood for a moment still as death,
not knowing which way to turn.
“It’s beatin’ up from all sides,” remarked Rossiter,
“like it was goin’ round the building.”
There was a moment’s pause, the four men listening
with awe to the roar and power of the terrific wind. Tom
listened too, but at the same time watched, wondering
vaguely why he didn’t cross the room and crash his fist
into the old man’s chattering mouth. Jim put out his
hand and took his glass, but did not raise it to his lips.
And a lull came abruptly in the storm, the wind sinking
into a moment’s dreadful silence. Tom and Rossiter
turned their heads in the same instant and stared into
each other’s eyes. For Tom the instant seemed enormously
prolonged. He realized the challenge in the other
and that his rudeness had roused it into action. It had
become a contest of wills—Justice battling against Love.[24]
Jim’s glass had now reached his lips, and the chattering
of his teeth against its rim was audible.
But the lull passed quickly and the wind began again,
though so gently at first, it had the sound of innumerable
swift footsteps treading lightly, of countless hands fingering
the doors and windows, but then suddenly with a
mighty shout as it swept against the walls, rushed across
the roof and descended like a battering-ram against the
farther side.
“God, did you hear that?” cried Sandy. “It’s trying
to get in!” and having said it, he sank in a heap beside
his chair, all of a sudden completely drunk. “It’s wolves
or panthersh,” he mumbled in his stupor on the floor,
“but whatsh’s happened to Malay?” It was the last thing
he said before unconsciousness took him, and apparently
he was insensible to the kick on the head from a heavy
farmer’s boot. For Jim’s glass had fallen with a crash and
the second kick was stopped midway. Tom stood spell-bound,
unable to move or speak, as he watched his brother
suddenly cross the room and open a window into the very
teeth of the gale.
“Let be! Let be!” came the voice of Rossiter, an
authority in it, a curious gentleness too, both of them
new. He had risen, his lips were still moving, but the
words that issued from them were inaudible, as the wind
and rain leaped with a galloping violence into the room,
smashing the glass to atoms and dashing a dozen loose
objects helter-skelter on to the floor.
“I saw it!” cried Jim, in a voice that rose above the
din and clamour of the elements. He turned and faced
the others, but it was at Rossiter he looked. “I saw the
leader.” He shouted to make himself heard, although the
tone was quiet. “A splash of white on his great chest.
I saw them all!”
At the words, and at the expression in Jim’s eyes, old
Rossiter, white to the lips, dropped back into his chair as
if a blow had struck him. Tom, petrified, felt his own[25]
heart stop. For through the broken window, above yet
within the wind, came the sound of a wolf-pack running,
howling in deep, full-throated chorus, mad for blood. It
passed like a whirlwind and was gone. And, of the three
men so close together, one sitting and two standing, Jim
alone was in that terrible moment wholly master of himself.
Before the others could move or speak, he turned and
looked full into the eyes of each in succession. His speech
went back to his wilderness days:
“I done it,” he said calmly. “I killed him—and I got
ter go.”
With a look of mystical horror on his face, he took
one stride, flung the door wide, and vanished into the
darkness.
So quick were both words and action, that Tom’s
paralysis passed only as the draught from the broken window
banged the door behind him. He seemed to leap
across the room, old Rossiter, tears on his cheeks and
his lips mumbling foolish words, so close upon his heels
that the backward blow of fury Tom aimed at his face
caught him only in the neck and sent him reeling sideways
to the floor instead of flat upon his back.
“Murderer! My brother’s death upon you!” he shouted
as he tore the door open again and plunged out into the
night.
And the odd thing that happened then, the thing that
touched old John Rossiter’s reason, leaving him from that
moment till his death a foolish man of uncertain mind
and memory, happened when he and the unconscious,
drink-sodden Sandy lay alone together on the stone floor
of that farm-house room.
Rossiter, dazed by the blow and his fall, but in full
possession of his senses, and the anger gone out of him
owing to what he had brought about, this same John Rossiter
sat up and saw Sandy also sitting up and staring at[26]
him hard. And Sandy was sober as a judge, his eyes and
speech both clear, even his face unflushed.
“John Rossiter,” he said, “it was not God who appointed
you executioner. It was the devil.” And his
eyes, thought Rossiter, were like the eyes of an angel.
“Sandy McKay,” he stammered, his teeth chattering
and breath failing him. “Sandy McKay!” It was all
the words that he could find. But Sandy, already sunk
back into his stupor again, was stretched drunk and incapable
upon the farm-house floor, and remained in that
condition till the dawn.
Jim’s body lay hidden among the dunes for many
months and in spite of the most careful and prolonged
searching. It was another storm that laid it bare. The
sand had covered it. The clothes were gone, and the
flesh, torn but not eaten, was naked to the December sun
and wind.