Home
  By Author [ A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z |  Other Symbols ]
  By Title [ A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z |  Other Symbols ]
  By Language
all Classics books content using ISYS

Download this book: [ ASCII | HTML | PDF ]

Look for this book on Amazon


We have new books nearly every day.
If you would like a news letter once a week or once a month
fill out this form and we will give you a summary of the books for that week or month by email.

Title: The Heart of the Ancient Wood
Author: Roberts, Charles G. D., Sir
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "The Heart of the Ancient Wood" ***


http://www.pgdpcanada.net



                           BY THE SAME AUTHOR

                        BY THE MARSHES OF MINAS
                        THE FORGE IN THE FOREST
                         A SISTER TO EVANGELINE

[Illustration: ‘Get off!’ she ordered sharply Page 153]



                            THE HEART OF THE
                              ANCIENT WOOD


                                   BY
                         CHARLES G. D. ROBERTS


                         WITH SIX ILLUSTRATIONS


                             METHUEN & CO.
                          36 ESSEX STREET W.C.
                                 LONDON
                                  1902


 Copyright by Silver, Burdett & Company in the United States of America
                         _All rights reserved_

                                   To
                              L. W. v. U.



                                CONTENTS


  Chapter                                                            Page
  I. The Watchers of the Trail                                          1
  II. The Cabin in the Clearing                                        18
  III. The Exiles from the Settlement                                  30
  IV. Miranda and the Furtive Folk                                     46
  V. Kroof, the She-bear                                               64
  VI. The Initiation of Miranda                                        76
  VII. The Intimates                                                   88
  VIII. Axe and Antler                                                107
  IX. The Pax Mirandæ                                                 121
  X. The Routing of the Philistines                                   133
  XI. Miranda and Young Dave                                          145
  XII. Young Dave at the Clearing                                     162
  XIII. Milking-time                                                  173
  XIV. Moonlight and Moose-call                                       187
  XV. A Venison Steak                                                 203
  XVI. Death for a Little Life                                        225
  XVII. In the Roar of the Rapids                                     245
  XVIII. The Forfeit of the Alien                                     262



                             ILLUSTRATIONS


  “‘Get off!’ she ordered sharply”                         _Frontispiece_
                                                              FACING PAGE
  “She . . . stood motionless, erect and formidable”                   50
  “She sprang up, . . . her whole weight straining on the tether”     102
  “He ran wildly over the snow patches”                               140
  “The moose recognized her”                                          196
  “‘Stroke on the right!’ came Dave’s sharp order”                    250



                     THE HEART OF THE ANCIENT WOOD



                               Chapter I
                       The Watchers of the Trail


Not indolently soft, like that which sifts in green shadow through the
leafage of a summer garden, but tense, alertly and mysteriously
expectant, was the silence of the forest. It was somehow like a vast
bubble of glass, blown to a fineness so tenuous that a small sound, were
it but to strike the one preordained and mystic note, might shatter it
down in loud ruin. Yet it had existed there flawless for generations,
transmuting into its own quality all such infrequent and inconsequent
disturbance as might arise from the far-off cry of the panther, or the
thin chirp of the clambering nuthatch, the long, solemn calling of the
taciturn moose, twice or thrice repeated under the round October moon,
or the noise of some great wind roaring heavily in the remote tops of
pine and birch and hemlock. Few and slender were the rays of sun that
pierced down through those high tops. The air that washed the endless
vistas of brown-green shadow was of a marvellous clarity, not blurred by
any stain of dust or vapour. Its magical transparency was confusing to
an eye not born and bred to it, making the far branches seem near, and
the near twigs unreal, disturbing the accustomed perspective, and
hinting of some elvish deception in familiar and apparent things.

The trail through the forest was rough and long unused. In spots the
mosses and ground vines had so overgrown it that only the broad scars on
the tree trunks, where the lumberman’s axe had blazed them for a sign,
served to distinguish it from a score of radiating vistas. But just
here, where it climbed a long, gradual slope, the run of water down its
slight hollow had sufficed to keep its worn stones partly bare.
Moreover, though the furrowing steps of man had left it these many
seasons untrodden, it was never wholly neglected. A path once fairly
differentiated by the successive passings of feet will keep, almost
forever, a spell for the persuasion of all that go afoot. The old trail
served the flat, shuffling tread of Kroof, the great she-bear, as she
led her half-grown cub to feast on the blueberry patches far up the
mountain. It caught the whim of Ten-Tine, the caribou, as he convoyed
his slim cows down to occasional pasturage in the alder swamps of the
slow Quah-Davic.

On this September afternoon, when the stillness seemed to wait
wide-eyed, suddenly a cock-partridge came whirring up the trail,
alighted on a gnarled limb, turned his outstretched head twice from side
to side as he peered with his round beads of eyes, and then stiffened
into the moveless semblance of one of the fungoid excrescences with
which the tree was studded. A moment more and the sound of footsteps, of
the nails of heavy boots striking on the stones, grew conspicuous
against the silence. Up the trail came slouching, with a strong but
laborious stride, a large, grizzled man in grey home-spuns. His trousers
were stuffed unevenly into the tops of his rusty boots; on his head was
a drooping, much-battered hat of a felt that had been brown; from his
belt hung a large knife in a fur-fringed leather sheath; and over his
shoulder he carried an axe, from the head of which swung a large bundle.
The bundle was tied up in a soiled patchwork quilt of gaudy colours, and
from time to time there came from it a flat clatter suggestive of tins.
At one side protruded the black handle of a frying-pan, half wrapped up
in newspaper.

Had he been hunter or trapper, Dave Titus would have carried a gun. Or
had he been a townsman, a villager, or even an ordinary small country
farmer, he would have taken care to be well armed before penetrating a
day’s journey into the heart of the ancient wood. But being a lumberman,
he was neither quite of the forest nor quite of the open. His winters he
spent in the very deep of the wilderness, in a log camp crowded with his
mates, eating salt pork, beans, hot bread; and too busy all day long
with his unwearying axe to wage any war upon the furred and feathered
people. His summers were passed with plough and hoe on a little
half-tilled farm in the Settlements. He had, therefore, neither the
desire to kill nor the impulse to fear, as he traversed, neutral and
indifferent, these silent but not desolated territories. Not desolated;
for the ancient wood was populous in its reserve. Observant, keen of
vision, skilled in woodcraft though he was, the grave-faced old
lumberman saw nothing in the tranquillity about him save tree trunks,
and fallen, rotting remnants, and mossed hillocks, and thickets of
tangled shrub. He noted the difference, not known to the general eye,
between white spruce, black spruce, and fir, between grey birch and
yellow birch, between withe-wood and viburnum; and he read
instinctively, by the lichen growth about their edges, how many seasons
had laid their disfeaturing touch upon those old scars of the axe which
marked the trail. But for all his craft he thought himself alone. He
guessed not of the many eyes that watched him.

In truth, his progress was the focus of an innumerable attention. The
furtive eyes that followed his movements were some of them timorously
hostile, some impotently vindictive, some indifferent; but all alien.
All were at one in the will to remain unseen; so all kept an unwinking
immobility, and were swallowed up, as it were, in the universal
stillness.

The cock-partridge, a well-travelled bird who knew the Settlements and
their violent perils, watched with indignant apprehension. Not without
purpose had he come whirring so tumultuously up the trail, a warning to
the ears of all the wood-folk. His fear was lest the coming of this grey
man-figure should mean an invasion of those long, black sticks which
went off with smoky bang when they were pointed. He effaced himself till
his brown mottled feathers were fairly one with the mottled brown bark
of his perch; but his liquid eyes lost not a least movement of the
stranger.

The nuthatch, who had been walking straight up the perpendicular trunk
of a pine when the sound of the alien footsteps froze him, peered
fixedly around the tree. His eye, a black point of inquiry, had never
before seen anything like this clumsy and slow-moving shape, but knew it
for something dangerous. His little slaty head, jutting at an acute
angle from the bark, looked like a mere caprice of knot or wood fungus;
but it had the singular quality of moving smoothly around the trunk, as
the lumberman advanced, so as to keep him always in view.

Equally curious, but quivering with fear, two wood-mice watched him
intently, sitting under the broad leaf of a skunk-cabbage not three feet
from the trail. Their whiskers touched each other’s noses, conveying
thrills and palpitations of terror as he drew near, drew nearer,
came—and passed. But not unless that blind, unheeding heel had been on
the very point of crushing them would they have disobeyed the prime law
of their tribe, which taught them that to sit still was to sit unseen.

A little farther back from the trail, under a spreading tangle of
ironwood, on a bed of tawny moss crouched a hare. His ears lay quite
flat along his back. His eyes watched with aversion, not unmixed with
scorn, the heavy, tall creature that moved with such effort and such
noise. “Never,” thought the hare, disdainfully, “would he be able to
escape from his enemies!” As the delicate current of air which pulses
imperceptibly through the forest bore the scent of the man to the hare’s
hiding-place, the fine nostrils of the latter worked rapidly with
dislike. On a sudden, however, came a waft of other scent; and the
hare’s form seemed to shrink to half its size, the nostrils rigidly
dilating.

It was the scent of the weasel—to the hare it was the very essence of
death. But it passed in an instant, and then the hare’s exact vision saw
whence it came. For the weasel, unlike all the other folk of the wood,
was moving. He was keeping pace with the man, at a distance of some ten
feet from the trail. So fitted, however, was his colouring to his
surrounding, so shadow-like in its soundless grace was his motion, that
the man never discerned him. The weasel’s eyes were fixed upon the
intruder with a malignancy of hate that might well have seared through
his unconsciousness. Fortunately for the big lumberman, the weasel’s
strength, stupendous for its size, was in no way commensurate with its
malice; or the journey would have come to an end just there, and the
gaudy bundle would have rested on the trail to be a long wonder to the
mice.

The weasel presently crossed the yet warm scent of a mink, whereupon he
threw up his vain tracking of the woodman and turned off in disgust. He
did not like the mink, and wondered what that fish-eater could be
wanting so far back from the water. He was not afraid exactly,—few
animals know fear so little as the weasel,—but he kept a small shred of
prudence in his savage little heart, and he knew that the mink was
scarcely less ferocious than himself, while nearly thrice his size.

From the mossy crotch of an old ash tree, slanting over the trail, a
pair of pale, yellow-green eyes, with fine black slits for pupils,
watched the traveller’s march. They were set in a round, furry head,
which was pressed flat to the branch and partly overhung it. The
pointed, tufted ears lay flat back upon the round brown head. Into the
bark of the branch four sets of razor-edged claws dug themselves
venomously; for the wild-cat knew, perhaps through some occult
communication from its far-off domesticated kin of hearth and door-sill,
that in man he saw the one unvanquishable enemy to all the folk of the
wood. He itched fiercely to drop upon the man’s bowed neck, just where
it showed, red and defenceless, between the gaudy bundle and the rim of
the brown hat. But the wild-cat, the lesser lynx, was heir to a ferocity
well tempered with discretion, and the old lumberman slouched onward
unharmed, all ignorant of that green gleam of hate playing upon his
neck.

It was a very different gaze which followed him from the heart of a
little colony of rotting stumps, in a dark hollow near the trail. Here,
in the cool gloom, sat Kroof, the bear, rocking her huge body
contemplatively from side to side on her haunches, and occasionally
slapping off a mosquito from the sensitive tip of her nose. She had no
cub running with her that season, to keep her busy and anxious. For an
hour she had been comfortably rocking, untroubled by fear or desire or
indignation; but when the whirring of the cock-partridge gave her
warning, and the grating of the nailed boots caught her ear, she had
stiffened instantly into one of the big brown stumps. Her little red
eyes followed the stranger with something like a twinkle in them. She
had seen men before, and she neither actively feared them nor actively
disliked them. Only, averse to needless trouble, she cared not to
intrude herself on their notice; and therefore she obeyed the custom of
the wood, and kept still. But the bear is far the most human of all the
furry wood-folk, the most versatile and largely tolerant, the least
enslaved by its surroundings. It has an ample sense of humour, also,
that most humane of gifts; and it was with a certain relish that Kroof
recognized in the grey-clad stranger one of those loud axemen from whose
camp, far down by the Quah-Davic, she had only last winter stolen
certain comforting rations of pork. Her impulse was to rock again with
satisfaction at the thought, but that would have been out of keeping
with her present character as a decaying stump, and she restrained
herself. She also restrained a whimsical impulse to knock the gaudy
bundle from the stranger’s back with one sweep of her great paw, and see
if it might not contain many curious and edifying things, if not even
pork. It was not till she had watched him well up the trail and fairly
over the crest of the slope that, with a deep, non-committal grunt, she
again turned her attention to the mosquitoes, which had been learning
all the tenderness of a bear’s nose.

These were but a few of the watchers of the trail, whose eyes,
themselves unseen, scrutinized the invader of the ancient wood. Each
step of all his journey was well noted. Not so securely and
unconsideringly would he have gone, however, had he known that only the
year before there had come a pair of panthers to occupy a vacant lair on
the neighbouring mountain side. No, his axe would have swung free, and
his eyes would have scanned searchingly every overhanging branch; for
none knew better than old Dave Titus how dangerous a foe was the tawny
northern panther. But just now, as it chanced, the panther pair were
hunting away over in the other valley, the low, dense-wooded valley of
the Quah-Davic.

As matters stood, for all the watchers that marked him, the old
lumberman walked amid no more imminent menace than that which glittered
down upon him from four pairs of small bright eyes, high up among the
forking limbs of an old pine. In a well-hidden hole, as in a nursery
window, were bunched the smooth heads of four young squirrels,
interested beyond measure in the strange animal plodding so heavily
below them. Had they been Settlement squirrels they would, without
doubt, have passed shrill comments, more or less uncomplimentary; for
the squirrel loves free speech. But when he dwells among the folk of the
ancient wood he, even he, learns reticence; and, in that neighbourhood,
if a young squirrel talks out loud in the nest, the consequences which
follow have a tendency to be final. When the old lumberman had passed
out of their range of view, the four little heads disappeared into the
musky brown depths of the nest, and talked the event over in the
smallest of whispers.

As the lumberman journeyed, covering good ground with his long,
slouching stride, the trail gradually descended through a tract where
moss-grown boulders were strown thick among the trees. Presently the
clear green brown of the mid-forest twilight took a pallor ahead of him,
and the air began to lose its pungency of bark and mould. Then came the
flat, soft smell of sedge; and the trees fell away: and the traveller
came out upon the shores of a lake. Its waters were outspread
pearly-white from a fringe of pale green rushes, and the opposite shore
looked black against the pale, hazy sky. A stone’s throw beyond the
sedge rose a little naked island of black rock, and in the sheen of
water off its extremity there floated the black, solitary figure of a
loon.

As the lumberman came out clear of the trees, and the gaudy colours of
his bundle caught its eye, the bird sank itself lower in the water till
only its erect neck and wedge-shaped head were in view. Then, opening
wide its beak, it sent forth its wild peal of inexplicable and
disconcerting laughter—an affront to the silence, but a note of monition
to all the creatures of the lake. The loon had seen men before, and
despised them, and found pleasure in proclaiming the scorn. It despised
even the long, black sticks that went off with smoky bang when pointed;
for had it not learned, in another lake near the Settlement, to dive at
the flash and so elude the futile, spattering pellets that flew from the
stick.

The lumberman gave neither a first nor a second thought to the loon at
all, but quickened his pace in the cheerful open. The trail now led some
way along the lake-side, till the shore became higher and rougher, and
behind a cape of rock a bustling river emptied itself, carrying lines of
foam and long ripples far out across the lake’s placidity. From the cape
of rock towered a bleak, storm-whitened rampike, which had been a pine
tree before the lightning smote it. Its broken top was just now serving
as the perch of a white-headed eagle. The great bird bent fierce yellow
eyes upon the stranger,—eyes with a cruel-looking, straight overhang of
brow,—and stretched its flat-crowned, snake-like head far out to regard
him. It opened the rending sickle of its beak and yelped at him—three
times at deliberated interval. Then the traveller vanished again into
the gloom of the wood, and the arrogant bird plumed himself upon a
triumph.

The trail now touched the river, only to forsake it and plunge into the
heart of a growth of young Canada balsam. This sweet-smelling region
traversed, the soft roar of the stream was left behind, and the forest
resumed its former monumental features. For another hour the man tramped
steadily, growing more conscious of his load, more and more uninterested
in his surroundings; and for another hour his every step was noted by
intent, unwinking eyes from branch and thicket. Then again the woods
fell apart with a spreading of daylight. He came out upon the spacious
solitude of a clearing; pushed through the harsh belt of blackberry and
raspberry canes, which grew as a neutral zone between forest and open;
picked his way between the burned stumps and crimson fireweeds of a long
desolate pasture; and threw down his bundle at the door of the loneliest
cabin he had ever chanced to see.



                               Chapter II
                       The Cabin in the Clearing


Though a spur of black, uncompromising spruce woods gave it near shelter
on the north, the harshly naked clearing fell away from it on the other
three sides, and left the cabin bleak. Not a shrub nor a sapling broke
the bareness of the massive log walls, whence the peeling bark hung in
strips that fluttered desolately to every wind. Only a few tall and
ragged weeds, pale green, and with sparse, whitish grey seed-heads,
straggled against the foundation logs. The rough deal door sagged on its
hinges, half open. The door-sill gaped with a wide crack, rotted along
the edges; and along the crack grew a little fringe of grass, ruthlessly
crushed down by old Dave’s gaudy bundle. The two small windows still
held fragments of glass in their sashes,—glass thick with spiders’ webs,
and captive dust, and the _débris_ of withered insects. The wide-eaved
roof, well built of split cedar-slabs, with a double overlay of bark,
seemed to have turned a brave front to the assault of the seasons, and
showed few casualties. Some thirty paces to one side stood another
cabin, lower and more roughly built, whose roof had partly fallen in.
This had been the barn,—this, with a battered lean-to of poles and
interwoven spruce boughs against its southerly wall. The barn was set
down at haphazard, in no calculated or contenting relation to the main
building, but just as the lay of the hillocks had made it simplest to
find a level for the foundations. All about it grew a tall, coarse
grass, now grey and drily rustling, the brood of seeds which in past
years had sifted through the chinks from the hay stored in the loft. The
space between the two buildings, and for many square yards about the
cabin door, was strewn thick with decaying chips, through which the dock
and plantain leaves, hardy strangers from the Settlement, pushed up
their broad, obtuse intrusion. Over toward the barn lay the bleached
skeleton of a bob-sled, the rusted iron shoe partly twisted from one
runner; and in the centre of the space, where the chips gathered
thickest and the plantains had gained least ground, lay a split
chopping-log, whose scars bore witness to the vigour of a vanished axe.

The old lumberman fetched a deep breath, depressed by the immeasurable
desolation. His eye wandered over the weedy fields, long fallow, and the
rugged stump lots aflame here and there with patches of golden-rod and
crimson fire-weed. To him these misplaced flares of colour seemed only
to make the loneliness more forlorn, perhaps by their association with
homelier and kindlier scenes. He leaned on his axe, and pointed
indefinitely with his thumb.

“Squat here! an’ farm yon!” said he, with contemplative disapproval.
“I’d see myself furder first! But Kirstie Craig’s got grit for ten men!”

Then he pushed the door open, lifting it to ease the hinge, and stepped
peeringly inside. As he did so, a barn-swallow flickered out through a
broken pane.

The cabin contained two rooms, one much smaller than the other. The
ceiling of the smaller room was formed by a loft at the level of the
eaves, open toward the main room, which had no ceiling but the roof of
slabs and bark. Here, running up through the east gable, was a chimney
of rough stone, arched at the base to contain a roomy hearth, with
swinging crane and rusted andirons. A settle of plank was fixed along
the wall under the window. Down the middle of the room, its flank toward
the hearth, ran a narrow table of two planks, supported by unsmoothed
stakes driven into the floor. In the corner farthest from the chimney,
over against the partition, was a shallow sleeping bunk, a mere oblong
box partly filled with dry red pickings of spruce and hemlock. The floor
was littered with dead leaves and with ashes wind-drifted from the
hearth.

Old Dave went over and glanced into the bunk. He found the spruce
pickings scratched up toward one end, and arranged as they would be for
no human occupant.

“Critters been sleepin’ here!” he muttered. Then laying down his bundle,
he turned his attention to the hearth, and soon the old chimney tasted
once more, after its long solitude, the cheer of the familiar heat.

It was now close upon sundown, and the lumberman was hungry. He untied
the grimy, many-coloured quilt. Kroof, the she-bear, had been right in
her surmise as to that bundle. It did contain pork,—a small, well-salted
chunk of it; and presently the red-and-white-streaked slices were
sputtering crisply in the pan, while the walls and roof saturated
themselves once more in old-remembered savours.

By the time the woodman had made his meal of fried pork and bread, and
had smoked out his little pipe of blackened clay, a lonely twilight had
settled about the cabin in the clearing. He went to the door and looked
out. A white mist, rising along the forest edges, seemed to cut him off
from all the world of men; and a few large stars, at vast intervals,
came out solemnly upon the round of sky. He shut the door, dropped the
wooden latch into its slot, and threw a dry sliver upon the hearth to
give him light for turning in. He was sparing of the firewood,
remembering that Kirstie, when she came, would need it all. Then he took
his pipe from his mouth, knocked out the ashes, wiped the stump on his
sleeve, and put it in his pocket; took off his heavy boots, rolled
himself in the coloured quilt, and tumbled comfortably into the bunk,
untroubled by any thought of its previous tenants. No sooner was he
still than the mice came out and began scampering across the loft. He
felt the sound homely and companionable, and so fell asleep. As he slept
the deep undreaming sleep of the wholesomely tired, the meagre fire
burned low, sank into pulsating coals, and faded into blackness.

It was, perhaps, an hour later that Old Dave sat up, suddenly wide
awake. He had no idea why he did it. He had heard no noise. He was
certainly not afraid. There was no tremor in his seasoned nerves.
Nevertheless, he was all at once absolutely awake, every sense alert. He
felt almost as if there were some unkindred presence in the cabin. His
first impulse was to spring from the bunk, and investigate. But,
doubtless because he had spent so great a portion of his life in the
forest, and because he had all that day been subtly played upon by its
influences, another instinct triumphed. He followed the immemorial
fashion of the folk of the wood, and just kept still, waiting to learn
by watching.

He saw the two dim squares of the windows, and once imagined that one of
them was for an instant shadowed. At this he smiled grimly there in the
dark, well knowing that among all the forest-folk there was not one, not
even the panther himself, so imprudent as to climb through a small
window into a shut-up place, all reeking with the fresh and ominous
scent of man.

Still he listened, in that movelessness which the haunted neighbourhood
had taught him. The scurrying of the mice had ceased. There was no wind,
and the darkness seemed all ears. The door, presently, gave a slow,
gentle creaking, as if some heavy body pushed softly against it, trying
the latch. The woodsman noiselessly reached out, and felt the handle of
his axe, leaning by the head of the bunk. But the latch held, and the
menacing furtive pressure was not repeated. Then, upon the very middle
of the roof, began a scratching, a light rattling of claws, and
footfalls went padding delicately over the bark. This puzzled the
woodsman, who wondered how the owner of those clawed and velveted feet
could have reached the roof without some noise of climbing. The soft
tread, with an occasional scratch and snap, moved up and down the roof
several times; and once, during a pause, a deep breath, ending with a
sharp sniffing sound, was heard through the thin roof. Then came a
muffled thud upon the chips, as of the drop of a heavy animal.

The spell was broken, and Old Dave rose from the bunk.

“It’s jumped down off the roof! wildcat, mebbe, or lynx. No painters
’round, ’tain’t likely; though’t did sound heavy fur a cat!” said he to
himself, as he strode to the door, axe in hand.

Fearlessly he threw the door open, and looked out upon the glimmering
night. The forest chill was in the air, the very breath and spirit of
solitude. The mists gathered thickly a stone’s throw from the cabin. He
saw nothing that moved. He heard no stir. With a shrug of the shoulders
he turned, latched the door again with just a trifle more exactness of
precaution than before, lounged back to his bunk, and slept heedlessly
till high dawn. A long finger of light, coldly rosy, came in through a
broken pane to rouse him up.

When he went outside, the mists yet clung white and chill about the
clearing, and all the weed tops were beaded with thick dew. He noted
that the chips were disturbed somewhat, but could find no definite
track. Then, following a grassy path that led, through a young growth of
alder, to the spring, he found signs. Down to the spring, and beyond,
into the woods, a trail was drawn that spoke plain language to his
wood-wise scrutiny. The grass was bent, the dew brushed off, by a body
of some bulk and going close to the ground.

“Painter!” he muttered, knitting his brows, and casting a wary glance
about him. “Reckon Kirstie’d better bring a gun along!”

All that day Dave Titus worked about the cabin and the barn. He mended
the roof, patched the windows, rehung the door, filled the bunk—and the
two similar ones in the smaller room—with aromatic fresh green spruce
tips, and worked a miracle of rejuvenation upon the barn. He also
cleaned out the spring, and chopped a handy pile of firewood. An old
sheep-pen behind the barn he left in its ruins, saying to himself:—

“What with the b’ars, an’ the painters, Kirstie ain’t goin’ to want to
mess with sheep, I reckon. She’ll have lots to do to look after her
critters!”

By “critters” he meant the cow and the yoke of steers which were Kirstie
Craig’s property in the Settlement, and which, as he knew, she was to
bring with her to her exile in the ancient wood.

That night, being now quite at home in the lonely cabin, and assured as
to the stability of the door, Dave Titus slept dreamlessly from dark to
dawn in the pleasant fragrance of his bunk. From dark to dawn the mice
scurried in the loft, the bats flickered about the eaves, the unknown
furry bulks leaned on the door or padded softly up and down the roof,
but troubled not his rest. Then the wild folk began to take account of
the fact that the sovereignty of the clearing had been resumed by man,
and word of the new order went secretly about the forest. When, next
morning, Dave Titus made careful survey of the clearing’s skirts,
calculating what brush and poles would be needed for Kirstie’s fencing,
making rough guesses at the acreage, and noting with approval the
richness of the good brown soil, he thought himself alone. But he was
not alone. Speculative eyes, large and small, fierce and timorous, from
all the edges of the ancient wood kept watch on him.



                              Chapter III
                     The Exiles from the Settlement


Late that afternoon Kirstie Craig arrived. Her coming was a migration.

The first announcement of her approach was the dull _tank, tank, a-tonk,
tank_ of cow-bells down the trail, at sound of which Old Dave threw
aside his axe and slouched away to meet her. There was heard a boy’s
voice shouting with young authority, “Gee! Gee, Bright! Gee, Star!” and
the head of the procession came into view in the solemn green archway of
the woods.

The head of the procession was Kirstie Craig herself, a tall, erect,
strong-stepping, long-limbed woman in blue-grey home-spuns, with a vivid
scarlet kerchief tied over her head. She was leading, by a rope about
its horns, a meekly tolerant black-and-white cow. To her left hand clung
a skipping little figure in a pink calico frock, a broad-brimmed hat of
coarse straw flung back from her hair and hanging by ribbons from her
neck. This was the five-year-old Miranda, Kirstie Craig’s daughter. She
had ridden most of the journey, and now was full of excited interest
over the approach to her new home. Following close behind came the yoke
of long-horned, mild-eyed steers,—Bright, a light sorrel, and Star, a
curious red-and-black brindle with a radiating splash of white in the
middle of his forehead. These, lurching heavily on the yoke, were
hauling a rude “drag,” on which was lashed the meagre pile of Kirstie’s
belongings and supplies. Close at Star’s heaving flank walked a lank and
tow-haired boy from the Settlement, his long ox-goad in hand, and an
expression of resigned dissatisfaction on his grey-eyed, ruddy young
face. Liking, and thoroughly believing in, Kirstie Craig, he had
impulsively yielded to her request, and let himself be hired to assist
her flight into exile. But in so doing he had gone roughly counter to
public opinion; for the Settlement, though stupidly inhospitable to
Kirstie Craig, none the less resented her decision to leave it. Her
scheme of occupying the deserted cabin, farming the deserted clearing,
and living altogether aloof from her unloved and unloving fellows, was
scouted on every hand as the freak of a madwoman; and Young Dave, just
coming to the age when public opinion begins to seem important, felt
uneasy at being identified with a matter of public ridicule. He saw
himself already, in imagination, a theme for the fine wit of the
Settlement. Nevertheless, he was glad to be helping Kirstie, for he was
sound and fearless at heart, and he counted her a true friend if she did
seem to him a bit queer. He was faithful, but disapproving. It was Old
Dave alone, his father, who backed the woman’s venture without criticism
or demur. He had known Kirstie from small girlhood, and known her for a
brave, loyal, silent, strongly-enduring soul; and in his eyes she did
well to leave the Settlement, where a shallow spite, sharpened by her
proud reticence and supplied with arrows of injury by her misfortunes,
made life an undesisting and immitigable hurt to her.

As she emerged from the twilight and came out upon the sunny bleakness
of the clearing, the unspeakable loneliness of it struck a sudden pallor
into her grave dark face. For a moment, even the humanity that was
hostile to her seemed less cruel than this voiceless solitude. Then her
resolution came back. The noble but somewhat immobile lines of her large
features relaxed into a half smile at her own weakness. She took
possession, as it were, by a sweeping gesture of her head; then silently
gave her hand in greeting to Old Dave, who had ranged up beside her and
swung the dancing Miranda to his shoulder. Nothing was said for several
moments, as the party moved slowly up the slope; for they were folk of
few words, these people, not praters like so many of their fellows in
the Settlement.

At last the pink frock began to wriggle on the lumberman’s shoulder, and
Miranda cried out:—

“Let me down, Uncle Dave, I want to pick those pretty flowers for my
mother.”

The crimson glories of the fireweed had filled her eyes with delight;
and in a few minutes she was struggling after the procession with her
small arms full of the long-stalked blooms.

In front of the cabin door the procession stopped. Dave turned, and said
seriously:—

“I’ve done the best I could by ye, Kirstie; an’ I reckon it ain’t so bad
a site for ye, after all. But ye’ll be powerful lonesome.”

“Thank you kindly, Dave. But we ain’t going to be lonesome, Miranda and
me.”

“But there’s painters ’round. You’d ought to hev a gun, Kirstie. I’ll be
sackin’ out some stuff fur ye nex’ week, Davey an’ me, an’ I reckon as
how I’d better fetch ye a gun.”

“We’ll be right hungry for a sight of your faces by that time, Dave,”
said Kirstie, sweeping a look of tenderness over the boy’s face, where
he stood leaning on Star’s brindled shoulder. “But I ain’t scared of
panthers. Don’t you mind about the gun, now, for I don’t want it, and I
won’t use it!”

“She ain’t skeered o’ nothin’ that walks,” muttered Young Dave, with
admiration.

The strong face darkened.

“Yes, I am, Davey,” she answered; “I’m afeard of evil tongues.”

“Well, my girl, here ye’re well quit of ’em,” said the old lumberman, a
slow anger burning on his rough-hewn face as he thought of certain busy
backbiters in the Settlement.

Just then Miranda’s small voice chimed in.

“Oh, Davey,” she cried, catching gleefully at the boy’s leg, “look at
the nice, great big dog!” And her little brown finger pointed to a
cluster of stumps, of all shapes and sizes, far over on the limits of
the clearing. Her wide, brown eyes danced elvishly. The others followed
her gaze, all staring intently; but they saw no excuse for her
excitement.

“It might be a b’ar she sees,” said Old Dave; “but I can’t spot it.”

“They’re plenty hereabouts, I suppose,” said Kirstie, rather
indifferently, letting her eyes wander to other portions of her domain.

“Ain’t no bear there,” asserted Young Dave, with all the confidence of
his years. “It’s a stump!”

“Nice big dog! I want it, mother,” piped Miranda, suddenly darting away.
But her mother’s firm hand fell upon her shoulder.

“There’s no big dog out here, child,” she said quietly. And Old Dave,
after puckering his keen eyes and knitting his shaggy brows in vain,
exclaimed:—

“Oh, quit yer foolin’, Mirandy, ye little witch. ’Tain’t nothin’ but
stumps, I tell ye.”

It was the child’s eyes, however, that had the keener vision, the
subtler knowledge; and, though now she let herself seem to be persuaded,
and obediently carried her armful of fireweed into the cabin, she knew
it was no stump she had been looking at. And as for Kroof, the she-bear,
though she had indeed sat moveless as a stump among the stumps, she knew
that the child had detected her. She saw that Miranda had the eyes that
see everything and cannot be deceived.

For two days the man and the boy stayed at the clearing to help Kirstie
get settled. The fields rang pleasantly with the _tank, tank, a-tonk,
tank_ of the cow-bells, as the cattle fed over the new pasturage. The
edges of the clearing resounded with axe strokes, and busy voices echoed
on the autumn air. There was much rough fencing to be built,—zig-zag
arrangements of brush and saplings,—in order that Kirstie’s “critters”
might be shut in till the sense of home should so grow upon them as to
keep them from straying.

The two days done, Old Dave and Young Dave shouldered their axes and
went away. Kirstie forthwith straightened her fine shoulders to the
Atlas load of solitude which had threatened at first to overwhelm her;
and she and Miranda settled down to a strangely silent routine. This was
broken, however, at first, by weekly visits from Old Dave, who came to
bring hay, and roots, and other provisions against the winter, together
with large “hanks” of coarse homespun yarn, to occupy Kirstie’s fingers
during the long winter evenings.

Kirstie was well fitted to the task she had so bravely set herself. She
could swing an axe; and the fencing grew steadily through the fall. She
could guide the plough; and before the snow came some ten acres of the
long fallow sod had been turned up in brown furrows, to be ripened and
mellowed by the frosts for next spring’s planting. The black-and-white
cow was still in good milk, and could be depended on not to go dry a day
more than two months before calving. The steers were thrifty and sleek,
and showed no signs of fretting for old pastures. The hoarse but homely
music of the cow-bells, sounding all day over the fields, and giving out
an occasional soft _tonk-a-tonk_ from the darkness of the stalls at
night, came to content her greatly. The lines which she had brought from
the Settlement smoothed themselves from about her mouth and eyes, and
the large, sufficing beauty of her face was revealed in the peace of her
new life.

About seven years before this move to the cabin in the clearing, Kirstie
Craig—then Kirstie MacAlister—had gone one evening to the cross-roads
grocery which served the Settlement as General Intelligence Office. Here
was the post-office as well, in a corner of the store, fitted up with
some dozen of lettered and dusty pigeon-holes. Nodding soberly to the
loafers who lounged about on the soap boxes and nail kegs, Kirstie
stepped up to the counter to buy a quart of molasses. She was just
passing over her gaudy blue-and-yellow pitcher to be filled, when a
stranger came in who caught her attention. He did far more than catch
her attention; for the stately and sombre girl, who had never before
taken pains to look twice on any man’s face, now felt herself grow hot
and cold as this stranger’s eyes glanced carelessly over her splendid
form. She heard him ask the postmaster for lodgings. He spoke in a tired
voice, and accents that set him apart from the men of the Settlement.
She looked at him twice and yet again, noted with a pang that he seemed
ill, and met his eye fairly for just one heart-beat. At once she flushed
scarlet under it, snatched up her pitcher, and almost rushed from the
store. The loafers were too much occupied with the new arrival to notice
her perturbation; but he noticed it, and was pleased. Never before had
he seen so splendid a girl as this black-haired, sphinx-faced creature,
with the scarlet kerchief about her head. She was a picture that awoke
the artist in him, and put him in haste to resume his palette and
brushes.

For Frank Craig, dilettante and man of the world, was a good deal of an
artist when the mood seized him strongly enough. When another mood
seized him, with sufficient vigour to overcome his native indolence, he
was something of a musician; and again, more rarely, something of a
poet. The temperament was his; but the steadiness of purpose, the
decision of will, the long-enduring patience, these were not. He had
just enough money to let him float through his world without work.
Health he had not, and the poor semblance of it which mere youth
supplied he had squandered childishly. Hearing of new health in the gift
of the northern spruce woods, with their high, balsam-sweet airs, he had
drifted away from his temptations, and at last sought out this remote
backwoods settlement as a place where he might expect to get much for
little. He was very good to look upon,—about as tall as Kirstie
herself,—slender, active, alert in movement when not wearied,
thoroughbred in every line of face and figure. His eyes, of a very deep
greyish green under long black lashes, were penetrating in their
clearness, but curiously unstable. In their beautiful depths there was
waged forever a strange conflict between honesty and inconstancy. His
face, pale and sallow, was clothed with a trimly pointed, close, dark
beard; and his hair, just a trifle more abundant than the fashion of his
world approved, was of a peculiar, tawny dark bronze.

The air of the Settlement was healing and tonic to the lungs, and before
he had breathed it a month he felt himself aglow with joyous life.
Before he had breathed it a month he had won Kirstie MacAlister, to whom
he seemed little less than a god. To him, on her part, she was a
splendid mystery. Even her peculiarities of grammar and accent did no
more than lend a piquancy to her strangeness. They appealed as a rough,
fresh flavour to his wearied senses. Here, safe from the wasting world,
he would really paint, would really write, and life would come to mean
something. One day he and Kirstie went away on the rattling old
mail-waggon, which visited the Settlement twice a week. Ten days later
they came back as man and wife, whereat the Settlement showed no
surprise whatever.

For a whole year after the birth of his child, the great-eyed and
fairy-like Miranda, Frank Craig stayed at the Settlement, seemingly
content. He was loving, admiring, tactful, proud of his dark impressive
wife, and the quickness with which she caught his purity of speech. Then
one day he seemed restless. He talked of business in the city—of a
month’s absence that could not be avoided. With a kind of terror at her
heart Kirstie heard him, but offered no hint of opposition to so
reasonable a purpose. And by the next trip of the rattling mail-waggon
he went, leaving the Settlement dark to Kirstie’s eyes.

But—he never came back. The months rolled by, and no word came of him;
and Kirstie gnawed her heart out in proud anguish. Inquiry throughout
the cities of the coast brought no hint of him. Then, as the months
climbed into years, that tender humanity which resents misfortune as a
crime started a rumour that Kirstie had been fooled. Perhaps there had
been no marriage, went the whisper at first. “Served her right, with her
airs, thinkin’ she could ketch a gentleman!”—was the next development of
it. Kirstie, with her superior air, had never been popular at best; and
after her marriage the sufficiency and exclusiveness of her joy, coupled
with the comparative fineness of speech which she adopted, made her the
object of jealous criticism through all the country-side. When the
temple of her soaring happiness came down about her ears, then was the
time for her chastening, and the gossips of the Settlement took a hand
in it with right good-will. Nothing else worth talking about happened in
that neighbourhood during the next few years, so the little rumour was
cherished and nourished. Presently it grew to a great scandal, and the
gossips came to persuade themselves that things had not been as they
should be. Kirstie, they said, was being very properly punished by
Providence, and it was well to show that they, chaste souls, stood on
the side of Providence. If Providence threw a stone, it was surely their
place to throw three.

At last some one of imagination vivid beyond that of the common run
added a new feature. Some one else had heard from some one else of some
one having seen Frank Craig in the city. There was at first a difference
of opinion as to what city; but that little discrepancy was soon
smoothed out. Then a woman was suggested, and forthwith it appeared that
he had been seen driving with a handsome woman, behind a spanking pair,
with liveried coachman and footman on the box. Thus gradually the myth
acquired a colour to endear it to the unoccupied rural imagination.
Kirstie’s inquiries soon proved to her the utter baselessness of the
scandal; but she was too proud to refute what she knew to be a cherished
lie. She endured, for Miranda’s sake, till the dark face grew lined, and
the black eyes smouldered dangerously, and she began to fear lest she
should do some one a hurt. At last, having heard by chance of that
deserted clearing in the forest, she sold out her cottage at a sacrifice
and fled from the bitter tongues.



                               Chapter IV
                      Miranda and the Furtive Folk


From the very first day of her new life at the clearing, Miranda had
found it to her taste. Her mother loved it for its peace, for its
healing; but to the elvish child it had an incomparably deeper and more
positive appeal. For her the place was not solitary. Her wide eyes saw
what Kirstie could not see; and to her the forest edges—which she was
not allowed to pass—were full of most satisfying playmates just waiting
for her to invite their confidence. Meanwhile, she had the two steers
and the black-and-white cow to talk to. Her mother noticed that when she
sat down in the grass by the head of one of the animals, and began her
low mysterious communication, it would stop its feeding and hearken
motionless. The black-and-red brindle, Star, would sometimes follow her
about like a dog, as if spelled by the child’s solemn eyes. Then the
solemn eyes on a sudden would dance with light; her lips would break
into a peal of whimsical mirth, shrill but not loud; and the steer, with
a flick of his tail and an offended snort, would turn again to his
pasturing.

In a hole in one of the logs, just under the eaves of the cabin, there
was a family of red squirrels, the four youngsters about three-fourths
grown and almost ready to shift for themselves. No sooner had the old
lumberman and his son gone away than the squirrels began to make
themselves much at home. They saw in Kirstie a huge and harmless
creature, whose presence in the cabin was useful to scare away their
enemies. But in Miranda they found a sort of puzzling kinship. The two
old squirrels would twitch up and down on the edge of the roof,
chattering shrilly to her, flirting their airy tails, and stretching
down their heads to scan her searchingly with their keen protruding
eyes; while Miranda, just below, would dance excitedly up and down in
response, nodding her head, jerking her elbows, and chattering back at
them in a quick, shrill voice. It was a very different voice to the soft
murmurs in which she talked to the cattle; but to the squirrels it
appeared satisfactory. Before she had been a week at the clearing the
whole squirrel family seemed to regard her as one of themselves,
snatching bread from her tiny brown fingers, and running up her skirt to
her shoulder whensoever the freak possessed them. Kirstie, they
ignored—the harmless, necessary Kirstie, mother to Miranda.

No sooner were they fairly settled than the child discovered an
incongruity in her gay pink calico frocks, and got her mother to bury
them out of sight in the deal chest behind the door. She was at ease now
only in the dull, blue-grey homespun, which made her feel at one with
her quiet surroundings. Nevertheless the vein of contradiction which
streaked her baby heart with bright inconsistencies bade her demand
always a bit of scarlet ribbon about her neck. This whim Kirstie
humoured with a smile, recognizing in it a perpetuation of the scarlet
kerchief about her own black hair. As for Miranda’s hair, it was black
like her mother’s when seen in shadow; but in the sunshine it showed
certain tawny lights, a pledge of her fatherhood to all who had known
Frank Craig.

So the autumn slipped by; and the silent folk of the wood, watching her
curiously and unwinkingly as she played while her mother built fences,
came to know Miranda as a creature in some way not quite alien to
themselves. They knew that she often saw them when her mother’s eyes
could not. Perceiving that her mother did not quite understand her, at
times, when she tried to point out pretty animals among the trees, the
child grew a little sensitive and reticent on the subject; and the
furtive folk, who had at first inclined to resent her inescapable
vision, presently realized her reserves and were appeased. Her grey
little sprite of a figure might have darted in among the trees, turned
to a statue, and become suddenly as invisible as any lynx, or cat, or
hare, or pine-marten amongst them, except, indeed, for that disquieting
flame of scarlet at her neck. This was a puzzle to all the folk of the
wood, continually reminding them that this quiet-flitting creature did
not really belong to the wood at all, but to the great woman with the
red about her head, whose axe made so vexing a clamour amid the trees.
As for Kroof, the bear, that bit of scarlet so interested her that one
day, being curious, she came much nearer than she intended. Miranda saw
her, of course, and gazed with wide-eyed longing for the “great big dog”
as a playmate. Just then Kirstie saw her, too—very close at hand, and
very huge.

[Illustration: She . . . stood motionless, erect and formidable]

For the first time, Kirstie Craig felt something like fear, not for
herself, but for the child. Thrusting Miranda roughly behind her, she
clutched her axe, and stood motionless, erect and formidable, awaiting
attack. Her great black eyes blazed ominously upon the intruder. But
Kroof, well filled with late berries, and sweet wild roots, and
honeycomb, was in most amiable humour, and just shambled off lazily when
she saw herself detected; whereupon Kirstie, with a short laugh of
relief, threw down her axe and snatched the child to her breast.
Miranda, however, was weeping salt tears of disappointment.

“I want it, mother,” she sobbed; “the nice big dog. You scared it away.”

Kirstie had heard more than enough about the dog.

“Hark now, Miranda,” she said severely, giving her shoulder a slight
shake to enforce attention. “You just remember what I say. That ain’t a
dog; that’s a bear; _a bear_, I say! And don’t you ever go near it, or
it’ll eat you up. Mind you now, Miranda, or I’ll just whip you well.”

Kirstie was a little fluttered and thrown off her poise at the idea of
Miranda encountering the great animal alone, and perhaps attempting to
bring it home to play with; so she forgot for a moment the wonted
stringency of her logic. As for Miranda, she consented to obey, and held
her tongue; but she clung secretly to her own opinion on the subject of
the big dog. She knew very well that the fascinating animal did not want
to eat her; and her mother’s order seemed to her just one of those bits
of maternal perversity which nobody can ever hope to understand.

The incident, however, overshadowed the child’s buoyant spirits for the
best part of two whole days. It thrust so very far off the time she
hoped for, when she might know and talk to the shy, furtive folk of the
wood, with their strange, unwinking eyes. Her mother kept her now ever
close to her skirts. She had no one to talk to about the things her
mother did not understand, except the steers and the black-and-white
cow, and the rather irrepressible squirrels.

The winter, which presently fell white and soundless and sparkling about
the lonely cabin, was to Miranda full of events. Before the snow Kirstie
had repaired the old lean-to, turning it into a fowl-house; and now they
had six prim hens to occupy it, and a splendid, flame-red cock who
crowed most loftily. Miranda felt that this proud bird despised her, so
she did not get on very well with him; but the hens were amiable, if
uninteresting, and it was a perennial joy to search out their eggs in
the loft or the corners of the stalls. Then there were the paths to be
kept clear after every snow-fall,—the path to the spring, the path to
the barn door and hen-house, the path to the woodpile. Uncle Dave had
made her a hand-sled, and she had the exhilarating duty of hauling in
the wood from the pile as fast as her mother could split it. It was a
spirited race, this, in which her mother somehow always managed to keep
just about one stick ahead.

And the fishing—this was a great event, coming about once a week, if the
weather suited. Both Kirstie and Miranda were semi-vegetarians. Frank
Craig had been a decryer of flesh-meat, one who would have chosen to
live on fruits and roots and grains and eggs, had not his body cried out
against the theory of his brain. But he had so far infected his wife
with his prejudice that neither she nor the child now touched meat in
any form. The aversion, artificial on Kirstie’s part, was instinctive on
Miranda’s. But as for fish—fish seemed to them both quite another
matter. Even Miranda of the sympathies and the perceptions had no sense
of fellowship for these cold-blooded, clammy, unpleasant things. She had
a fierce little delight in catching them; she had a contented joy in
eating them when fried to a savory brown in butter and yellow cornmeal.
For Miranda was very close to Nature, and Nature laughs at consistency.

The fishing in which Miranda so delighted took place in winter at the
lake. When the weather seemed quite settled, Kirstie would set out on
her strong snow-shoes, with Miranda, on her fairy facsimiles of them,
striding bravely beside her, and follow the long, white trail down to
the lake. Even to Miranda’s discerning eyes the trail was lonely now,
for most of the forest folk were either asleep, or abroad, or fearful
lest their tinted coats should reveal them against the snowy surface.
Once in a while she detected the hare squatting under a spruce bush,
looking like a figure of snow in his winter coat; and once or twice,
too, she saw the weasel, white now, with but a black tip to his tail as
a warning to all who had cause to dread his cruelty. Miranda knew
nothing about him, but she did not quite like the weasel, which was just
as well, seeing that the weasel hated Miranda and all the world besides.
As for the lynx and the brown cat, they kept warily aloof in their
winter shyness. The wood-mice were asleep,—warm, furry balls buried in
their dry nests far from sight; and Kroof, too, was dreaming away the
frozen months in a hollow under a pine root, with five or six feet of
snow drifted over her door to keep her sleep unjarred.

Arrived at the lake, Kirstie would cut two holes through the ice with
her nimble axe, bait two hooks with bits of fat pork, and put a line
into Miranda’s little mittened hands. The trout in the lake were
numerous and hungry; and somehow Miranda’s hook had ever the more deadly
fascination for them, and Miranda’s catch would outnumber Kirstie’s by
often three to one. Though her whole small being seemed absorbed in the
fierce game, Miranda was all the time vividly aware of the white
immensity enfolding her. The lifeless white level of the lake; the
encircling shores all white; the higher fringe of trees, black beneath,
but deeply garmented with white; the steep mountain-side, at the foot of
the lake, all white; and over-brooding, glimmering, opalescent,
fathomless, the flat white arch of sky. Across the whiteness of the
mountain-side, one day, Miranda saw a dark beast moving, a beast that
looked to her like a great cat. She saw it halt, gazing down at them;
and even at that distance she could see it stretch wide its formidable
jaws. A second more and she heard the cry which came from those
formidable jaws,—a high, harsh, screeching wail, which amused her so
that she forgot to land a fish. But her mother seemed troubled at the
sound. She gazed very steadily for some seconds at the far-off shape,
and then said: “Panthers, Miranda! I don’t mind bears; but with panthers
we’ve got to keep our eyes open. I reckon we’ll get home before sundown
to-day; and mind you keep right close by me every step.”

All this solicitude seemed to Miranda a lamentable mistake. She had no
doubt in her own mind that the panther would be nice to play with.

As I have said, the winter was for Miranda full of events. Twice, as she
was carrying out the morning dish of hot potatoes and meal to the hens,
she saw Ten-Tine, the bull caribou, cross the clearing with measured
stately tread, his curious, patchy antlers held high, his muzzle
stretched straight ahead of him, his demure cows at his heels. This was
before the snow lay deep in the forest. Later on in the winter she would
look out with eager interest every morning to see what visitors had been
about the cabin during the night. Sometimes there was a fox track, very
dainty, cleanly indented, and regular, showing that the animal who made
it knew where he was going and had something definite in view. Hare
tracks there were sure to be—she soon came to recognize those
three-toed, triplicate clusters of impressions, stamped deeply upon the
snow by the long, elastic jump. Whenever there was a weasel
track,—narrow, finely pointed, treacherously innocent,—it was sure to be
closely parallel to that of a leaping hare; and Miranda soon
apprehended, by that instinct of hers, that the companionship was not
like to be well for the hare. Once, to her horror, she found that a hare
track ended suddenly, right under the cabin window, in a blood-stained
patch, bestrewn with fur and bones. All about it the snow was swept as
if by wings, and two strange footprints told the story. They were long,
these two footprints—forked, with deep hooks for toes, and an obscure
sort of brush mark behind them. This was where the owl had sat up on the
snow for a few minutes after dining, to ponder on the merits of the
general order of things, and of a good meal in particular. Miranda’s
imagination painted a picture of the big bird sitting there in the
moonlight beside the bloody bones, his round, horned head turning slowly
from one side to the other, his hooked beak snapping now and again in
reminiscence, his sharp eyes wide open and flaming. There was also the
track of a fox, which had come up from the direction of the barn,
investigated the scene of action, and gone off at a sharp, decisive
angle toward the woods. Miranda had no clew to tell her how stealthily
that fox had come, or how nearly he had succeeded in catching an owl for
his breakfast; but from that morning she bore a grudge against owls, and
never could hear without a flash of wrath their hollow
_two-hoo-hoo-whoo-oo_ echoing solemnly from the heart of the pinewood.

But the owl was not the only bird that Miranda knew that winter. Well
along in January, when the haws were all gone, and most of the withered
rowan-berries had been eaten, and famine threatened such of the
bird-folk as had not journeyed south, there came to the cabin brisk
foraging flocks of the ivory-billed snow-bird. For these Miranda had
crumbs ready always, and as word of her bounty went abroad in the
forest, her feathered pensioners increased. Even a hungry crow would
come now and then, glossy and sideling, watchful and audacious, to share
the hospitality of this kind Miranda of the crumbs. She liked the crows,
and would hear no ill of them from her mother; but most of all she liked
those big, rosy-headed, trustful children, the pine-grosbeaks, who would
almost let her take them in her hands. Whenever their wandering flocks
came down to her, she held winter carnival for them.

During those days when it was not fine enough to go out,—when the snow
drove in great swirls and phantom armies across the open, and a dull
roar came from the straining forest, and the fowls went to roost at
midday, and the cattle munched contentedly in their stanchions, glad to
be shut in,—then the cabin seemed very pleasant to Miranda. On such days
the drifts were sometimes piled halfway up the windows. On such days the
dry logs on the hearth blazed more brightly than their wont, and the
flames sang more merrily up the chimney. On such days the piles of hot
buckwheat cakes, drenched in butter and brown molasses, tasted more
richly toothsome than at any time else, and on such days she learned to
knit. This was very interesting. At first she knit gay black-and-red
garters for her mother; and then, speedily mastering this rudimentary
process, she was fairly launched on a stocking, with four needles. The
stocking, of course, was for her mother, who would not find fault if it
were knitted too tightly here and too loosely there. As for Kirstie
herself, her nimble needles would click all day, turning out socks and
mittens of wonderful thickness to supply the steady market of the lumber
camps.

One night, after just such a cosey, shut-in day, Miranda was awakened by
a scratching sound on the roof. Throughout the cold weather Miranda
slept with her mother in the main room, in a broad new bunk which had
been substituted for the narrow one wherein Old Dave had slept on his
first visit to the clearing. Miranda caught her mother’s arm, and shook
it gently. But Kirstie was already awake, lying with wide eyes,
listening.

“What’s that, mother, trying to get in?” asked the child in a whisper.

“Hush-sh-sh,” replied Kirstie, laying her fingers on the child’s mouth.

The scratching came louder now, as the light snow was swept clear and
the inquisitive claws reached the bark. Then it stopped. After a second
or two of silence there was a loud, blowing sound, as if the visitor
were clearing his nostrils from the snow and cold. This was followed by
two or three long, penetrating sniffs, so curiously hungry in their
suggestion that even Miranda’s dauntless little heart beat very fast. As
for Kirstie, she was decidedly nervous. Springing out of bed she ran to
the hearth, raked the coals from the ashes, fanned them, heaped on birch
bark and dry wood, and in a moment had a great blaze roaring up the
chimney-throat. The glow from the windows streamed far out across the
snow. To the visitor it proved disconcerting. There was one more sharp
rattle of claws upon the roof, then a fluffy thump below the eaves. The
snow had stopped falling hours before; and when, at daylight, Kirstie
opened the door, there was the deep hollow where the panther had jumped
down, and there was the floundering trail where he had fled.

This incident made Miranda amend, in some degree, her first opinion of
panthers.



                               Chapter V
                          Kroof, the She-bear


Spring came early to the clearing that year. Kirstie’s autumn furrows,
dark and steaming, began to show in patches through the diminished snow.
The chips before the house and the litter about the barn, drawing the
sun strongly, were first of all uncovered; and over them, as to the
conquest of new worlds, the haughty cock led forth his dames to scratch.
“Saunders,” Miranda had called him, in remembrance of a strutting beau
at the Settlement; and with the advent of April cheer, and an increasing
abundance of eggs, and an ever resounding cackle from his complacent
partlets, his conceit became insufferable. One morning, when something
she did offended his dignity, he had the presumption to face her with
beak advanced and wide-ruffled neck feathers. But Saunders did not know
Miranda. Quick as a flash of light she seized him by the legs, whirled
him around her head, and flung him headlong, squawking with fear and
shame, upon his own dunghill. It took him a good hour to recover his
self-esteem, but after that Miranda stood out in his eyes as the one
creature in the world to be respected.

When the clearing was quite bare, except along the edges of the forest,
and Kirstie was again at work on her fencing, the black-and-white cow
gave birth to a black-and-white calf, which Miranda at once claimed as
her own property. It was a very wobbly, knock-kneed little heifer; but
Miranda admired it immensely, and with lofty disregard of its sex,
christened it Michael.

About this time the snow shrank away from her hollow under the pine
root, and Kroof came forth to sun herself. She had lived all winter on
nothing but the fat stored up on the spaces of her capacious frame.
Nevertheless she was not famished—she had still a reserve to come and go
on, till food should be abundant. A few days after waking up she bore a
cub. It was the custom of her kind to bear two cubs at a birth; but
Kroof, besides being by long odds the biggest she-bear ever known in
that region, had a pronounced individuality of her own, and was just as
well satisfied with herself over one cub as over two.

The hollow under the pine root was warm and softly lined—a condition
quite indispensable to the newcomer, which was about as unlike a bear as
any baby creature of its size could well manage to be. It was blind,
helpless, whimpering, more shapeless and clumsy-looking than the
clumsiest conceivable pup, and almost naked. Its tender, hairless hide
looked a poor thing to confront the world with; but its appetite was
astounding, and Kroof’s milk inexhaustible. In a few days a soft dark
fur began to appear. As the mother sat, hour by hour, watching it and
suckling it, half erect upon her haunches, her fore legs braced wide
apart, her head stretched as far down as possible, her narrow red tongue
hanging out to one side, her eyes half closed in rapture, it seemed to
grow visibly beneath her absorbing gaze. Before four weeks had passed,
the cub was covered with a jet black coat, soft and glossy. This being
the case, he thought it time to open his eyes and look about.

He was now about the size of a small cat, but of a much heavier build.
His head, at this age, was shorter for its breadth than his mother’s;
the ears much larger, fan-like and conspicuous. His eyes, very softly
vague at first, soon acquired a humorous, mischievous expression, which
went aptly with the erect, inquisitive ears. Altogether he was a fine
baby—a fair justification of Kroof’s pride.

The spring being now fairly forward, and pale, whitish-green shoots
upthrusting themselves numerously through the dead leaves, and the big
crimson leaf-bud of the skunk-cabbage vividly punctuating the sombreness
of the swamp, Kroof led her infant forth to view their world. He had no
such severe and continued education to undergo as that which falls to
the lot of other youngsters among the folk of the ancient wood. For
those others the first lesson, the hardest and the most tremendous in
its necessity, was how to avoid their enemies. With this lesson
ill-learned, all others found brief term; for the noiseless drama, in
which all the folk of the forest had their parts, moved ever, through
few scenes or through many, to a tragic close. But the bear, being for
the most part dominant, had his immunities. Even the panther, swift and
fierce and masterful, never deliberately sought quarrel with the bear,
being mindful of his disastrous clutch and the lightning sweep of his
paw. The bear-cub, therefore, going with its mother till almost full
grown, gave no thought at all to enemies; and the cub with such a
giantess as Kroof for its mother might safely make a mock even at
panthers. Kroof’s cub had thus but simple things to learn, following
close at his mother’s flank. During the first blind weeks of his cubhood
he had, indeed, to acquire the prime virtue of silence, which was not
easy, for he loved to whimper and grumble in a comfortable little
fashion of his own. This was all right while Kroof was at home; but when
she was out foraging, then silence was the thing. This he learned,
partly from Kroof’s admonitions, partly from a deep-seated instinct; and
whenever he was left alone, he held his tongue. There was always the
possibility slight but unpleasant, of a fox or a brown cat noting
Kroof’s absence, and seizing the chance to savour a delicate morsel of
sucking bear.

Wandering the silent woods with Kroof, the cub would sniff carefully at
the moist earth and budding shoots wheresoever his mother stopped to
dig. He thus learned where to find the starchy roots which form so large
a part of the bear’s food in spring. He found out the important
difference between the sweet groundnuts and the fiery bitter bulb of the
arum, or Indian turnip; and he learned to go over the grassy meadows by
the lake and dig unerringly for the wild bean’s nourishing tubers. He
discovered, also, what old stumps to tear apart when he wanted a
pleasantly acid tonic dose of the larvæ of the wood-ant. Among these
serious occupations he would gambol between his mother’s feet, or caper
hilariously on his hind legs. Soon he would have been taught to detect a
bee tree, and to rob it of its delectable stores without getting his
eyes stung out; but just then the mysterious forest fates dropped the
curtain on his merry little play, as a reminder that not even for the
great black bear could the rule of doom be relaxed.

Kroof’s first wanderings with the cub were in the neighbourhood of the
clearing, where both were sometimes seen by Miranda. The sight of the
cub so overjoyed her that she departed from her usual reticence as to
the forest-folk, and told her mother about the lovely, glossy little dog
that the nice, great big dog took about with her. The only result was
that Kirstie gave her a sharp warning.

“Dog!” she exclaimed severely; “didn’t I tell you, Miranda, it was a
bear? Bears are mostly harmless, if you leave them alone; but an old
bear with a cub is mighty ugly. Mind what I say now, you keep by me and
don’t go too nigh the edge of the woods.”

And so, for the next few weeks, Miranda was watched very strictly, lest
her childish daring should involve her with the bears.

Along in the summer Kroof began to lead the cub wider afield. The longer
journeys vexed the little animal at first, and tired him; so that
sometimes he would throw himself down on his back, with pinky-white
soles of protest in the air, and refuse to go a step farther. But in
spite of the appeal of his quizzical little black snout, big ears, and
twinkling eyes, old Kroof would box him sternly till he was glad enough
to jump up and renew the march. With the exercise he got a little
leaner, but much harder, and soon came to delight in the widest
wandering. Nothing could tire him, and at the end of the journey he
would chase rabbits, or weasels, or other elusive creatures, till
convicted of futility by his mother’s sarcastic comments.

These wide wanderings were, indeed, the making of him, so that he
promised to rival Kroof herself in prowess and stature; but alas! poor
cub, they were also his undoing. Had he stayed at home—but even that
might have little availed, for among the folk of the wood it is right at
home that fate most surely strikes.

One day they two were exploring far over in the next valley—the valley
of the Quah-Davic, a tract little familiar to Kroof herself. At the noon
hour Kroof lay down in a little hollow of coolness beside a spring that
_drip-drop, drip-drop, drip-dropped_ from the face of a green rock. The
cub, however, went untiringly exploring the thickets for fifty yards
about, out of sight, indeed, but scrupulously never out of ear-shot.

Near one of these thickets his nostrils caught a new and enthralling
savour. He had never, in his brief life, smelled anything at all like
it, but an unerring instinct told him it was the smell of something very
good to eat. Pushing through the leafage he came upon the source of the
fragrance. Under a slanting structure of logs he found a piece of flesh,
yellowish-white, streaked thickly with dark reddish-brown,—and, oh, so
sweet smelling! It was stuck temptingly on a forked point of wood. His
ears stood up very wide and high in his eagerness. His sensitive
nostrils wrinkled as he sniffed at the tempting find. He decided that he
would just taste it, and then go fetch his mother. But it was a little
high up for him. He rose, set his small white teeth into it, clutched it
with his soft forepaws, and flung his whole weight upon it to pull it
down.

Kroof, dozing in her hollow of coolness, heard a small agonized screech,
cut short horribly. On the instant her great body went tearing in a
panic through the underbrush. She found poor cub crushed flat under the
huge timbers of “a dead-fall,” his glossy head and one paw sticking out
piteously, his little red tongue protruding from his distorted mouth.

Kroof needed no second look to know in her heart he was dead, stone
dead; but in the rage of her grief she would not acknowledge it. She
tore madly at the great timber,—so huge a thing to set to crush so small
a life,—and so astonishing was the strength of her claws and her vast
forearms that in the course of half an hour she had the trap fairly
demolished. Softly she removed the crushed and shapeless body, licking
the mouth, the nostrils, the pitifully staring eyes; snuggling it
lightly as a breath, and moaning over it. She would lift the head a
little with her paw, and redouble her caresses as it fell limply aside.
Then it grew cold. This was testimony she could not pretend to ignore.
She ceased the caresses which proved so vain to keep warmth in the
little body she loved. With her snout held high in air she turned around
slowly twice, as if in an appeal to some power not clearly apprehended;
then, without another glance at her dead, she rushed off madly through
the forest.

All night she wandered aimlessly, hither and thither through the low
Quah-Davic valley, over the lower slopes of the mountain, through tracts
where she had never been, but of which she took no note; and toward noon
of the following day she found herself once more in the ancient wood,
not far from the clearing. She avoided widely the old den under the pine
root, and at last threw herself down, worn out and with unsuckled teats
fiercely aching, behind the trunk of a fallen hemlock.

She slept heavily for an hour or two. Then she was awakened by the
crying of a child. She knew it at once for Miranda’s voice; and being in
some way stirred by it, in spite of the preoccupation of her pain, she
got up and moved noiselessly toward the sound.



                               Chapter VI
                       The Initiation of Miranda


That same day, just after noon-meat, when Miranda had gone out with the
scraps in a yellow bowl to feed the hens, Kirstie had been taken with
what the people at the Settlement would have called “a turn.” All the
morning she had felt unusually oppressed by the heat, but had thought
little of it. Now, as she was wiping the dishes, she quite unaccountably
dropped one of them on the floor. The crash aroused her. She saw with a
pang that it was Miranda’s little plate of many colours. Then things
turned black about her. She just managed to reel across to the bunk, and
straightway fell upon it in a kind of faint. From this state she passed
into a heavy sleep, which lasted for several hours, and probably saved
her from some violent sickness.

When Miranda had fed the hens she did not go straight back to her
mother. Instead, she wandered off toward the edge of the dark firwood,
where it came down close behind the cabin. The broad light of the open
fields, now green with buckwheat, threw a living illumination far in
among the cool arcades.

Between the straight grey trunks Miranda’s clear eyes saw something
move.

She liked it very much indeed. It looked to her extremely like a cat,
only larger than any cat she had seen at the Settlement, taller on its
legs, and with a queer, thick stump of a tail. In fact, it was a cat,
the brown cat, or lesser lynx. Its coat was a red brown, finely mottled
with a paler shade. It had straight brushes of bristles on the tips of
its ears, like its big cousin, the Canada lynx, only much less
conspicuous than his; and the expression on the moonlike round of its
face was both fierce and shy. But it was a cat, plainly enough; and
Miranda’s heart went out to it, as it sat up there in the shadows,
watching her steadily with wide pale eyes.

“Oh, pretty pussy! pretty pussy!” called Miranda, stretching out her
hands to it coaxingly, and running into the wood.

The brown cat waited unwinking till she was about ten paces off, then
turned and darted deeper into the shadows. When it was all but out of
sight it stopped, turned again, and sat up to watch the eager child. It
seemed curious as to the bit of scarlet at her neck. Miranda was now
absorbed in the pursuit, and sanguine of catching the beautiful pussy.
This time she was suffered to come almost within grasping distance,
before the animal again wheeled with an angry _pfuff_ and darted away.
Disappointed, but not discouraged, Miranda followed again; and the
little play was repeated, with slight variation, till her great eyes
were full of blinding tears, and she was ready to drop with weariness.
Then the malicious cat, tired of the game and no longer curious about
the ribbon, vanished altogether; and Miranda sat down to cry.

But she was not a child to make much fuss over a small disappointment.
In a very few minutes she jumped up, dried her eyes with the backs of
her tiny fists, and started, as she thought, straight for home. At first
she ran, thinking her mother might be troubled at her absence. But not
coming to the open as soon as she expected, she stopped, looked about
her very carefully, and then walked forward with continual
circumspection. She walked on, and on, till she knew she had gone far
enough to reach home five times over. Her feet faltered, and then she
stood quite still, helplessly. She knew that she was lost. All at once
the ancient wood, the wood she had longed for, the wood whose darkness
she had never feared, became lonely, menacing, terrible. She broke into
loud wailing.

This is what Kroof had heard and was coming to investigate. But other
ears heard it, too.

A tawny form, many times larger than the perfidious brown cat, but not
altogether unlike it in shape, crept stealthily toward the sound. Though
his limbs looked heavy, his paws large in comparison with his lank body
and small, flat, cruel head, his movements nevertheless were noiseless
as light. At each low-stooping, sinuous step, his tail twitched
nervously. When he caught sight of the crying child he stopped, and then
crept up more stealthily than before, crouching so low that his belly
almost touched the ground, his neck stretched out in line with his tail.

He made absolutely no sound, yet something within Miranda’s sensitive
brain heard him, before he was quite within springing distance. She
stopped her crying, glanced suddenly around, and fixed a darkly clear
look upon his glaring green eyes. Poor little frightened and lonely
child though she was, there was yet something subtly disturbing to the
beast in that steady gaze of hers. It was the empty gloom, the state of
being lost which had made Miranda’s fear. Of an animal, however fierce,
she had no instinctive terror; and now, though she knew that the
cruel-eyed beast before her was the panther, it was a sort of indignant
curiosity that was uppermost in her mind.

The beast shifted his eyes uneasily under her unwavering look. He
experienced a moment’s indecision as to whether or not it was well,
after all, to meddle with this unterrified, clear-gazing creature. Then
an anger grew within him. He fixed his hypnotizing stare more
resolutely, and lashed his tail with angry jerks. He was working himself
up to the final and fatal spring, while Miranda watched him.

Just then a strange thing happened. Out from behind a boulder, whence
she had been eying the situation, shambled the huge black form of Kroof.
She was at Miranda’s side in an instant; and rising upon her hind
quarters, a towering, indomitable bulk, she squealed defiance to the
panther. As soon as Miranda saw her “great big dog,”—which she knew
quite well, however, to be a bear,—she seemed to realize how frightened
she had been of the panther; and she recognized that strong defence had
come. With a convulsive sob she sprang and hid her tear-stained little
face in the bear’s shaggy flank, clutching at the soft fur with both
hands. To this impetuous embrace Kroof paid no attention, but continued
to glower menacingly at the panther.

As for the panther, he was unaffectedly astonished. He lost his
stealthy, crouching, concentrated attitude, and rose to his full height;
lifted his head, dropped his tail, and stared at the phenomenon. If this
child was a protégée of Kroof’s, he wanted none of her; for it would be
a day of famine indeed when he would wish to force conclusions with the
giant she-bear. Moreover, he recognized some sort of power and
prerogative in Miranda herself, some right of sovereignty, as it were,
which had made it distinctly hard for him to attack her even while she
had no other defence than her disconcerting gaze. Now, however, he saw
clearly that there was something very mysterious indeed about her. He
decided that it would be well to have an understanding with his mate—who
was more savage though less powerful than himself—that the child should
not be meddled with, no matter what chance should arise. With this
conclusion he wheeled about, and walked off indifferently, moving with
head erect and a casual air. One would hardly have known him for the
stealthy monster of five minutes before.

When he was gone Kroof lay down on her side and gently coaxed Miranda
against her body. Her bereaved heart went out to the child. Her swollen
teats, too, were hotly aching, and she had a kind of hope that Miranda
would ease that hurt. But this, of course, never came within scope of
the child’s remotest idea. In every other respect, however, she showed
herself most appreciative of Kroof’s attentions, stroking her with light
little hands, and murmuring to her much musical endearment, to which
Kroof lent earnest ear. Then, laying her head on the fine fur of the
bear’s belly, she suddenly went fast asleep, being wearied by her
wanderings and her emotions.

Late in the afternoon, toward milking-time, Kirstie aroused herself. She
sat up with a startled air in her bunk in the corner of the cabin.
Through the window came the rays of the westering sun. She felt troubled
at having been so long asleep. And where could Miranda be? She arose,
tottering for a moment, but soon found herself steady; and then she
realized that she had slept off a sickness. She went to the door. The
hens were diligently scratching in the dust, and Saunders eyed her with
tolerance. At the fence beyond the barn the black-and-white cow lowed
for the milking; and from her tether at the other side of the buckwheat
field, Michael, the calf, bleated for her supper of milk and hay tea.
But Miranda was nowhere to be seen.

“Miranda!” she called. And then louder,—and yet louder,—and at last with
a piercing wail of anguish, as it burst upon her that Miranda was gone.
The sunlit clearing, the grey cabin, the dark forest edges, all seemed
to whirl and swim about her for an instant. It was only for an instant.
Then she snatched up the axe from the chopping log, and with a sure
instinct darted into that tongue of fir woods just behind the house.

Straight ahead she plunged, as if following a plain trail; though in
truth she was little learned in woodcraft, and by her mere eyes could
scarce have tracked an elephant. But her heart was clutched by a grip of
ice, and she went as one tranced. All at once, however, over the mossy
crest of a rock, she saw a sight which brought her to a standstill. Her
eyes and her mouth opened wide in sheer amazement. Then the terrible
tension relaxed. A strong shudder passed through her, and she was her
steadfast self again. A smile broke up the sober lines of her face.

“Sure enough,” she muttered; “the child was right. She knows a sight
more about the beasts than I do.”

And this is what she saw. Through the hoary arcades of the firwood
walked a huge black bear, with none other than Miranda trotting by its
side, and playfully stroking its rich coat. The great animal would pause
from time to time, merely to nuzzle at the child with its snout or lick
her hand with its narrow red tongue; but the course it was making was
straight for the cabin. Kirstie stood motionless for some minutes,
watching the strange scene; then, stepping out from her shelter, she
hastened after them. So engrossed were they with each other that she
came up undiscovered to within some twenty paces of them. Then she
called out:—

“Miranda, where _have_ you been?”

The child stopped, looked around, but still clung to Kroof’s fur.

“Oh, mother!” she cried, eager and breathless, and trying to tell
everything at once, “I was all lost—and I was just going to be eaten
up—and the dear, good, big bear came and frightened the panther away—and
we were just going home—and _do_ come and speak to the dear, lovely, big
bear! Oh, don’t let it go away! _don’t_ let it!”

But on this point Kroof had her own views. It was Miranda she had
adopted, not Kirstie; and she felt a kind of jealousy of Miranda’s
mother. Even while Miranda was speaking, the bear swung aside and
briskly shambled off, leaving the child half in tears.

It was a thrilling story which Miranda had to tell her mother that
evening, while the black-and-white cow was getting milked, and while
Michael, the calf, was having its supper of milk and hay tea. It made a
profound impression on Kirstie’s quick and tolerant mind. She at once
realized the value to Miranda of such an affection as Kroof’s. Most
mothers would have been crazed with foolish fear at the situation, but
Kirstie Craig was of no such weak stuff. She saw in it only a strong
shield for Miranda against the gravest perils of the wood.



                              Chapter VII
                             The Intimates


After this experience Miranda felt herself initiated, as she had so
longed to be, into the full fellowship of the folk of the ancient wood.
Almost every day Kroof came prowling about the edges of the clearing.
Miranda was sure to catch sight of her before long and run to her with
joyous caresses. Farther than a few steps into the open the big bear
would not come, having no desire to cultivate Kirstie, or the cabin, or
the cattle, or aught that appertained to civilization. But Kirstie,
after watching from a courteous distance a few of these strange
interviews, wisely gave the child a little more latitude. Miranda was
permitted to go a certain fixed distance into the wood, but never so far
as quite to lose sight of the cabin; and this permission was only for
such times as she was with Kroof. Kirstie knew something about wild
animals; and she knew that the black bear, when it formed an attachment,
was inalienably and uncalculatingly loyal to it.

As sometimes happens in an affection which runs counter to the lines of
kinship, Kroof seemed more passionately devoted to the child than she
had been to her own cub. She would gaze with eyes of rapture, her mouth
hanging half open in foolish fondness, while Miranda, playing about her,
acquired innumerable secrets of forest-lore. Whatsoever Miranda wanted
her to do, she would strive to do, as soon as she could make out what it
was; for, in truth, Miranda’s speech, though very pleasant to her ear,
was not very intelligible to her brain. On one point, however, she was
inflexible. Perhaps for a distance of thrice her own length she would
follow Miranda out into the clearing, but farther than that she would
not go. Persuasions, petulance, argument, tears—Miranda tried them all,
but in vain. When Miranda tried going behind and pushing, or going in
front and pulling, the beast liked it, and her eyes would blink
humorously. But her mind was made up. This obstinacy, so disappointing
to Miranda, met with Kirstie’s unqualified but unexpressed approval. She
did not want Kroof’s ponderous bulk hanging about the house or loafing
around and getting in the way when she was at work in the fields.

Though Kroof was averse to civilization, she was at the same time
sagacious enough to see that she could not have Miranda always with her
in the woods. She knew very well that the tall woman with red on her
head was a very superior and mysterious kind of animal,—and that Miranda
was her cub,—a most superior kind of cub, and always to be regarded with
a secret awe, but still a cub, and belonging to the tall woman.
Therefore she was not aggrieved when she found that she could not have
Miranda with her in the woods for more than an hour or two at a time. In
that hour or two, however, much could be done; and Kroof tried to teach
Miranda many things which it is held good to know among the folk of the
ancient wood. She would sniff at the mould and dig up sweet-smelling
roots; and Miranda, observing the stems and leaves of them, soon came to
know all the edible roots of the neighbourhood. Kroof showed her, also,
the delicate dewberry, the hauntingly delicious capillaire, hidden under
its trailing vines, the insipidly sweet Indian pear, and the harmless
but rather cotton-woolly partridge-berry; and she taught her to shun the
tempting purple fruit of the trillium, as well as the deadly
snake-berry. The blueberry, dear alike to bears and men, did not grow in
the heavy-timbered forest, but Miranda had known that fruit well from
those earliest days in the Settlement, when she had so often stained her
mouth with blueberry pie. As for the scarlet clusters of the
pigeon-berry, carpeting the hillocks of the pasture, Miranda needed no
teaching from Kroof to know that these were good. Then, there were all
sorts of forest fungi, of many shapes and colours,—white, pink, delicate
yellow, shining orange covered with warts, creamy drab, streaky green,
and even strong crimson. Toadstools, Miranda called them at first, with
indiscriminating dread and aversion. But Kroof taught her better. Some,
indeed, the red ones and the warty ones in particular, the wise animal
would dash to pieces with her paw; and these Miranda understood to be
bad. In fact, their very appearance had something ominous in it, and to
Miranda’s eye they had _poison_ written all over them in big letters.
But there was one very white and dainty-looking, sweet-smelling fungus
which she would have sworn to as virtuous. As soon as she saw it, she
thought of a peculiarly shy mushroom (she loved mushrooms), and ran to
pick it up in triumph. But Kroof thrust her aside with such rudeness
that she fell over a stump, much offended. Her indignation died away,
however, as she saw Kroof tearing and stamping the pale mushrooms to
minutest fragments, with every mark of loathing. From this Miranda
gathered that the beautiful toadstool was a very monster of crime. It
was, indeed; for it was none other than the deadly amanita, one small
morsel of which would have hushed Miranda into the sleep which does not
wake.

Though Miranda was safe under Kroof’s tutelage, it was perhaps just as
well for her at that period of her youth that she was forbidden to stray
from the clearing. For there was, indeed, one tribe among the folk of
the wood against whose anger Kroof’s protection would have very little
availed. Had Miranda gone roaming, she and Kroof, they might have found
a bee tree. It is doubtful if Kroof’s sagacity would have told her that
Miranda’s skin was not adequate to an enterprise against bee trees. The
zealous bear would have probably wanted honey for the child, and the
result would have been such as to shake Kirstie’s confidence in Kroof’s
judgment.

There were, however, several well-inhabited ant-logs in that narrow
circuit which Miranda was allowed to tread, and on a certain afternoon
Kroof discovered one of these. She was much pleased. Here was a chance
to show Miranda something very nice and very good for her health. Having
attracted the child’s attention, she ripped the rotten log to its heart,
and began licking up the swarming insects and plump white larvæ
together. Here was a treat; but the incomprehensible Miranda, with a
shuddering scream, ran away. Kroof was bewildered. She finished the
ants, however, while she was about it. Whereafter she was called upon to
hear a long lecture from Miranda, to the effect that ants were not good
to eat, and that it was very cruel to tear open their nests and steal
their eggs. Of course, as Kroof did not at all understand what she was
driving at, there was no room for an argument; which, considering the
points involved, is much to be regretted.

Though Miranda had now, so to speak, the freedom of the wood, she was
not really intimate with any of the furtive folk, saving only, of
course, the irrepressible squirrels who lived in the cabin roof. She saw
the wild creatures now very close at hand, and they went about their
business under her eye without concern. They realized that it was no use
trying with her their game of invisibility. No matter how perfect their
stillness, no matter how absolutely they made themselves one with their
surroundings, they felt her clear, unwavering, friendly eyes look them
through and through. This was at first a troubling mystery to them. Who
was this youngling,—for youth betrays itself even to the most primitive
perceptions,—who, for all her youth, set their traditions and elaborate
devices so easily at naught? Their instincts told them, however, that
she was no foe to the weakest of them; and so they let her see them at
their affairs unabashed, though avoiding her with a kind of careful awe.

Kroof, too, they all avoided, but with a difference. They knew that she
was not averse to an occasional meal of flesh meat, but that she would
not greatly trouble herself in pursuit of it. All they had to do, these
lesser folk of the wood, was to keep at a safe distance from the sweep
of her mighty paw, and they felt at ease in her neighbourhood. All but
the hare—_he_ knew that Kroof considered him and his long-eared children
a special delicacy, well worth the effort of a bear. Miranda wondered
why she could never see anything of the hare when she was out with
Kroof. She did see him sometimes, indeed; but always at a distance, and
for an instant only. On these occasions, Kroof did not see him at all;
and Miranda soon came to realize that she could see more clearly than
even the furtive folk themselves. They could hide themselves from each
other by stillness and by self-effacement; but Miranda’s eyes always
inexorably distinguished the ruddy fox from the yellow-brown, rotten log
on which he flattened himself. She instantly differentiated the moveless
nuthatch from the knot on the trunk, the squatting grouse from the
lichened stone, the wood-mouse from the curled brown leaf, the crouching
wild-cat from the mottled branch. Consequently the furtive folk
gradually began to pay her the tribute of ignoring her, which meant that
they trusted her to let them alone. They kept their reserve; but under
her interested scrutiny the nuthatch would walk up the rough-barked pine
trunk and pick insects out from under the grey scales; the golden-winged
woodpecker would hunt down the fat, white grubs which he delighted in,
and hammer sharply on the dead wood a few feet above her head; the slim,
brown stoat would chase beetles among the tree roots, untroubled by her
discreet proximity; the beruffed cock-grouse would drum from the top of
his stump till the air was full of the soft thunder of his vauntings,
and his half-grown brood would dust themselves in the deserted ant-hill
in the sunniest corner of the clearing. Only the pair of crows which,
seeing great opportunities about the reoccupied clearing, had taken up
their dwelling in the top of a tall spruce close behind the cabin, held
suspiciously aloof from Miranda. They often talked her over, in harsh
tones that jarred the ancient stillness; and they considered her
intimacy with Kroof altogether contrary to the order of things. Being
themselves exemplars of duplicity, they were quite convinced that
Miranda had ulterior motives, too deep for them to fathom; and they
therefore respected her immensely. But they did not trust her, of
course. The shy rain-birds, however, trusted her, and would whistle to
each other their long, melancholy calls foretelling rain, even though
she were standing within a few steps of them, and staring at them with
all her might; and this was a most unheard-of favour on the part of the
rain-birds, who are too reticent to let themselves be heard when any one
is near enough to see them. There might be three or four uttering their
slow, inexpressibly pathetic cadences all around the clearing; but
Kirstie could never catch a glimpse of them, though many a time she
listened with deep longing in her heart as their remote voices thrilled
across the dewy oncoming of the dusk.

Miranda saw the panther only once again that year. It was about a month
after her meeting with Kroof. She was alone, just upon the edge of the
buckwheat field, and peering into the shadowy, transparent stillness to
see what she could see. What she saw sent her little heart straight up
into her mouth. There, not a dozen paces from her, lying flat along a
fallen tree, was the panther. He was staring at her, with his eyes half
shut. Startled though she was, Miranda’s experience with Kroof had made
her very self-confident. She stood moveless, staring back into those
dangerous, half-shut eyes. After a moment or two the beautiful beast
arose and stretched himself with great deliberation, reaching out and
digging in his claws, as an ordinary cat does when it stretches. At the
same time he yawned prodigiously, so that it seemed to Miranda he would
surely split to his ears, and she looked right into his great pink
throat. Then he stepped lightly down from the tree,—on the side farthest
from Miranda,—and walked away with the air of not wishing to intrude.

This same summer, too, so momentous in its events, Miranda first met
Wapiti, the delicate-antlered buck, and Ganner, the big Canada lynx.
Needless to say, they were not in company. One morning, as she sat in a
fence corner, absorbed in building a little house of twigs around a sick
butterfly, she heard a loud snort just at her elbow. Much startled, she
gave a little cry as she looked up, and something jumped back from the
fence. She saw a bright brown head, crowned with splendid, many-pronged
antlers, and a pair of large, liquid eyes looking at her with mild
wonder.

“Oh, you _be-autiful_ deer, did I frighten you?” she cried, knowing the
visitor by pictures she had seen; and she poked her little hand through
the fence in greeting. The buck seemed very curious about the scarlet
ribbon at her neck, and eyed it steadily for half a minute. Then he came
close up to the fence again, and sniffed her hand with his fine black
nostrils, opening and closing them sensitively. He let her stroke his
smooth muzzle, and held his head quite still under the caressing of her
hand. Then some unusual sound caught his ear. It was Kirstie hoeing
potatoes near by; and presently the furrow she was following brought her
into view behind the corner of the barn. The scarlet kerchief on her
hair flamed hotly in the sun. The buck raised his head high, and stared,
and finally seemed to decide that the apparition was a hostile one. With
a snort, and an impatient stamp of his polished hoof, he wheeled about
and trotted off into the wood.

Her introduction to Ganner, the lynx, was under less gracious auspices.

Michael, the calf, who had been growing excellently all summer, was kept
tethered during the daytime to a stake in a corner of the wild-grass
meadow, about fifty yards from the edge of the forest. A little nearer
the cabin was a long thicket of blackberry brakes and elder bushes and
wild clematis, forming a dense tangle, in which Miranda had, with great
pains and at the cost of terrific scratches, formed herself a delectable
hiding-place. Here she would play house, and sometimes take a nap, in
the hot mornings, while her mother would be at work acres away, at the
very opposite side of the clearing.

One day, about eleven in the morning, Michael was lying at the limit of
her tether nearest the cabin, when she saw a strange beast come out of
the forest and halt to look at her. The animal was of a greyish rusty
brown, very pale on the belly and neck, and nearly as tall as Michael
herself; but its body was curiously short in proportion to the length of
its powerful legs. It had a perfectly round face, with round glaring
eyes, long stiff black tufts on the tips of its sharp-pointed ears, and
a fierce-looking, whitish brown whisker brushed away, as it were, from
under its chin. Its tail was a mere thick, brown stump of a tail,
looking as if it had been chopped off short. The creature gazed all
around, warily; then crouched low, its hind quarters rather higher in
the air than its fore shoulders, and stepping softly, came straight for
Michael.

[Illustration: She sprang up, . . . her whole weight straining on the
tether]

Inexperienced as Michael was, she knew that this was nothing less than
death itself approaching her. She sprang up, her awkward legs spread
wide apart, her whole weight straining on the tether, her eyes, rolling
white, fixed in horror on the dreadful object. From her throat came a
long, shrill bleat of appeal and despair.

There was no mistaking that cry. It brought Miranda from her playhouse
in an instant. In the next instant she took in the situation. “Mother!
_Mothe-e-er!_” she screamed at the top of her voice, and flew to the
defence of her beloved Michael.

The lynx, at this unexpected interference, stopped short. Miranda did
not look formidable, and he was not alarmed by any means. But she looked
unusual,—and that bit of bright red at her throat might mean something
which he did not understand,—and there was something not quite natural,
something to give him pause, in a youngster displaying this reckless
courage. For a second or two, therefore, he sat straight up like a cat,
considering; and his tufted ears the while, very erect, with the strange
whiskers under his chin, gave him an air that was fiercely dignified.
His hesitation, however, was but for a moment. Satisfied that Miranda
did not count, he came on again, more swiftly; and Miranda, seeing that
she had failed to frighten him away, just flung her arms around
Michael’s neck and screamed.

The scream should have reached Kirstie’s ear across the whole breadth of
the clearing; but a flaw of wind carried it away, and the cabin
intervened to dull its edge. Other ears than Kirstie’s, however, heard
it; heard, too, and understood Michael’s bleating. The black-and-white
cow was far away, in another pasture. (Kirstie saw her running
frantically up and down along the fence, and thought the flies were
tormenting her.) But just behind the thicket lay the two steers, Bright
and Star, contemplatively chewing their midday cud. Both had risen
heavily to their feet at Michael’s first appeal. As Miranda’s scream
rang out, Bright’s sorrel head appeared around the corner of the
thicket, anxious to investigate. He stopped at sight of Ganner, held his
muzzle high in air, snorted loudly, and shook his head with a great show
of valour. Immediately after him came Star, the black-and-white brindle.
But of a different temper was he. The moment his eyes fell upon
Michael’s foe and Miranda’s, down went his long, straight horns, up went
his brindled tail, and with a bellow of rage he charged.

The gaunt steer was an antagonist whom Ganner had no stomach to face.
With an angry snarl, which showed Miranda a terrifying set of white
teeth in a very red mouth, he turned his stump of a tail, laid flat his
tufted ears, and made for the forest with long, splendid leaps, his
exaggerated hind legs seeming to volley him forward like a ball. In
about five seconds he was out of sight among the trees; and Star,
snorting and switching his tail, stood pawing the turf haughtily in
front of Miranda and Michael.

It was Miranda who named the big lynx “Ganner” that day; because, as she
told her mother afterward, that was what he said when Star came and
drove him away.



                              Chapter VIII
                             Axe and Antler


The next winter went by in the main much like the former one. But more
birds came to be fed as the season advanced, because Miranda’s fame had
gone abroad amongst them. The snow was not so deep, the cold not so
severe. No panther came again to claw at their roof by night. But there
were certain events which made the season stand out sharply from all
others in the eyes of both Kirstie and Miranda.

Throughout December and January Wapiti, the buck, with two slim does
accompanying him, would come and hang about the barn for several days at
a time, nibbling at the scattered straw. With the two steers, Star and
Bright, Wapiti was not on very good terms. They would sometimes thrust
at him resentfully, whereupon he would jump aside, as if on springs,
stamp twice sharply with his polished fore hoofs, and level at them the
fourteen threatening spear points of his antlers. But the challenge
never came to anything. As for the black-and-white cow, she seemed to
admire Wapiti greatly, though he met her admiration with the most lofty
indifference. One day Miranda let him and the two does lick some coarse
salt out of a dish, after which enchanting experience all three would
follow her straight up to the cabin door. They even took to following
Kirstie about, which pleased and flattered her more than she would
acknowledge to Miranda, and earned them many a cold buckwheat pancake.
To them the cold pancakes, though leathery and tough, were a tit-bit of
delight; but along in January they tore themselves away from such
raptures and removed to other feeding grounds.

Toward spring, to Miranda’s great delight, she made acquaintance with
Ten-Tine, the splendid bull caribou whom she had just seen the winter
before. He and his antlered cows were migrating southward by slow
stages. They were getting tired of the dry moss and lichen of the
barrens which lay a week’s journey northward from the clearing. They
began to crave the young shoots of willow and poplar that would now be
bursting with sap along the more southerly streams. Looking from the
window one morning, before the cattle had been let out, Miranda saw
Ten-Tine emerge from the woods and start with long, swinging strides
across the open. His curiously flattened, leaf-like antlers lay back on
a level with his shoulders, and his nose pointed straight before him.
The position was just the one to enable him to go through the woods
without getting his horns entangled. From the middle of his forehead
projected, at right angles to the rest of the antlers, two broad, flat,
palmated prongs, a curious enlargement of the central ones. His cows,
whose antlers were little less splendid than his own, but lacking in the
frontal projection, followed at his heels. In colour he was of a very
light, whitish-drab, quite unlike the warm brown of Wapiti’s coat.

In passing the barn Ten-Tine caught sight of some tempting fodder, and
stopped to try it. Kirstie’s straw proved very much to the taste of the
whole herd. While they were feeding delightedly, Miranda stole out to
make friends with them. She took, as a tribute, a few handfuls of the
hens’ buckwheat, in a bright yellow bowl. As she approached, Ten-Tine
lifted his fine head and eyed her curiously. Had it been the rutting
season, he would no doubt have straightway challenged her to mortal
combat. But now, unless he saw a wolf, a panther, or a lynx, he was
good-tempered and inquisitive. This small creature looked harmless, and
there was undoubtedly something quite remarkable about her. What was
that shining thing which she held out in front of her? And what was that
other very bright thing around her neck? He stopped feeding, and watched
her intently, his head held in an attitude of indecision, just a little
lower than his shoulders. The cows took a look also, and felt curious,
but were concerned rather to satisfy their hunger than their curiosity.
They left the matter easily to Ten-Tine.

Miranda had learned many things already from her year among the folk of
the wood. One of these things was that all the furtive folk dreaded and
resented rough movement. Their manners were always beyond reproach. The
fiercest of them moved ever with an aristocratic grace and poise. They
knew the difference between swiftness and haste. All abruptness they
abhorred. In lines of beauty they eluded their enemies. They killed in
curves.

She did not, therefore, attempt to go straight up and take Ten-Tine’s
acquaintance by storm. She paused discreetly some dozen steps away, held
out the dish to him, and murmured her inarticulate, soft persuasions.
Not being versed in the caribou tongue, she trusted the tones of her
voice to reveal her good intention.

Seeing that she would come no nearer, Ten-Tine’s curiosity refused to be
balked. But he was dubious, very dubious. Like Wapiti, he stamped when
he was in doubt; but the hoofs he stamped with were much larger,
broader, clumsier, less polished than Wapiti’s, being formed for running
over such soft surfaces as bogland and snow insufficiently packed, where
Wapiti’s trim feet would cut through like knives.

Step by step he drew nearer. There was something in Miranda’s clear gaze
that gave him confidence. At length he was near enough to touch the
yellow bowl with his flexible upper lip. He saw that the bowl contained
something. He extended his muzzle over the rim, and, to Miranda’s
surprise, blew into it. The grain flew in every direction, some of it
sticking to his own moist lips. He drew back, a little startled. Then he
licked his lips; and he liked the taste. Back went his muzzle into the
interesting bowl; and, after sniffing again very gently, he licked up
the whole contents.

“Oh, greedy!” exclaimed Miranda, in tender rebuke, and started back to
the cabin to get him some more.

“Wouldn’t Saunders be cross,” she thought to herself, “if he knew I was
giving his buckwheat to the nice deer?”

Ten-Tine followed close behind her, sniffing inquisitively at the red
ribbon on her neck. When Miranda went in for the buckwheat, he tried to
enter with her, but his antlers had too much spread for the doorway.
Kirstie, who was busy sweeping, looked up in amazement as the great head
darkened her door.

“Drat the child!” she exclaimed; “she’ll be bringing all the beasts of
the wood in to live with us before long.”

She did not grudge Ten-Tine the few handfuls of buckwheat, however,
though he blew half of it over the floor so that she had to sweep it up.
When he had finished, and perceived that no more was forthcoming, he
backed off reluctantly from the door and began smelling around the
window-sill, pushing his curious nose tentatively against the glass.

Now it chanced that all the way down from the barrens Ten-Tine and his
little herd had been hungrily pursued, although they did not know it.
Four of the great grey timber wolves were on their track. Savage but
prudent, the wolves were unwilling to attack the herd, for they knew the
caribou’s fighting prowess. But they awaited a chance to cut off one of
the cows and hunt her down alone. For days they had kept the trail,
faring very scantly by the way; and now they were both ravenous and
enraged. Emerging from the woods, they saw the five cows at feed by the
barn, with Ten-Tine nowhere in sight. The opportunity was too rare a one
to miss. They seized it. All four gaunt forms abreast, they came
galloping across the snow in silence, their long, grey snouts wrinkled,
their white fangs uncovered, their grey-and-white shoulders rising and
falling in unison, their cloudy tails floating straight out behind them.

Just in time the cows saw them coming. There was a half second of
motionless consternation. Then nimbly they sprang into a circle, hind
quarters bunched together, levelled antlers all pointing outward. It was
the accurate inherited discipline of generations.

Without a sound, save a deep, gasping breath, the wolves made their
leap, striving to clear that bayonet hedge of horns. Two were hurled
back, yelping. One brought a cow to her knees, half clear of the circle,
his fangs in her neck, and would have finished her but that her next
neighbour prodded him so fiercely in the flank that he let go with a
shrill snarl. But the fourth wolf found the weak point in the circle.
The foolish young cow upon whom he sprang went wild at once with fright.
She broke from the ring and fled. The next instant the wolf was at her
throat.

The moment he pulled her down the other wolves sprang upon her. The rest
of the cows, maintaining their position of defence, viewed her plight
with considerable unconcern, doubtless holding that her folly was well
served, and that she was worth no better end. But Ten-Tine, who had
suddenly taken in the situation, had other views about it. To him the
foolish young cow was most important. With a shrill note of rage, half
bleat, half bellow, he charged down to the rescue. The first wolf he
struck was hurled against the corner of the barn, and came limping back
to the fray with no great enthusiasm. Upon the next he came down with
both front feet, fairly breaking the creature’s back. Instantly the
other two fastened upon his flanks, trying to pull him down; while he,
bounding and rearing, strove heroically to shake them off in order to
reach them with horns and hoofs. The bleeding cow, meanwhile, struggled
to her feet and took refuge within the dauntless circle, which rather
grudgingly opened to admit her. For this they must not be judged too
harshly; for in caribou eyes she had committed the crime of crimes in
breaking ranks and exposing the whole herd to destruction.

At this stage in the encounter the valiant Ten-Tine found himself in
desperate straits; but help came from an unexpected quarter. The factor
which the wolves had not allowed for was Kirstie Craig. At the first
sight of them Kirstie had been filled with silent rage. She had believed
that wolves were quite extinct throughout all the neighbouring forests;
and now in their return she saw a perpetual menace. But at least they
were scarce, she knew that; and on the instant she resolved that this
little pack should meet no milder fate than extermination.

“It’s wolves! Don’t you stir outside this door!” she commanded grimly,
in that voice which Miranda never dreamed of disobeying. Miranda,
trembling with excitement, her eyes wide and her cheeks white, climbed
to the window, and flattened her face against it. Kirstie rushed out,
slamming the door.

As she passed the chopping-block, Kirstie snatched up her axe. Her fine
face was set like iron. The black eyes blazed fury. It was a desperate
venture, to attack three maddened wolves, with no ally to support her
save a caribou bull; but Kirstie, as we have seen, was not a woman for
half measures.

The first sweep of that poised and practised axe caught the nearest wolf
just behind the fore quarters, and almost shore him in two. Thus
suddenly freed on one side, Ten-Tine wheeled like lightning to catch his
other assailant, but the animal sprang back. In evading Ten-Tine’s
horns, he almost fell over Kirstie, who, thus balked of her full deadly
swing, just managed to fetch him a short stroke under the jaw with the
flat of the blade. It was enough, however, to fell him for an instant,
and that instant was enough for Ten-Tine. Bounding into the air, the big
caribou came down with both sharp fore hoofs, like chisels, squarely on
the middle of his adversary’s ribs. The stroke was slaughterously
decisive. Ribs of steel could not have endured it, and in a very few
seconds the shape of bloody grey fur upon the snow bore scant
resemblance to a wolf.

The last of the pack, who had been lamed by Ten-Tine’s onslaught, had
prudently drawn off when he saw Kirstie coming. Now he turned tail.
Kirstie, determined that not one should escape, gave chase. She could
run as can few women. She was bent on her grim purpose of extermination.
At first the wolf’s lameness hindered him; but just as he was about to
turn at bay and fight dumbly to the death, after the manner of his kind,
the effort which he had been making loosened the strained muscles, and
he found his pace. Stretching himself out on his long gallop, he shot
away from his pursuer as if she had been standing still.

Kirstie stopped, swung her axe, and hurled it after him with all her
strength. It struck the mark. Had it struck true, edge on, it would have
fulfilled her utmost intention; but it struck, with the thick of the
head, squarely upon the brute’s rump. The blow sent him rolling end over
end across the snow. He yelped with astonishment and terror; but
recovering himself again in a second, he went bounding like a grey ball
of fur over a brush heap, and vanished down the forest arches.

When Kirstie turned round she saw Miranda, white, pitiful, and
bewildered, in the doorway; while Ten-Tine and his cows, without waiting
to thank her, were trotting away across the white fields, their muzzles
thrust far forward, their antlers laid along their backs. From Ten-Tine
himself, and from the wounded young cow, the blood dripped scarlet and
steaming at every stride.



                               Chapter IX
                            The Pax Mirandæ


After this experience, Kirstie would have been more anxious than before
about Miranda, had it not been for the child’s remarkable friendship
with the great she-bear. As soon as the snow was gone, and the ancient
wood again began to lure Miranda with its mystic stillness and
transparent twilight, Kroof reappeared, as devoted as ever. When Kroof
was absent, the woods were to the child a forbidden realm, into which
she could only peer with longing and watch the furtive folk with those
initiated eyes of hers.

A little later when the mosses were dry, and when the ground was well
heartened with the fecundating heats of June, Miranda had further proof
of her peculiar powers of vision. One day she and Kroof came upon a
partridge hen with her new-hatched brood, at the edge of a thicket of
young birches. The hen went flopping and fluttering off among the trees,
as if sorely wounded; and Kroof, convinced of a speedy capture, followed
eagerly. She gave a glance about her first, however, to see if there
were any partridge chicks in the neighbourhood. To Miranda’s
astonishment, the wise animal saw none. But Miranda saw them distinctly.
There they were all about her, moveless little brown balls, exactly like
the leaves and the moss and the scattered things of the forest floor.
Some were half hidden under a leaf or twig; some squatted in the open,
just in the positions in which the alarm had found them. They shut their
eyes even, to make themselves more at one with their surroundings. They
would have endured any fate, they would have died on the spot, rather
than move, so perfect was their baby obedience to the partridge law.
This obedience had its reward. It gave them invisibility to all the folk
of the wood, friends and foes alike. But there was no such thing as
deceiving Miranda’s eyes. She was not concerned about the mother
partridge, because she saw through her pretty trick and knew that Kroof
could never catch her. Indeed, in her innocence she did not think good
Kroof would hurt her if she did catch her, But these moveless chicks, on
the other hand, were interesting. One—two—three—Miranda counted ten of
them, and there were more about somewhere, she imagined. Presently the
mother bird came flopping around in a circle, to see how things were
going. She saw Miranda stoop and pick up one of the precious brown
balls, and then another, curiously but gently. In her astonishment the
distracted bird forgot Kroof for a second, and was almost caught.
Escaping this peril by a sudden wild dash, and realizing that from
Miranda there was no concealment, she flew straight into the densest
part of the thicket and gave a peremptory call. At the sound each little
motionless ball came to life. The two that were lying as if dead on
Miranda’s outstretched palms hopped to the ground; and all darted into
the thicket. A few low but sharply articulated clucks, and the mother
bird led her brood off swiftly through the bush; while Kroof, somewhat
crestfallen, came shambling back to Miranda.

All this time, in spite of the affair of the wolves, the attack of
Ganner, the lynx, on Michael, and that tell-tale spot of blood and fur
on the snow, where the owl had torn the hare for his midnight feast,
Miranda had regarded the folk of the ancient wood as a gentle people,
living for the most part in a voiceless amity. Her seeing eyes quite
failed to see the unceasing tragedy of the stillness. She did not guess
that the furtive folk, whom she watched about their business, went
always with fear at their side and death lying in wait at every turn.
She little dreamed that, for most of them, the very price of life itself
was the ceaseless extinguishing of life.

It was during the summer that Miranda found her first and only flaw in
Kroof’s perfections; for Kroof she regarded as second only to her mother
among created beings. But on one memorable day, when she ran across the
fields to meet Kroof at the edge of the wood, the great bear was too
much occupied to come forward as usual. She was sniffing at something on
the ground which she held securely under one of her huge paws. Miranda
ran forward to see what it was.

To her horror it was the warm and bleeding body of a hare.

She shrank back, sickened at the sight. Then, in flaming indignation she
struck Kroof again and again in the face with the palms of her little
hands. Kroof was astonished,—temperately astonished,—for she always knew
Miranda was peculiar. She lifted her snout high in the air to escape the
blows, shut her eyes, and meekly withdrew the offending paw.

“Oh, Kroof, how _could_ you! I hate you, bad Kroof! You are just like
the wolves!” cried Miranda, her little bosom bursting with wrath and
tears. Kroof understood that she was in grievous disgrace. Carrying the
dead hare with her, Miranda ran out into the potato patch, fetched the
hoe, returned to the spot where the bear still sat in penitential
contemplation, and proceeded in condemnatory silence to dig a hole right
under Kroof’s nose. Here she buried the hare, tenderly smoothing the
ground above it. Then throwing the hoe down violently, she flung her
arms about Kroof’s neck, and burst into a passion of tears.

“How _could_ you do it, Kroof?” she sobbed. “Oh, perhaps you’ll be
wanting to eat up Miranda some day!”

Kroof suffered herself to be led away from the unhappy spot. Soon
Miranda grew calm, and the painful scene seemed forgotten. The rest of
the afternoon was spent very pleasantly in eating wild raspberries along
the farther side of the clearing. To Kroof’s mind it gradually became
clear that her offence lay in killing the hare; and as it was obvious
that Miranda liked hares, she resolved never to offend again in this
respect, at least while Miranda was anywhere in the neighbourhood. After
Miranda had gone home, however, the philosophical Kroof strolled back
discreetly to where the hare was buried. She dug it up, and ate it with
great satisfaction, and afterward she smoothed down the earth again,
that Miranda might not know.

After this trying episode Miranda had every reason to believe that
Kroof’s reformation was complete. Little by little, as month followed
month, and season followed season, and year rolled into year at the
quiet cabin in the clearing, Miranda forgot the few scenes of blood
which had been thrust upon her. The years now little varied one from
another; yet to Miranda the life was not monotonous. Each season was for
her full of events, full of tranquil uneventfulness for Kirstie. The
cabin became more homelike as currant and lilac bushes grew up around
it, a green, sweet covert for birds, and abundant scarlet-blossomed
bean-vines mantled the barrenness of its weathered logs. The clearing
prospered. The stock increased. Old Dave hardly ever visited at the
clearing but he went back laden with stuff to sell for Kirstie at the
Settlement. Among the folk of the forest Miranda’s ascendency kept on
growing, little by little, till, though none of the beasts came to know
her as Kroof did, they all had a tendency to follow her at respectful
distance, without seeming to do so. They never killed in her presence,
so that a perpetual truce, as it were, came at last to rule within
eyeshot of her inescapable gaze. Sometimes the advent of spring would
bring Kroof to the clearing not alone, but with a furry and jolly black
morsel of a cub at her side. The cub never detracted in the least from
the devotion which she paid to Miranda. It always grew up to young
bearhood in more or less amiable tolerance of its mother’s
incomprehensible friend, only to drift away at last to other feeding
grounds; for Kroof was absolute in her own domain, and suffered not even
her own offspring to trespass thereon, when once they had reached
maturity. Cubs might come, and cubs might go; but the love of Kroof and
Miranda was a thing that rested unchanging.

In the winters, Miranda now did most of the knitting, while Kirstie
wove, on a great clacking loom, the flax which her little farm produced
abundantly. They had decided not to keep sheep at the clearing, lest
their presence should lure back the wolves. One warm day toward spring,
when Old Dave, laden with an ample pack of mittens, stockings, and socks
which Miranda’s active fingers had fashioned, was slowly trudging along
the trail on his way back to the Settlement, he became aware that a pair
of foxes followed him. They came not very near, nor did they pay him any
marked attention. They merely seemed to “favour his company,” as he
himself put it. He was thus curiously escorted for perhaps a mile or
two, to his great bewilderment; for he knew no reason why he should be
so chosen out for honour in the wood. At another time, when similarly
burdened, Wapiti, the buck, came up and sniffed at him, very amicably.
During the next winter, when he was carrying the same magic merchandise,
several hares went leaping beside him, not very near, but as if seeking
the safety of his presence. The mystery of all this weighed upon him. He
was at first half inclined to think that he was “ha’nted”; but
fortunately he took thought to examine the tracks, and so assured
himself that his inexplicable companions were of real flesh and blood.
Nevertheless, he found himself growing shy of his periodical journeyings
through the wood, and at last he opened his mind to Kirstie on the
subject.

Kirstie was amused in her grave way.

“Why, Dave,” she explained, “didn’t you know Miranda was that thick with
the wild things she’s half wild herself? Weren’t you carrying a lot of
Miranda’s knit stuff when the creatures followed you?”

“That’s so, Kirstie!” was the old lumberman’s reply. “I recollec’ as how
the big buck kep’ a-sniffin’ at my pack of socks an’ mits, too!”

“They were some of Miranda’s friends; and when they smelled of those
mits they thought she was somewhere around, or else they knew you must
be a friend of hers.”

Thenceforward Old Dave always looked for something of a procession in
his honour whenever he carried Miranda’s knittings to the Settlement;
and he was intensely proud of the distinction. He talked about it among
his gossips, of course; and therefore a lot of strange stories began to
circulate. It was said by some that Kirstie and Miranda held converse
with the beasts in plain English such as common mortals use, and knew
all the secrets of the woods, and much besides that “humans” have no
call to know. By others, more superstitious and fanatical, it was
whispered that no mere animals formed the circle of Kirstie’s
associates, but that spirits, in the guise of hares, foxes, cats,
panthers, bears, were her familiars at the solitary cabin. Such
malicious tales cost Old Dave many a bitter hour, as well as more than
one sharp combat, till the gossips learned to keep a bridle on their
tongues when he was by. As for Young Dave, he had let the clearing and
all its affairs drop from his mind, and, betaking himself to a wild
region to the north of the Quah-Davic, was fast making his name as a
hunter and trapper. He came but seldom to the Settlement, and when he
came he had small ear for the Settlement scandals. His mind was growing
large, and quiet, and tolerant, among the great solitudes.



                               Chapter X
                     The Routing of the Philistines


In the seventh year of Kirstie’s exile, something occurred which gave
the Settlement gossip a fresh impulse, and added a colour of awe to the
mystery which surrounded the clearing.

The winter changed to a very open one, so that long before spring Kroof
awoke in her lair under the pine root. There was not enough snow to keep
her warm and asleep. But the ground was frozen, food was scarce, and she
soon became hungry. Miranda observed her growing leanness, and tried the
experiment of bringing her a mess of boiled beans from the cabin pot. To
the hungry bear the beans were a revelation. She realized that Miranda’s
mother was in some way connected with the experience, and her long
reserve melted away in the warmth of her responsive palate. The next
day, about noon, as Kirstie and Miranda were sitting down to their meal,
Kroof appeared at the cabin door and sniffed longingly at the threshold.

“What’s that sniffing at the door?” wondered Kirstie, with some
uneasiness in her grave voice. But Miranda had flown at once to the
window to look out.

“Why, mother, it’s Kroof!” she cried, clapping her hands with delight,
and before her mother could say a word, she had thrown the door wide
open. In shambled the bear forthwith, blinking her shrewd little eyes.
She seated herself on her haunches, near the table, and gazed with
intent curiosity at the fire. At this moment a dry stick snapped and
crackled sharply, whereupon she backed off to a safer distance, but
still kept her eyes upon the strange phenomenon.

Both Kirstie and Miranda had been watching her with breathless interest,
to see how she would comport herself, but now Miranda broke silence.

“Oh! you dear old Kroof, we’re so glad you’ve come at last to see us!”
she cried, rushing over and flinging both arms around the animal’s neck.
Kirstie’s face looked a doubtful indorsement of the welcome. Kroof paid
no attention to Miranda’s caresses beyond a hasty lick at her ear, and
continued to study the fascinating flames. This quietness of demeanour
reassured Kirstie, whose hospitality thereupon asserted itself.

“Give the poor thing some buckwheat cakes, Miranda,” she said. “I’m sure
she’s come because she’s hungry.”

Miranda preferred to think the visit was due to no such interested
motives; but she at once took up a plate of cakes which she had drenched
in molasses for the requirements of her own taste. She set the plate on
the edge of the table nearest to her visitor, and gently pulled the
bear’s snout down toward it. No second invitation was needed. The fire
was forgotten. The enchanting smell of buckwheat cakes and molasses was
a new one to Kroof’s nostrils, but the taste for it was there, full
grown and waiting. Out went her narrow red tongue. The cakes disappeared
rather more rapidly than was consistent with good manners: the molasses
was deftly licked up, and with a grin of rapture she looked about for
more. Just in front of Kirstie stood a heaping dish of the dainties hot
from the griddle. With an eager but tentative paw Kroof reached out for
them. This was certainly not manners. Kirstie removed the dish beyond
her reach, while Miranda firmly pushed the trespassing paw from the
table.

“No, Kroof, you shan’t have any more at all, unless you are good!” she
admonished, with hortatory finger uplifted.

There are few animals so quick to take a hint as the bear, and Kroof’s
wits had grown peculiarly alert during her long intimacy with Miranda.
She submitted with instant meekness, and waited, with tongue hanging
out, while Miranda prepared her a huge bowl of bread and molasses. When
she had eaten this, she investigated everything about the cabin, and
finally went to sleep on a mat in the corner of the inner room. Before
sundown she got up and wandered off to her lair, being still drowsy with
winter sleep.

After this the old bear came daily at noon to the cabin, dined with
Kirstie and Miranda, and dozed away the afternoon on her mat in the
chosen corner. Kirstie came to regard her as a member of the household.
To the cattle and the poultry she paid no attention whatever. In a few
days the oxen ceased to lower their horns as she passed; and the cock,
Saunders’s equally haughty successor, refrained from the shrill
expletives of warning with which he had been wont to herald her
approach.

One afternoon, before spring had fairly set in, there came two unwelcome
visitors to the cabin. In a lumber-camp some fifteen miles away, on a
branch of the Quah-Davic, there had been trouble. Two of the “hands,”
surly and mutinous all winter, had at last, by some special brutality,
enraged the “boss” and their mates beyond all pardon. Hooted and beaten
from the camp, they had started through the woods by the shortest road
to the Settlement. Their hearts were black with pent-up fury. About
three o’clock in the afternoon, they happened upon the clearing, and
demanded something to eat.

Though sullen, and with a kind of menace in their air, their words were
civil enough at first, and Kirstie busied herself to supply what seemed
to her their just demands. The laws of hospitality are very binding in
the backwoods. Miranda, meanwhile, not liking the looks of the
strangers, kept silently aloof and scrutinized them.

When Kirstie had set before them a good meal,—hot tea, and hot boiled
beans, and eggs, and white bread and butter,—they were disappointed
because she gave them no pork, and they were not slow to demand it.

“I’ve got none,” said Kirstie; “we don’t eat pork here. You ought to get
along well enough on what’s good enough for Miranda and me.”

For a backwoods house to be without pork, the indispensable, the
universal, the lumberman’s staff of life, was something unheard of. They
both thought she was keeping back the pork out of meanness.

“You lie!” exclaimed one, a lean, short, swarthy ruffian. The other got
up and took a step toward the woman, where she stood, dauntlessly eying
them. His scrubby red beard bristled, his massive shoulders hunched
themselves ominously toward his big ears.

“You git that pork, and be quick about it!” he commanded, with the
addition of such phrases of emphasis as the lumberman uses, but does not
use in the presence of women.

“Beast!” exclaimed Kirstie, eyes and cheeks flaming. “Get out of this
house.” And she glanced about for a weapon. But in a second the ruffian
had seized her. Though stronger than most men, she was no match for
him—a noted bully and a cunning master of the tricks of the ring. She
was thrown in a second. Miranda, with a scream of rage, snatched up a
table knife and darted to her mother’s aid; but the shorter ruffian, now
delighted with the game, shouted: “Settle the old woman, Bill. I’ll see
to the gal!” and made a grab for Miranda.

It had all happened so suddenly that Kirstie was, for a moment, stunned.
Then, realizing the full horror of the situation, a strength as of
madness came upon her. She set her teeth into the wrist of her assailant
with such fury that he yelled and for a second loosed his hold. In that
second, tearing herself half free, she clutched his throat with her long
and powerful fingers. It was only an instant’s respite, but it was
enough to divert the other scoundrel’s attention from Miranda. With a
huge laugh he turned to free his mate from that throttling grip.

His purpose was never fulfilled. Kroof, just at this instant, thrust her
nose from the door of the inner room, half awake, and wondering at the
disturbance. Her huge bulk was like a nightmare. The swarthy wretch
stood for an instant spellbound in amazement. With a savage growl, Kroof
launched herself at him, and he, darting around the table, wrenched the
door open and fled.

[Illustration: He ran wildly over the snow patches]

The other miscreant, though well occupied with Kirstie’s mad grip at his
throat, had seen, from the corner of his eyes, that black monster emerge
like fate and charge upon his comrade. To him, Kroof looked as big as an
ox. With a gasping curse he tore himself free; and, hurling Kirstie half
across the table, he rushed from the cabin. His panic was lest the
monster should return and catch him, like a rat in a pit, where there
was no chance of escape.

As a matter of fact, Kroof _was_ just returning, with an angry
realization that her foe could run faster than she could. And lo! here
was another of the same breed in the very doorway before her. As she
confronted him, his eyes nearly started from his head. With a yell he
dodged past, nimble as a loon’s neck. Savagely she struck out at him
with her punishing paw. Had she caught him, there would have been one
rogue the fewer, and blood on the cabin threshold. But she missed, and
he went free. He ran wildly over the snow patches in pursuit of his
fleeing comrade; while Kroof, all a-bristle with indignation, hurried
into the cabin, to be hugged and praised with grateful tears by Kirstie
and Miranda.

When the first of the fugitives, the lean and swarthy one, reached the
edge of the woods, he paused to look back. There was no one following
but his comrade, who came up a moment later and clutched at him, panting
heavily. Neither, for a minute or two, had breath for any word but a
broken curse. The big, bristly scoundrel called Bill was bleeding at the
wrist from Kirstie’s bite, and his throat, purple and puffed, bore
witness to the strength of Kirstie’s fingers. The other had got off scot
free. The two stared at each other, cowed and discomfited.

“Ever see the likes o’ that?” queried Bill, earnestly.

“Be damned ef ’twan’t the devil himself!” asseverated his companion.

“Oh, hell! ’twere jest a b’ar!” retorted Bill, in a tone of would-be
derision. “But bigger’n a steer! _I_ don’t want none of it!”

“B’ar er devil, what’s the odds? Let’s git, says I!” was the response;
and simultaneously the two lifted their eyes to observe the sun and get
their bearings. But it was not the sun they saw. Their jaws fell. Their
hair rose. For a moment they stood rooted to the ground in abject
horror.

Right above their heads, crouched close upon the vast up-sloping limb of
a hoary pine, lay a panther, looking down upon them with fixed, dilating
stare. They saw his claws, protruding, and set firmly into the bark.
They saw the backward, snarling curl of his lips as his head reached
down toward them over the edge of his perch. For several choking
heart-beats the picture bit itself into their coarse brains; then, with
a gurgling cry that came as one voice from the two throats, both sprang
aside like hares and ran wildly down the trail.

Within a few hours of their arrival at the Settlement, this was the
story on all lips,—that Kirstie’s cabin was guarded by familiars, who
could take upon themselves at will the form of bear, panther, wolf, or
mad bull moose, for the terrorizing of such travellers as might chance
to trespass upon that unholy solitude. The Settlement held a few
superstitious souls who believed this tale; while the rest pretended to
believe it because it gave them something to talk about. No one, in
fact, was at all the worse for it, except the ruffian called Bill, who,
on one of Young Dave’s rare visits to the Settlement, got into an
argument with him on the subject, and incidentally got a licking.



                               Chapter XI
                         Miranda and Young Dave


After this the cabin in the clearing ran small risk of marauders. To the
most sceptical homespun philosopher in the Settlement it seemed obvious
that Kirstie and Miranda had something mysterious about them, and had
forsaken their kind for the fellowship of the furtive kin. No one but
Old Dave had any relish for a neighbourhood where bears kept guard, and
lynxes slily frequented, and caribou bulls of a haughty temper made
themselves free of the barnyard. As for Young Dave, unwilling to fall
foul of the folk who were so friendly to Kirstie and Miranda, he carried
his traps, his woodcraft, and his cunning rifle to a tract more remote
from the clearing.

Thus it came that Miranda grew to womanhood with no human companion but
her mother. To her mother she stood so close that the two assimilated
each other, as it were. Such education as Kirstie possessed, and such
culture, narrow but significant, were Miranda’s by absorption. For the
rest, the quiet folk of the wood insensibly moulded her, and the great
silences, and the wide wonder of the skies at night, and the solemnity
of the wind. At seventeen she was a woman, mature beyond her years, but
strange, with an elfish or a faun-like strangeness: as if a soul not all
human dwelt in her human shape. Silent, wild, unsmiling, her sympathies
were not with her own kind, but with the wild and silent folk who know
not the sweetness of laughter. Yet she was given to moods of singing
mirth, at long intervals; and her tenderness toward all pain, her horror
of blood, were things equally alien to the wilderness creatures, her
associates. It was doubtless this unbridgable divergence, combining with
her sympathy and subtle comprehension, which secured her mysterious
ascendency in the forest; for by this time it would never have occurred
to her to step aside even for a panther or a bull moose in his fury.
Something, somehow, in the air about her, told all the creatures that
she was supreme.

In appearance, Miranda was a contrast to her mother, though her
colouring was almost the same. Miranda was a little less than middle
height, slender, graceful, fine-boned, small of hand and foot,
delicate-featured, her skin toned with the clear browns of health and
the open air and the matchless cosmetic of the sun. Her abundance of
bronze-black hair, shot with flame-glints wheresoever the sunlight
struck it, came down low over a broad, low forehead. Her eyes, in which,
as we have seen, lay very much of her power over the folk of the wood,
were very large and dark. They possessed a singular transparency, akin
to the magical charm of the forest shadows. There was something unreal
and haunting in this inexplicable clarity of her gaze, something of that
mystery which dwells in the reflections of a perfect mirror of water.
Her nose, straight and well modelled, was rather large than small, with
nostrils alertly sensitive to discern all the wilding savours, the
clean, personal scents of the clean-living creatures of the wood, and
even those inexpressibly elusive perfume-heralds which, on certain days,
come upon the air, forerunning the changes of the seasons. Her mouth was
large, but not too large for beauty, neither thin nor full, of a vivid
scarlet, mobile and mutable, yet firm, and with the edges of the lips
exactly defined. Habitually reposeful and self-controlled in movement,
like her mother, her repose suggested that of a bird poised upon the
wing, liable at any instant to incalculable celerities; while that of
Kirstie was like the calm of a hill with the eternal disrupting fire at
its heart. The scarlet ribbon which Miranda the woman, like Miranda the
child, wore always about her neck, seemed in her the symbol of an
ineradicable strangeness of spirit, while Kirstie’s scarlet kerchief
expressed but the passion which burned perennial beneath its wearer’s
quietude.

Being in all respects natural and unselfconscious, it is not to be
wondered at that Miranda was inconsistent. The truce which she had
created about her—the _pax Mirandæ_—had so long kept her eyes from the
hated sight of blood that she had forgotten death, and did not more than
half believe in pain. Nevertheless she was still a shaft of doom to the
trout in the lake and river. Fishing was a delight to her. It satisfied
some fierce instinct inherited from her forefathers, which she never
thought to analyze. The musical rushing of the stream; the foam and
clamour of the shallow falls; the deep, black, gleaming pools with the
roots of larch and hemlock overhanging; the sullen purple and amber of
the eddies with their slowly swirling patches of froth,—all these
allured her, though with a threat. And then the stealthy casting of the
small, baited hook or glittering fly, the tense expectancy, the
electrifying tug upon the line, the thrill, the exultation of the
landing, and the beauty of the spotted prey, silver and vermilion, on
the olive carpet of the moss! It hardly occurred to her that they were
breathing, sentient creatures, these fish of the pools. She would
doubtless have resented the idea of any kinship between herself and
these cold inhabiters of a hostile element. In fact, Miranda was very
close to nature, and she could not escape her part in nature’s never
ceasing war of opposites.

Late one afternoon in summer Miranda was loitering homeward from the
stream with a goodly string of trout. It was a warm day and windless,
and the time of year not that which favours the fisherman. But in those
cold waters the fish will rise even in July and August, and Miranda’s
bait, or Miranda’s home-tied fly, was always a killing lure to them. She
carried her catch—one gaping-jawed two-pounder, and a half dozen smaller
victims—strung through the crimson gills on a forked branch of alder.
Her dark face was flushed; her hair (she never wore a hat) was
dishevelled; her eyes were very wide and abstracted, taking in the
varied shadows,—the boulders, the markings on the bark of the tree
trunks, the occasional flickering moths, and the solemn little brown owl
that sat in the cleft of the pine tree, yet seeming to see not these but
something within or beyond them.

Suddenly, however, they were arrested by a sight which scattered their
abstraction. Their focus seemed to shorten, their expression
concentrated to a strained intensity, then lightened to a greyness with
anger as she took a hasty step forward, and paused, uncertain for a
moment what to do.

Before her was a little open glade, full of sun, secure and inviting. At
its farther edge a thick-branched, low beech tree, reaching out from the
confusion of trunks and vistas, cast a pleasant differentiated shade.
Here in this shade a young man lay sleeping, sprawled carelessly, his
head on one arm. He was tall, gaunt, clad in grey homespuns and a
well-worn buckskin jacket. His red-brown hair was cut somewhat short,
his light yellow moustache, long and silky, looked the lighter by
contrast with the ruddy tan of his face. His rifle leaned against the
tree near by, while he slept the luxurious sleep of an idle summer
afternoon.

But not five paces away crouched an immense panther, flattened to the
ground, watching him.

The beast was ready, at the first movement or sign of life, to spring
upon the sleeper’s throat. Its tail rigidly outstretched, twitched
slightly at the tip. Its great, luminous eyes were so intently fixed
upon the anticipated prey that it did not see Miranda’s quiet approach.

To the girl the sleeper seemed something very beautiful, in the
impersonal way that a splendid flower, or a tall young tree in the open,
or the scarlet-and-pearl of sunrise is beautiful—not a thing as near to
herself as the beasts of the wood, whom she knew. But she was filled
with strange, protective fury at the thought of peril to this
interesting creature. Her hesitation was but for a moment. She knew the
ferocity of the panther very well, and trembled lest the sleeper should
move, or twitch a muscle. She stepped up close to his side, and fixed
the animal’s eyes with her disconcerting gaze.

“Get off!” she ordered sharply, with a gesture of command.

The beast had doubtless a very plentiful ignorance of the English
language, but gesture is a universal speech. He understood it quite
clearly. He faced her eye, and endured it for some seconds, being minded
to dispute its authority. Then his glance shifted, his whole attitude
changed. He rose from his crouching posture, his tail drooped, his
tension relaxed, he looked back over his shoulder, then turned and
padded furtively away. Just as he was leaving, the man awoke with a
start, sat up, gave one wondering look at Miranda, caught sight of the
panther’s retreating form, and reached for his rifle.

Quick as light, Miranda intervened. Stepping between his hand and its
purpose, she flamed out against him with sudden anger.

“How dare you—go to shoot him!” she cried, her voice trembling.

He had sprung to his feet, and was staring at her flushed face with a
mixture of admiration and bewilderment.

“But he was goin’ to jump onto me!” he protested.

“Well,” rejoined Miranda, curtly, “he didn’t! And you’ve got no call to
shoot him!”

“Why didn’t he?” asked the young man.

“I drove him off. If I’d thought you’d shoot him, I’d have _let_ him
jump onto you,” was the cool reply.

“Why didn’t he jump onto _you_?” asked the stranger, his keen grey eyes
lighting up as if he began to understand the situation.

“Because he durs’n’t,—and he wouldn’t want to, neither!”

“I calculate,” said the stranger, holding out his hand, while a smile
softened the thoughtful severity of his face, “that you must be little
Mirandy.”

“My name _is_ Miranda,” she answered, ignoring the outstretched hand;
“but I’m sure I don’t know who you are, coming here into my woods to
kill my friends.”

“I wouldn’t hurt a hair of ’em!” he asserted, with a mingling of fervour
and amusement. “But ain’t I one o’ your friends, too, Mirandy? I used to
be, anyway.”

He took a step nearer, still holding out a pleading hand. Miranda drew
back, and put her hands behind her. “I don’t know you,” she persisted,
but now with something of an air of wilfulness rather than of hostility.
Old memories had begun to stir in forgotten chambers of her brain.

“You _used_ to be friends with Young Dave,” he said, in an eager half
whisper. Miranda’s beauty and the strangeness of it were getting into
his long-untroubled blood.

The girl at once put out her hand with a frank kindness. “Oh, I
remember!” she said. “You’ve been a long time forgetting us, haven’t
you? But never mind. Come along with me to the clearing, and see mother,
and get some supper.”

Dave flushed with pleasure at the invitation.

“Thank ye kindly, Mirandy, I reckon I will,” said he; and stepping to
one side he picked up his rifle. But at the sight of the weapon
Miranda’s new friendliness froze up, and a resentful gleam came into her
great eyes.

“Let me heft it,” she demanded abruptly, holding out an imperative hand.

Dave gave it up at once, with a deprecating air, though a ghost of a
smile flickered under the long, yellow droop of his moustache.

Miranda had no interest in the weight or balance of the execrated
weapon: possession of it was all her purpose.

“I’ll carry it,” she remarked abruptly. “You take these,” and handing
over to him the string of trout, she turned to the trail.

Dave followed, now at her side, now dropping respectfully behind, as the
exigencies of the way required. Nothing was said for some time. The
girl’s instinctive interest in the man whom she had so opportunely
protected was now quenched in antagonism, as she thought upon his
murderous calling. With sharp resentment she imagined him nursing an
indulgent contempt for her friendship with the furry and furtive
creatures. She burned with retrospective compassion for all the beasts
which had fallen to his bullets, or his blind and brutal traps. A trap
was, in her eyes, the unpardonable horror. Had she not once, when a
small girl, seen a lynx—perhaps it was Ganner himself—caught by the hind
quarters in a dead-fall? The beast was not quite dead—it had been for
days dying; its eyes were dulled, yet widely staring, and its tongue,
black and swollen, stuck out between its grinning jaws. She had seen at
once that the case was past relief; and she would have ended the torture
had her little hands known how to kill. But helpless and anguished as
she was, she had fled from the spot, and shudderingly cried her eyes out
for an hour. Then it had come over her with a wrenching of remorse that
the dreadful tongue craved water; and she had flown back with a tin cup
of the assuaging fluid, only to find the animal just dead. The pain of
thinking that she might have eased its last torments, and had not, bit
the whole scene ineffaceably into her heart; and now, with this splendid
trapper, the kind friend of her babyhood, walking at her side, the
picture and its pangs returned with a horrible incongruity. But what
most of all hardened her heart against the man was a sense of threat
which his atmosphere conveyed to her,—a menace, in some vague way, to
her whole system of life, her sympathies, her contentments, her calm.

Dave, on his part, felt himself deep in the cold flood of disfavour, and
solicitously pondered a way of return to the sunshine of his companion’s
smile. His half-wild intuition told him at once that Miranda’s anger was
connected with his rifle, and he in part understood her aversion to his
craft. He hungered to conciliate her; and as he trod noiselessly the
scented gloom of the arches, the mottled greens and greys and browns of
the trail, he laid his plans with far-considering prudence. It was
characteristic of his quietly masterful nature that he not once thought
of conciliating by giving up gun and trap and turning to a vocation more
humane. No, the ways and means which occupied his thoughts were the ways
and means of converting Miranda to his own point of view. He felt,
though not philosophic enough to formulate it clearly, that he had all
nature behind him to help mould the girl to his will, while she stood
not only alone, but with a grave peril of treason in her own heart.

His silence was good policy with Miranda, who was used to silence and
loved it. But being a woman, she loved another’s silence even better
than her own. “You are a hunter, ain’t you?” she inquired at last,
without turning her head.

“Yes, Mirandy.”

“And a trapper, too?”

“Yes, Mirandy; so they call me.”

“And you like to kill the beasts?”

“Well, yes, Mirandy, kind of, least-ways, I like them; and, well, you’ve
jest got to kill them, to live yourself. That’s jest what they do, kill
each other, so’s they can live themselves. An’ it’s the only kind of
life _I_ can live—’way in the woods, with the shadows, an’ the silence,
an’ the trees, an’ the sky, an’ the clean smells, an’ the whispers you
can’t never understand.”

Dave shut his mouth with a firm snap at the close of this unwonted
outburst. Never to any one before had he so explained his passion for
the hunter’s life; and now Miranda, who had turned square about, was
looking at him with a curious searching expression. It disconcerted him;
and he feared, under those unescapable eyes, that he had talked
nonsense. Nevertheless when she spoke there was a less chilling note in
her voice, though the words were not encouraging.

“If you like killing the creatures,” she said slowly, “it’s no place for
you here. So maybe you hadn’t better come to the clearing.”

“I don’t like killing _your_ beasts, anyways,” he protested eagerly.
“An’ ever sence I heard how you an’ the bears an’ the caribou was
friends like, I’ve kep’ clear the other side of the divide, an’ never
set a trap this side the Quah-Davic valley. As for these critters you
take such stock in, Mirandy, I wouldn’t harm a hair of one of ’em, I
swear!”

“You hadn’t better! I’d kill you myself,” she rejoined sharply, with a
swift, dangerous flame in her strange gaze; “or I’d set Kroof on you,”
she added, a gleam of mirth suddenly irradiating her face, and darkening
her eyes richly, till Dave was confused by her loveliness. But he kept
his wits sufficiently to perceive, as she set her face again up the
trail, that he was permitted to go with her.

“Who’s Kroof?” he asked humbly, stepping close to her side and ignoring
the fact that the pathway, just there, was but wide enough for one.

“My best friend,” answered Miranda. “You’ll see at the clearing. You’d
better look out for Kroof, let me tell you!”



                              Chapter XII
                       Young Dave at the Clearing


During the rest of the journey—a matter of an hour’s walking—there was
little talk between Miranda and Dave; for the ancient wood has the
property that it makes talk seem trivial. With those who journey through
the great vistas and clear twilight of the trees, thoughts are apt to
interchange by the medium of silence and sympathy, or else to remain
uncommunicated. Whatever her misgivings, her resentments and
hostilities, Miranda was absorbed in her companion. So deeply was she
absorbed that she failed to notice an unwonted emptiness in the shadows
about her.

In very truth, the furtive folk had all fled away. The presence of the
hunter filled them with instinctive fear; and in their chief defence,
their moveless self-effacement, they had no more any confidence while
within reach of Miranda’s eyes. The stranger was like herself—and though
they trusted her in all else, they knew the compulsion of nature, and
feared lest she might betray them to her own kind. Therefore they held
prudently aloof,—the hare and the porcupine, the fox and the red cat;
the raccoon slipped into his hole in the maple tree, and the wood-mice
scurried under the hemlock root, and the woodpecker kept the thickness
of a tree between his foraging and Miranda’s eye. Only the careless and
inquisitive partridge, sitting on a birch limb just over the trail,
curiously awaited their approach; till suddenly an intuition of peril
awoke him, and he fled on wild wings away through the diminishing
arches. Even the little brown owl in the pine crotch snapped his bill
and hissed uneasily as the two passed under his perch. Yet all these
signs, that would have been to her in other moods a loud proclamation of
change, now passed unnoted. Miranda was receiving a new impression, and
the experience engrossed her.

Arrived at the edge of the clearing, Dave was struck by the alteration
that had come over it since that day, thirteen years back, when he had
aided Kirstie’s flight from the Settlement. It was still bleak, and
overbrooded by a vast unroutable stillness, for the swelling of the land
lifted it from the forest’s shelter and made it neighbour to the
solitary sky. But the open fields were prosperous with blue-flowered
flax, pink-and-white buckwheat, the green sombreness of potatoes, and
the gallant ranks of corn; while half a dozen sleek cattle dotted the
stumpy pasture. The fences were well kept. The cabin and the barn were
hedged about with shining thickets of sunflower, florid hollyhocks, and
scarlet-runner beans. It gave the young woodman a kind of pang,—this bit
of homely sweetness projected, as it were, upon the infinite solitude of
the universe. It made him think, somehow, of the smile of a lost child
that does not know it is lost.

Presently, to his astonishment, there rose up from behind a blackberry
coppice the very biggest bear he had ever seen. The huge animal paused
at sight of a stranger, and sat up on her hind quarters to inspect him.
Then she dropped again upon all fours, shuffled to Miranda’s side, and
affectionately smuggled her nose into the girl’s palm. Dave looked on
with smiling admiration. The picture appealed to him. And Miranda,
scanning his face with jealous keenness, could detect therein nothing
but approval.

“This is Kroof,” said she, graciously.

“Never seen such a fine bear in all my life!” exclaimed the young man,
sincerely enough; and with a rash unmindfulness of the reserve which
governs the manners of all the furtive folk (except the squirrels), he
stretched out his hand to stroke Kroof’s splendid coat.

The presumption was instantly resented. With an indignant squeal Kroof
swung aside and struck at the offending hand, missing it by a hair’s
breadth, as Dave snatched it back out of peril. A flush of anger
darkened his face, but he said nothing. Miranda, however, was annoyed,
feeling her hospitality dishonoured. With a harsh rebuke she slapped the
bear sharply over the snout, and drew a little away from her.

Kroof was amazed. Not since the episode of the hare had Miranda struck
her, and then the baby hand had conveyed no offence. Now it was
different: and she felt that the tall stranger was the cause of the
difference. Her heart swelled fiercely within her furry sides. She gave
Miranda one look of bitter reproach, and shambled off slowly down the
green alleys of the potato field.

During some moments of hesitation, Miranda looked from Kroof to Dave,
and from Dave to Kroof. Then her heart smote her. With a little sob in
her throat, she ran swiftly after the bear, and clung to her neck with
murmured words of penitence. But Kroof, paying no attention whatever,
kept her way steadily to the woods, dragging Miranda as if she had been
a bramble caught on her fur. Not till she had reached the very edge of
the forest, at the sunny corner where she had been wont to play with
Miranda during the far-off first years of their friendship, did the old
bear stop. There she turned, sat up on her haunches, eyed the girl’s
face steadily for some seconds, and then licked her gently on the ear.
It meant forgiveness, reconciliation; but Kroof was too deeply hurt to
go back with Miranda to the cabin. In response to the girl’s
persuasions, she but licked her hands assiduously, as if pleading to be
not misunderstood, then dropped upon all fours and moved off into the
forest, leaving Miranda to gaze after her with tearful eyes.

When she went back to where the young hunter awaited her, Miranda’s
friendly interest had vanished, and in a chilly silence—very unlike that
which had been eloquent between them a short half hour before—the two
walked on up to the cabin. In Kirstie’s welcome Dave found all the
warmth he could wish, with never a reproach for his long years of
neglect,—for which, therefore, he the more bitterly reproached himself.
The best of all protections against the stings of self-reproach is the
reproach of others; and of this protection Kirstie ruthlessly deprived
him. She asked about all the details of his life as a solitary trapper,
congratulated him on his success, appeared sympathetic toward his
calling, and refrained from attempting his conversion to vegetarianism.
Looking at her noble figure, her face still beautiful in its strength
and calm, the young man harked back in his memory to the Settlement’s
scandals and decided that Frank Craig had never, of his own will,
forsaken a woman so altogether gracious and desirable. He resolved that
he would come often to the cabin in the clearing—even if Miranda _was_
unpleasant to him.

Unpleasant she certainly was, all the evening, coldly unconscious of his
presence, except, of course, at supper, where civility as well as
hospitality obliged her to keep his plate supplied, and not to sour his
meal with an obstinate silence. He watched her stealthily while he
talked to her mother; and the fact that her wild and subtle beauty,
thrilling his blood, made ridiculous the anger in his heart, did not
prevent his accomplishing a brave meal of eggs, steaming buttered
pancakes with molasses, and sweet cottage cheese with currant jelly.
Kirstie would not hear of his going that night, so he stayed, and slept
in the bunk which his father had occupied a dozen years before.

In the morning he was diligent to help with the barnyard chores, and won
golden comment from Kirstie; but he found Miranda still ice to his
admiration. About breakfast time, however, Kroof reappeared, with an air
of having quite forgotten the evening’s little unpleasantness. Of Dave
she took no notice at all, looking through, beyond, and around him; but
with her return Miranda’s manner became a shade less austere. Her
self-reproach was mitigated when she saw that her passing interest in
the newcomer had not unpardonably wronged her old friend.

Dave was bound for the Settlement, to arrange some business of bounties
and pelt sales. In spite of Kirstie’s hospitable arguments, he insisted
on setting out as soon as breakfast was over. As he picked up his rifle
from the corner beside his bunk, Miranda, as a sign of peace between
them, handed him his pouch of bullets. But not so his big powder-flask,
on its gay green cord. This she took to the door, and coolly emptied its
contents into a clump of burdocks. Then, with an enigmatic smile, she
handed back the flask to its owner.

The young hunter was annoyed. Powder was, in his eyes, a sacred thing,
and such a wanton waste of it seemed to him little less than criminal.

“That was all the powder I had ’twixt here an’ the Settlement,” he said,
in a tone of rebuke.

“So much the better,” said Miranda.

“But I don’t see no sense in wastin’ it that way,” he persisted.

“No knowing what may happen between here and the Settlement,” rejoined
the girl, meaningly.

Dave flushed with anger. “Didn’t I pass ye my word I’d not harm a hair
of one of your beasts?” he demanded.

“Then what do you want with the powder this side of the Settlement?” she
inquired, with tantalizing pertinence.

The young hunter, though steady and clear in his thought, was by no
means apt in repartee, and Miranda had him at a cruel disadvantage.
Confused by her last question, he blundered badly in his reply.
“But—what if a painter should jump onto me, like he was goin’ to
yesterday?” he protested.

“I thought you promised you wouldn’t harm a hair of one of them,”
suggested Miranda, thoughtful yet triumphant.

“Would you have me let the critter kill me, jest to keep my promise?” he
asked, humour beginning to correct his vexation.

“I don’t see why not,” murmured Miranda. “Anyhow, you’ve got to do
without the powder. And you needn’t be frightened, Dave,”—this very
patronizingly,—“for your father never carries a gun on our trail, and
he’s never needed one yet.”

“Well, then,” laughed Dave, “I’ll try an’ keep my hair on, an’ not be
clean skeered to death. Good-by, Kirstie! Good-by, Mirandy! I’ll look
’round this way afore long, like as not.”

“Inside of twelve years?” said Kirstie, with a rare smile, which robbed
her words of all reproach.

“Likely,” responded Dave, and he swung off with long, active strides
down the trail.

Miranda’s eyes followed him with reluctance.



                              Chapter XIII
                              Milking-time


Young Dave Titus was not without the rudiments of a knowledge of woman,
few as had been his opportunities for acquiring that rarest and most
difficult of sciences. He made no second visit to the cabin in the
clearing till he had kept Miranda many weeks wondering at his absence.
Then, when the stalks were whitey grey, and the pumpkins golden yellow
in the corn-field, and the buckwheat patch was crisply brown, and the
scarlet of the maples was beginning to fade out along the forest edges,
he came drifting back lazily one late afternoon, just as the slow
_tink-a-tonk_ of the cow-bells was beginning the mellow proclamation of
milking-time and sundown. The tonic chill of autumn in the wilderness
open caught his nostrils deliciously as he emerged from the warmer
stillness of the woods. The smell, the sound of the cow-bells,—these
were homely sweet after the day-long solitude of the trail. But the
scene—the grey cabin lifted skyward on the gradual swell of the
fields—was loneliness itself. The clearing seemed to Dave a little
beautiful lost world, and it gave him an ache at the heart to think of
the years that Miranda and Kirstie had dwelt in it alone.

Just beyond the edge of the forest he came upon Kroof, grubbing and
munching some wild roots. He spoke to her deferentially, but she swung
her huge rump about and firmly ignored him. He was anxious to win the
shrewd beast’s favour, or at least her tolerance, both because she had
stirred his imagination and because he felt that her good-will would be,
in Miranda’s eyes, a most convincing testimonial to his worth. But he
wisely refrained from forcing himself upon her notice.

“Go slow, my son, go slow. It’s a she; an’ more’n likely you don’t know
jest how to take her,” he muttered to himself, after a fashion acquired
in the interminable solitude of his camp. Leaving Kroof to her
moroseness, he hastened up to the cabin, in hopes that he would be in
time to help Kirstie and Miranda with the milking.

Just before he got to the door he experienced a surprise, so far as he
was capable of being surprised at anything which might take place in
these unreal surroundings. From behind the cabin came Wapiti the buck,
or perhaps a younger Wapiti, on whom the spirit of his sire had
descended in double portion. Close after him came two does, sniffing
doubtfully at the smell of a stranger on the air. To Wapiti a stranger
at the cabin, where such visitants were unheard of, must needs be an
enemy, or at least a suspect. He stepped delicately out into the path,
stamped his fine hoof in defiance, and lowered his armory of antlers.
They were keen and hard, these October antlers, for this was the moon of
battle, and he was ready. In rutting season Wapiti was every inch a
hero.

Now Dave Titus well knew that this was no bluff of Wapiti’s. He was
amused and embarrassed. He could not fight this unexpected foe, for
victory or defeat would be equally fatal to his hope of pleasing
Miranda. As a consequence, here he was, Dave Titus, the noted hunter,
the Nimrod, held up by a rutting buck! Well, the trouble was of
Miranda’s making. She’d have to get him out of it. Facing the defiant
Wapiti at a distance of five or six paces, he rested the butt of his
rifle on his toe and sent a mellow, resonant _heigh-lo, heigh-lo!_
echoing over the still air. The forest edges took it up, answering again
and again. Kirstie and Miranda came to the door to see who gave the
summons, and they understood the situation at a glance.

“Call off yer dawg, Mirandy,” cried Young Dave, “an’ I’ll come an’ pay
ye a visit.”

“He thinks you’re going to hurt us,” explained Kirstie; and Miranda,
with a gay laugh, ran to the rescue.

“You mustn’t frighten the good little boy, Wapiti,” she cried, pushing
the big deer out of her path and running to Dave’s side. As soon as
Wapiti saw Miranda with Dave, he comprehended that the stranger was not
a foe. With a flourish of his horns he stepped aside and led his herd
off through the barnyard.

Arriving at the door, where Kirstie, gracious, but impassive, awaited
him, Dave exclaimed: “She’s saved my life ag’in, Kirstie, that girl o’
yourn. First it’s a painter, an’ now it’s a rutting buck. Wonder what
it’ll be next time!”

“A rabbit, like as not, or a squir’l, maybe,” suggested Miranda,
unkindly.

“Whatever it be,” persisted Dave, “third time’s luck for me, anyways. If
you save my life agin, Mirandy, you’ll hev’ to take care o’ me
altogether. I’ll git to kind of depend on ye.”

“Then I reckon, Dave, you’ll get out of your next scrape by yourself,”
answered Miranda, with discouraging decision.

“That’s one on you, Dave,” remarked Kirstie, with a strictly neutral
air. But behind Miranda’s back she shot him a look which said, “Don’t
you mind what she says, she’s all right in her heart!” which, indeed,
was far from being the case. Had Dave been so injudicious as to woo
openly at this stage of Miranda’s feelings, he would have been dismissed
with speedy emphasis.

Dave was in time to help with the milking,—a process which he boyishly
enjoyed. The cows, five of them, were by now lowing at the bars. Kirstie
brought out three tin pails. “You can help us, if you like, Dave,” she
cried, while Miranda looked her doubt of such a clumsy creature’s
capacity for the gentle art of milking. “Can you milk?” she asked.

“’Course I can, though I haven’t had much chance, o’ late years, to
practise,” said Dave.

“Can you milk without hurting the cow? Are you sure? And can you draw
off the strippings clean?” she persisted, manifestly sceptical.

“Try me,” said Dave.

“Let him take old Whitey, Miranda. He’ll get through with her, maybe,
while we’re milking the others,” suggested Kirstie.

“Oh, well, any one could milk Whitey,” assented Miranda; and Dave, on
his mettle, vowed within himself that he’d have old Whitey milked, and
milked dry, and milked to her satisfaction, before either Kirstie or
Miranda was through with her first milker. He stroked the cow on the
flank, and scratched her belly gently, and established friendly
relations with her before starting; and the elastic firmness of his
strong hands chanced to suit Whitey’s large teats. The animal eyed him
with favour and gave down her milk affluently. As the full streams
sounded more and more liquidly in his pail, Dave knew that he had the
game in his hands, and took time to glance at his rivals. To his
astonishment there was Kroof standing up on her haunches close beside
Miranda, her narrow red tongue lolling from her lazily open jaws, while
she watched the milky fountains with interest.

While Kirstie’s scarlet kerchiefed head was still pressed upon her
milker’s flank, and while Miranda was just beginning to draw off the
rich “strippings” into a tin cup, Dave completed his task. His pail—he
had milked the strippings in along with the rest—was foaming creamily to
the brim. He arose and vaunted himself. “Some day, when I’ve got lots of
time,” he drawled, “I’ll l’arn you two how to milk.”

“You needn’t think you’re done already,” retorted Miranda, without
looking up. “I’ll get a quart more out of old Whitey, soon as I’m
through here.”

But Kirstie came over and looked at the pail. “No, you won’t, Miranda,
not this time,” she exclaimed. “Dave’s beaten us, sure. Old Whitey never
gave us a fuller pail in her life. Dave, you _can_ milk. You go and milk
Michael over there, the black-an’-white one, for me. I’ll leave you and
Miranda, if you won’t fall out, to finish up here, while I go and get an
extra good supper for you, so’s you’ll come again soon. I know you men
keep your hearts in your stomachs, just where we women know how to reach
them easy. Where’d we have been if the Lord hadn’t made us cooks!”

Such unwonted pleasantry on the part of her sombre mother proved to
Miranda that Dave was much in her graces, and she felt moved to a
greater austerity in order that she might keep the balance true.
Throughout the rest of the milking, she answered all Dave’s attempts at
conversation with briefest _yes_ or _no_, and presently reduced him to a
discouraged silence. During supper,—which consisted of fresh trout fried
in corn meal, and golden hot johnny-cake with red molasses, and eggs
fried with tomatoes, and sweet curds with clotted cream, all in a
perfection to justify Kirstie’s promise,—Miranda relented a little, and
talked freely. But Dave had been too much subdued to readily regain his
cheer. It was his tongue now that knew but _yes_ and _no_. Confronted by
this result of her unkindness, Miranda’s sympathetic heart softened.
Turning in her seat to slip a piece of johnny-cake, drenched in
molasses, into the expectant mouth of Kroof who sat up beside her, she
spoke to Dave in a tone whose sweetness thrilled him to the finger-tips.
The instinct of coquetry, native and not unknown to the furtive folk
themselves, was beginning to stir within Miranda’s untaught heart.

“I’m going down to the lake to-night, Dave,” she said, “to set a night
line and see if I can catch a togue.[1] There’s a full moon, and the
lake’ll be worth looking at. Won’t you come along with us?”

“Won’t I, Miranda? Couldn’t think of nothin’ I’d like better!” was the
eager response.

“We’ll start soon as ever we get the dishes washed up,” explained the
girl. “And you can help us at that—what say, mother?”

“Certainly, Dave can help us,” answered Kirstie, “if you have the nerve
to set the likes of him at woman’s work. But I reckon I won’t go with
you to-night to the lake. Kroof and Dave’ll be enough to look after
you.”

“I’ll look after Dave, more like,” exclaimed Miranda, scornfully,
remembering both Wapiti and the panther. “But what’s the matter, mother?
_Do_ come. It won’t be the same without you.”

“Seems to me I’m tired to-night, kind of, and I just want to stay at
home by the fire and think.”

Miranda sprang up, with concern in her face, and ran round to her
mother’s seat.

“Tired, mother!” she cried, scanning her features anxiously. “Who ever
heard of people like you and me, who are strong, and live right, being
tired? I’m afraid you’re not well, mother; I won’t go one step!”

“Yes, you will, dearie,” answered her mother, and never yet had Miranda
rebelled against that firm note in Kirstie’s voice. “I really want to be
alone to-night a bit, and think. Dave’s visit has stirred up a lot of
old thoughts, and I want to take a look at them. I reckoned they were
dead and buried years ago!”

“Are you sure you’re not sick, mother?” went on Miranda, hesitatingly
returning to her seat.

“No, child, I’m not sick. But I have felt tired off an’ on the last few
days when there was no call to. I do begin to feel that this big
solitude of the woods is wearing on me, someway. I’ve stood up under it
all these years, Dave, and it’s given me peace and strength when I
needed it bad enough, God knows. But someway I reckon it’s too big for
me, and will crush me in the long run. I love the clearing, but I don’t
just want to end my days here.”

“Mother,” cried Miranda, springing up again, “I never heard you talk so
before in my life! Leave the clearing! Leave the woods! I _couldn’t_
live, I just couldn’t, anywheres else at all!”

“There’s other places, Miranda,” murmured Dave. But Kirstie continued
the argument.

“It’s a sight different with you, child,” she said thoughtfully. “You’ve
grown up here. The woods and the sky have made you. They’re in your
blood. You live and breathe them. You were a queer baby—more a fairy or
a wild thing than a human youngster—before ever you came to the
clearing; and all the wild things seem to think you’re one of
themselves; and you see what other folks can’t see—what the folks of the
woods themselves can’t see. Oh, yes! it’s a sight different with you,
Miranda. Your father used to watch you and say you’d grow up to be a
faun woman or wood goddess, or else the fairies would carry you off.
This place is all right for you. And I used to think I was that big and
strong of spirit that I could stand up to it all the rest of my life.
But I begin to think it’s too big for me. I don’t want to die here,
Miranda!”

Miranda stared at her, greatly troubled.

“You won’t die till I’m old enough to die too, mother,” she cried, “for
I just couldn’t live without you one day. But,” she added passionately,
“I know I should die, quick, right off, if I had to go away from the
clearing! I know I would!”

She spoke with the fiercer positiveness, because, just as she was
speaking, there came over her a doubt of her own words. In a flash she
saw herself growing old here in the vast solitude, she and Kirstie
together, and no one else anywhere to be seen. The figure so cruelly
conspicuous in its absence bore a strange, dim likeness to Young Dave.
She did not ask herself if it were possible that she could one day wish
to desert the clearing, and the stillnesses, and all the folk of the
ancient wood, but somewhere at the back of her heart she felt that it
might even be so, and her heart contracted poignantly. She ran and flung
both arms about Kroof’s neck, and wiped a stealthy tear on the shaggy
coat.

Dave, with a quickening intuition born of his dread lest the trip to the
lake should fall through, saw that the conversation was treading
dangerous ground. He discreetly changed the subject to johnny-cake.



                              Chapter XIV
                        Moonlight and Moose-call


When Miranda was ready to start, the moon was up, low and large, shining
broadly into the cabin window. Miranda brought forward a small,
tin-covered kettle, containing some little fish for bait.

“Where’s your line an’ hooks?” asked Dave.

“I keep them in a hollow tree by the lake,” said Miranda. “But don’t you
go to take that thing along, or you don’t go with me!” she added
sharply, as the young man picked up his rifle.

He set it down again with alacrity.

“But at night, Mirandy!” he protested. “Air ye sure it’s safe?”

“Don’t come if you’re afraid!” she answered witheringly, stepping out
into the white light and the coldly pungent air.

Dave was at her side in a moment, ignoring a taunt which could touch him
least among men. At Miranda’s other side was the great lumbering form of
Kroof, with the girl’s hand resting lovingly on her neck.

“We’ll not be long, mother,” called Miranda to Kirstie, in the doorway.

But before they had gone twenty paces, Kroof stopped short, and sat down
to deliberate. She regarded it as her own peculiar office to protect
Miranda (who needed no protection) on these nocturnal expeditions to
which the girl was given in some moods. Was the obnoxious stranger to
usurp her office and her privilege? Well, she would not share with him.
She would stay where she was needed.

“Come along, Kroof!” urged Miranda, with a little tug at her fur. But
the jealous bear was obstinate. She wheeled and made for the cabin door.

Miranda was irritated.

“Let her stay, then!” she exclaimed, setting her face to the forest, and
smiling in more gracious fashion upon Young Dave. Kroof was certainly
very provoking.

“That’s all right!” said Dave, more pleased than he dare show. “She’ll
be company for yer mother till we git back.”

“Kroof seems to think she owns me!” mused Miranda. “I love her better
than any one else in the world except mother; but I mustn’t spoil her
when she gets cross about nothing. She oughtn’t to be so jealous when
I’m nice to you, Dave! I’m very angry at her for being so silly. She
ought to know you’re nothing to me alongside of her; now, oughtn’t she?”

“Of course,” assented Dave, with such cheerfulness as he could assume.
Then he set himself craftily to win Miranda’s approval by a minute
account of the characteristics—mental, moral, and physical—of a tame
bear named Pete, belonging to one of the lumbermen at the Settlement.
The subject was sagaciously chosen, and had the effect of making Miranda
feel measurably less remote from the world of men. It suggested to her a
kind of possible understanding between the world of men and the world of
the ancient wood.

As they left the moonlit open, the long white fingers of the phantom
light reached after them, down the dissolving arches. Then the last
groping ray was left behind, and they walked in the soft dark. Dave
found it an exquisite but imperative necessity to keep close at
Miranda’s elbow, touching her very skirt indeed, for even his trained
woodland eyes could at first distinguish nothing. Miranda, however, with
her miraculous vision, moved swiftly, unhesitatingly, as if in broad day
and a plain way.

Soon, however, Dave’s eyes adapted themselves, and he could discern
vague differences, denser masses, semi-translucencies in the enfolding
depth of blackness. For there _was_ a light, of a kind, carried down by
countless reflections and refractions from the lit, wet surfaces of the
topmost leaves. Moreover, clean-blooded and fine-nerved as he was from
his years of living under nature’s ceaseless purgation, his other senses
came to the aid of his baffled sight. He seemed to feel, rather than
see, the massive bulk of the pine and birch trunks as his face
approached them to the nearness of an arm’s length. He felt, too, an
added hardness and a swelling under the moss, wherever the network of
roots came close to the parent trunk. His nostrils discerned the pine,
the spruce, the hemlock, the balsam poplar, the aromatic moose-wood, as
he passed them; and long before he came to it he knew the tamarack swamp
was near. Only his ears could not aid him. Except for Miranda’s
footsteps, feather-soft upon the moss, and his own heavier but skilfully
muffled tread, there was no sound in the forest but an indeterminate
whisper, so thin that it might have been the speech of the leaves
conferring, or the sap climbing through the smaller branches. Neither he
nor Miranda uttered a word. The stillness was such that a voice would
have profaned it. Finding it difficult to keep up without stumbling and
making a rough noise, Dave frankly resigned himself to the girl’s
superior craft.

“You’ve got to be eyes fer me here, you wonderful Mirandy, er I can’t
keep up with ye!” he whispered at her ear. The light warmth of his
breath upon her neck made her tingle in a way that bewildered her; but
she found it pleasant. When he took hold of her arm, very gently, to
steady himself, rather to his surprise he was permitted. He was wise
enough, however, not to attach too much importance to the favour. He
pondered the fact that to Miranda, who was not a Settlement girl, it
meant altogether nothing.

Presently, just ahead of them, they saw a pair of palely-glowing eyes,
about two feet from the ground. Miranda squeezed the hand inside her
arm, as a sign that Dave was not to regret his rifle. As a matter of
fact, he was not disposed to regret anything at that moment.

“_Lou’-cerfie!_” he whispered at her ear, meaning the lynx, or
_loup-cervier_ of the camps.

“No, panther!” murmured Miranda, indifferently, going straight forward.
At this startling word, Dave could not, under the circumstances, refrain
from a certain misgiving. A panther is not good to meet in the dark. But
the palely-glowing eyes sank mysteriously toward the ground and
retreated as Miranda advanced; and in a few seconds they went floating
off to one side and disappeared.

“How on earth do ye do it, Mirandy?” whispered Dave, rather awestruck.

“They know me,” replied the girl; which seemed to her, but not to Dave,
an all-sufficient answer.

There was no more said. The magic of the dark held them both breathless.
They were strung to a strange, electric pitch of sympathy and
expectation. Dave’s fingers, where they rested on the girl’s arm,
tingled curiously, deliciously. Once, close beside them, there was a
sharp rattle of claws going up the bark of a fir tree, and then two
little points of light, close together, gleamed down upon them from
overhead. Both Miranda and Dave knew it was a raccoon, and said nothing.
Farther on they came suddenly upon a spectrally luminous figure just in
their path. It was nearly the height of a man. The ghostly light waxed
and waned before their eyes. A timorous imagination might have been
pardoned for calling it a spirit sent to warn them back from their
venture. But they knew it was only a rotting birch stump turned
phosphorescent. As they passed, Dave broke off a piece and crumbled it,
and for some minutes the bluish light clung to his fingers, like a
perfume.

At last they heard an owl hoot solemnly in the distance.
“_Tw’oh-hoo-hoo-hoo-ooo_,” it went, a cold and melancholy sound.

“We’re near the lake,” whispered Miranda. “I know Wah-hoo; he lives in
an old tree close to the water. We’re almost there.” Then glimpses of
light came, broken and thin, from the far-off moon-silvered surface.
Then a breath of chill, though there was no wind. And then they came out
upon the open shore.

Miranda, with a decisive gesture, removed her arm from Dave’s grasp, and
side by side the two followed the long sweep of sandy beach curving off
to the right.

“See that point yonder,” said Miranda, “with the lop-sided tree standing
alone on it? I’ve got my line and hooks hidden in that tree.”

“How do ye set a night line without a boat?” queried Dave.

“Got one, of course!” answered the girl. “Your father made me a dugout,
last summer a year ago, and I keep it drawn up behind the point.”

The moon was high now, sailing in icy splendour of solitude over the
immensity of the ancient wood. The lake was a windless mirror. The beach
was very smooth and white, etched along its landward edges with the
shadows of the trees. At one spot a cluster of three willows grew very
near the water’s brink, spreading a transparent and mysterious shadow.
Just as Dave and Miranda came to this little oasis in the shining sand,
across the water came the long, sonorous call of a bull moose. It was a
deep note, melodious and far carrying, and seemed in some way the very
spoken thought of the vastness.

“That’s what I call music!” said Dave.

But before Miranda could respond, a thunderous bellow roared in answer
from the blackness of the woods close by; there was a heavy crashing in
the underbrush, and the towering front of another bull appeared at the
edge of the sands, looking for his challenger. Catching sight of Dave
and Miranda, he charged down upon them at once.

“Get up a tree, quick!” cried Dave, slipping his long knife from its
sheath and stepping in front of the girl.

“Don’t you meddle and there’ll be no trouble!” said Miranda, sharply.
“You stand behind that tree!” and seizing him by the arm she attempted
to push him out of sight. But for a second he stupidly resisted.

“Fool!” she flamed out at him. “What do you suppose I’ve done all these
years without you?”

[Illustration: The moose recognized her]

The anger in her eyes pierced his senses and brought wisdom. He realized
that somehow she was master of the situation, and he reluctantly stepped
behind the big willow trunk. It was just in the nick of time, for the
furious animal was almost upon them. At this moment a breath of air from
the water carried Miranda’s scent to the beast’s nostrils, and he
checked himself in doubt. At once Miranda gave a soft whistle and
stepped out into the clear flood of moonlight. The moose recognized her,
stood still, raised his gigantic antlers to their full height, and
stretched toward her his long, flexible snout, sniffing amicably. Then,
step by step, he approached, while she waited with her small hand held
out to him, palm upward; and Dave looked on in wonder from behind his
tree, still doubtful, his fingers gripping his knife-hilt.

At this moment the first call sounded again across the lake. The moose
forgot Miranda. He wheeled nimbly, lowered his head toward the great
challenge, bellowed his answer, and charged along the shore to mortal
combat. As he disappeared around a jutting spur of pines, a tall cow
moose emerged from the shades and trotted after him.

Miranda turned to Dave with an air of triumph, her anger forgotten.

“I swan, Mirandy!” exclaimed the young hunter, “the girl as can manage a
bull moose in callin’ season is the Queen of the Forest, sure. I take
off my cap to yer majesty!”

“Put it on again, Dave,” said she, not half displeased, “and we’ll go
set the night lines.”

Behind the point, hidden in a thicket of mixed huckleberry and ironwood,
they found the wooden canoe, or dugout, in good condition. Dave ran it
down into the water, and Miranda tossed in a roll of stout cod-line,
with four large hooks depending from it, at four-foot intervals, by drop
strings a foot and a half in length. The hooks she proceeded to bait
from the tin kettle.

“Why don’t ye have more hooks on sech a len’th of line?” inquired Dave.

“Don’t want to catch more togue than we can eat,” explained Miranda.
“It’s no fun catching them this way, and they’re not much good salted.”

There was but one paddle, and this Dave captured. “You sit in the bow,
Mirandy, an’ see to the lines, an’ I’ll paddle ye out,” said he.

But Miranda would have none of it. “Look here, Dave,” she exclaimed,
“I’m doing this, and you’re just a visitor. I declare, I’m almost sorry
I brought you along. You just sit where you’re put, and do as I tell
you, or you won’t come with me again.”

The young man squatted himself meekly on his knees, a little forward of
amidship, but not far enough for his superior weight to put the canoe
down by the bow. Then Miranda stepped in delicately, seated herself on a
thwart at the stern, and dipped her paddle with precise and masterful
stroke. The canoe shot noiselessly out of the shadow and into the
unrippled sheen. Just off the point, about twenty yards from shore, lay
a light wooden float at anchor. Beside this Miranda brought her canoe to
a standstill, backing water silently with firm flexures of her wrist. To
a rusty staple in the float she fastened one end of the line.

“Deep water off this here point, I reckon,” commented Dave.

“Of course,” answered Miranda. “The togue only lie in deep water.”

Dave was permitted to make comments, but to take no more active part in
the proceedings. As he was a man of deeds and dreams rather than of
speech, this was not the rôle he coveted, and he held his tongue; while
Miranda, deftly paying out the line with one hand, with the other
cleverly wielded the paddle so that the canoe slipped toward shore. She
was too much absorbed in the operation to vouchsafe any explanation to
Dave, but he saw that she intended making fast the other end of the line
to a stake which jutted up close to the water’s edge.

Miranda now slipped the line under her foot to hold it, and, taking both
hands to her paddle, was about to make a landing, when suddenly there
was a violent tug at one of the hooks. The line was torn from under her
light foot, and at once dragged overboard. Dave saw what had happened;
but he was wise enough not to say, even by look or tone, “I told you
so!” Instead, he turned and pointed to the float, which was now acting
very erratically, darting from side to side, and at times plunging quite
under water. The glassy mirror of the lake was shattered to bits.

“You’ve got him a’ready, Mirandy,” he cried in triumph; and his palpable
elation quite covered Miranda’s chagrin. Two or three strong strokes of
her paddle brought the canoe back to the float, and Dave had his reward.

“Catch hold of the float, Dave,” she commanded, “and pull him aboard,
while I hold the canoe.”

With a great splashing and turmoil he hauled up a large togue, of twelve
pounds or thereabouts, and landed it flopping in the bottom of the
dugout. A stroke in the back of the neck from Miranda’s knife, sharp but
humane, put a term to its struggles.

While Dave gazed admiringly at the glittering spoil, Miranda began
untying the line from the float.

“What air ye doin’ now, Mirandy?” he inquired, as she proceeded to strip
the bait from the remaining hooks, and throw the pieces overboard.

“We won’t want any more togue for a week,” she explained. “This is such
a fine, big one.” And she headed the canoe for the landing-place, under
the shadow of the point.



                               Chapter XV
                            A Venison Steak


Throughout the succeeding winter Dave managed to visit the clearing two
or three times in the course of each month, but he could not see that he
made any progress in Miranda’s favour. As at first, she was sometimes
friendly, sometimes caustically indifferent. Only once did he perceive
in her the smallest hint of gratification at his coming. That was the
time when he came on his snow-shoes through the forest by moonlight, the
snow giving a diffused glimmer that showed him the trail even through
the densest thickets. Arriving in the morning, he surprised her at the
door of the cow stable, where she had been foddering the cattle. Her
face flushed at the sight of him; and a look came into her wide, dark
eyes which even his modesty could not quite misunderstand. But his
delight quickly crumbled: Miranda was loftily indifferent to him during
all that visit, so much so that after he had gone Kirstie reproached her
with incivility.

“I can’t help it, mother!” she explained. “I don’t want to hate him, but
what better is he than a butcher? His bread is stained with blood. Pah!
I sometimes think I smell blood, the blood of the kind wood creatures,
when he’s around.”

“But you don’t want him not to come, girl, surely,” protested her
mother.

“Well, you know, it’s a pleasure to you to have him come once in a
while,” said the girl, enigmatically.

Dave continued his visits, biding his time. He lost no chance of
familiarizing Miranda’s imagination with the needs of man as he imagined
them, and with a rational conception of life as he conceived it. This he
did not directly, but through the medium of conversation with Kirstie,
to whom his words were sweetness. He was determined to break down
Miranda’s prejudice against his calling, which to him was the only one
worth a man’s while,—wholesome, sane, full of adventure, full of
romance. He was determined, also, to overcome her deep aversion to flesh
food. He felt that not till these two points were gained would Miranda
become sufficiently human to understand human love or any truly human
emotions. In this belief he strictly withheld his wooing, and waited
till the barriers that opposed it should be undermined by his systematic
attacks. He was too little learned in woman to realize that with Miranda
his best wooing was the absence of all wooing; and so he builded better
than he knew.

During the cold months he was glad to be relieved of the presence of
Kroof, who had proved, in her taciturn way, quite irreconcilable. He had
tried in vain to purchase her favour with honey, good hive bees’ honey
in the comb, carried all the way from the Settlement. She would have
nothing to do with him at any price; and he felt that this discredited
him in Miranda’s eyes. He hoped that Kroof would sleep late that spring
in her lair under the pine root.

But while Dave was labouring so assiduously, and, as he fancied, so
subtly, to mould and fashion Miranda, she all unawares was moulding him.
Unconsciously his rifle and his traps were losing zest for him; and the
utter solitude of his camp beyond the Quah-Davic began to have manifest
disadvantages. Once he hesitated so long over a good shot at a lynx,
just because the creature looked unsuspecting, that in the end he was
too late, and his store of pelts was the poorer by one good skin.
Shooting a young cow moose in the deep snow, moreover, he felt an
unwonted qualm when the gasping and bleeding beast turned upon him a
look of anguished reproach. His hand was not quite so steady as usual
when he gave her the knife in the throat. This was a weakness which he
did not let himself examine too closely. He knew the flesh of the young
cow was tender and good, and after freezing it he hung it up in his cold
cellar. Though he would not for an instant have acknowledged it, even to
himself, he was glad that bears were not his business during the winter,
for he would almost certainly have felt a sense of guilt, of wrong to
Miranda, in shooting them. For all this undercurrent of qualm in the
hidden depths of his heart, however, his hunting was never more
prosperous than during the January and February of that winter; and fox,
lynx, wolverine, seemed not only to run upon his gun, but to seek his
traps as a haven. He killed with an emphasis, as if to rebuke the waking
germ of softness in his soul. But he had little of the old satisfaction,
as he saw his peltries accumulate. His craft was now become a business,
a mere routine necessity. For pleasure, he chose to watch Miranda as her
feathered pensioners—snowbirds, wrens, rose grosbeaks, and a glossy crow
or two—gathered about her of a morning for their meal of grain and
crumbs. They alighted on her hair, her shoulders, her arms; and the
round-headed, childlike grosbeaks would peck bread from her red lips;
and a crow, every now and then, would sidle in briskly and give a
mischievous tug at the string of her moccasin. To the girl, his heart
needed no warming,—it burned by now with a fire which all his backwood’s
stoicism could but ill disguise,—but to the birds, and through them to
all the furry folk of the wood, his heart warmed as he regarded the
beautiful sight. He noted that the birds were quite unafraid of Kirstie,
who also fed them; but he saw that toward Miranda they showed an active,
even aggressive ardour, striving jealously for the touch of her hand or
foot or skirt when no tit-bits whatever were in question. And another
sight there was, toward shut of winter’s evening, that moved him
strangely. The wild, white hares (he and Kirstie and Miranda called them
rabbits) would come leaping over the snow to the cabin door to be fed,
with never cat or weasel on their trail. They would press around the
girl, nibbling eagerly at her dole of clover, hay, and carrots; some
crouching about her feet, some erect and striking at her petticoat with
their nervous fore paws, all twinkling-eared, and all implicitly
trustful of this kind Miranda of the clover.

Toward spring Miranda began to be troubled about Kirstie’s health. She
saw that the firm lines of her mother’s face were growing unwontedly
sharp, the bones of her cheek and jaw strangely conspicuous. Then her
solicitous scrutiny took note of a pallor under the skin, a greyish
whiteness at the corners of her eyes, a lack of vividness in the usually
brilliant scarlet of the lips; for up to now Kirstie had retained all
the vital colouring and tone of youth. Then, too, there was a
listlessness, a desire to rest and take breath after very ordinary tasks
of chopping or of throwing fodder for the cattle. This puzzled the girl
much more than Kirstie’s increasing tendency to sit dreaming over the
hearth fire when there was work to be done. Miranda felt equal to doing
all the winter work, and she knew that her mother, like herself, was
ever a dreamer when the mood was on. But even this brooding abstraction
came to worry her at last, when one morning, after a drifting storm
which had piled the snow halfway up the windows, her mother let her
shovel out all the paths unaided, with never a comment or excuse.
Miranda was not aggrieved at this, by any means; but she began to be
afraid, sorely afraid. It was so unlike the alert and busy Kirstie of
old days. Of necessity, Miranda turned to Dave for counsel in her alarm,
when next he came to the clearing.

The conference took place in the warm twilight of the cow stable, where
Dave, according to his custom, was helping Miranda at the milking, while
Kirstie got supper. The young hunter looked serious, but not surprised.

“I’ve took note o’ the change this two month back, Mirandy,” he said,
“an’ was a-wonderin’ some how them big eyes of yourn, that can see
things us ordinary folks can’t see, could be blind to what teched ye so
close.”

“I _wasn’t_ blind to it, Dave,” protested the girl, indignantly; “but I
didn’t see how you could help any. Nor I don’t see now; but there was no
one else I could speak to about it,” she added, with a break in her
voice that distantly presaged tears.

“I could help some, if you’d let me, Mirandy,” he hesitated, “for I know
right well what she’s needin’.”

“Well, what is it?” demanded the girl. There was that in his voice which
oppressed her with a vague misgiving.

“It’s good, fresh, roast meat she wants!” said Dave.

There was a pause. Miranda turned and looked out through the stable
door, across the glimmering fields.

“It’s her blood’s got thin an’ poor,” continued Dave. “Nothin’ but flesh
meat’ll build her up now, an’ she’s jest got to have it.” He was
beginning to feel it was time that Miranda experienced the touch of a
firm hand.

“I don’t believe you!” said the girl, and turned hotly to her milking.

“Well, we’ll see,” retorted Dave. In Miranda’s silence he read a tardy
triumph for his views.

That evening he took note of the fact that Kirstie came to supper with
no appetite, though every dish of it was tempting and well cooked.
Miranda observed this also. Her fresh pang of apprehension on her
mother’s account was mixed with a resentful feeling that Dave would
interpret every symptom as a confirmation of his own view. She was quite
honest in her rejection of that view, for in her eyes flesh food was a
kind of subtle poison. But she was too anxious about her mother’s health
to commit herself in open hostility to anything, however extreme, which
might be suggested in remedy. On this point she was resolved to hold
aloof, letting the decision rest between her mother and Dave.

Aroused by the young hunter’s talk, Kirstie was brighter than usual
during the meal; but, to her great disappointment, Dave got up to go
immediately after supper. He would take no persuasion, but insisted that
he had come just to see if she and Miranda were well, and declared that
affairs of supreme importance called him straight back to the camp.
Kirstie was not convinced. She turned a face of reproach on Miranda, so
frankly that the girl was compelled to take her meaning.

“Oh! it isn’t my fault, mother,” she protested, with a little vexed
laugh. “I’ve not been doing anything ugly to him. If he goes, it’s just
his own obstinacy, for he knows we’d like him to stay as he always does.
Let him go if he wants to!”

“Mirandy,” said her mother, in a voice of grave rebuke, “I wish you
would not be so hard with Dave. If you treated your dumb beasts like you
treat him, I reckon they would never come to you a second time. You seem
to forget that Dave and his father are our only friends,—and just now,
Dave’s father being in the lumber camp, we’ve nobody but Dave here to
look to.”

“Oh! I’ve nothing against Dave, mother, except the blood on his hands,”
retorted the girl, turning her face away.

The young hunter shrugged his shoulders, deprecatingly, smiled a slow
smile of understanding at Kirstie, and strode to the door.

“Good night, both of ye,” he said cheerfully. “Ye’ll see me back,
liker’n not, by this time to-morrow.”

As he went, Miranda noticed with astonishment and a flush of warmth that
for once in his career he was without his inseparable rifle. Kirstie, in
the vacant silence that followed his going, had it on her tongue to say,
“I do wish you could take to Dave, Miranda.” But the woman’s heart
within her gave her warning in time, and she held her peace. Thanks to
this prudence, Miranda went to bed that night with something of a glow
at her heart. Dave’s coming without the rifle was a direct tribute to
her influence, and to some extent outweighed his horrible suggestion
that her mother should defile her mouth with meat.

The next evening the chores were all done up; the “rabbits” had come and
gone with their clover and carrots; and Kirstie and Miranda were sitting
down to their supper, when in walked Dave. He carried a package of
something done up in brown sacking. This time, too, he carried his
rifle. Kirstie’s welcome was frankly eager, but Miranda saw the rifle,
and froze. He caught her look, and with a flash of intuition understood
it.

“_Had_ to bring it along, Mirandy,” he explained, with a flush of
embarrassment. “Couldn’t ha’ got here without it. The wolves have come
back again, six of ’em. They set on to me at my own camp door.”

“Oh, wolves!” exclaimed Miranda, in a tone of aversion. “They’re
vermin.”

Since that far-off day when, with her childish face flattened against
the pane, her childish heart swelling with wrath and tears, she had
watched the wolves attack Ten-Tine’s little herd, she had hated the
ravening beasts with a whole-souled hate.

“I hope to goodness you killed them all!” said Kirstie, with pious
fervour.

“Two got off; got the pelts of the others,” answered Dave.

“Not too bad, that,” commented Kirstie, with approval; “now come and
have some supper.”

“Not jest yet, Kirstie,” he replied, undoing his package. “I’ve noticed
lately ye was looking mighty peaked, an’ hadn’t much appetite, like. Now
when folks has anything the matter with ’em I know as much about it as
lots of the doctors, and I know what’s goin’ to set ye right up. If
ye’ll lend me the loan of yer fire, an’ a frying-pan, I’ll have
something for yer supper that’ll do ye more good than a bucketful of
doctor’s medicine.”

Miranda knew what was coming. She knew Dave had been all the way back to
the camp, beyond the Quah-Davic, for meat, that he might run no risk of
killing any of the beasts that were under her protection. She knew, too,
that to make such a journey in the twenty-four hours he could scarce
have had one hour’s sleep. None the less, she hardened her heart against
him. She kept her eyes on her plate and listened with strained intensity
for her mother’s word upon this vital subject.

Kirstie’s interest was now very much awake. “There’s the fire, Dave,”
she said, “and there’s the frying-pan hanging on the side of the
dresser. But what have you got? I’ve felt this long while I’d like a bit
of a change—not but what the food we’re used to, Miranda and me, is real
good food and wholesome.”

“Well, Kirstie,” he answered, taking a deep breath before the plunge,
and at the same time throwing back the wrapping from a rosy cut of
venison steak, “it’s jest nothin’ more nor less than fresh meat. It’s
venison, clean an’ wholesome; and I’ll fry ye right now this tender
slice I’m cuttin’ for ye.”

Kirstie was startled quite out of her self-possession. The rule of the
cabin against flesh meat was so long established, so well known at the
Settlement, so fenced about with every sanction of principle and
prejudice, that Dave’s words were of the nature of a challenge. She felt
that she ought to be angry; but, as a matter of fact, she was only
uneasy as to how Miranda would take so daring a proposal. At the same
time she was suddenly conscious of an unholy craving for the forbidden
thing. She glanced anxiously at Miranda, but the girl appeared to be
wrapped up in her own thoughts.

“But you know, Dave,” she protested rebukingly, “we neither of us ever
touch meat of any kind. You know our opinions on this point.”

The words themselves would have satisfied Miranda had she not detected a
certain irresolution in the tone. They did not affect Dave in the least.
For a moment he made no reply, for he was busy cutting thin slices off
the steak. He spread them carefully in the hot butter, now spluttering
in the pan over the coals; and then, straightening himself up from the
task, knife in hand, he answered cheerfully: “That’s all right. But, ye
see, Kirstie, all the folks reckon me somethin’ of a doctor, an’ this
here meat I’m cookin’ for ye ain’t rightly food at all. It’s medicine;
’tain’t right ye should hold off now, when ye need it as medicine.
’Tain’t fair to Mirandy. I can see ye’ve jest been pinin’ away like, all
winter. It’s new blood, with iron in it, ye need. It’s flesh meat, an’
flesh meat only, that’ll give ye iron an’ new blood. When ye’re well,
an’ yer old strong self agin, ye can quit meat if ye like,—an’ kick me
out o’ the cabin for interferin’; but now—”

He paused dramatically. He had talked right on, contrary to his silent
habit, for a purpose. He knew the power of natural cravings. He was
waiting for Kirstie’s elemental bodily needs to speak out in support of
his argument. He waited just time for the savoury smell of the steak to
fill the cabin and work its miracle. Now the spell was abroad. He looked
to Kirstie for an answer.

The instant she smelled that savour Kirstie knew that he was right.
Steak, venison steak fried in butter, _was_ what she required. For weeks
she had had no appetite; now she was ravenous. Moreover, a thousand
lesser forces, set in motion by Dave’s long talks, were impelling her to
just such a change as the eating of flesh would symbolize to her.
But—Miranda? Kirstie stared at her in nervous apprehension, expecting an
outburst of scorn. But Miranda was seemingly oblivious of all that went
on in the cabin. Her unfathomed eyes, abstractedly wide open, were
staring out through the white square of the window. She was trying hard
to think about the mysterious blue-white wash of radiance that seemed to
pour in palpable floods from the full moon;—about the furred and furtive
creatures passing and repassing noiselessly, as she knew, across the lit
patches of the glades;—about the herd of moose down in the firwoods,
sleeping securely between walls of deep snow in the “yard,” which they
had trodden for themselves a fortnight back;—of Kroof, coiled in her
warm den under the pine root, with five feet of drift piled over her.
But in reality she was steeling herself, with fierce desperation,
against a strange appetite which was rising within her at the call of
that insidious fragrance. With a kind of horror she realized that she
was at war with herself—that one half her nature was really more than
ready to partake of the forbidden food.

Dave noticed the look of question which Kirstie had turned upon Miranda.

“Oh, ye needn’t look to her, Kirstie, to back ye up in no foolishness,”
he went on. “I spoke to her last night about it, an’ she hadn’t a word
to say agin my medicine.”

Still there was no comment from Miranda. If Miranda, to whom abstinence
from flesh was a religion, could tolerate a compromise, why she herself,
to whom it was merely a prejudice and a preference, might well break an
ancient rule for an instant’s good. She had been inwardly anxious for
months about her condition. After a second or two of doubt, her mind was
made up; and when Kirstie made up her mind, it was in no halfway
fashion.

“I’ll try your doctoring, Dave,” she said slowly. “I’ll give it a fair
trial. But while you’re about it, why don’t you cook enough for
yourself, too? Have you put salt in the pan? And here’s a dash of
pepper.”

“No,” answered the young hunter, concealing his elation as he sprinkled
the steak temperately with the proffered salt and pepper, “I don’t want
none myself, I need meat onct in a while, er I git weak an’ no good. But
there’s nothin’ suits my taste like the feeds I git here,—the pipin’ hot
riz buckwheat cakes, with lots o’ butter an’ molasses, an’ the
johnny-cake, an’ the potater pie, an’ the tasty ways ye cook eggs. I
often think when I’m here that I wouldn’t care if I never seen a slice
o’ fresh meat, er even bacon, agin. But our bodies is built a certain
way, an’ there’s no gittin’ over Nature’s intention. We’ve got the teeth
to prove it, an’ the insides, too,—I’ve read all about it in doctors’
books. I read a heap in camp. Fact is, Kirstie, we’re built like the
bear,—to live on all kinds of food, includin’ flesh,—an’ if we don’t git
all kinds onct in a while, somethin’s bound to go wrong.”

Never had Dave talked so much before; but now he was feverishly eager to
have no opening for discussion. While he talked the venison was cooked
and served. Kirstie ate it with a relish, which convinced him of the
wisdom of his course. She ate all that he had fried; and he wisely
refrained from cooking more, that her appetite might be kept on edge for
it in the morning. Then she ate other things, with an unwonted zest.
Miranda returned to the table, talking pleasantly of everything but
health, and food, and hunting. Against herself she was angry; but on
Dave, to his surprise, she smiled with a rare graciousness. She was
mollified by his tact in characterizing the steak as medicine; and,
moreover, by his statement of a preference for their ordinary bloodless
table, he seemed in some way to range himself on her side, even while
challenging her principles. But—oh, that savoury smell! It still
enriched the air of the cabin; it still stirred riotous cravings in her
astonished appetite. She trembled with a fear and hatred of herself.

When Kirstie, with a face to which the old glow was already venturing
back, laid down her knife and fork, and explained to her guest, “You’re
a good doctor, and no mistake, Dave Titus; I declare I feel better
already,” Miranda got up and went silently out into the moonlight to
breathe new air and take counsel with herself.

Dave would have followed her, but Kirstie stopped him. “Best let her
be,” she said meaningly, in a low voice. “She’s got a heap to think over
in the last half hour.”

“But she took it a sight better’n I thought she would,” responded Dave.

And all on account of a venison steak, his hopes soared higher than they
had ever dared before.



                              Chapter XVI
                        Death for a Little Life


Thenceforward Kirstie twice or thrice a week medicined herself with
fresh venison, provided assiduously by Young Dave, and by the time
spring was fairly in possession of the clearing, she was her old strong
self again. But as for Dave’s hopes, they had been reduced to
desolation. Miranda had taken alarm at her sudden carnivorous craving,
and in her effort to undo that moment’s weakness she had withdrawn
herself to the utmost from Dave’s influence. She had been the further
incited to this by an imagined aloofness on the part of her furred and
feathered pensioners. A pair of foxes, doubtless vagrants from beyond
her sphere, had spread slaughter among the hares as they returned from
feeding at the cabin. The hungry raiders had laid an ambush at the edge
of the clearing on two successive nights. They had killed recklessly.
Then they vanished, doubtless driven away by the steady residents who
knew how to kill discreetly and to guard their preserves from poachers.
But the hares had taken alarm, and few came now o’ nights for Miranda’s
carrots and clover. Miranda, with a little ache at her heart, concluded
from this that she had forfeited her ascendency among the kin of the
ancient wood. There had been a migration, too, among the squirrels, so
that now these red busybodies were perceptibly fewer about the cabin
roof. And the birds—they were nearly all gone. An unusually early
spring, laying bare the fields in the lower country, and bringing out
the insects before their wont, had scattered Miranda’s flocks a
fortnight earlier than usual. No crumbs could take the place of swelling
seeds and the first fat May-fly. But Miranda thought they were fled
through distrust of her. Kroof, old Kroof the constant, was all
unchanged when she came from her winter’s sleep; but this spring she
brought an unusually fine cub with her, and the cub, of necessity, took
a good deal of her time and attention away from Miranda. When Miranda
was with her, roaming the still, transparent corridors, all the
untroubled past came back, crystalline and flawless as of old. Once more
the furtive folk went about their business in the secure peace of her
neighbourhood; once more she revelled with a kind of intoxication in the
miraculous fineness of her vision; once more she felt assured of the
mastery of her look. But this was in the intervals between Dave’s
visits. When he was at the clearing, everything was different. She was
no longer sure of herself on any point. And the worst of it was that the
more indifference to him she feigned, the less she felt. She was quite
unconscious, all the while, that her mother was shrewdly watching her
struggles. She was not unconscious, however, of Dave’s attitude. She saw
that he seemed dull and worried, which gratified her, she knew not why,
and confirmed her in her coolness. But at last, with a slow anger
beginning to burn at his heart, he adopted the policy of ignoring her
altogether, and giving all his thought to Kirstie, whereupon Miranda
awoke to the conclusion that it was her plain duty to be civil to her
mother’s guest.

This change, not obtrusive, but of great moment to Dave, came over the
girl in June, when the dandelions were starring the pasture grass. The
sowing and the potato planting were just done. The lilac bushes beside
the cabin were a mass of purple enchantment. It was not a time for hard
indifference; and Dave was quick to catch the melting mood. His manner
was such, however, that Miranda could not take alarm.

“Mirandy,” said he, with the merest good comradeship in tone and air,
“would ye take a little trip with me to-morrow, now that the crops can
spare ye a bit?”

“Where to, Dave?” interposed Kirstie, fearful lest the girl should
refuse out of hand, before she knew what Dave proposed to do.

“Why, I’ve got to go over the divide an’ run down the Big Fork in my
canoe to Gabe White’s clearin’, with some medicine I’ve brought from the
Settlement for his little boy what’s sick. He’s a leetle mite of a chap,
five year old, with long, yaller curls, purty as a picture, but that
peaked an’ thin, it goes to yer heart to see him. Gabe came in to the
Settlement yesterday to see the doctor about him an’ git medicine; but
he’s had to go right on to the city to sell his pelts, an’ git some
stuff the doctor says the little feller must hev, what can’t be got in
the Settlement at all. So Gabe give me this” (and he pulled a bottle out
of the inside pocket of his hunting shirt) “to take to him right now,
coz the little feller needs it badly. It’s a right purty trip, Mirandy,
an’ the Big Fork’s got some rapids ’at’ll please ye. What ye say?”

Dave was growing subtle under Miranda’s discipline. He knew that the
picture of the small boy would draw her; and also that the sight of the
ailing child, acting upon her quick sympathies, would awaken a new human
interest and work secretly in favour of himself. The beauty of the
scenery, the excitement of the rapids,—these were a secondary influence,
yet he knew they would not be without appeal to the beauty-worshipping
and fearless Miranda.

The girl’s deep eyes lightened at the prospect. She would see something
a little different, yet not alien or hostile,—a new river, other hills
and woods, a deeper valley, a ruder cabin in a remoter clearing, a
lonely woman,—above all, a little sick boy with long, yellow hair.

“But it must be a long way off, Dave,” she protested, in a tone that
invited contradiction.

“Not so far as to the Settlement,” answered Dave; “an’ it don’t take
half so long to go because o’ the quick run down river. I reckon,
though, we’d best stay over night at White’s clearin’ and come back easy
nex’ day—if you don’t mind, Kirstie! Sary Ann White’s a powerful fine
woman, an’ Mirandy’s sure to like her. It’ll do her a sight of good,
poor thing, to hev Mirandy to talk to a bit.”

He wanted to say that just a look at Miranda’s wild loveliness would do
Mrs. White a lot of good; but he had not quite the courage for such a
bold compliment.

“No, I don’t mind, if Miranda likes to go,” said Kirstie; “I shan’t be
lonesome, as Kroof’ll be round most of the time.”

It had come to be understood, and accepted without comment, that when
Dave went anywhere with Miranda the jealous old bear remained at home.

Until they were fairly off, Dave was in a fever of anxiety lest Miranda
should change her mind. But this venture had genuinely caught her
interest, and no whim tempted her to withdraw. After a breakfast eaten
so early that the early June dawn was still throwing its streaks of cool
red through the cabin window and discouraging the fire upon the hearth,
Dave and Miranda set out. They followed the path to the spring among the
alders, and then plunged direct into the woods, aiming a little to the
east of north. The dew was thick in silver globules on the chips of the
yard and on the plantain leaves. It beaded the slender grasses about the
spring, and the young foliage of the alders, and the dazzling veils of
the gossamer spiders. This time Dave took his rifle with him, and
Miranda paid no heed to it.

The woods were drenching wet, but unusually pervaded with light. The new
risen sun sent its fresh rays far up the soundless vistas, and every
damp leaf or shining facet of bark diffused its little dole of lustre to
thin the gloom. As the sun got higher and the dew exhaled away, the
twilight slightly deepened, the inexpressible clarity of the shadowed
air returned, and the heart of the ancient wood resumed its magic. The
awe, as of an enchantment working unseen, the meaning and expectant
stillness, the confusion of near and far, the unreality of the
familiar,—all this gripped the imagination of the two travellers just as
sharply as if they had not been all their lives accustomed to it. The
mystery of the ancient wood was not to be staled by use. These two,
sensitive to its spell as a surface of glass to a breath, lay open to it
in every nerve, and a tense silence fell upon their lips. In the silence
was understanding of each other. It was Dave’s most potent wooing,
against which Miranda had no warning, no defence.

As they walked thus noiselessly, light-footed as the furtive folk
themselves, suddenly from a bit of open just ahead of them there came
the slender, belling cry of a young deer. They had arrived now, after
three hours’ rapid walking, at a part of the forest unknown to Miranda.
The open space was rock thinly covered with mosses and vines, an
upthrust of the granite foundations of a hill which towered near by.

It was an unheard-of thing for a young deer to give cry so heedlessly
amid the perilous coverts of the wood. Both the travellers instinctively
paused, and then stole forward with greater caution, peering through the
branches. To the forest dwellers, beast or human, the unusual is always
the suspicious, and therefore to be investigated. A few paces carried
them both to a point where Miranda caught sight of the imprudent
youngling.

“Hush!” she whispered, laying her hand on Dave’s arm, “Look! the poor
little thing’s lost. Don’t frighten it!”

“There’ll be something else’ll frighten it afore long,” muttered Dave,
“if it don’t quit its bla’tin’.”

The words were hardly out of his mouth when the little animal jumped,
trembled, started to run, and then looked piteously from side to side,
as if uncertain which way to flee and from what peril. An instant more
and the greyish-brown form of a lynx shot like lightning from the
underbrush. It caught the young deer by the throat, dragged it down,
tore it savagely, and began drinking its blood.

“Kill it! kill it!” panted Miranda, starting forward. But Dave’s hand
checked her.

“Wait!” he said firmly. “The little critter’s dead; we can’t do it no
good. Wait an’ we’ll git both the varmints. There’ll be a pair of ’em.”

Under ordinary circumstances, Miranda would have resented the idea of
getting “both the varmints”; but just now she was savage with pity for
the young deer, and she chose to remember vindictively that far-off day
when Ganner had come to the clearing, and only the valour of Star, the
brindled ox, had saved herself and Michael, the calf, from a cruel
death. She obeyed Dave’s command, therefore, and waited.

But there was another who would not wait. The mother doe had heard her
lost little one’s appeal. In wild haste, but noiseless on the deep
carpet of the moss, she came leaping to the cry. She saw what Miranda
and Dave saw. But she did not pause to calculate, or weigh the odds
against her. With one bound she was out in the open. With the next she
was upon the destroyer. The hungry lynx looked up just in time to avoid
the fair impact of her descending hooves, which would have broken his
back. As it was, he caught a glancing blow on the flank, which ripped
his fine fur and hurled him several paces down the slope.

Before he could fully recover, the deer was upon him again; and Miranda,
her eyes glowing, her cheeks scarlet with excitement and exultation,
clutched her companion’s arm with such a grip that her slim fingers hurt
him deliciously. The lynx, alarmed and furious, twisted himself over and
fixed both claws and teeth in his adversary’s leg, just below the
shoulder. Fierce and strong as he was, he was nevertheless getting badly
punished, when his mate appeared bounding down the slope, and with a
sharp snarl sprang upon the doe’s neck, bearing her to her knees.

“Shoot! shoot!” cried Miranda, springing away from Dave’s side to give
him room. But his rifle was at his shoulder ere she spoke. With the word
his shot rang out; and the second assailant dropped to the ground,
kicking. Immediately Dave ran forward. The male lynx, disentangling
himself, darted for cover; but just as he was disappearing, Dave gave
him the second barrel, at short range, and the bullet caught him
obliquely across the hind quarters, breaking his spine. Dave was noted
as the best shot in all that region; but the marksmanship which he had
just displayed was lost on Miranda. She took it for granted that to
shoot was to hit, and to hit was to kill, as a matter of course. Dave’s
first shot had killed. The animal was already motionless. But the
writhings of the other lynx, prone in the bush, tore her heart.

“Oh, how it’s suffering! Kill it, quick!” she panted. Dave ran up, swung
his rifle in a short grip, and struck the beast a settling blow at the
base of the skull. The deer, meanwhile, limping and bleeding, but not
seriously the worse for her dreadful encounter, hobbled back to where
the body of her young lay stretched upon the moss. She sniffed at it for
a moment with her delicate nose, satisfied herself that it was quite
dead, then moved off slowly into the shadows.

Miranda went to each of the three slain animals in turn, and looked at
them thoughtfully, while Dave waited in silence, uncertain what to do
next. He felt that it behooved him to step warily while Miranda was
wrestling with emotions. At last she said, with a sob in her voice, and
her eyes very bright and large,—

“Come, let’s get away from this horrid place!”

Dave experienced a certain mild pang at the thought of leaving two good
pelts behind him to be gnawed by foxes; but he followed Miranda without
a word. It would have been a fatal error to talk of furs at that moment.
As soon, however, as they were out of sight of the open slope, he turned
aside and headed their course toward a rocky knoll which was visible
through the trees.

“What are you going that way for?” asked Miranda.

“Likely the lou’-cerfies had their den in the rocks yonder,” was the
reply; “we must find it.”

“What do we want of their den?” queried the girl in surprise.

“There’ll be a couple of lou’-cerfie kittens in it, I reckon,” said
Dave, “an’ we must find ’em.”

“What for?” demanded Miranda, suspiciously.

Dave looked at her.

“You’ve had me shoot the father an’ mother, Mirandy,” he said slowly,
“for the sake of the deer. An’ now would ye hev the little ones starve
to death?”

“I never thought of that, Dave,” answered the girl, smitten with
remorse; and she looked at him with a new approval. She thought to
herself that he, hunter and blood-stained as he was, showed yet a
readier and more reasonable tenderness for the furry kindred than she
herself.

For nearly half an hour they searched the hollows of the rocky knoll,
and at last came upon a shallow cave overhung darkly by a mat of dwarf
cedar. There were bones about the entrance, and inside, upon a bed of
dry moss, were two small rusty brown, kitten-like objects curled softly
together. Miranda’s discerning vision perceived them at once, but it
took Dave’s eyes some seconds to adapt themselves to the gloom. Then the
furry ball of “lou’-cerfie” kittens looked to him very pretty—something
to be fondled and protected. He knew well how their helplessness would
appeal to Miranda’s tender heart. Nevertheless, with a firmness of
courage which, under the circumstances, few heroes would have arisen to,
he stepped forward, stooped, untangled the soft ball, and with the heavy
handle of his hunting-knife struck each kitten just one sharp stroke on
the neck, killing it instantly and easily.

“Poor little critters!” he muttered; “it was the only thing to do with
’em,” and he turned to Miranda.

The girl had backed out of the cave and now stood, with flushed face,
staring at him fiercely.

“You brute!” she exclaimed.

Dave had been prepared for some discussion of his action. But he was not
prepared for just this. He drew himself up.

“I did think ye was a woman grown; an’ for all yer idees were kind of
far-fetched, I’ve respected ’em a heap; an’ I won’t say but what they’ve
influenced me, too. But now I see ye’re but a silly child an’ don’t
reason. Did ye think, maybe, these here leetle mites o’ things could
live an’ take keer o’ themselves?”

He spoke coldly, scornfully; and there was a kind of mastery in his
voice that quelled her. She was astonished, too. The colour in her face
deepened, but she dropped her eyes.

“I wanted to take them home, and tame them,” she explained, quite
humbly.

Dave’s stern face softened.

“Ye’d never ’a’ been able to raise ’em. They’re too young, a sight too
young. See, their eyes ain’t open. They’d have jest died on yer hands,
Mirandy, sure an’ sartain!”

“But—how _could_ you!” she protested, with no more anger left, but a sob
of pity in her throat.

“It was jest what _you_ do to the fish ye ketch, Mirandy, to stop their
sufferin’.”

Miranda looked up quickly, and her eyes grew large.

“Do you know, I never thought of that before, Dave,” she replied. “I’ll
never catch a fish again, long as I live! Let’s get away from here.”

“Ye see,” began Dave, making up his mind to sow a few seeds of doubt in
Miranda’s mind as to the correctness of her theories, “ye see, Mirandy,
’tain’t possible to be consistent right through in this life; but what
ye’ll find, life’ll make a fool o’ ye at one point or another. I ain’t
a-goin’ to say I think ye’re all wrong, not by no means. Sence I’ve seen
the way ye understand the live critters of the woods, an’ how they
understand you, I’ve come to feel some different about killin’ ’em
myself. But, Mirandy, Nature’s nature, an’ ye can’t do much by buckin’
up agin her. Look now, ye told me to shoot the lou’-cerfie coz he killed
the deer kid. But he didn’t go to kill it for ugliness, nor jest for
himself to make a dinner off of—you know that. He killed it for his
mate, too. Lou’-cerfie ain’t built so’s they can eat grass. If the she
lou’-cerfie didn’t git the meat she needed, her kittens’d starve. She’s
jest _got_ to kill. Nature’s put that law onto her, an’ onto the
painters, an’ the foxes an’ wolves, the ’coons an’ the weasels. An’
she’s put the same law, only not so heavy, onto the bears, an’ also onto
humans, what’s all built to live on all kinds of food, meat among the
rest. An’ to live right, and be their proper selves, they’ve all got to
eat meat sometimes, for Nature don’t stand much foolin’ with her laws!”

“_I’m_ well,” interrupted Miranda, eagerly, with the obvious retort.

“Maybe ye won’t be always!” suggested Dave.

“Then I’ll be sick—then I’ll _die_ before I’ll eat meat!” she protested
passionately. “What’s the good of living, anyway, if it’s nothing but
kill, kill, kill, and for one that lives a lot have got to die!”

Dave shook his head soberly.

“That’s what nobody, fur’s I can see, Mirandy, has ever been able to
make out yet. I’ve thought about it a heap, an’ read about it a heap,
alone in camp, an’ I can’t noways see through it. Oftentimes it’s seemed
to me all life was jest like a few butterflies flitterin’ over a
graveyard. But all the same, if we don’t go to too much foolish worryin’
’bout what we can’t understand, we do feel it’s good to be alive; an’ I
do think, Mirandy, this life _might_ be somethin’ finer than the finest
kind of a dream.”

Something in his voice, at these last words, thrilled Miranda, and at
the same time put her on her guard.

“Well,” she exclaimed positively, if not relevantly, “I’m never going to
catch another fish.”

The answer not being just what Dave needed for the support of his
advance, he lost courage, and let the conversation drop.



                              Chapter XVII
                       In the Roar of the Rapids


A little before noon, when the midsummer heat of the outside world came
filtering faintly down even into the cool vistas of the forest, and here
and there a pale-blue butterfly danced with his mate across the clear
shadow, and the aromatic wood smells came out more abundantly than was
their wont, at the lure of the persuasive warmth, the travellers halted
for noonmeat. Sitting on a fallen hemlock trunk beside a small but noisy
brook, it was a frugal meal they made on the cheese and dark bread which
Kirstie had put in Dave’s satchel. Their halt was brief; and as they set
out again, Dave said:—

“’Tain’t a mile from here to the Big Fork. Gabe’s canoe’s hid in the
bushes just where this here brook falls in. Noisy, ain’t it?”

“I love the sound,” exclaimed Miranda, stepping quickly and gaily, as if
the light, musical clamour of the stream had got into her blood.

“Well, the Big Fork’s a sight noisier,” continued Dave. “It’s heavy
water, an’ just rapids on rapids all the ways down to Gabe’s clearing.
Ye won’t be skeered, Mirandy?”

The girl gave one of her rare laughs, very high-pitched, but brief,
musical, and curiously elusive. She was excited at the prospect.

“I reckon you know how to handle a canoe, Dave,” was all she said. The
trust in her voice made Dave feel measurably nearer his purpose. He
durst not speak, lest his elation should betray itself.

In a little while there came another sound, not drowning or even
obscuring the clear prattle of the brook, but serving as a heavy
background to its brightness. It was a large, yet soft, pulsating
thunder, and seemed to come from all sides at once; as if far-off herds,
at march over hollow lands, were closing in upon them. Dave looked at
Miranda. She gave him a shining glance of comprehension.

“It’s the rapids!” she cried. “Do we go through those?”

Dave laughed.

“Not those! Not by a long chalk! That’s the ‘Big Soo’ ye hear, an’ it’s
more a fall than a rapid. Ther’s an eddy an’ a still water jest below,
an’ that’s where we take to the canoe.”

As they went on, the great swelling noise seemed to Miranda to fill her
soul, and worked a deep yet still excitement within her. Nevertheless,
rapidly as its volume increased, the light chatter of the brook was
upborne distinctly upon the flood of it. Then, suddenly, as the forest
thinned ahead, and the white daylight confronted them, the voice of the
brook was in an instant overwhelmed, utterly effaced. The softly
pervasive thunder burst all at once into a trembling roar, vehement,
conflicting, explosive; and they came out full in face of a long,
distorted slope of cataract. White, yellow, tawny green, the waves
bounded and wallowed down the loud steep; and here and there the black
bulks of rock shouldered upward, opposing them eternally.

Spellbound at the sight, Miranda stood gazing, while Dave fetched from
the bushes a ruddy-yellow canoe of birch bark, and launched it in a
quiet but foam-flecked back-water at their feet. In the bow he placed a
compact bundle of bracken for Miranda to sit upon, with another flat
bundle at her back, that the cross-bar might not gall her.

“Best fer ye to sit low, Mirandy, ’stead o’ kneelin’,” he explained,
“coz I’ll be standin’ up, with the pole, goin’ through some o’ the rips,
an’ ye’ll be steadier sittin’ than kneelin’.”

“But I paddle better kneeling,” protested Miranda.

“Ye won’t need to paddle,” said Dave, a little grimly. “Ye’ll jest maybe
fend a rock now an’ agin, that’s all. The current an’ me’ll do the
rest.”

The fall of the “Big Soo” ended in a basin very wide and deep, whose
spacious caverns absorbed the fury of the waters and allowed them to
flow off sullenly. Dave knelt in the stern, paddle in hand, and the long
pole of white spruce sticking out behind the canoe, where he could lay
his grasp upon it in an instant. A couple of strokes sent the little
craft out into the smooth, purplish-amber swirls of the deep current,
whereon the froth clusters wheeled slowly. A few minutes more and a
green fringed overhang of rock was rounded, the last energy of the
current spent itself in a deep and roomy channel, the uproar of the
cataract mellowed suddenly to that pulsating thunder which they had
heard at first, and the canoe, under Dave’s noiseless propulsion, shot
forward over a surface as of dark brown glass. There was a mile of this
still water, along which Miranda insisted upon paddling. The rocks rose
straight from the channel, and the trees hung down from their rim, and
the June sun, warmly flooding the trough of rock and water, made its
grimness greatly beautiful. Then the rocks diminished, and the steep,
richly green slopes of the hillsides came down to the water’s edge, and
a rushing clamour began to swell in the distance. The currents awakened
under the canoe, which darted forward more swiftly. The shouting of the
“rips” seemed to rush up stream to meet them. The surface of the river
began to slant away before them, not breaking yet, but furrowing into
long, thready streaks. Then, far down the slant, a tossing white line of
short breakers, drawn right across the channel, clambered toward them
ravenously.

“Ye’d better not paddle now, Mirandy,” said Dave, in a quiet voice,
standing up for a moment to survey the channel, while the canoe slipped
swiftly down toward the turmoil. “There’s rapids now all the way down to
Gabe’s clearing. An’ we won’t be long goin’, neither.”

[Illustration: ‘Stroke on the right!’ came Dave’s sharp order]

A moment more, and to Miranda it seemed that the leafy shores ran by
her, that the gnashing phalanx of the waves sprang up at her. She had
never run a rapid before. Her experience of canoeing had all been gained
on the lake. She caught her breath, but did not flinch as the tumbling
waters seethed and yammered around her. Then her blood ran hot with the
excitement of it; her nerves tingled. She wanted to cry out, to paddle
wildly and fiercely. But she held herself under curb. She never moved.
Only the grip of her hands on the paddle, which lay idle before her,
tightened till the knuckles went white. There was no word from Dave; no
sign of his presence save that the canoe shot straight as an arrow, and
bit firmly upon the big surges, so that she knew his wrist of steel was
in control. Suddenly, just ahead, sprang a square black rock, against
which the mad rush of water upreared and fell back broken to either
side. The canoe leaped straight at it, and Miranda held her breath.

“Stroke on the right!” came Dave’s sharp order. She dipped her paddle
strenuously, twice—thrice—and, swerving at the last moment, while the
currents seethed up along her bulwarks, the canoe darted safely past.

Miranda stopped paddling. There was a steeper slope in front, but a
clear channel, the waves not high but wallowing inward toward the
centre. Straight down this centre rushed the canoe, the surges clutching
at her on both sides, yellow green, with white foam-streaks veining
their very hearts. At the foot of the slope, singing sharply and shining
in the sun, curved a succession of three great “ripples,” stationary in
mid-channel, their back-curled crests thin and prismatic. Straight
through these Dave steered. The three thin crests, thus swiftly divided,
one after another, slapped Miranda coldly in the face, drenching her,
and leaving a good bucketful of water in the canoe.

“Oh!” gasped Miranda, at the shock, and shook her hair, laughing
excitedly.

There was gentler water now for a hundred yards or so, and Dave steered
cautiously for shore.

“We’ll hev to land an’ empty her out,” said he. “Ther’s no more big
‘ripples’ like them there on the whole river; an’ we won’t take in water
agin ’twixt here an’ Gabe’s.”

“I don’t care if we do!” exclaimed Miranda, fervently. “It was splendid,
Dave! And you did it just fine!”

This commendation took him aback somewhat, and he was unable to show his
appreciation of it except by a foolish grin, which remained on his face
while he turned the canoe over and while he launched it again. It was
still there when Miranda resumed her place in the bow; and, strangely
enough, she felt no disposition to criticise him for it.

The rest of the journey, lasting nearly an hour longer, was a ceaseless
succession of rapids, with scant and few spaces of quiet water between.
None were quite so long and violent as the first; but by the time the
canoe slowed up in the reach of still water that ran through the
interval meadow of Gabe’s clearing, Miranda felt fagged from the
long-sustained excitement. She felt as if it had been she, not Dave,
whose unerring eye and unfailing wrist had brought the canoe in triumph
through the menace of the roaring races.

They landed on the blossoming meadow strip, and Dave turned the canoe
over among the grasses, under the shade of an elm that would serve to
keep the afternoon sun from melting the rosin off the seams. Gabe’s
cabin stood a stone’s throw back from the meadow, high enough up the
slope to be clear of the spring freshets. It was a bare, uncared-for
place, with black stumps still dotting all the fields of buckwheat and
potatoes, a dishevelled-looking barn, and no vine or bush about the
house. It gave Miranda a pang of pity to look at it. Her own cabin was
lonely enough, but with a high, austere, clear loneliness that seemed to
hold communion with the stars. The loneliness of this place was a
shut-in, valley loneliness, without horizons and without hope. She felt
sorry almost to tears for the white and sad-eyed woman who appeared in
the cabin door to welcome them.

“Sary Ann, this is Mirandy I spoke to ye about.”

The two women shook hands somewhat shyly, and, after the silent fashion
of their race, said nothing.

“How’s Jimmy?” asked Dave.

“’Baout the same, thank ye, Dave,” replied the woman, wearily, leading
the way into the cabin.

In a low chair near the window, playing listlessly with a dingy
red-and-yellow rag doll, sat a thin-faced, pallid little boy with long,
pale curls down on his shoulders. He lifted sorrowful blue eyes to
Miranda’s face, as she, with a swift impulse of tenderness and
compassion, rushed forward and knelt down to embrace him. Her vitality
and the loving brightness of her look won the child at once. His wan
little face lightened. He lifted the baby mouth to be kissed. Miranda
pressed his fair head to her bosom gently, and had much ado to keep her
eyes from running over, so worked the love and pity and the mothering
hunger in her heart.

“He takes to ye, Mirandy,” said the woman, smiling upon her. And Dave,
his passion almost mastering him, blurted out proudly,—

“An’ who wouldn’t take to her, I’d like to know?”

He felt at this moment that Miranda was now all human, and could never
quite go back to her mystic and uncanny wildness, her preference for the
speechless, furry kin over her own warm, human kind. He produced the
medicine from his satchel; and from Miranda’s attentive hand Jimmy took
the stuff as if it had been nectar. Jimmy’s mother looked on with
undisguised approval of the girl. Had she thought Miranda was going to
stay any length of time, her mother-jealousy would have been aroused;
but as it was she was only exquisitely relieved at the thought of
Jimmy’s being in some one else’s care for a few hours. She whispered
audibly—a mere chaffing pretence of a whisper it was—to Dave:—

“It’s a right purty an’ a right smart little wife she’ll make fer ye,
Dave Titus, an’ she’ll know how to mind yer babies. Ye’re a lucky man,
an’ I hope ye understand how lucky ye air!”

Poor Dave! She might as well have thrown a bucket of cold water in his
face. For an instant he could have strangled the kindly, coarse-grained,
well-meaning, silly woman, who stood beaming her pale goodwill upon them
both. He cursed himself for not having warned her that Miranda could not
be chaffed like a common Settlement girl. He saw Miranda’s face go
scarlet to the ears, though she bent over Jimmy and pretended to have
heard nothing; and he knew that in that moment his good work was all
undone. For a few seconds he could say nothing, and the silence grew
trying. Then he stammered out:—

“I’m afeard ther’s no sich luck fer me, Sary Ann, though God knows I
want her. But Mirandy don’t like me very well.”

The woman stared at him incredulously.

“Lord sakes, Dave Titus, then what’s she doin’ here alone with you?” she
exclaimed, the weariness coming back into her voice at the last of the
phrase. “Oh, you go ’long! You don’t know nothin’ about women!”

This was quite too much for Dave, whose instincts, fined by long months
in the companionship of only the great trees, the great winds, and the
grave stars, had grown unerringly delicate. His own face flushed up now
for Miranda’s sake.

“I’d take it kindly of ye, Sary Ann, if ye’d quit the subject right
there,” he said quietly. But there was a firmness in his voice which the
woman understood.

“The both of ye must be nigh dead for somethin’ to eat,” she said. “I
must git ye supper right off.” And she turned to the fireplace and
filled the kettle.

Thereafter, through supper, and through the short evening, Miranda had
never a word for Dave. She talked a little, kindly and without showing
her resentment, to Mrs. White; but her attentions were entirely absorbed
in little Jimmy. Indeed, she had Jimmy very much to herself, for Mrs.
White got Dave to help with the chores and the milking. Afterward, about
the hearth-fire,—maintained for its cheer and not for warmth,—Mrs. White
confined her conversation largely to Dave. She was not angry at him on
account of his rebuke—but vaguely aggrieved at Miranda as the cause of
it. She began to feel that Miranda was different from other girls, from
what she herself had been as a girl. Miranda’s fineness and
sensitiveness were something of an offence to her, though she could not
define them at all. She characterized them vaguely by the phrase “stuck
up”; and became presently inclined to think that a fine fellow like Dave
was too good for her. Still, she was a fair-minded woman in her worn,
colourless way; and she could not but allow there must be a lot in
Miranda if little Jimmy took to her so—“For a child knows a good heart,”
she said to herself.

Next morning, soon after dawn, the travellers were off, Miranda tearing
herself with difficulty from little Jimmy’s embrace, and leaving him in
a desolation of tears. She was quite civil and ordinary with Dave now,
so much so that good, obtuse, weary Mrs. White concluded that all was at
rights again. But Dave felt the icy difference; and he was too proud, if
not for the time too hopeless, to try to thaw it. During all the long,
laborious journey upward through the rapids, by poling, he did wonders
of skill and strength, but in utter silence. His feats were not lost
upon Miranda, but she hardened her heart resolutely; for now a shame,
which she had never known before, gave tenacity to her anger. Through it
all, however, she couldn’t help thrilling to the strife with the loud
rapids, and exulting in the slow, inexorable conquest of them. The
return march through the woods was in the main a silent one, as before;
but how different a silence! Not electric with meaning, but cold, the
silence of a walled chamber. And, as if the spirits of the wood
maliciously enjoyed Dave’s discomfiture, they permitted no incident, no
diversion. They kept the wood-folk all away, they emptied of all life
and significance the forest spaces. And Dave grew sullen.

Arriving back at the clearing just before sundown, they paused at the
cabin door. Dave looked into Miranda’s eyes with something of reproach,
something of appeal. Kirstie’s voice, talking cheerfully to Kroof, came
from the raspberry brambles behind the house. Miranda stretched out her
hand with a cool frankness, and returned his look blankly.

“I’ve had a real good time, thank you, Dave,” she said. “You’ll find
mother yonder, picking raspberries.”



                             Chapter XVIII
                        The Forfeit of the Alien


All through the summer and early autumn Dave continued his fortnightly
visits to the cabin in the clearing, and always Miranda treated him with
the same cold, casual civility. She felt, or pretended to herself that
she felt, grateful now to the blunt-fingered, wan woman over at Gabe
White’s, who had rudely jostled her back to her senses when she was on
the very edge of giving up her freedom and her personality to a man—a
strong man, who would have absorbed her. She flung herself passionately
once more into the fellowship of the furtive folk, the secrecy and
wonder of the wood. As it was a human love which she was crushing out,
and as she felt the need of humanity cravingly, though not
understandingly, at her heart, she lavished upon Kirstie a
demonstrativeness of affection such as she had never shown before. It
pleased Kirstie, and she met it heartily in her calm, strong way; but
she saw through it, and smiled at the back of her brain, scarcely daring
to think her thought frankly, lest the girl’s intuition should discern
it. She made much of Dave, but never before Miranda; and she kept
encouraging the rather despondent man with the continual assertion:
“It’ll be all right, Dave. Don’t fret, but bide your time.” To which
Dave responded by biding his time with a quiet, unaggressive
persistence; and if he fretted, he took pains not to show it.

If Dave had an ally in Kirstie, he had consistent antagonists in all the
folk of the wood; for never before in all Miranda’s semi-occult
experience had the folk of the wood come so near to her. Kroof was her
almost ceaseless companion, more devoted, if possible, than ever, and
certainly more quick in comprehension of Miranda’s English. And Kroof’s
cub, a particularly fine and well-grown young animal, was well-nigh as
devoted as his mother. When these two were absent on some rare
expedition of their own, undertaken by Kroof for the hardening of the
cub’s muscles, then the very foxes took to following Miranda, close to
heel, like dogs; and one drowsy fall afternoon, when she had lain down
to sleep on a sloping patch of pine needles, the self-same big panther
from whom she had rescued Dave came lazily and lay down beside her. His
large purring at her ear awoke her. He purred still more loudly when she
gently scratched him under the throat. She was filled with a curious
exaltation as she marked how her influence over the wild things grew and
widened. Nothing, she vowed, should ever lure her away from these clear
shades, these silent folks whom she ruled by hand and eye, and this
mysterious life which she alone could know. When Old Dave, for whom she
cared warmly, made his now infrequent visits to the clearing, she had an
inclination to avoid him, lest he should attack her purpose; and the
thought of little Jimmy’s white face and baby mouth she put away
obstinately, as most dangerous of all. And so it came that when October
arrived, and all the forest everywhere was noiselessly astir with
falling leaves, and the light of the blue began to peer in upon the
places which had been closed to it all summer, by that time Miranda felt
quite secure in her resolve; and Dave’s fight now was to keep the
despair of his heart from writing itself large upon his face.

Toward the end of that October Dave’s hunting took him to the rocky open
ground where, in the previous June, he and Miranda had encountered the
lynxes. He was looking for fresh meat for Kirstie, and game, that day,
had kept aloof. Just as he recognized, with a kind of homesick ache of
remembrance, the spot where he and Miranda had seemed, for a brief
space, to be in perfect accord with each other,—how long ago and how
unbelievable it appeared to him now!—his hunter’s eye caught a sight
which brought the rifle to his shoulder. Just at the edge of the open a
young bear stood greedily stripping blueberries from the laden bushes,
and grunting with satisfaction at the sweet repast.

“A bit of bear steak,” thought Dave, “will be jest the thing for
Kirstie. She’s gittin’ a mite tired o’ deer’s meat!”

An unhurried aim, a sharp, slapping report, and the handsome cub sank
forward upon his snout, and rolled over, shot through the brain. Dave
strode up to him. He had died instantly—so instantly and painlessly that
his half-open mouth was still full of berries and small, dark green
leaves. Dave felt his soft and glossy dark coat.

“Ye’re a fine young critter,” he muttered half regretfully. “It was kind
o’ mean to cut ye off when ye was havin’ such a good time all to
yerself.”

But Dave was not one to nurse an idle sentimentality. Without delay he
skinned the carcase, and _cached_ the pelt carefully under a pile of
heavy stones, intending to return for it the first day possible. He was
going to the clearing now, and could not take a raw pelt with him, to
damn him finally in Miranda’s eyes; but the skin was too fine a one to
be left to the foxes and wolverines. When it was safely bestowed, he cut
off the choicest portions of the carcase, wrapped them in leaves and
tied them up in birch bark, slung the package over his shoulder, and set
out in haste for the clearing. He was anxious that Kirstie should have
bear steaks for supper that night.

He had been but a little while gone from the rocky open, where the red
carcase lay hideously affronting the sunlight, when another bear emerged
in leisurely fashion from the shadows. It was an animal of huge size and
with rusty fur that was greying about the snout. She paused to look
around her. On the instant her body stiffened, and then she went
crashing through the blueberry bushes to where that dreadful thing lay
bleeding. She walked around it twice, with her nose in the air, and
again with her nose to the ground. Then she backed away from it slowly
down the slope, her stare fixed upon it as if she expected it might rise
and follow. At the edge of the wood she wheeled quickly, and went at a
savage gallop along the trail which Dave had taken.

It was old Kroof; and Dave had killed her cub.

She rushed on madly, a terrible avenger of blood; but so fast was Dave
journeying that it was not much short of an hour before her instinct or
some keen sense told her that he was close at hand. She was not blinded
by her fury. Rather was she coolly and deliberately set upon a sufficing
vengeance. She moderated her pace, and went softly; and soon she caught
sight of her quarry some way ahead, striding swiftly down the
brown-shadowed vistas.

There was no other bear in all the forests so shrewd as Kroof; and she
knew that for the hunter armed all her tremendous strength and fury were
no match. She waited to catch him at a disadvantage. Her huge bulk kept
the trail as noiselessly as a weasel or a mink. Young Dave, with all his
woodcraft, all his alertness of sense, all his intuition, had no guess
of the dark Nemesis which was so inexorably dogging his stride. He was
in such haste that in spite of the autumn chill his hair clung moistly
to his forehead. When he reached the rivulet flowing away from the cabin
spring, he felt that he must have a wash-up before presenting himself.
Under a big hemlock he dropped his bundle, threw off his cap, his belt,
his shirt, and laid down his loaded rifle. Then, bare to the waist, he
went on some twenty paces to a spot where the stream made a convenient
pool, and knelt down to give himself a thorough freshening.

Kroof’s little eyes gleamed redly. Here was her opportunity.

She crept forward, keeping the trunk of the hemlock between herself and
her foe, till she reached the things which Dave had thrown down under
the tree. She sniffed at the rolled-up package and turned it over with
her paw. Then, with one short, grunting cough of rage and pain, she
launched herself upon the murderer of her cub.

That savage cry was Dave’s first hint of danger. He looked up quickly,
his head and shoulders dripping. He recognized Kroof. There was no time
for choice. The huge animal was just upon him; but in that instant he
understood the whole tragedy. His heart sickened. There was a great
beech tree just across the pool, almost within arm’s length. With one
bound he reached it. With the next he caught a branch and swung himself
up, just eluding the vengeful sweep of Kroof’s paw.

Nimbly he mounted, seeking a branch which would lead him to another tree
and so back to the ground and his rifle; and Kroof, after a moment’s
pause, climbed after him. But Dave could not find what he sought. Few
were the trees in the ancient wood whose topmost branches did not twine
closely with their neighbour trees. But with a man’s natural aversion to
bathing in water that is not enlivened and inspirited by the direct
sunlight, Dave had chosen a spot where the trees were scattered and the
blue of the sky looked in. He climbed to a height of some forty or fifty
feet from the ground before he found a branch that seemed to offer any
hope at all. Out upon this he stepped, steadying himself by a slenderer
branch above his head. Following it as far as the branch would support
him, he saw that his position was all but hopeless. He could not, even
by the most accurate and fortunate swing, catch the nearest branch of
the nearest tree. He turned back, but Kroof was already at the fork. Her
claws were already fixed upon the branch; she was crawling out to him
slowly, inexorably; she had him in a trap.

Dave stood tense and moveless, awaiting her. His face was white, his
mouth set. He knew that in all human probability his hour was come; yet
what might be done, he would do. Far below, between him and the mingling
of rock and moss which formed the ground (he looked down upon it,
chequered with the late sunlight), was a stout hemlock branch. At the
last moment he would drop; and the branch—he would clutch at it—might
perhaps break his fall, at least in part. It was a meagre chance, but
his only one. He was not shaken by fear, but he felt aggrieved and
disappointed at such a termination of his hopes; and the deadly irony of
his fate stung him. The branch bent lower and lower as Kroof’s vast
weight drew near. The branch above, too frail to endure his weight
alone, still served to steady him. He kept his head erect, challenging
death.

It chanced that Miranda, not far off, had heard the roar with which
Kroof had rushed to the attack. The fury of it had brought her in haste
to the spot, surprised and apprehensive. She recognized Dave’s rifle and
hunting-shirt under the hemlock tree, and her heart melted in a horrible
fear. Then she saw Dave high up in the beech tree, his bare shoulders
gleaming through the russet leaves. She saw Kroof, now not three feet
from her prey. She saw the hate in the beast’s eyes and open jaws.

“Kroof!” she cried, in a tone of fierce command; and Kroof heeded her no
more than if she had been the wind whispering. “Kroof! Kroof!” she cried
again, in anguished appeal, in piercing terror, as the savage animal
crept on. Dave did not turn his head, but he called down in a quiet
voice: “Ye can’t do it this time, Mirandy. I guess it’s good-by now, for
good!”

But Miranda’s face had suddenly set itself to stone. She snatched up the
rifle. “Hold on!” she cried, and taking a careful, untrembling aim she
pulled first one trigger, then the other, in such quick succession that
the two reports came almost as one. Then she dropped the weapon, and
stood staring wildly.

The bear’s body heaved convulsively for a moment, then seemed to fall
together on the branch, clutching at it. A second later and it rolled
off, with a leisurely motion, and came plunging downward, soft, massive,
enormous. It struck the ground with a sobbing thud. Miranda gave a low
cry at the sound, turned away, and leaned against the trunk of the
hemlock. Her face was toward the tree, and hidden in the bend of her
arm.

Dave knew now that all he had hoped for was his. Yet, after the first
overwhelming, choking throb of exultation, his heart swelled with pity
for the girl, with pity and immeasurable tenderness. He descended from
his refuge, put on his hunting-shirt and belt, looked curiously at the
empty rifle where it lay on the moss, and kicked the corded package of
meat into a thicket. Then he went and stood close beside Miranda.

After a moment or two he laid an arm about her shoulders and touched her
with his large hand, lightly firm. “Ye wonderful Mirandy,” he said,
“you’ve give me life over agin! I ain’t a-goin’ to thank ye, though,
till I know what ye’re goin’ to do with me. My life’s been jest all
yours since first I seen ye a woman grown. What’ll ye do with the life
ye’ve saved, Mirandy?”

He pressed her shoulder close against his heart, and leaned over, not
quite daring to kiss the bronze-dark hair on which he breathed. The girl
turned suddenly, with a sob, and caught hold of him, and hid her face in
his breast. “Oh, Dave!” she cried, in a piteous voice, “take mother and
me away from this place; I don’t want to live at the clearing any more.
You’ve killed the old life I loved.” And she broke into a storm of
tears.

Dave waited till she was quieter. Then he said: “If I’ve changed your
life, Mirandy, ye’ve changed mine a sight, too. I’ll hunt and trap no
more, dear, an’ the beasts’ll hev no more trouble ’long o’ me. We’ll
sell the clearin’, an’ go ’way down onto the Meramichi, where I can git
a good job surveyin’ lumber. I’m right smart at that. An’ I reckon—oh, I
love ye, an’ I need ye, an’ I reckon I can make ye happy, ye wonderful
Mirandy.”

The girl heard him through, then gently released herself from his arms.
“You go an’ tell mother what I’ve done, Dave,” she said, in a steady
voice, “and leave me here a little while with Kroof.”

That evening, after Miranda had returned to the cabin, Kirstie and Dave
came with spades and a lantern to the beech tree by the pool. Where they
could find room in the rocky soil, they dug a grave; and there they
buried old Kroof deeply, that neither might the claws of the wolverine
disturb her, nor any lure of spring suns waken her from her sleep.


                                PLYMOUTH
                   WILLIAM BRENDON AND SON, PRINTERS



                               Footnotes


[1]A species of large, grey lake trout.



                          Transcriber’s Notes


--Silently corrected a few palpable typos.

--Retained copyright notice from the printed edition (which is
  public-domain in the country of publication.)

--In the text version, delimited italicized text with _underscores_ (the
  HTML version displays the modified font.)





*** End of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "The Heart of the Ancient Wood" ***

Copyright 2023 LibraryBlog. All rights reserved.



Home