Part 17 (1/2)
”Dan,” he choked up, ”it's a terrible thing for a divinity student to do; but--” his fingers tightened nervously. ”I'm with you!” Then in a moment, ”Find some whiskey, Dan. I'm done up.”
He soon got braced enough to ask me who was in the deal, and what timber we expected to trade for. When I told him Lige Smith and Jack Jackson were going to help me, he looked scared and asked me if I thought they would split on him. He was so excited I thought him cowardly, but the poor devil had reason enough, I supposed, to want to keep the transaction from the ears of his father, or worse still--the bishop. He seemed easier when I a.s.sured him the boys were square, and immensely gratified at the news that I had already traded six quarts of the stuff for over a hundred dollars' worth of cordwood.
”We'll never get it across the river to the markets,” he said dolefully. ”I came over this morning in a canoe. Ice is all out.”
”What about the Onondaga Jam?” I said. He winked.
”That'll do. I'd forgotten it,” he answered, and chirped up right away like a kid.
But I hadn't forgotten the Jam. It had been a regular gold-mine to me all that open winter, when the ice froze and thawed every week and finally jammed itself clean to the river bottom in the throat of the bend up at Onondaga, and the next day the thermometer fell to eleven degrees below zero, freezing it into a solid block that bridged the river for traffic, and saved my falling fortunes.
”And where's the whiskey hidden?” he asked after awhile.
”No you don't,” I laughed. ”Parson or pal, no man living knows or will know where it is till he helps me haul it away. I'll trust none of you.”
”I'm not a thief,” he pouted.
”No,” I said, ”but you're blasted hard up, and I don't intend to place temptation in your way.”
He laughed good-naturedly and turned the subject aside just as Lige Smith and Jack Jackson came in with an unusual companion that put a stop to all further talk. Women were never seen at night time around Jake's; even his wife was invisible, and I got a sort of shock when I saw old Cayuga Joe's girl, Elizabeth, following at the boys' heels. It had been raining and the girl, a full blood Cayuga, s.h.i.+vered in the damp and crouched beside the stove.
Tom Barrett started when he saw her. His color rose and he began to mark up the table with his thumb nail. I could see he felt his fix.
The girl--Indian right through--showed no surprise at seeing him there, but that did not mean she would keep her mouth shut about it next day, Tom was undoubtedly _discovered_.
Notwithstanding her unwelcome presence, however, Jackson managed to whisper to me that the Forest Warden and his officers were alive and bound for the Reserve the following day. But it didn't worry me worth a cent; I knew we were safe as a church with Tom Barrett's clerical coat in our midst. He was coming over to our corner now.
”That hundred's right on the dead square, Dan?” he asked anxiously, taking my arm and moving to the window.
I took a roll of bank notes from my trousers' pocket and with my back to the gang counted out ten tens. I always carry a good wad with me with a view to convenience if I have to make a hurried exit from the scene of my operations.
He shook his head and stood away. ”Not till I've earned it, McLeod.”
What fools very young men make of themselves sometimes. The girl arose, folding her damp shawl over her head, and made towards the door; but he intercepted her, saying it was late and as their ways lay in the same direction, he would take her home. She shot a quick glance at him and went out. Some little uneasy action of his caught my notice. In a second my suspicions were aroused; the meeting had been arranged, and I knew from what I had seen him to be that the girl was doomed.
It was all very well for me to do up Cayuga Joe--he was the Indian whose hundred dollars' worth of cordwood I owned in lieu of six quarts of bad whiskey--but his women-folks were ent.i.tled to be respected at least while I was around. I looked at my watch; it was past midnight. I suddenly got boiling hot clean through.
”Look here, Tom Barrett,” I said, ”I ain't a saint, as everybody knows; but if you don't treat that girl right, you'll have to square it up with me, d'you understand?”
He threw me a nasty look. ”Keep your gallantry for some occasion when it's needed, Dan McLeod,” he sneered, and with a laugh I didn't like, he followed the girl out into the rain.
I walked some distance behind them for two miles. When they reached her father's house and went in, I watched her through the small uncurtained window put something on the fire to cook, then arouse her mother, who even at that late hour sat beside the stove smoking a clay pipe. The old woman had apparently met with some accident; her head and shoulders were bound up, and she seemed in pain.
Barrett talked with her considerably and once when I caught sight of his face, it was devilish with some black pa.s.sion I did not recognize. Although I felt sure the girl was now all right for the night, there was something about this meeting I didn't like; so I lay around until just daylight when Jackson and Lige Smith came through the bush as pre-arranged should I not return to Jake's.
It was not long before Elizabeth and Tom came out again and entered a thick little bush behind the shanty. Lige lifted the axe off the woodpile with a knowing look, and we all three followed silently.
I was surprised to find it a well beaten and equally well concealed trail. All my suspicions returned. I knew now that Barrett was a bad lot all round, and as soon as I had quit using him and his coat, I made up my mind to rid my quarters of him; fortunately I knew enough about him to use that knowledge as a whip-lash.
We followed them for something over a mile, when--heaven and h.e.l.l!
The trail opened abruptly on the clearing where lay my recently acquired cordwood with my five barrels of whiskey concealed in its midst.