Part 6 (1/2)

”Good-night, Bruce!”

Langdon was awakened some time hours later by a deluge of rain that brought him out of his blankets with a yell to Bruce. They had not put up their tepee, and a moment later he heard Bruce anathematizing their idiocy. The night was as black as a cavern, except when it was broken by lurid flashes of lightning, and the mountains rolled and rumbled with deep thunder.

Disentangling himself from his drenched blanket, Langdon stood up. A glare of lightning revealed Bruce sitting in his blankets, his hair dripping down over his long, lean face, and at sight of him Langdon laughed outright.

[Ill.u.s.tration: ”They headed up the creek-bottom, bending over from their saddles to look at every strip of sand they pa.s.sed for tracks. They had not gone a quarter of a mile when Bruce gave a sudden exclamation and stopped.”]

”Fine day to-morrow,” he taunted, repeating Bruce's words of a few hours before. ”Look how white the snow is on the peaks!”

Whatever Bruce said was drowned in a crash of thunder.

Langdon waited for another lightning flash and then dove for the shelter of a thick balsam. Under this he crouched for five or ten minutes, when the rain stopped as suddenly as it had begun. The thunder rolled southward, and the lightning went with it. In the darkness he heard Bruce fumbling somewhere near. Then a match was lighted, and he saw his comrade looking at his watch.

”Pretty near three o'clock,” he said. ”Nice shower, wasn't it?”

”I rather expected it,” replied Langdon carelessly. ”You know, Bruce, whenever the snow on the peaks is so white--”

”Shut up--an' let's get a fire! Good thing we had sense enough to cover our grub with the blankets. Are yo' wet?”

Langdon was wringing the water from his hair. He felt like a drowned rat.

”No. I was under a thick balsam, and prepared for it. When you called my attention to the whiteness of the snow on the peaks I knew--”

”Forget the snow,” growled Bruce, and Langdon could hear him breaking off dry pitch-filled twigs under a spruce.

He went to help him, and five minutes later they had a fire going. The light illumined their faces, and each saw that the other was not unhappy.

Bruce was grinning under his sodden hair.

”I was dead asleep when it came,” he explained. ”An' I thought I'd fallen in a lake. I woke up tryin' to swim.”

An early July rain at three o'clock in the morning in the northern British Columbia mountains is not as warm as it might be, and for the greater part of an hour Langdon and Bruce continued to gather fuel and dry their blankets and clothing. It was five o'clock before they had breakfast, and a little after six when they started with their two saddles and single pack up the valley. Bruce had the satisfaction of reminding Langdon that his prediction had come true for a glorious day followed the thunder shower.

Under them the meadows were dripping. The valley purred louder with the music of the swollen streamlets. From the mountain-tops a half of last night's snow was gone, and to Langdon the flowers seemed taller and more beautiful. The air that drifted through the valley was laden with the sweetness and freshness of the morning, and over and through it all the sun shone in a warm and golden sea.

They headed up the creek-bottom, bending over from their saddles to look at every strip of sand they pa.s.sed for tracks. They had not gone a quarter of a mile when Bruce gave a sudden exclamation, and stopped. He pointed to a round patch of sand in which Thor had left one of his huge footprints.

Langdon dismounted and measured it.

”It's he!” he cried, and there was a thrill of excitement in his voice.

”Hadn't we better go on without the horses, Bruce?”

The mountaineer shook his head. But before he voiced an opinion he got down from his horse and scanned the sides of the mountains ahead of them through his long telescope. Langdon used his double-barrelled hunting gla.s.s. They discovered nothing.

”He's still in the creek-bottom, an' he's probably three or four miles ahead,” said Bruce. ”We'll ride on a couple o' miles an' find a place good for the horses. The gra.s.s an' bushes will be dry then.”

It was easy to follow Thor's course after this, for he had hung close to the creek. Within three or four hundred yards of the great ma.s.s of boulders where the grizzly had come upon the tan-faced cub was a small copse of spruce in the heart of a gra.s.sy dip, and here the hunters stripped and hobbled their horses. Twenty minutes later they had come up cautiously to the soft carpet of sand where Thor and Muskwa had become acquainted. The heavy rain had obliterated the cub's tiny footprints, but the sand was cut up by the grizzly's tracks. The packer's teeth gleamed as he looked at Langdon.

”He ain't very far,” he whispered. ”Shouldn't wonder if he spent the night pretty close an' he's moos.h.i.+ng on just ahead of us.”

He wet a finger and held it above his head to get the wind. He nodded significantly.

”We'd better get up on the slopes,” he said.