Romany of the Snows - Gilbert Parker
"'I was sinking, sinking, so quiet and easy, when all at once I felt
something beside me; I could hear it breathing, but I could not open my
eyes at first, for, as I say, the lashes were froze. Something touch me,
smell me, and a nose was push against my chest. I put out my hand ver'
soft and touch it. I had no fear, I was so glad I could have hug it, but
I did not--I drew back my hand quiet and rub my eyes. In a little I can
see. There stand the thing--a polar bear--not ten feet away, its red eyes
shining. On my knees I spoke to it, talk to it, as I would to a man. It
was like a great wild dog, fierce, yet kind, and I fed it with the fish
which had been for Brandy-wine and the rest--but not to kill it! and it
did not die. That night I lie down in my bag--no, I was not afraid! The
bear lie beside me, between me and the sled. Ah, it was warm! Day after
day we travel together, and camp together at night--ah, sweet Sainte
Anne, how good it was, myself and the wild beast such friends, alone in
the north! But to-day--a little while ago--something went wrong with me,
and I got sick in the head, a swimming like a tide wash in and out. I
fall down-asleep. When I wake I find you here beside me--that is all. The
bear must have drag me here.'"
Pierre stuck a splinter into the fire to light another cigarette, and
paused as if expecting the governor to speak, but no word coming, he
continued: "I had my arm around him while we talked and come slowly down
the hill. Soon he stopped and said, 'This is the place.' It was a cave of
ice, and we went in. Nothing was there to see except the sled. Babiche
stopped short. It come to him now that his good comrade was gone. He
turned, and looked out, and called, but there was only the empty night,
the ice, and the stars. Then he come back, sat down on the sled, and the
tears fall. . . . I lit my spirit-lamp, boiled coffee, got pemmican from
my bag, and I tried to make him eat. No. He would only drink the coffee.
At last he said to me, 'What day is this, Pierre?' 'It is the day of the
Great Birth, Babiche,' I said. He made the sign of the cross, and was
quiet, so quiet! but he smile to himself, and kept saying in a whisper:
'Ma p'tite Corinne! Ma p'tite Corinne!' The next day we come on safe, and
in a week I was back at Fort St. Saviour with Babiche and all the mails,
and that most wonderful letter of the governor's."
"The letter was to tell a factor that his sick child in the hospital at
Quebec was well," the governor responded quietly. "Who was 'Ma p'tite
Corinne,' Pierre?"
"His wife--in heaven; and his child--on the Chaudiere, m'sieu'. The child
came and the mother went on the same day of the Great Birth. He has a
soft heart--that Babiche!"
"And the white bear--so strange a thing!"
"M'sieu', who can tell? The world is young up here. When it was all
young, man and beast were good comrades, maybe."
"Ah, maybe. What shall be done with Little Babiche, Pierre?"
"He will never be the same again on the old trail, m'sieu'!"
There was silence for a long time, but at last the governor said, musing,
almost tenderly, for he never had a child: "Ma p'tite Corinne!--Little
Babiche shall live near his child, Pierre. I will see to that."
Pierre said no word, but got up, took off his hat to the governor, and
sat down again.
AT POINT O' BUGLES
"John York, John York, where art thou gone, John York?"
"What's that, Pierre?" said Sir Duke Lawless, starting to his feet and
peering round.
"Hush!" was Pierre's reply. "Wait for the rest. . . . There!"
"King of my heart, king of my heart, I am out on the trail of thy
bugles."
Sir Duke was about to speak, but Pierre lifted a hand in warning, and
then through the still night there came the long cry of a bugle, rising,
falling, strangely clear, echoing and echoing again, and dying away. A
moment, and the call was repeated, with the same effect, and again a
third time; then all was still, save for the flight of birds roused from
the desire of night, and the long breath of some animal in the woods
sinking back to sleep.
Their camp was pitched on the south shore of Hudson's Bay, many leagues
to the west of Rupert House, not far from the Moose River. Looking north
was the wide expanse of the bay, dotted with sterile islands here and
there; to the east were the barren steppes of Labrador, and all round
them the calm, incisive air of a late September, when winter begins to
shake out his frosty curtains and hang them on the cornice of the north,
despite the high protests of the sun. The two adventurers had come
together after years of separation, and Sir Duke had urged Pierre to fare
away with him to Hudson's Bay, which he had never seen, although he had
shares in the great Company, left him by his uncle the admiral.
They were camped in a hollow, to the right a clump of hardy trees, with
no great deal of foliage, but some stoutness; to the left a long finger
of land running out into the water like a wedge, the most eastern point
of the western shore of Hudson's Bay. It was high and bold, and, somehow,
had a fine dignity and beauty. From it a path led away north to a great
log-fort called King's House.
Lawless saw Pierre half rise and turn his head, listening. Presently he,
too, heard the sound-the soft crash of crisp grass under the feet. He
raised himself to a sitting posture and waited.
Presently a tall figure came out of the dusk into the light of their
fire, and a long arm waved a greeting at them. Both Lawless and Pierre
rose to their feet. The stranger was dressed in buckskin, he carried a
rifle, and around his shoulder was a strong yellow cord, from which hung
a bugle.
"How!" he said, with a nod, and drew near the fire, stretching out his
hands to the blaze.
"How!" said Lawless and Pierre.
After a moment Lawless drew from his blanket a flask of brandy, and
without a word handed it over the fire. The fingers of the two men met in
the flicker of flames, a sort of bond by fire, and the stranger raised
the flask.
"Chin-chin," he said, and drank, breathing a long sigh of satisfaction
afterwards as he handed it back; but it was Pierre that took it, and
again fingers touched in the bond of fire. Pierre passed the flask to
Lawless, who lifted it.
"Chin-chin," he said, drank, and gave the flask to Pierre again, who did
as did the others, and said "Chin-chin" also.
By that salutation of the east, given in the far north, Lawless knew that
he had met one who had lighted fires where men are many and close to the
mile as holes in a sieve.
They all sat down, and tobacco went round, the stranger offering his,
while the two others, with true hospitality, accepted.
"We heard you over there--it was you?" said Lawless, nodding towards
Point o' Bugles, and glancing at the bugle the other carried.
"Yes, it was I," was the reply. "Someone always does it twice a year: on
the 25th September and the 25th March. I've done it now without a break
for ten years, until it has got to be a sort of religion with me, and the
whole thing's as real as if King George and John York were talking. As I
tramp to the point or swing away back, in summer barefooted, in winter on
my snowshoes, to myself I seem to be John York on the trail of the king's
bugles. I've thought so much about the whole thing, I've read so many of
John York's letters--and how many times one of the King's!--that now I
scarcely know which is the bare story, and which the bit's I've dreamed
as I've tramped over the plains or sat in the quiet at King's House,
spelling out little by little the man's life, from the cues I found in
his journal, in the Company's papers, and in that one letter of the
King's."
Pierre's eyes were now more keen than those of Lawless: for years he had
known vaguely of this legend of Point o' Bugles.
"You know it all," he said--"begin at the beginning: how and when you
first heard, how you got the real story, and never mind which is taken
from the papers and which from your own mind--if it all fits in it is all
true, for the lie never fits in right with the square truth. If you have
the footprints and the handprints you can tell the whole man; if you have
the horns of a deer you know it as if you had killed it, skinned it, and
potted it."
The stranger stretched himself before the fire, nodding at his hosts as
he did so, and then began:
"Well, a word about myself first," he said, "so you'll know just where
you are. I was full up of life in London town and India, and that's a
fact. I'd plenty of friends and little money, and my will wasn't equal to
the task of keeping out of the hands of the Jews. I didn't know what to
do, but I had to go somewhere, that was clear. Where? An accident decided
it. I came across an old journal of my great-grandfather, John York,--my
name's Dick Adderley,--and just as if a chain had been put round my leg
and I'd been jerked over by the tipping of the world, I had to come to
Hudson's Bay. John York's journal was a thing to sit up nights to read.
It came back to England after he'd had his fill of Hudson's Bay and the
earth beneath, and had gone, as he himself said on the last page of the
journal, to follow the king's buglers in 'the land that is far off.' God
and the devil were strong in old John York. I didn't lose much time after
I'd read the journal. I went to Hudson's Bay house in London, got a place
in the Company, by the help of the governor himself, and came out. I've
learned the rest of the history of old John York--the part that never got
to England; for here at King's House there's a holy tradition that the
real John York belongs to it and to it alone."
Adderley laughed a little. "King's House guards John York's memory, and
it's as fresh and real here now as though he'd died yesterday; though
it's forgotten in England, and by most who bear his name, and the present
Prince of Wales maybe never heard of the roan who was a close friend of
the Prince Regent, the First Gentleman of Europe."
"That sounds sweet gossip," said Lawless, with a smile; "we're waiting."
Adderley continued: "John York was an honest man, of wholesome sport,
jovial, and never shirking with the wine, commendable in his appetite, of
rollicking soul and proud temper, and a gay dog altogether--gay, but to
be trusted, too, for he had a royal heart. In the coltish days of the
Prince Regent he was a boon comrade, but never did he stoop to flattery,
nor would he hedge when truth should be spoken, as ofttimes it was needed
with the royal blade, for at times he would forget that a prince was yet
a man, topped with the accident of a crown. Never prince had truer
friend, and so in his best hours he thought, himself, and if he ever was
just and showed his better part, it was to the bold country gentleman who
never minced praise or blame, but said his say and devil take the end of
it. In truth, the Prince was wilful, and once he did a thing which might
have given a twist to the fate of England. Hot for the love of women, and
with some dash of real romance in him too, else even as a prince he might
have had shallower love and service,--he called John York one day and
said:
"'To-night at seven, Squire John, you'll stand with me while I put the
seal on the Gates of Eden;' and, when the other did not guess his import,
added: 'Sir Mark Selby is your neighbour--his daughter's for my arms
to-night. You know her, handsome Sally Selby--she's for your prince, for
good or ill.'
"John York did not understand at first, for he could not think the Prince
had anything in mind but some hot escapade of love. When Mistress Selby's
name was mentioned his heart stood still, for she had been his choice,
the dear apple of his eye, since she had bloomed towards womanhood. He
had set all his hopes upon her, tarrying till she should have seen some
little life before he asked her for his wife. He had her father's
Godspeed to his wooing, for he was a man whom all men knew honest and
generous as the sun, and only choleric with the mean thing. She, also,
had given him good cause to think that he should one day take her to his
home, a loved and honoured wife. His impulse, when her name passed the
Prince's lips, was to draw his sword, for he would have called an emperor
to account; but presently he saw the real meaning of the speech: that the
Prince would marry her that night."
Here the story-teller paused again, and Pierre said softly, inquiringly:
"You began to speak in your own way, and you've come to another way--like
going from an almanac to the Mass."
The other smiled. "That's so. I've heard it told by old Shearton at
King's House, who speaks as if he'd stepped out of Shakespeare, and
somehow I seem to hear him talking, and I tell it as he told it last year
to the governor of the Company. Besides, I've listened these seven years
to his style."
"It's a strange beginning--unwritten history of England," said Sir Duke
musingly.
"You shall hear stranger things yet," answered Adderley. "John York could
hardly believe it at first, for the thought of such a thing never had
place in his mind. Besides, the Prince knew how he had looked upon the
lady, and he could not have thought his comrade would come in between him
and his happiness. Perhaps it was the difficulty, adding spice to the
affair, that sent the Prince to the appeal of private marriage to win the
lady, and John York always held that he loved her truly then, the first
and only real affection of his life. The lady--who can tell what won her
over from the honest gentleman to the faithless prince? That soul of
vanity which wraps about the real soul of every woman fell down at last
before the highest office in the land, and the gifted bearer of the
office. But the noble spirit in her brought him to offer marriage, when
he might otherwise have offered, say, a barony. There is a record of that
and more in John York's Memoirs which I will tell you, for they have
settled in my mind like an old song, and I learned them long ago. I give
you John York's words written by his own hands:
"'I did not think when I beheld thee last, dearest flower of the world's
garden, that I should see thee bloom in that wide field, rank with the
sorrows of royal favour. How did my foolish eyes fill with tears when I
watched thee, all rose and gold in thy cheeks and hair, the light falling
on thee through the chapel window, putting thy pure palm into my
prince's, swearing thy life away, selling the very blossoms of earth's
orchards for the brier beauty of a hidden vineyard! I saw the flying
glories of thy cheeks, the halcyon weather of thy smile, the delicate
lifting of thy bosom, the dear gaiety of thy step, and, at that moment, I
mourned for thy sake that thou wert not the dullest wench in the land,
for then thou hadst been spared thy miseries, thou hadst been saved the
torture-boot of a lost love and a disacknowledged wifedom. Yet I could
not hide from me that thou wert happy at that great moment, when he swore
to love and cherish thee, till death you parted.
"Ah, George, my prince, my king, how wickedly thou didst break thy vows
with both of us who loved thee well, through good and ill report--for
they spake evil of thee, George; ay, the meanest of thy subjects spake
lightly of their king--when with that sweet soul secretly hid away in the
farthest corner of thy kingdom, thou soughtst divorce from thy later
Caroline, whom thou, unfaithful, didst charge with infidelity. When, at
last, thou didst turn again to the partner of thy youth, thy true wife in
the eyes of God, it was too late. Thou didst promise me that thou wouldst
never take another wife, never put our dear heart away, though she could
not--after our miserable laws--bear thee princes. Thou didst break thy
promise, yet she forgave thee, and I forgave thee, for well we knew that
thou wouldst pay a heavy reckoning, and that in the hour when thou
shouldst cry to us we might not come to thee; that in the days when age
and sorrow and vast troubles should oppress thee, thou wouldst long for
the true hearts who loved thee for thyself and not for aught thou wudst
give, or aught that thou wert, save as a man.
"'When thou didst proclaim thy purpose to take Caroline to wife, I
pleaded with thee, I was wroth with thee. Thy one plea was succession.
Succession! Succession! What were a hundred dynasties beside that
precious life, eaten by shame and sorrow? It were easy for others, not
thy children, to come after thee, to rule as well as thee, as must even
now be the case, for thou hast no lawful child save that one in the
loneliest corner of thy English vineyard--alack! alack! I warned thee
George, I pleaded, and thou didst drive me out with words ill-suited to
thy friend who loved thee.
"'I did not fear thee, I would have forced thee to thy knees or made thee
fight me, had not some good spirit cried to my heart that thou wert her
husband, and that we both had loved thee. I dared not listen to the
brutal thing thou hintedst at--that now I might fatten where I had
hungered. Thou hadst to answer for the baseness of that thought to the
King of kings, when thou wentest forth alone, no subject, courtier,
friend, wife, or child to do thee service, journeying--not en prince,
George; no, not en prince! but as a naked soul to God.
"'Thou saidst to me: "Get thee gone, John York, where I shall no more see
thee." And when I returned, "Wouldst thou have me leave thy country,
sir?" thou answeredst: "Blow thy quarrelsome soul to the stars where my
farthest bugle cries." Then I said: "I go, sir, till thou callest me
again--and after; but not till thou hast honoured the child of thy honest
wedlock; till thou hast secured thy wife to the end of her life against
all manner of trouble save the shame of thy disloyalty." There was no
more for me to do, for my deep love itself forbade my staying longer
within reach of the noble deserted soul. And so I saw the chastened glory
of her face no more, nor evermore beheld her perfectness.'"
Adderley paused once more, and, after refilling his pipe in silence,
continued:
"That was the heart of the thing. His soul sickened of the rank world, as
he called it, and he came out to the Hudson's Bay country, leaving his
estates in care of his nephew, but taking many stores and great chests of
clothes and a shipload of furniture, instruments of music, more than a
thousand books, some good pictures, and great stores of wine. Here he
came and stayed, an officer of the Company, building King's House, and
filling it with all the fine things he had brought with him, making in
this far north a little palace in the wilderness. Here he lived, his
great heart growing greater in this wide sinewy world, King's House a
place of pilgrimage for all the Company's men in the north; a noble
gentleman in a sweet exile, loving what he could no more, what he did no
more, see.
"Twice a year he went to that point yonder and blew this bugle, no man
knew why or wherefore, year in, year out, till 1817. Then there came a
letter to him with great seals, which began: 'John York, John York, where
art thou gone, John York?' There followed a score of sorrowful sentences,
full of petulance, too, for it was as John York foretold, his prince
longed for the 'true souls' whom he had cast off. But he called too late,
for the neglected wife died from the shock of her prince's longing
message to her, and when, by the same mail, John York knew that, he would
not go back to England to the King. But twice every year he went to
yonder point and spoke out the King's words to him: 'John York, John
York, where art thou gone, John York?' and gave the words of his own
letter in reply: 'King of my heart, king of my heart, I am out on the
trail of thy bugles.' To this he added three calls of the bugle, as you
have heard."
Adderley handed the bugle to Lawless, who looked at it with deep interest
and passed it on to Pierre. "When he died," Adderley continued, "he left
the house, the fittings, and the stores to the officers of the Company
who should be stationed there, with a sum of money yearly, provided that
twice in twelve months the bugle should be blown as you have heard it,
and those words called out."
"Why did he do that?" asked Lawless, nodding towards the point.
"Why do they swing the censers at the Mass?" interjected Pierre. "Man has
signs for memories, and one man seeing another's sign will remember his
own."
"You stay because you like it--at King's House?" asked Lawless of
Adderley.
The other stretched himself lazily to the fire and, "I am at home," he
said. "I have no cares. I had all there was of that other world; I've not
had enough of this. You'll come with me to King's House to-morrow?" he
added.
To their quick assent he rejoined: "You'll never want to leave. You'll
stay on."
To this Lawless replied, shaking his head: "I have a wife and child in
England."
But Pierre did not reply. He lifted the bugle, mutely asking a question
of Adderley, who as mutely replied, and then, with it in his hand, left
the other two beside the fire.
A few minutes later they heard, with three calls of the bugle from the
point afterwards, Pierre's voice: "John York, John York, where art thou
gone, John York?"
Then came the reply:
"King of my heart, king of my heart, I am out on the trail of thy
bugles."
THE SPOIL OF THE PUMA
Just at the point where the Peace River first hugs the vast outpost hills
of the Rockies, before it hurries timorously on, through an unexplored
region, to Fort St. John, there stood a hut. It faced the west, and was
built half-way up Clear Mountain. In winter it had snows above it and
below it; in summer it had snow above it and a very fair stretch of trees
and grass, while the river flowed on the same, winter and summer. It was
a lonely country. Travelling north, you would have come to the Turnagain
River; west, to the Frying Pan Mountains; south, to a goodly land. But
from the hut you had no outlook towards the south; your eye came plump
against a hard lofty hill, like a wall between heaven and earth. It is
strange, too, that, when you are in the far north, you do not look
towards the south until the north turns an iron hand upon you and refuses
the hospitality of food and fire; your eyes are drawn towards the Pole by
that charm--deadly and beautiful--for which men have given up three
points of the compass, with their pleasures and ease, to seek a grave
solitude, broken only by the beat of a musk-ox's hoofs, the long breath
of the caribou, or the wild cry of the puma.
Sir Duke Lawless had felt this charm, and had sworn that one day he would
again leave his home in Devon and his house in Pont Street, and, finding
Pierre, Shon M'Gann, and others of his old comrades, together they would
travel into those austere yet pleasant wilds. He kept his word, found
Shon M'Gann, and on an autumn day of a year not so long ago lounged in
this hut on Clear Mountain. They had had three months of travel and
sport, and were filled, but not sated, with the joy of the hunter. They
were very comfortable, for their host, Pourcette, the French Canadian,
had fire and meat in plenty, and, if silent, was attentive to their
comfort--a little, black-bearded, grey-headed man, with heavy brows over
small vigilant eyes, deft with his fingers, and an excellent sportsman,
as could be told from the skins heaped in all the corners of the large
hut.
The skins were not those of mere foxes or martens or deer, but of
mountain lions and grizzlies. There were besides many soft, tiger-like
skins, which Sir Duke did not recognise. He kept looking at them, and at
last went over and examined one.
"What's this, Monsieur Pourcette?" he said, feeling it as it lay on the
top of the pile.
The little man pushed the log on the fireplace with his moccasined foot
before he replied: "Of a puma, m'sieu'."
Sir Duke smoothed it with his hand. "I didn't know there were pumas
here."
"Faith, Sir Duke--"
Sir Duke Lawless turned on Shon quickly. "You're forgetting again, Shon.
There's no 'Sir Dukes' between us. What you were to me years ago on the
wally-by-track and the buffalo-trail, you are now, and I'm the same also:
M'Gann and Lawless, and no other."
"Well, then, Lawless, it's true enough as he says it, for I've seen more
than wan skin brought in, though I niver clapped eye on the beast alive.
There's few men go huntin' them av their own free will, not more than
they do grizzlies; but, bedad, this French gintleman has either the luck
o' the world, or the gift o' that man ye tould me of, that slew the wild
boars in anciency. Look at that, now: there's thirty or forty puma-skins,
and I'd take my oath there isn't another man in the country that's shot
half that in his lifetime."
Pourcette's eyes were on the skins, not on the men, and he did not appear
to listen. He sat leaning forward, with a strange look on his face.
Presently he got up, came over, and stroked the skins softly. A queer
chuckling noise came from his throat.
"It was good sport?" asked Lawless, feeling a new interest in him.
"The grandest sport--but it is not so easy," answered the old man. "The
grizzly comes on you bold and strong; you know your danger right away,
and have it out. So. But the puma comes--God, how the puma comes!" He
broke off, his eyes burning bright under his bushy brows and his body
arranging itself into an attitude of expectation and alertness.