 CHAPTER XXIV With the going of Black Roger also went the oppressive loneliness which had gripped Kerrigan, and as he stood listening to the low voices outside, the undeniable truth came to him that he did not hate this man as he had wanted to hate him. He was a murderer and a scoundrel in another way, but he felt irresistibly the impulse to like him and to feel sorry for him. He made an effort to shake off the feeling, but a small voice which he could not quiet persisted in telling him that more than one good man had committed what the law called murder and that perhaps he didn't fully understand what he had seen through the cabin window on the raft. And yet when unstirred by this impulse he knew the evidence was damning. But his loneliness was gone. With Odomar's visit had come an unexpected thrill, the revival of an almost feverish anticipation, the promising of impending things that stirred his blood as he thought of them. "'You will understand strange things then,' Roger Odomar had said, and something in his voice had been like a key unlocking mysterious doors for the first time. And then, wait as patiently as you can!' Out of the basket on the table seemed to come to him a whispering echo of that same word, wait. He laid his hands upon it, and a pulse of life came with the imagined whispering. It was from Marie Anne. It seemed as though the warmth of her hands were still there, and as he removed the cloth the sweet breath of her came to him. And then, in the next instant, he was trying to laugh at himself and trying equally hard to call himself a fool, for it was the breath of newly baked things which her fingers had made. Yet never had he felt the warmth of her presence more strangely in his heart. He did not try to explain to himself why Roger Odomar's visit had broken down things which had seemed insurmountable an hour ago. Analysis was impossible, because he knew the transformation within himself was without a shred of reason. But it had come, and with it his imprisonment took on another form. Where before there had been thought of escape and a scheming to jail Black Roger, there filled him now an intense desire to reach the yellow knife and the Chateau Boulin. It was after midnight when he went to bed, and he was up with the early dawn. With the first break of day the Bateau men were preparing their breakfast. David was glad. He was eager for the day's work to begin, and in that eagerness he pounded on the door and called out to Joe Clamart that he was ready for his breakfast, with the rest of them, but that he wanted only hot coffee to go with what Black Roger had brought to him in the basket. That afternoon the Bateau passed Fort McMurray, and before the sun was well down in the west, Kerrigan saw the green slopes of thick wood hills and the rising peaks of birch mountains. He left outright, as he thought of Corporal Anderson and Constable Fraser at Fort McMurray, whose chief duty was to watch the big waterway. How their eyes would pop if they could see through the padlocked door of his prison. But he had no inclination to be discovered now. He wanted to go on, and with a growing exaltation he saw there was no intention in the part of the Bateau's crew to loiter on the way. There was no stop at noon, and the tie-up did not come until the last glow of day was darkening into the gloom of night in the sky. For sixteen hours the Bateau had traveled steadily, and it could not have made less than sixty miles as the river ran. The raft, David figured, had not traveled a third of the distance. The fact that the Bateau's progress would bring him to Chateau Boulin many days, and perhaps weeks, before Black Roger and Marie Anne could arrive on the raft did not check his enthusiasm. It was this interval between their arrivals which held a great speculative promise for him. In that time, if his efficiency had not entirely deserted him, he would surely make discoveries of importance. Day after day the journey continued without rest. On the fourth day, after leaving Fort McMurray, it was Joe Clamart who brought in David's supper, and he grunted a protest at his long hours of muscle-breaking labor at the sweeps. When David questioned him, he shrugged his shoulders, and his mouth closed tight as a clam. On the fifth the Bateau crossed the narrow western neck of Lake Athabasca, slipping past Chippewine in the night, and on the sixth that entered the Slave River. It was the fourteenth day when the Bateau entered Great Slave Lake, and the second night after that, as dust gathered thickly between the forest walls of the Yellow Knife, David knew that at last they had reached the mouth of the dark and mysterious stream which led to the still more mysterious domain of Black Roger Audemard. That night the rejoicing of the Bateau men ashore was that of men who had come out from under a strain and were throwing off its tension for the first time in many days. A great fire was built, and the men sang and laughed and shouted as they piled wood upon it. In the flare of this fire a smaller one was built, and kettles and pans were soon bubbling and sizzling over it, and a great coffee pot that held two gallons sent out at steam laden with an aroma that mingled joyously with the balsam and cedar smells in the air. David could see the whole thing from his window, and when Joe Clamart came in with supper he found the meat they were cooking over the fire was fresh mousse-stake. As there had been no trading or firing of guns coming down, he was puzzled, and when he asked where the meat had come from, Joe Clamart only shrugged his shoulders and winked an eye, and went out singing about the alouette bird that had everything plucked from it one by one. But David noticed there were never more than four men ashore at the same time. At least one was always aboard the Bateau, watching his doors and windows. And he, too, felt the thrill of an excitement working subtly within him, and this thrill pounded in swifter-running blood when he saw the men about the fire jump to their feet suddenly and go to meet new and shadowy figures that came up indistinctly just in the edge of the forest gloom. There they mingled and were lost in identity for a long time, and David wondered if the newcomers were of the people of Chateauboulin. After that Bateis and Joe Clamart and two others stamped out the fires and came over the plank to the Bateau to sleep. David followed their example and went to bed. The cook fires were burning again before the gray dawn was broken by a tint of the sun, and when the voices of many men roused David, he went to his window and saw a dozen figures where last night there had been only four. When it grew lighter he recognized none of them. All were strangers. Then he realized the significance of their presence. The Bateau had been traveling north, but downstream. Now it would still travel north, but the water of the yellow knife flowed south into Great Slave Lake, and the Bateau must be towed. He caught a glimpse of the two big York boats a little later and six rowers to a boat, and after that the Bateau set out slowly but steadily upstream. For hours David was at one window or the other, with something of awe working inside him as he saw what they were passing through and between. He fancied the water-trail was like an entrance into a forbidden land, a region of vast and unbroken mystery, a country of enchantment, possibly of death, shut out from the world he had known. For the stream narrowed and the forest along the shores was so dense he could not see into it. The treetops hung in a tangled canopy overhead, and a gloom of twilight filled the channel below so that where the sun shot through it was like filtered moonlight shining on black oil. There was no sound except the dull, steady beat of the rowers' oars and the ripple of water along the sides of the Bateau. The men did not sing or laugh, and if they talked it must have been in whispers. There was no cry of birds from a shore. And once David saw Joe Clamart's face as he passed the window, and it was set and hard and filled with the superstition of a man who was passing through a devil-country. And then suddenly the end of it came. A flood of sunlight burst in at the windows, and all at once voices came from ahead, a laugh, a shout, and a yell of rejoicing from the Bateau, and Joe Clamart started again the everlasting song of the ala-wet bird that was plucked of everything it had. Clamart found himself grinning. They were a queer people, these bread-and-the-blood northerners, still moved by their superstitions of children. Yet he conceded that the awesome deadness of the forest passage had put strange thoughts into his own heart. Before nightfall Bateis and Joe Clamart came in and tied his arms behind him, and he was taken ashore with the rumble of a waterfall in his ears. For two hours he watched the labors of the men as they beached the Bateau on long rollers of smooth birch, and rolled it foot by foot over cleared trail until it was launched again above the waterfall. Then he was led back into the cabin and his arms freed. That night he went to sleep with the music of the waterfall in his ears. The second day the yellow knife seemed to be no longer a river but a narrow lake, and the third day the rowers came into the nine lake country at noon, and until another dusk the Bateau threaded its way through twisting channels and impenetrable forests and beached at last at the edge of a great open where the timber had been cut. There was more excitement here, but it was too dark for David to understand the meaning of it. There were many voices, dogs barked. Then voices were at his door, a key rattled in the lock, and it opened. David saw Bates and Joe Clamart first, and then, to his amazement, Black Roger Audemard stood there, smiling at him and nodding good evening. It was impossible for David to repress his astonishment. "'Welcome to Chateau-Boulain,' greeted Black Roger. "'You are surprised?' "'Well, I beat you out by half a dozen hours, in a canoe, monsieur. "'It is only courtesy that I should be here to give you welcome.' Behind him Bates and Joe Clamart were grinning widely, and then both came in, and Joe Clamart picked up his donage sack and threw it over his shoulder. "'If you'll come with us, monsieur,' David followed, and when he stepped ashore there were Bates and Joe Clamart and one other behind him, and three or four shadowy figures ahead, with Black Roger walking at his side. There were no more voices, and the dog had ceased barking. Ahead was a wall of darkness which was the deep black forest beyond the clearing, and into it led a trail which they followed. It was a path worn smooth by the travel of many feet, and for a mile not a star broke through the treetops overhead, nor did a flash of light break the utter chaos of the way but once when Joe Clamart lighted his pipe. No one spoke. Even Black Roger was silent, and David found no word to say. At the end of the mile the trees began to open above their heads, and they soon came to the edge of the timber. In the darkness David caught his breath. Dead ahead, not a rifle shot away, was the Chateau Boulin. He knew it before Black Roger had said a word. He guessed it by the lighted windows, full a score of them, without a curtain drawn to shut out their illumination from the night. He could see nothing but these lights, yet they measured off a mighty place to be built of logs in the heart of a wilderness, and at his side he heard Black Roger chuckling in low exultation. Our home, monsieur, he said. Tomorrow, when you see it in the light of day, you will say it is the finest Chateau in the north, all built of sweet cedar where birch is not used, so that even in the deep snows it gives us the perfume of springtime and flowers. David did not answer, and in a moment Audemars said, Only on Christmas and New Year, and at birthdays and wedding feasts, is it lighted up like that. Tonight it is in your honour, monsieur David. Again he laughed softly, and under his breath he added, And there is someone waiting for you there whom you will be surprised to see. David's heart gave a jump. There was meaning in Black Roger's words, and no double twist to what he meant. Marie Anne had come ahead with her husband. Now as they passed on to the brilliantly lighted Chateau, David made out the indistinct outlines of other buildings almost hidden in the out creeping shadows of the forest edges, with now and then a ray of light to show people were in them. But there was a brooding silence over it all which made him wonder, there was no voice, no bark of dog, not even the opening or closing of a door. As they drew nearer he saw a great veranda reaching the length of the Chateau, with screening to keep out the summer pests of mosquitoes and flies and the night-prowing insects attracted by light. Into this they went, up wide birch steps, and ahead of them was a door so heavy it looked like the post-turn gate of a castle. Black Roger opened it, and in a moment David stood beside him in a dimly lighted hall where the mounted heads of wild beasts looked down like startled things from the gloom of the walls. And then David heard the low, sweet notes of a piano coming to them very faintly. He looked at Black Roger. A smile was on the lips of the Chateau master. His head was up, and his eyes glowed with pride and joy as the music came to him. He spoke no word, but laid a hand on David's arm and led him toward it, while Baptiste and Joe Clamart remained standing at the entrance to the hall. David's feet trod in thick rugs of fur. He saw the dim luster of polished birch and cedar in the walls, and over his head the ceiling was rich and matched as in the Bateau cabin. They drew nearer to the music and came to a closed door. This Black Roger opened very quietly as if anxious not to disturb the one who was playing. They entered, and David held his breath. It was a great room he stood in, thirty feet or more from end to end, scarcely less in width. A room brilliant with light, sumptuous in its comfort, sweet with the perfume of wildflowers and with a great black fireplace at the end of it, from over which there stared at him the glass eyes of a monster moose. Then he saw the figure at the piano, and something rose up quickly and choked him when his eyes told him it was not Marie Anne. It was a slim, beautiful figure in a soft and shimmering white gown, and its head was glowing gold in the lamp-light. Roger Odomar'd spoke. Carmen! The woman at the piano turned about, a little startled at the unexpectedness of the voice, and then rose quickly to her feet, and David Kerrigan found himself looking into the eyes of Carmen Fauchet. Her head he seen her more beautiful than in this moment, like an angel in her shimmering dress of white, her hair a radiant glory, her eyes wide and glowing, and as she looked at him a smile coming to her red lips. Yes, she was smiling at him, this woman whose brother he had brought to the hangman, this woman who had stolen Black Roger from another. She knew him, he was sure of that. She knew him as the man who had believed her a criminal along with her brother, and who had fought to the last against her freedom. Yet from her lips and her eyes and her face the old hatred was gone. She was coming toward him slowly. She was reaching out her hand, and half blindly his own went out, and he felt the warmth of her fingers for a moment, and he heard her voice saying softly, Welcome to Chateau Boulin, Monsieur Kerrigan. He bowed and mumbled something, and Black Roger gently pressed his arm, drawing him back to the door. As he went he saw again that Carmen Fauchet was very beautiful as she stood there, and that her lips were very red, but her face was white, whiter than he had ever seen the face of a woman before. As they went up a winding stair to the second floor, Roger Audemard said, I am proud of my Carmen, Monsieur David. Would any other woman in the world have given her hand like that to the man who had helped to kill her brother? They stopped at another door. Black Roger opened it. There were lights with him, and David knew it was to be his room. Audemard did not follow him inside, but there was a flashing humor in his eyes. I say, is there another woman like her in the world, Monsieur? What have you done to Marianne, your wife? asked David. It was hard for him to get the words out. A terrible thing was gripping at his throat, and the clutch of it drew tighter as he saw the wild light in Black Roger's eyes. Tomorrow you will know, Monsieur, but not tonight. You must wait until tomorrow. He nodded and stepped back, and the door closed, and in the same instance came the harsh grating of a key in the lock. End of Chapter XXIV There was no other door, except one opening into a closet, and but two windows. Curtains were drawn at these windows, and he raised them. A grim smile came to his lips when he saw the white bars of tough birch nailed across each of them outside the glass. He could see the birch had been freshly stripped of bark, and had probably been nailed there that day. Carmen Fanché and Black Roger had welcomed him to Chateau Boulin, but they were evidently taking no chances with their prisoner. And where was Marie Anne? The question was insistent, and with it remained that cold grip of something in his heart that had come with the sight of Carmen Fanché below. Was it possible that Carmen's hatred still lived deadlier than ever, and that with Black Roger she had plotted to bring him here so that her vengeance might be more complete, and a greater torture to him? Were they smiling and offering him their hands even as they knew he was about to die? And if that was conceivable, what had they done with Marie Anne? He looked about the room. It was singularly bare in an unusual sort of way, he thought. There were rich rugs on the floor, three magnificent black bear skins and two wolfs. The heads of two bucks and a splendid caribou hung against the walls. He could see, from marks on the door, where a bed had stood, but this bed was now replaced by a couch made up comfortably for one inclined to sleep. The significance of the thing was clear. Nowhere in the room could he lay his hand upon an object that might be used as a weapon. His eyes again sought the white birch bars of his prison, and he raised the two windows so that the cool, sweet breath of the forests reached into him. It was then that he noticed the mosquito-proof screening nailed outside the bars. It was rather odd, this thinking of his comfort, even as they planned to kill him. If there was truth to this new suspicion that Black Roger and his mistress were plotting both vengeance and murder, their plans must also involve Marie Anne. Suddenly his mind shot back to the raft. Had Black Roger turned to clever coup by leaving his wife there while he came on ahead of the bateau with Carmen Fanché? It would be several weeks before the raft reached the yellow knife, and in that time many things might happen. The thought worried him. He was not afraid for himself. The danger, the combating of physical forces, was his business. His fear was for Marie Anne. He had seen enough to know that Black Roger was hopelessly infatuated with Carmen Fanché, and several things might happen aboard the raft, planned by agents as Black sold as himself. If they killed Marie Anne, his hand gripped the knob of the door, and for a moment he was filled with the impulse to shout for Black Roger and face him with what was in his mind. And as he stood there, every muscle in his body ready to fight, there came to him faintly the sound of music. He heard the piano first, and then a woman's voice singing. Soon a man's voice joined the woman's, and he knew it was Black Roger, singing with Carmen Fanché. Suddenly the mad impulse in his heart went out, and he leaned his head nearer to the crack of the door and strained his ears to hear. He could make out no words of the song, yet the singing came to him with a thrill that set his lips apart and brought a staring wonder into his eyes. In the room below him, fifteen hundred miles from civilization, Black Roger and Carmen Fanché were singing Home Sweet Home. An hour later David looked through one of the barred windows upon a world lighted by a splendid moon. He could see the dark edge of the distant forest that rimmed in the chateau, and about him seemed to be a level meadow, with here and there the shadow of a building in which the lights were out. Stars were thick in the sky, and a strange quietness hovered over the world he looked upon. From below him floated up now and then a perfume of tobacco smoke. The guard under his window was awake, but he made no sound. A little later he undressed, put out the two lights in his room, and stretched himself between the cool white sheets on the couch. After a time he slept, but it was a restless slumber filled with troubled dreams. Once he was half awake, and the second time it seemed to him his nostrils sensed a sharper tang of smoke than that of burning tobacco. Yet he did not fully rouse himself, and the hours passed, and new sounds and smells that rose in the night impinge themselves upon him only as a part of the troublest fabric of his dreams. But at last there came a shock, something which beat over these things which chained him, and seized upon his consciousness, demanding that he rouse himself, open his eyes, and get up. He obeyed the command, and before he was fully awake, found himself on his feet. It was still dark, but he heard voices, voices no longer subdued, but filled with a wild note of excitement and command. And what he smelled was not the smell of tobacco smoke. It was heavy in his room. It filled his lungs. His eyes were smarting with the sting of it. Then came vision, and with a startled cry he leaped to a window. To the north and east he looked out upon a flaming world. With his fist he rubbed his smarting eyes. The moon was gone. The gray he saw outside must be the coming of dawn, ghostly with that mist of smoke that had come into his room. He could see shadowy figures of men running swiftly in and out and disappearing, and he could hear the voices of women and children, and from beyond the edge of the forest to the west came the howling of many dogs. One voice rose above the others. It was Black Rogers, and at its commands little groups of figures shot out into the gray smoke gloom and did not appear again. North and east the sky was flaming, sullen red, and a breath of air blowing gently in David's face told him the direction of the wind. The chateau lay almost in the center of the growing line of conflagration. He dressed himself and went again to the window. Quite distinctly now he could make out Joe Clamart under his window, running toward the edge of the forest at the head of half a dozen men and boys who carried axes and cross-cut saws over their shoulders. It was the last of Black Rogers' people that he saw for some time in the open meadow, but from the front of the chateau he could hear many voices, chiefly of women and children, and guessed it was from there that the final operations against the fire were being directed. The wind was blowing stronger in his face. With it came a sharper tang of smoke, and the widening light of day was fighting to hold its own against the deepening pall of flamelit gloom advancing with the wind. There seemed to come a low and distant sound with that wind, so indistinct that to David's ears it was like a murmur a thousand miles away. He strained his ears to hear, and as he listened there came another sound, a moaning, sobbing voice below his window. It was grief, he heard now, something that went to his heart and held him cold and still. The voice was sobbing like that of a child, yet he knew it was not a child's. Nor was it a woman's. A figure came out slowly in his view, humped over, twisted in its shape, and he recognized Andre, the broken man. David could see that he was crying like a child, and he was facing the flaming forests, with his arms reaching out to them in his moaning. Then of a sudden he gave a strange cry as if defiance had taken the place of grief, and he hurried across the meadow and disappeared into the timber where a great lightning-riven spruce gleamed dully white through the settling veil of smoke mist. For a space David looked after him, a strange beating in his heart. It was as if he had seen a little child going into the face of a deadly peril, and at last he shouted out for someone to bring back the broken man. But there was no answer from under his window. The guard was gone. Nothing lay between him and escape if he could force the white birch bars from the window. He thrust himself against them, using his shoulder as a battering ram. Not the thousandth part of an inch could he feel them give, yet he worked until his shoulder was sore. Then he paused and studied the bars more carefully. Only one thing would avail him, and that was some object which he might use as a lever. He looked about him, and not a thing was there in the room to answer the purpose. Then his eyes fell on the splendid horns of the caribou head. Black Roger's discretion had failed him there, and eagerly David pulled the head down from the wall. He knew the woodsman's trick of breaking off a horn from the skull, yet in this room without log or route to help him the task was difficult, and it was a quarter of an hour after he had last seen the broken man before he stood again at the window with the caribou horn in his hands. He no longer had to hold his breath to hear the low moaning in the wind, and where there had been smoke-gloom before there were now black clouds rolling and twisting up over the tops of the north and eastern forests as if mighty breaths were playing with them from behind. David thrust the big end of the caribou horn between two of the white birch bars, but before he had put his weight to the lever he heard a great voice coming around the end of the chateau, and it was calling for André the broken man. In a moment it was followed by Black Roger Audemard, who ran under the window and faced the lightning-struck spruce as he shouted André's name again. Finally David called down to him, and Black Roger turned and looked up through the smoke-gloom, his head bare, his arms naked, and his eyes gleaming wildly as he listened. "'He went that way twenty minutes ago,' David shouted. "'He disappeared into the forest where you see the dead spruce yonder. And he was crying, Black Roger. He was crying like a child.' If there had been other words to finish, Black Roger would not have heard them. He was running toward the old spruce, and David saw him disappear where the broken man had gone. Then he put his weight on the horn and one of the tough birch bars gave way slowly, and after that a second was wrenched loose, and a third, until the lower half of the window was free of them entirely. He thrust out his head and found no one within the range of his vision. Then he worked his way through the window, feet first, and hanging the length of arms and body from the lower sill, dropped to the ground. Instantly he faced the direction taken by Roger Audemard. It was his turn now, and he felt a savage thrill in his blood. For an instant he hesitated, held by the impulse to rush to Carmen Fanché and with his fingers at her throat, demand what she and her paramour had done with Marie Anne. But the mighty determination to settle it all with Black Roger himself overwhelmed that impulse like an inundation. Black Roger had gone into the forest. He was separated from his people, and the opportunity was at hand. Positive that Marie Anne had been left with the raft, the thought that the Chateau Boulin might be devoured by the onrushing conflagration did not appall David. The Chateau held little interest for him now. It was Black Roger he wanted. As he ran toward the old spruce he picked up a club that lay in the path. This path was a faintly worn trail where it entered the forest beyond the spruce, very narrow, and with brush hanging close to the sides of it, so that David knew it was not in general use and the but few feet had ever used it. He followed swiftly and in five minutes came suddenly out into a great open, thick with smoke, and here he saw why Chateau Boulin would not burn. The break in the forest was a clearing, a rifle shot in width, free of brush and grass, and partly tilled. And it ran in a semi-circle as far as he could see through the smoke in both directions. Thus had Black Roger safeguarded his wilderness castle while providing tillable fields for his people, and as David followed the faintly beaten path he saw green stuffs growing on both sides of him and through the center of the clearing a long strip of wheat, green and very thick. Up and down through the fog of smoke he could hear voices, and he knew it was this great, circular fire-clearing the people of Chateau Boulin were watching and guarding. But he saw no one as he trailed across the open. In soft patches of the earth he found footprints deeply made and wide apart, the footprints of hurrying men, telling him Black Roger and the broken man were both ahead of him, and that Black Roger was running when he crossed the clearing. The footprints led him to a still more indistinct trail in the farther forest, a trail which went straight into the face of the fire ahead. He followed it. The distant murmur had grown into a low moaning over the treetops, and with it the wind was coming stronger and the smoke thicker. For a mile he continued along the path, and then he stopped, knowing he had come to the deadline. Over him was a swirling chaos. The fire wind had grown into a roar before which the treetops bent as if struck by a gale, and in the air he breathed he could feel a swiftly growing heat. For a space he stood there, breathing quickly in the face of a mighty peril. Where had Black Roger and the broken man gone? What mad impulse could it be that dragged them still farther into the path of death? Or had they struck aside from the trail? Was he alone in danger? As if in answer to the questions there came from far ahead of him a loud cry. It was Black Roger's voice, and as he listened it called over and over again the broken man's name. Andrei! Andrei! Andrei! Something in the cry held Kerrigan. There was a note of terror in it, a wild entreaty that was almost drowned in the trembling wind and the moaning that was in the air. David was ready to turn back. He had already approached too near to the red line of death, yet that cry of Black Roger urged him on like the lash of a whip. He plunged ahead into the chaos of smoke, no longer able to distinguish a trail under his feet. Twice again in as many minutes he heard Black Roger's voice and ran straight toward it. The blood of the hunter rushed over all other things in his veins. The man he wanted was ahead of him, and the moment had passed when danger or fear of death could drive him back. Where Black Roger lived he could live, and he gripped his club and ran through the low brush that whipped in stinging lashes against his face and hands. He came to the foot of a ridge, and from the top of this he knew Black Roger had called. It was a huge hog's back, rising a hundred feet up out of the forest, and when he reached the top of it he was panting for breath. It was as if he had come suddenly within the blast of a hot furnace. North and east the forest lay under him, and only the smoke obstructed his vision. But through this smoke he could make out a thing that made him rub his eyes in a fierce desire to see more clearly. A mile away, perhaps too, the conflagration seemed to be splitting itself against the tip of a mighty wedge. He could hear the roar of it to the right of him and to the left, but dead ahead there was only a moaning whirlpool of fire-heated wind and smoke. And out of this, as he looked, came again the cry, André, André, André! Again he stared north and south through the smoke-gloom. As of resinous clouds, black as ink, were swirling skyward along the two sides of the giant wedge. Under that death-paul the flames were sweeping through the spruce and cedar-tops like race-horses, hidden from his eyes. If they closed in there could be no escape. In fifteen minutes they would inundate him, and it would take him half an hour to reach the safety of the clearing. His heart thumped against his ribs as he hurried down the ridge in the direction of Black Roger's voice. The giant wedge of the forest was not burning, yet, and Odomard was hurrying like mad toward the tip of that wedge, crying out now and then the name of the broken man. And always he kept ahead, until at last, a mile from the ridge, David came to the edge of a wide stream and saw what it was that made the wedge of forest. For under his eyes the stream split, and two arms of it widened out, and along each shore of the two streams was a wide fire-clearing, made by the axes of Black Roger's people, who had foreseen this day when fire might sweep their world. Karagin dashed water into his eyes, and it was warm. Then he looked across. The fire had passed, the pall of smoke was clearing away, and what he saw was the black corpse of a world that had been green. It was smoldering, the deep mold was a fire. Little tongues of flame still licked at ten thousand stubs charred by the fire-death, and there was no wind here, and only the whisper of a distant moaning sweeping farther and farther away. And then out of that waste across the river David heard a terrible cry. It was Black Roger still calling, even in that place of hopeless death, for Andrei the broken man. CHAPTER XXVI Into the stream Karagin plunged and found it only waist-deep in crossing. He saw where Black Roger had come out of the water and where his feet had plowed deep in the ash and char and smoldering debris ahead. This trail he followed. The air he breathed was hot and filled with stifling clouds of ash and char-dust and smoke. His feet struck red-hot embers under the ash, and he smelled burning leather. A forest of spruce and cedar skeletons still crackled and snapped and burst out into sudden tongues of flame about him. And the air he breathed grew hotter, and his face burned, and into his eyes came a smarting pain when, ahead of him, he saw Black Roger. He was no longer calling out the broken man's name, but was crashing through the smoking chaos like a great beast that had gone both blind and mad. Twice David turned aside where Black Roger had rushed through burning debris, and a third time, following where Audemard had gone, his feet felt the sudden stab of living coals. In another moment he would have shouted Black Roger's name, but even as the words were on his lips, mingled with a gasp of pain, the giant river-man stopped where the forest seemed suddenly to end in a ghostly, smoke-filled space, and when David came up behind him he was standing at the black edge of a cliff which leaped off into a smoldering valley below. Out of this narrow valley between two ridges, an hour ago choked with living spruce and cedar rose up a swirling, terrifying heat. Down into this pit of death Black Roger stood looking, and David heard a strange moaning coming in his breath. His great bare arms were black and scarred with heat. His hair was burned, his shirt was torn from his shoulders. When David spoke and Black Roger turned at the sound, his eyes glared wildly out of a face that was like a black mask. And when he saw it was David who had spoken, his great body seemed to sag, and with an unintelligible cry he pointed down. David, staring, saw nothing with his half-blind eyes. But under his feet he felt a sudden giving way, and the fire-eaten tangle of earth and roots broke off like a rotten ledge, and with it both he and Black Roger went crashing into the depths below, smothered in an avalanche of ash and sizzling earth. At the bottom David lay for a moment partly stunned. Then his fingers clutched a bit of living fire, and with a savage cry he staggered to his feet and looked to see Black Roger. For a space his eyes were blinded, and when at last he could see he made out Black Roger fifty feet away, dragging himself on his hands and knees through the blistering muck of the fire. And then, as he stared, the stricken giant came to the charred remnant of a stump and crumpled over it with a great cry, moaning again that name. Andrei! Andrei! David hurried to him, and as he put his hands under Black Roger's arms to help him to his feet, he saw that the charred stump was not a stump, but the fire-scribbled corpse of Andrei, the broken man. Horror choked back speech on his own lips. Black Roger looked up at him, and a great breath came in a sob out of his body. Then suddenly he seemed to get grip of himself, and his burned and bleeding fingers closed about David's hand at his shoulder. "'I knew he was coming here,' he said, the words forcing themselves with an effort through his swollen lips. He came home to die.' "'Home?' "'Yes. His mother and father were buried here nearly thirty years ago, and he worshipped them. Look at him, Kerrigan, look at him closely, for he is the man you have wanted all these years, the finest man God ever made, Roger Audemard. When he saw the fire, he came to shield their graves from the flames. And now he is dead.' A moan came to his lips, and the weight of his body grew so heavy that David had to exert his strength to keep him from falling. "'And you?' he cried, "'For God's sake, Audemard, tell me!' "'I, Monsieur?' "'Why, I am only St. Pierre Audemard, his brother.' And with that his head dropped heavily, and he was like a dead man in David's arms. Now at last David came to the edge of the stream again, with the weight of St. Pierre Audemard on the shoulders, was a torturing nightmare which would never be quite clear in his brain. The details were obliterated in the vast agony of the thing. He knew that he fought, as he had never fought before, that he stumbled again and again in the fire-mock, that he was burned and blinded, and his brain was sick. But he held to St. Pierre, with his twisted, broken leg, knowing that he would die if he dropped him into the flesh-devouring heat of the smoldering debris under his feet. Toward the end he was conscious of St. Pierre's moaning, and then of his voice speaking to him. After that he came to the water and fell down in the edge of it with St. Pierre, and inside his head everything went as black as the world over which the fire had swept. He did not know how terribly he was hurt. He did not feel pain after the darkness came. Yet he sensed certain things. He knew that over him St. Pierre was shouting. For days it seemed he could hear nothing but that great voice bellowing away in the interminable distance. And then came other voices, now near and now far, and after that he seemed to rise up and float among the clouds, and for a long time he heard no other sound and felt no movement but was like one dead. Something soft and gentle and comforting roused him out of darkness. He did not move. He did not open his eyes for a time while reason came to him. He heard a voice, and it was a woman's voice speaking softly, and another voice replied to it. Then he heard gentle movement, and someone went away from him, and he heard the almost noiseless opening and closing of a door. A very little he began to see. He was in a room with a patch of sunlight on the wall. Also he was in a bed, and that gentle, comforting hand was still stroking his forehead and hair, light as thistle down. He opened his eyes wider and looked up. His heart gave a great throb. Over him was a glorious, tender face smiling like an angel into his widening eyes. And it was the face of Carmen Fauchet. He made an effort as if to speak. Hush, she whispered, and he saw something shining in her eyes, and something wet fell upon his face. She is returning, and I will go. For three days and nights she has not slept, and she must be the first to see you open your eyes. She bent over him. Her soft lips touched his forehead, and he heard her sobbing breath. God bless you, David Kerrigan. Then she was going to the door, and his eyes dropped shut again. He began to experience pain now, a hot consuming pain all over him, and he remembered the fight through the path of the fire. Then the door opened very softly once more, and someone came in, and knelt down at his side, and was so quiet that she scarcely seemed to breathe. He wanted to open his eyes, to cry out a name, but he waited, and lips, soft as velvet, touched his own. They lay there for a moment, then moved to his closed eyes, his forehead, his hair, and after that something rested gently against him. His eyes shot open. It was Marie Anne with her head nestled in the crook of his arm as she knelt there beside him on the floor. He could see only a bit of her face, but her hair was very near, crumpled gloriously on his breast, and he could see the tips of her long lashes as she remained very still, seeming not to breathe. She did not know he had roused from his sleep, the first sleep of those three days of torture which he could not remember now. And he, looking at her, made no movement to tell her he was awake. One of his hands lay over the edge of the bed, and so lightly he could scarce feel the weight of her fingers she laid one of her own upon it, and a little at a time drew it to her until the bandaged thing was against her lips. It was strange she did not hear his heart which seemed all it wants to beat like a drum inside him. Suddenly he sensed the fact that his other hand was not bandaged. He was lying on his side, with his right arm partly under him, and against that hand he felt the softness of Marie Anne's cheek, the velvety crush of her hair. And then he whispered, Marie Anne! She still lay for a moment utterly motionless. Then slowly, as if believing he had spoken her name in his sleep, she raised her head and looked into his wide open eyes. There was no word between them in that breath or two. His bandaged hand and his well hand went to her face and hair, and then a sobbing cry came from Marie Anne, and swiftly she crushed her face down to his, holding him close with both her arms for a moment. And after that, as on that other day when she kissed him after the fight, she was up and gone so quickly that her name had scarcely left his lips when the door closed behind her and he heard her running down the hall. He called after her. Marie Anne! Marie Anne! He heard another door, and voices, and quick footsteps again coming his way, and he was waiting eagerly, half on his elbow, and into his room came Neppa Penis and Carmen Fauché. And again he saw the glory of something in the woman's face. His eyes must have burned strangely as he stared at her, but it did not change that light in her own, and her hands were wonderfully gentle as she helped Neppa Penis raise him so that he was sitting up straight with pillows at his back. It doesn't hurt so much now, does it? She asked, her voice low with a mother in tenderness. He shook his head. No! What is the matter? You were burned, terribly. For two days and nights you were in great pain, but for many hours you have been sleeping, and Neppa Penis says the burns will not hurt any more. If it had not been for you, she bent over him, her hand touched his face, and now he began to understand the meaning of that glory shining in her eyes. If it hadn't been for you, he would have died. She drew back, turning to the door. He is coming to see you, alone, she said, a little broken note in her throat. But I pray, God, you will see with clear understanding, David Kerrigan, and forgive me, as I have forgiven you, for a thing that happened long ago. He waited, his head was in a jumble, and his thoughts were tumbling over one another in an effort to evolve some sort of coherence out of things amazing and unexpected. One thing was impressed upon him. He had saved St. Pierre's life, and because he had done this, Carmen Fanché was very tender to him. She had kissed him, and Marianne had kissed him, and a strange dawning was coming to him, thrilling him to his fingertips. He listened. A new sound was approaching from the hall. His door was opened, and a wheelchair was rolled in by old Neppa Penis. In the chair was St. Pierre Audemard. Feet and hands and arms were wrapped in bandages, but his face was uncovered and wreathed in smiling happiness when he saw David propped up against his pillows. Neppa Penis rolled him close to the bed, and then shuffled out. And as he closed the door, David was sure he heard the subdued whispering of feminine voices down the hall. How are you, David? asked St. Pierre. Fine, nodded Caragin. And you? A bit scorched, and a broken leg. He held up his padded hand. Would be dead if you hadn't carried me to the river. Carmen says she owes you her life for having saved mine. And Marianne? That's what I've come to tell you about, said St. Pierre. The instant they knew you were able to listen, both Carmen and Marianne insisted that I come and tell you things. But if you don't feel well enough to hear me now, go on, almost threatened David. The look of cheer which had illumined St. Pierre's face faded away, and David saw in its place the lines of sorrow which had settled there. He turned his gaze toward a window through which the afternoon sun was coming, and nodded slowly. You saw, out there, he's dead. They buried him in a casket made of sweet cedar. He loved the smell of that. He was like a little child. And once, a long time ago, he was a splendid man, a greater and better man than St. Pierre, his brother, will ever be. What he did was right and just, Monsieur David. He was the oldest, sixteen, when the thing happened. I was only nine, and didn't fully understand. But he saw it all, the death of our father, because a powerful factor wanted my mother. And after that, he knew how and why our mother died, but not a word of it did he tell us until years later, after the day of vengeance was passed. You understand, David? He didn't want me in that. He did it alone, with good friends from the upper north. He killed the murderers of our mother and father, and then he buried himself deeper into the forests with us. And we took our mother's family names, which was Boulin, and settled here on the yellow knife. Roger, Black Roger, as you know him, brought the bones of our father and mother and buried them over in the edge of that plane where he died and where our first cabin stood. Five years ago a falling tree crushed him out of shape, and his mind went at the same time, so that he has been like a little child and was always seeking for Roger Odomard, the man he once was. That was the man your law wanted, Roger Odomard, our brother. Our brother, cried David, who is the other? My sister. Yes? Marie Anne. Good God! joked David. St. Pierre, do you lie? Is this another bit of trickery? It is the truth, said St. Pierre. Marie Anne is my sister, and Carmen, whom you saw in my arms through the cabin window, he paused, smiling into David's staring eyes, taking full measure of recompense in the other's heartbreaking attitude as he waited. Is my wife, Monsieur David? A great gasp of breath came out of Caragin. Yes, my wife and the greatest-hearted woman that ever lived without one exception in all the world, cried St. Pierre, a fierce pride in his voice. It was she, and not Marie Anne, who shot you on that strip of sand, David Caragin. Montieux, I tell you, not one woman in a million would have done what she did, let you live. Why? Listen, Monsieur, and you will understand at last. She had a brother, years younger than she, and to that brother she was mother, sister, everything, because they had no parents almost from babyhood. She worshipped him, and he was bad, yet the worse he became, the more she loved him and prayed for him. Years ago she became my wife, and I fought with her to save the brother. But he belonged to the devil, hand and foot, and at last he left us and went south, and became what he was when you were sent out to get him, Sergeant Caragin. It was then that my wife went down to make a last fight to save him, to bring him back, and you know how she made that fight, Monsieur, until the day you hanged him. Saint Pierre was leaning from his chair, his face ablaze. Tell me, did she not fight? He cried. And you, until the last, did you not fight to have her put behind prison bars with her brother? Yes, it is so, Mermin Caragin. She hated you, went on Saint Pierre. You hanged her brother, who was almost a part of her flesh and body. He was bad, but he had been hers from babyhood, and a mother will love her son if he is a devil. And then I won't take long to tell you the rest of it. Through friends she learned that you, who had hanged her brother, were on your way to run down Roger Odomard. And Roger Odomard, mind you, was the same as myself, for I had sworn to take my brother's place if it became necessary. She was on the bateau with Marie Anne when the messenger came. She had but one desire to save me, to kill you. If it had been some other man, but it was you who had hanged her brother, she disappeared from the bateau that day with a rifle. You know, Mr. David, what happened? Marie Anne heard the shooting and came, alone, just as you rolled out in the sand as if dead. It was she who ran out to you first, while my Carmen crouched there with her rifle, ready to send another bullet into you if you moved. It was Marie Anne you saw standing over you. It was she who knelt down at your side. And then, St. Pierre paused, and he smiled, and then grimaced as he tried to rub his two bandaged hands together. David, fate mixes things up in a funny way. My Carmen came out and stood over you, hating you, and Marie Anne knelt down there at your side, loving you. Yes, it is true. And over you they fought for life or death, and love won, because it is always stronger than hate. Besides, as you lay there bleeding and helpless, you look different to my Carmen than as you did when you hanged her brother. So they dragged you up under a tree, and after that they plotted together and planned, while I was away up the river on the raft. The feminine mind worked strangely, Mr. David, and perhaps it was that thing we call intuition which made them do what they did. Marie Anne knew it would never do for you to see and recognize my Carmen, so in their scheming of things she insisted on passing herself off as my wife, while my Carmen came back in a canoe to meet me. They were frightened, and when I came the whole thing had gone too far for me to mend, and I knew the false game must be played out to the end. When I saw what was happening, that you loved Marie Anne so well that you were willing to fight for her honor, even when you thought she was my wife, I was sure it would all end well. But I could take no chances until I knew, and so there were bars at your windows, and St. Pierre shrugged his shoulders, and the lines of grief came into his face again, and in his voice was a little break as he continued, If Roger had not gone out there to fight back the flames from the graves of his dead, I had planned to tell you as much as I dared, Mr. David, and I had faith that your love for our sister would win. I did not tell you in the river, because I wanted you to see with your own eyes our paradise up here, and I knew you would not destroy it once you were a part of it, and so I could not tell you Carmen was my wife, for that would have betrayed us. And besides, that fight of yours against a love which you thought was dishonest interested me very much, for I saw in it a wonderful test of the man who might become my brother if he chose wisely between love and what he thought was duty. I loved you for it, even when you sat me there in the sand like a silly loon. And now even my Carmen loves you for bringing me out of the fire. But you are not listening. David was looking past him toward the door, and St. Pierre smiled when he saw the look that was in his face. Nepapinas, he called loudly, Nepapinas! In a moment there was shuffling of feet outside, and Nepapinas came in. St. Pierre held out his two great bandaged hands, and David met them with his own, one bandaged and one free. Not a word was spoken between them, but their eyes were the eyes of men between whom had suddenly come the faith and understanding of a brotherhood as strong as life itself. Then Nepapinas wheeled St. Pierre from the room, and David straightened himself against his pillows, and waited, and listened until it seemed two hearts were thumping inside him in the place of one. It was an interminable time, he thought, before Marie Anne stood in the doorway. For a breath she paused there, looking at him as he stretched out his bandaged arm to her, moved by every yearning impulse in her soul to come in, yet ready as a bird to fly away. And then, as he called her name, she ran to him and dropped upon her knees at his side, and his arms went about her, insensible to their hurt, and her hot face was against his neck, and his lips crushed in the smothering sweetness of her hair. He made no effort to speak beyond that first calling of her name. He could feel her heart throbbing against him, and her hands tightened at his shoulders, and at last she raised her glorious face so near that the breath of it was on his lips. Then seeing what was in his eyes, her soft mouth quivered in a little smile, and with a broken throb in her throat she whispered, "'Has it all ended, right, David?' He drew the red mouth to his own, and with a glad cry which was no word in itself he buried his face in the lustrous tresses he loved. He could not remember all it was that he said, but at the end Marie-Anne had drawn a little away so that she was looking at him, her eyes shining gloriously and her cheeks beautiful as the petals of a wild rose. And he could see the throbbing in her white throat like the beating of a tiny heart. "'And you'll take me with you?' she whispered joyously. "'Yes. And when I show you to the old man,' Superintendent McVane, you know, and tell him you're my wife, he can't go back on his promise. He said, if I settled this Roger Audemard affair, I could have anything I might ask for. And I'll ask for my discharge. I ought to have it in September, and that will give us time to return before the snow flies. "'You see,' he held out his arms again. "'You see,' he cried, his face smothered in her hair again, "'I've found the place of my dreams up here, and I want to stay. Always. "'Are you a little glad, Marie-Anne?' In a great room at the end of the hall, with windows opening in three directions upon the wilderness, St. Pierre waited in his wheelchair, grunting uneasily now and then, at the long time it was taking Carmen to discover certain things out in the hall. Finally he heard her coming, tiptoeing very quietly from the direction of David Kerrigan's door, and St. Pierre chuckled and tried to rub his bandaged hands when she came in, her face, pink, and her eyes shining with the greatest thrill that can stir a feminine heart. "'If we had only known,' he tried to whisper, "'I would have had the keyhole made larger, Cherie. He deserves it for having spied on us at the cabin window. "'But tell me, could you see? Did you hear?' "'What?' Carmen's soft hand went over his mouth. "'In another moment you'll be shouting,' she warned. "'Maybe I didn't see, and maybe I didn't hear, Big Bear. But I know there are four very happy people in Chateau Boulin. And now, if you want to guess who is the happiest, "'I am Cher Kerrigan.' "'No.' "'Well, then, if you insist, you are.' "'Yes, and the next?' St. Pierre chuckled. "'David Kerrigan,' he said. "'No, no, no. If you mean that, I mean always that I am second, unless you will ever let me be first,' corrected St. Pierre, kissing the hand that was gently stroking his cheek. And then he leaned his great head back against her, where she stood behind him. And Carmen's fingers ran where his hair was crisp with the cinch of fire, and for a long time they said no other word, but let their eyes rest upon the dim length of the hall, at the far end of which was David Kerrigan's room.