hough his words were false, his kiss a betrayal.
When the mid hour hung in silence over the wilderness a figure came out
of the darkness and stood at the gate beside that watcher, Cif Bordoux,
who paced its length with noiseless tread.
A strange figure it was, clad in garments that shone misty white in
the shadow, whose fringes fluttered in the warm wind and whose glowing
plastron glittered in the starlight.
"Cif Bordoux," said the figure, "I would go without."
Wondering and startled, Bordoux would have refused if he dared; but this
was the leader of the Long Trail and her word had been his law for many
moons, nor had he ever questioned her wisdom.
Therefore he drew the bolts and opened the gate the width of a man's
body, and Maren Le Moyne slipped outside the palisade into the night.
A rifle hung in her arm and a pouch of bullets dangled at her knee.
Swiftly and silently she pushed a canoe into the water at the landing,
stepped in, and with one deep dip of a paddle sent the frail craft out
to midstream. She did not turn her head for a farewell glance toward the
post, but set her face toward the way that led to the Pays d'en Haut and
the man who journeyed thither.
Deep and even her paddle took the sweet waters and the current shot her
forward like a racer. The dark shores flowed by in a long black ribbon
of soft shadow, their leaning grasses and foliage playing with the
ripples in endless dip and lift. No fear was in her, scarce any thought
of what she did, only an obeying of the call which simplified all
things.
McElroy was in danger, and she followed him.
That was all she knew, save the mighty sorrow of his falseness which
never left her day or night.
He had taught her love in that one passionate embrace in the forest, and
it was for all time.
What mattered it that he had turned from her for another? That was the
sorry tangle of the threads of Fate,--she had naught to do with it.
Love was born in her and it set a new law unto her being, the law of
service.
Every fibre in her revolted at thought of his death. If it was to be
done beneath the pitying Heaven, he should be saved. He must be helped
to escape. The other was insupportable. Nothing mattered in all the
world save that. Therefore she set herself, alone and fearless, to
follow the tribe of the Nakonkirhirinons to the far North if need be, to
hang on their flank like a wolverine, to take every chance the good
God might send. Chief o
|