Part 53 (1/2)
On the foot-hills' side of The Gap, on a gra.s.sy plain bounded on three sides by the Bow River and on the other by ragged hills and broken timber, stood Surveyor McIvor's camp, three white tents, seeming wondrously insignificant in the shadow of the mighty Rockies, but cosy enough. For on this April day the sun was riding high in the heavens in all his new spring glory, where a few days ago and for many months past the storm king with relentless rigour had raged, searching with pitiless fury these rock-ribbed hills and threatening these white tents and their dwellers with dire destruction. But threaten though he might and pin them though he did beneath their frail canvas covers, he could not make that gang beat retreat. McIvor was of the kind that takes no back trail.
In the late fall he had set out to run the line through The Gap, and after many wanderings through the coulees of the foothills and after many vain attempts, he had finally made choice of his route and had brought his men, burnt black with chinook and frost and sun, hither to The Gap's mouth. Every chain length in those weary marches was a battle ground, every pillar, every picket stood a monument of victory. McIvor's advance through the foot-hill country to The Gap had been one unbroken succession of fierce fights with Nature's most terrifying forces, a triumphal march of heroes who bore on their faces and on their bodies the scars and laurels of the campaign. But to McIvor and his gang it was all in the day's work.
To Cameron the winter had brought an experience of a life hitherto undreamed of, but never even in its wildest blizzards did he cherish anything but grat.i.tude to his friend Martin, who had got him attached to McIvor's survey party. For McIvor was a man to ”tie to,” as Martin said, and to Cameron he was a continual cause of wonder and admiration. He was a big man, with a big man's quiet strength, patient, fearless of men and things, reverent toward Nature's forces, which it was his life's business to know, to measure, to control, and, if need be, to fight, careful of his men, whether amid the perils of the march, or amid the more deadly perils of trading post and railway construction camp.
Cameron never could forget the thrill of admiration that swept his soul one night in Taylor's billiard and gambling ”joint” down at the post where the Elbow joins the Bow, when McIvor, without bluff or bl.u.s.ter, took his chainman and his French-Canadian cook, the latter frothing mad with ”Jamaica Ginger” and ”Pain-killer,” out of the hands of the gang of bad men from across the line who had marked them as lambs for the fleecing. It was not the courage of his big chief so much that had filled Cameron with amazed respect and admiration as the calm indifference to every consideration but that of getting his men out of harm's way, and the cool-headed directness of the method he employed.
”Come along, boys,” McIvor had said, gripping them by their coat collars. ”I don't pay you good money for this sort of thing.” And so saying he had lifted them clear from their seats, upsetting the table, ignoring utterly the roaring oaths of the discomfited gamblers. What would have been the result none could say, for one of the gamblers had whipped out his gun and with sulphurous oaths was conducting a vigourous demonstration behind the unconscious back of McIvor, when there strolled into the room and through the crowd of men scattering to cover, a tall slim youngster in the red jacket and pill-box cap of that world-famous body of military guardians of law and order, the North West Mounted Police. Not while he lived would Cameron forget the scene that followed.
With an air of lazy nonchalance the youngster strode quietly up to the desperado flouris.h.i.+ng his gun and asked in a tone that indicated curiosity more than anything else, ”What are you doing with that thing?”
”I'll show yeh!” roared the man in his face, continuing to pour forth a torrent of oaths.
”Put it down there!” said the youngster in a smooth and silky voice, pointing to a table near by. ”You don't need that in this country.”
The man paused in his demonstration and for a moment or two stood in amazed silence. The audacity of the youngster appeared to paralyse his powers of speech and action.
”Put it down there, my man. Do you hear?” The voice was still smooth, but through the silky tones there ran a fibre of steel. Still the desperado stood gazing at him. ”Quick, do you hear?” There was a sudden sharp ring of imperious, of overwhelming authority, and, to the amazement of the crowd of men who stood breathless and silent about, there followed one of those phenomena which experts in psychology delight to explain, but which no man can understand. Without a word the gambler slowly laid upon the table his gun, upon whose handle were many notches, the tally of human lives it had accounted for in the hands of this same desperado.
”What is this for?” continued the young man, gently touching the belt of cartridges. ”Take it off!”
The belt found its place beside the gun.
”Now, listen!” gravely continued the youngster. ”I give you twenty-four hours to leave this post, and if after twenty-four hours you are found here it will be bad for you. Get out!”
The man, still silent, slunk out from the room. Irresistible authority seemed to go with the word that sent him forth, and rightly so, for behind that word lay the full weight of Great Britain's mighty empire.
It was Cameron's first experience of the North West Mounted Police, that famous corps of frontier riders who for more than a quarter of a century have ridden the marches of Great Britain's territories in the far northwest land, keeping intact the Pax Britannica amid the wild turmoil of pioneer days. To the North West Mounted Police and to the pioneer missionary it is due that Canada has never had within her borders what is known as a ”wild and wicked West.” It was doubtless owing to the presence of that slim youngster in his scarlet jacket and pill-box cap that McIvor got his men safely away without a hole in his back and that his gang were quietly finis.h.i.+ng their morning meal this s.h.i.+ning April day, in their camp by the Bow River in the shadow of the big white peaks that guard The Gap.
Breakfast over, McIvor heaved his great form to the perpendicular.
”How is the foot, Cameron?” he asked, filling his pipe preparatory to the march.
”Just about fit,” replied Cameron.
”Better take another day,” replied the chief. ”You can get up wood and get supper ready. Benoit will be glad enough to go out and take your place for another day on the line.”
”Sure ting,” cried Benoit, the jolly French-Canadian cook. ”Good for my healt. He's tak off my front porsch here.” And the cook patted affectionately the little round paunch that marred the symmetry of his figure.
”You ought to get Cameron to swap jobs with you, Benny,” said one of the axemen. ”You would be a dandy in about another month.”
Benoit let his eye run critically over the line of his person.
”Bon! Dat's true, for sure. In tree, four mont I mak de beeg spark on de girl, me.”
”You bet, Benny!” cried the axeman. ”You'll break 'em all up.”
”Sure ting!” cried Benny, catching up a coal for his pipe. ”By by, Cameron. Au revoir. I go for tak some more slice from my porsch.”
”Good-bye, Benny,” cried Cameron. ”It is your last chance, for to-morrow I give you back your job. I don't want any 'front porsch' on me.”
”Ho! ho!” laughed Benny scornfully, as he turned to hurry after his chief. ”Dat's not moch front porsch on you. Dat's one rail fence--clabbord.”
And indeed Benoit was right, for there was no ”porsch” or sign of one on Cameron's lean and muscular frame. The daily battle with winter's fierce frosts and blizzards, the strenuous toil, the hard food had done their work on him. Strong, firm-knit, clean and sound, hard and fit, he had come through his first Canadian winter. No man in the camp, not even the chief himself, could ”bush” him in a day's work. He had gained enormously in strength lately, and though the lines of his frame still ran to angles, he had gained in weight as well. Never in the days of his finest training was he as fit to get the best out of himself as now.
An injured foot had held him in camp for a week, but the injury was now almost completely repaired and the week's change of work only served to replenish his store of snap and vim.