<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0029" id="link2HCH0029"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter XXIX </h2>
<p>Three weeks later the steam barge Pole Star sailed down the reach of
Saginaw Bay.</p>
<p>Thorpe had received letters from Carpenter advising him of a credit to him
at a Marquette bank, and inclosing a draft sufficient for current
expenses. Tim Shearer had helped make out the list of necessaries. In time
everything was loaded, the gang-plank hauled in, and the little band of
Argonauts set their faces toward the point where the Big Dipper swings.</p>
<p>The weather was beautiful. Each morning the sun rose out of the frosty
blue lake water, and set in a sea of deep purple. The moon, once again at
the full, drew broad paths across the pathless waste. From the southeast
blew daily the lake trades, to die at sunset, and then to return in the
soft still nights from the west. A more propitious beginning for the
adventure could not be imagined.</p>
<p>The ten horses in the hold munched their hay and oats as peaceably as
though at home in their own stables. Jackson Hines had helped select them
from the stock of firms changing locality or going out of business. His
judgment in such matters was infallible, but he had resolutely refused to
take the position of barn-boss which Thorpe offered him.</p>
<p>"No," said he, "she's too far north. I'm gettin' old, and the rheumatics
ain't what you might call abandonin' of me. Up there it's colder than hell
on a stoker's holiday."</p>
<p>So Shearer had picked out a barn-boss of his own. This man was important,
for the horses are the mainstay of logging operations. He had selected
also, a blacksmith, a cook, four teamsters, half a dozen cant-hook men,
and as many handy with ax or saw.</p>
<p>"The blacksmith is also a good wood-butcher (carpenter)," explained
Shearer. "Four teams is all we ought to keep going at a clip. If we need a
few axmen, we can pick 'em up at Marquette. I think this gang'll stick. I
picked 'em."</p>
<p>There was not a young man in the lot. They were most of them in the prime
of middle life, between thirty and forty, rugged in appearance, "cocky" in
manner, with the swagger and the oath of so many buccaneers, hard as
nails. Altogether Thorpe thought them about as rough a set of customers as
he had ever seen. Throughout the day they played cards on deck, and spat
tobacco juice abroad, and swore incessantly. Toward himself and Shearer
their manner was an odd mixture of independent equality and a slight
deference. It was as much as to say, "You're the boss, but I'm as good a
man as you any day." They would be a rough, turbulent, unruly mob to
handle, but under a strong man they might accomplish wonders.</p>
<p>Constituting the elite of the profession, as it were,—whose swagger
every lad new to the woods and river tried to emulate, to whom lesser
lights looked up as heroes and models, and whose lofty, half-contemptuous
scorn of everything and everybody outside their circle of "bully boys" was
truly the aristocracy of class,—Thorpe might have wondered at their
consenting to work for an obscure little camp belonging to a greenhorn.
Loyalty to and pride in the firm for which he works is a strong
characteristic of the lumber-jack. He will fight at the drop of a hat on
behalf of his "Old Fellows"; brag loud and long of the season's cut, the
big loads, the smart methods of his camps; and even after he has been
discharged for some flagrant debauch, he cherishes no rancor, but speaks
with a soft reminiscence to the end of his days concerning "that winter in
'81 when the Old Fellows put in sixty million on Flat River."</p>
<p>For this reason he feels that he owes it to his reputation to ally himself
only with firms of creditable size and efficiency. The small camps are for
the youngsters. Occasionally you will see two or three of the veterans in
such a camp, but it is generally a case of lacking something better.</p>
<p>The truth is, Shearer had managed to inspire in the minds of his cronies
an idea that they were about to participate in a fight. He re-told
Thorpe's story artistically, shading the yellows and the reds. He detailed
the situation as it existed. The men agreed that the "young fellow had
sand enough for a lake front." After that there needed but a little
skillful maneuvering to inspire them with the idea that it would be a
great thing to take a hand, to "make a camp" in spite of the big concern
up-river.</p>
<p>Shearer knew that this attitude was tentative. Everything depended on how
well Thorpe lived up to his reputation at the outset,—how good a
first impression of force and virility he would manage to convey,—for
the first impression possessed the power of transmuting the present rather
ill-defined enthusiasm into loyalty or dissatisfaction. But Tim himself
believed in Thorpe blindly. So he had no fears.</p>
<p>A little incident at the beginning of the voyage did much to reassure him.
It was on the old question of whisky.</p>
<p>Thorpe had given orders that no whisky was to be brought aboard, as he
intended to tolerate no high-sea orgies. Soon after leaving dock he saw
one of the teamsters drinking from a pint flask. Without a word he stepped
briskly forward, snatched the bottle from the man's lips, and threw it
overboard. Then he turned sharp on his heel and walked away, without
troubling himself as to how the fellow was going to take it.</p>
<p>The occurrence pleased the men, for it showed them they had made no
mistake. But it meant little else. The chief danger really was lest they
become too settled in the protective attitude. As they took it, they were
about, good-naturedly, to help along a worthy greenhorn. This they
considered exceedingly generous on their part, and in their own minds they
were inclined to look on Thorpe much as a grown man would look on a child.
There needed an occasion for him to prove himself bigger than they.</p>
<p>Fine weather followed them up the long blue reach of Lake Huron; into the
noble breadth of the Detour Passage, past the opening through the Thousand
Islands of the Georgian Bay; into the St. Mary's River. They were locked
through after some delay on account of the grain barges from Duluth, and
at last turned their prow westward in the Big Sea Water, beyond which lay
Hiawatha's Po-ne-mah, the Land of the Hereafter.</p>
<p>Thorpe was about late that night, drinking in the mystic beauty of the
scene. Northern lights, pale and dim, stretched their arc across beneath
the Dipper. The air, soft as the dead leaves of spring, fanned his cheek.
By and by the moon, like a red fire at sea, lifted itself from the waves.
Thorpe made his way to the stern, beyond the square deck house, where he
intended to lean on the rail in silent contemplation of the moon-path.</p>
<p>He found another before him. Phil, the little cripple, was peering into
the wonderful east, its light in his eyes. He did not look at Thorpe when
the latter approached, but seemed aware of his presence, for he moved
swiftly to give room.</p>
<p>"It is very beautiful; isn't it, Phil?" said Thorpe after a moment.</p>
<p>"It is the Heart Song of the Sea," replied the cripple in a hushed voice.</p>
<p>Thorpe looked down surprised.</p>
<p>"Who told you that?" he asked.</p>
<p>But the cripple, repeating the words of a chance preacher, could explain
himself no farther. In a dim way the ready-made phrase had expressed the
smothered poetic craving of his heart,—the belief that the sea, the
sky, the woods, the men and women, you, I, all have our Heart Songs, the
Song which is most beautiful.</p>
<p>"The Heart Song of the Sea," he repeated gropingly. "I don't know ...I
play it," and he made the motion of drawing a bow across strings, "very
still and low." And this was all Thorpe's question could elicit.</p>
<p>Thorpe fell silent in the spell of the night, and pondered over the
chances of life which had cast on the shores of the deep as driftwood the
soul of a poet.</p>
<p>"Your Song," said the cripple timidly, "some day I will hear it. Not yet.
That night in Bay City, when you took me in, I heard it very dim. But I
cannot play it yet on my violin."</p>
<p>"Has your violin a song of its own?" queried the man.</p>
<p>"I cannot hear it. It tries to sing, but there is something in the way. I
cannot. Some day I will hear it and play it, but—" and he drew
nearer Thorpe and touched his arm—"that day will be very bad for me.
I lose something." His eyes of the wistful dog were big and wondering.</p>
<p>"Queer little Phil!" cried Thorpe laughing whimsically. "Who tells you
these things?"</p>
<p>"Nobody," said the cripple dreamily, "they come when it is like to-night.
In Bay City they do not come."</p>
<p>At this moment a third voice broke in on them.</p>
<p>"Oh, it's you, Mr. Thorpe," said the captain of the vessel. "Thought it
was some of them lumber-jacks, and I was going to fire 'em below. Fine
night."</p>
<p>"It is that," answered Thorpe, again the cold, unresponsive man of
reticence. "When do you expect to get in, Captain?"</p>
<p>"About to-morrow noon," replied the captain, moving away. Thorpe followed
him a short distance, discussing the landing. The cripple stood all night,
his bright, luminous eyes gazing clear and unwinking at the moonlight,
listening to his Heart Song of the Sea.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0030" id="link2HCH0030"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter XXX </h2>
<p>Next morning continued the traditions of its calm predecessors. Therefore
by daybreak every man was at work. The hatches were opened, and soon
between-decks was cumbered with boxes, packing cases, barrels, and crates.
In their improvised stalls, the patient horses seemed to catch a hint of
shore-going and whinnied. By ten o'clock there loomed against the strange
coast line of the Pictured Rocks, a shallow bay and what looked to be a
dock distorted by the northern mirage.</p>
<p>"That's her," said the captain.</p>
<p>Two hours later the steamboat swept a wide curve, slid between the yellow
waters of two outlying reefs, and, with slackened speed, moved slowly
toward the wharf of log cribs filled with stone.</p>
<p>The bay or the dock Thorpe had never seen. He took them on the captain's
say-so. He knew very well that the structure had been erected by and
belonged to Morrison & Daly, but the young man had had the foresight
to purchase the land lying on the deep water side of the bay. He therefore
anticipated no trouble in unloading; for while Morrison & Daly owned
the pier itself, the land on which it abutted belonged to him.</p>
<p>From the arms of the bay he could make out a dozen figures standing near
the end of the wharf. When, with propeller reversed, the Pole Star bore
slowly down towards her moorings, Thorpe recognized Dyer at the head of
eight or ten woodsmen. The sight of Radway's old scaler somehow filled him
with a quiet but dangerous anger, especially since that official, on whom
rested a portion at least of the responsibility of the jobber's failure,
was now found in the employ of the very company which had attempted that
failure. It looked suspicious.</p>
<p>"Catch this line!" sung out the mate, hurling the coil of a handline on
the wharf.</p>
<p>No one moved, and the little rope, after a moment, slid overboard with a
splash.</p>
<p>The captain, with a curse, signalled full speed astern.</p>
<p>"Captain Morse!" cried Dyer, stepping forward. "My orders are that you are
to land here nothing but M. & D. merchandise."</p>
<p>"I have a right to land," answered Thorpe. "The shore belongs to me."</p>
<p>"This dock doesn't," retorted the other sharply, "and you can't set foot
on her."</p>
<p>"You have no legal status. You had no business building in the first place—"
began Thorpe, and then stopped with a choke of anger at the futility of
arguing legality in such a case.</p>
<p>The men had gathered interestedly in the waist of the ship, cool,
impartial, severely critical. The vessel, gathering speed astern, but not
yet obeying her reversed helm, swung her bow in towards the dock. Thorpe
ran swiftly forward, and during the instant of rubbing contact, leaped.</p>
<p>He alighted squarely upon his feet. Without an instant's hesitation, hot
with angry energy at finding his enemy within reach of his hand, he rushed
on Dyer, and with one full, clean in-blow stretched him stunned on the
dock. For a moment there was a pause of astonishment. Then the woodsmen
closed upon him.</p>
<p>During that instant Thorpe had become possessed of a weapon It came
hurling through the air from above to fall at his feet. Shearer, with the
cool calculation of the pioneer whom no excitement can distract from the
main issue, had seen that it would be impossible to follow his chief, and
so had done the next best thing,—thrown him a heavy iron belaying
pin.</p>
<p>Thorpe was active, alert, and strong. The men could come at him only in
front. As offset, he could not give ground, even for one step. Still, in
the hands of a powerful man, the belaying pin is by no means a despicable
weapon. Thorpe hit with all his strength and quickness. He was conscious
once of being on the point of defeat. Then he had cleared a little space
for himself. Then the men were on him again more savagely than ever. One
fellow even succeeded in hitting him a glancing blow on the shoulder.</p>
<p>Then came a sudden crash. Thorpe was nearly thrown from his feet. The next
instant a score of yelling men leaped behind and all around him. There
ensued a moment's scuffle, the sound of dull blows; and the dock was clear
of all but Dyer and three others who were, like himself, unconscious. The
captain, yielding to the excitement, had run his prow plump against the
wharf.</p>
<p>Some of the crew received the mooring lines. All was ready for
disembarkation.</p>
<p>Bryan Moloney, a strapping Irish-American of the big-boned, red-cheeked
type, threw some water over the four stunned combatants. Slowly they came
to life. They were promptly yanked to their feet by the irate rivermen,
who commenced at once to bestow sundry vigorous kicks and shakings by way
of punishment. Thorpe interposed.</p>
<p>"Quit it!" he commanded. "Let them go!"</p>
<p>The men grumbled. One or two were inclined to be openly rebellious.</p>
<p>"If I hear another peep out of you," said Thorpe to these latter, "you can
climb right aboard and take the return trip." He looked them in the eye
until they muttered, and then went on: "Now, we've got to get unloaded and
our goods ashore before those fellows report to camp. Get right moving,
and hustle!"</p>
<p>If the men expected any comment, approval, or familiarity from their
leader on account of their little fracas, they were disappointed. This was
a good thing. The lumber-jack demands in his boss a certain fundamental
unapproachability, whatever surface bonhomie he may evince.</p>
<p>So Dyer and his men picked themselves out of the trouble sullenly and
departed. The ex-scaler had nothing to say as long as he was within reach,
but when he had gained the shore, he turned.</p>
<p>"You won't think this is so funny when you get in the law-courts!" he
shouted.</p>
<p>Thorpe made no reply. "I guess we'll keep even," he muttered.</p>
<p>"By the jumping Moses," snarled Scotty Parsons turning in threat.</p>
<p>"Scotty!" said Thorpe sharply.</p>
<p>Scotty turned back to his task, which was to help the blacksmith put
together the wagon, the component parts of which the others had trundled
out.</p>
<p>With thirty men at the job it does not take a great while to move a small
cargo thirty or forty feet. By three o'clock the Pole Star was ready to
continue her journey. Thorpe climbed aboard, leaving Shearer in charge.</p>
<p>"Keep the men at it, Tim," said he. "Put up the walls of the warehouse
good and strong, and move the stuff in. If it rains, you can spread the
tent over the roof, and camp in with the provisions. If you get through
before I return, you might take a scout up the river and fix on a camp
site. I'll bring back the lumber for roofs, floors, and trimmings with me,
and will try to pick up a few axmen for swamping. Above all things, have a
good man or so always in charge. Those fellows won't bother us any more
for the present, I think; but it pays to be on deck. So long."</p>
<p>In Marquette, Thorpe arranged for the cashing of his time checks and
orders; bought lumber at the mills; talked contract with old Harvey, the
mill-owner and prospective buyer of the young man's cut; and engaged four
axmen whom he found loafing about, waiting for the season to open.</p>
<p>When he returned to the bay he found the warehouse complete except for the
roofs and gables. These, with their reinforcement of tar-paper, were
nailed on in short order. Shearer and Andrews, the surveyor, were scouting
up the river.</p>
<p>"No trouble from above, boys?" asked Thorpe.</p>
<p>"Nary trouble," they replied.</p>
<p>The warehouse was secured by padlocks, the wagon loaded with the tent and
the necessaries of life and work. Early in the morning the little
procession laughing, joking, skylarking with the high spirits of men in
the woods took its way up the river-trail. Late that evening, tired, but
still inclined to mischief, they came to the first dam, where Shearer and
Andrews met them.</p>
<p>"How do you like it, Tim?" asked Thorpe that evening.</p>
<p>"She's all right," replied the riverman with emphasis; which, for him, was
putting it strong.</p>
<p>At noon of the following day the party arrived at the second dam. Here
Shearer had decided to build the permanent camp. Injin Charley was
constructing one of his endless series of birch-bark canoes. Later he
would paddle the whole string to Marquette, where he would sell them to a
hardware dealer for two dollars and a half apiece.</p>
<p>To Thorpe, who had walked on ahead with his foreman, it seemed that he had
never been away. There was the knoll; the rude camp with the deer hides;
the venison hanging suspended from the pole; the endless broil and tumult
of the clear north-country stream; the yellow glow over the hill opposite.
Yet he had gone a nearly penniless adventurer; he returned at the head of
an enterprise.</p>
<p>Injin Charley looked up and grunted as Thorpe approached.</p>
<p>"How are you, Charley?" greeted Thorpe reticently.</p>
<p>"You gettum pine? Good!" replied Charley in the same tone.</p>
<p>That was all; for strong men never talk freely of what is in their hearts.
There is no need; they understand.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0031" id="link2HCH0031"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter XXXI </h2>
<p>Two months passed away. Winter set in. The camp was built and inhabited.
Routine had established itself, and all was going well.</p>
<p>The first move of the M. & D. Company had been one of conciliation.
Thorpe was approached by the walking-boss of the camps up-river. The man
made no reference to or excuse for what had occurred, nor did he pretend
to any hypocritical friendship for the younger firm. His proposition was
entirely one of mutual advantage. The Company had gone to considerable
expense in constructing the pier of stone cribs. It would be impossible
for the steamer to land at any other point. Thorpe had undisputed
possession of the shore, but the Company could as indisputably remove the
dock. Let it stay where it was. Both companies could then use it for their
mutual convenience.</p>
<p>To this Thorpe agreed. Baker, the walking-boss, tried to get him to sign a
contract to that effect. Thorpe refused.</p>
<p>"Leave your dock where it is and use it when you want to," said he. "I'll
agree not to interfere as long as you people behave yourselves."</p>
<p>The actual logging was opening up well. Both Shearer and Thorpe agreed
that it would not do to be too ambitious the first year. They set about
clearing their banking ground about a half mile below the first dam; and
during the six weeks before snow-fall cut three short roads of half a mile
each. Approximately two million feet would be put in from these—roads
which could be extended in years to come—while another million could
be travoyed directly to the landing from its immediate vicinity.</p>
<p>"We won't skid them," said Tim. "We'll haul from the stump to the bank.
And we'll tackle only a snowroad proposition:—we ain't got time to
monkey with buildin' sprinklers and plows this year. We'll make a little
stake ahead, and then next year we'll do it right and get in twenty
million. That railroad'll get along a ways by then, and men'll be more
plenty."</p>
<p>Through the lengthening evenings they sat crouched on wooden boxes either
side of the stove, conversing rarely, gazing at one spot with a steady
persistency which was only an outward indication of the persistency with
which their minds held to the work in hand. Tim, the older at the
business, showed this trait more strongly than Thorpe. The old man thought
of nothing but logging. From the stump to the bank, from the bank to the
camp, from the camp to the stump again, his restless intelligence
travelled tirelessly, picking up, turning over, examining the littlest
details with an ever-fresh curiosity and interest. Nothing was too small
to escape this deliberate scrutiny. Nothing was in so perfect a state that
it did not bear one more inspection. He played the logging as a chess
player his game. One by one he adopted the various possibilities, remote
and otherwise, as hypotheses, and thought out to the uttermost copper
rivet what would be the best method of procedure in case that possibility
should confront him.</p>
<p>Occasionally Thorpe would introduce some other topic of conversation. The
old man would listen to his remark with the attention of courtesy; would
allow a decent period of silence to intervene; and then, reverting to the
old subject without comment on the new, would emit one of his terse
practical suggestions, result of a long spell of figuring. That is how
success is made.</p>
<p>In the men's camp the crew lounged, smoked, danced, or played cards. In
those days no one thought of forbidding gambling. One evening Thorpe, who
had been too busy to remember Phil's violin,—although he noticed, as
he did every other detail of the camp, the cripple's industry, and the
precision with which he performed his duties,—strolled over and
looked through the window. A dance was in progress. The men were waltzing,
whirling solemnly round and round, gripping firmly each other's loose
sleeves just above the elbow. At every third step of the waltz they
stamped one foot.</p>
<p>Perched on a cracker box sat Phil. His head was thrust forward almost
aggressively over his instrument, and his eyes glared at the dancing men
with the old wolf-like gleam. As he played, he drew the bow across with a
swift jerk, thrust it back with another, threw his shoulders from one side
to the other in abrupt time to the music. And the music! Thorpe
unconsciously shuddered; then sighed in pity. It was atrocious. It was not
even in tune. Two out of three of the notes were either sharp or flat, not
so flagrantly as to produce absolute disharmony, but just enough to set
the teeth on edge. And the rendition was as colorless as that of a poor
hand-organ.</p>
<p>The performer seemed to grind out his fearful stuff with a fierce delight,
in which appeared little of the esthetic pleasure of the artist. Thorpe
was at a loss to define it.</p>
<p>"Poor Phil," he said to himself. "He has the musical soul without even the
musical ear!"</p>
<p>Next day, while passing out of the cook camp he addressed one of the men:</p>
<p>"Well, Billy," he inquired, "how do you like your fiddler?"</p>
<p>"All RIGHT!" replied Billy with emphasis. "She's got some go to her."</p>
<p>In the woods the work proceeded finely. From the travoy sledges and the
short roads a constant stream of logs emptied itself on the bank. There
long parallel skidways had been laid the whole width of the river valley.
Each log as it came was dragged across those monster andirons and rolled
to the bank of the river. The cant-hook men dug their implements into the
rough bark, leaned, lifted, or clung to the projecting stocks until slowly
the log moved, rolling with gradually increasing momentum. Then they
attacked it with fury lest the momentum be lost. Whenever it began to
deviate from the straight rolling necessary to keep it on the center of
the skids, one of the workers thrust the shoe of his cant-hook under one
end of the log. That end promptly stopped; the other, still rolling, soon
caught up; and the log moved on evenly, as was fitting.</p>
<p>At the end of the rollway the log collided with other logs and stopped
with the impact of one bowling ball against another. The men knew that
being caught between the two meant death or crippling for life.
Nevertheless they escaped from the narrowing interval at the latest
possible moment, for it is easier to keep a log rolling than to start it.</p>
<p>Then other men piled them by means of long steel chains and horses, just
as they would have skidded them in the woods. Only now the logs mounted up
and up until the skidways were thirty or forty feet high. Eventually the
pile of logs would fill the banking ground utterly, burying the landing
under a nearly continuous carpet of timber as thick as a two-story house
is tall. The work is dangerous. A saw log containing six hundred board
feet weighs about one ton. This is the weight of an ordinary iron safe.
When one of them rolls or falls from even a moderate height, its force is
irresistible. But when twenty or thirty cascade down the bold front of a
skidway, carrying a man or so with them, the affair becomes a catastrophe.</p>
<p>Thorpe's men, however, were all old-timers, and nothing of the sort
occurred. At first it made him catch his breath to see the apparent
chances they took; but after a little he perceived that seeming luck was
in reality a coolness of judgment and a long experience in the peculiar
ways of that most erratic of inanimate cussedness—the pine log. The
banks grew daily. Everybody was safe and sound.</p>
<p>The young lumberman had sense enough to know that, while a crew such as
his is supremely effective, it requires careful handling to keep it
good-humored and willing. He knew every man by his first name, and each
day made it a point to talk with him for a moment or so. The subject was
invariably some phase of the work. Thorpe never permitted himself the
familiarity of introducing any other topic. By this course he preserved
the nice balance between too great reserve, which chills the lumber-jack's
rather independent enthusiasm, and the too great familiarity, which loses
his respect. He never replied directly to an objection or a request, but
listened to it non-committally; and later, without explanation or
reasoning, acted as his judgment dictated. Even Shearer, with whom he was
in most intimate contact, respected this trait in him. Gradually he came
to feel that he was making a way with his men. It was a status, not
assured as yet nor even very firm, but a status for all that.</p>
<p>Then one day one of the best men, a teamster, came in to make some
objection to the cooking. As a matter of fact, the cooking was perfectly
good. It generally is, in a well-conducted camp, but the lumber-jack is a
great hand to growl, and he usually begins with his food.</p>
<p>Thorpe listened to his vague objections in silence.</p>
<p>"All right," he remarked simply.</p>
<p>Next day he touched the man on the shoulder just as he was starting to
work.</p>
<p>"Step into the office and get your time," said he.</p>
<p>"What's the matter?" asked the man.</p>
<p>"I don't need you any longer."</p>
<p>The two entered the little office. Thorpe looked through the ledger and
van book, and finally handed the man his slip.</p>
<p>"Where do I get this?" asked the teamster, looking at it uncertainly.</p>
<p>"At the bank in Marquette," replied Thorpe without glancing around.</p>
<p>"Have I got to go 'way up to Marquette?"</p>
<p>"Certainly," replied Thorpe briefly.</p>
<p>"Who's going to pay my fare south?"</p>
<p>"You are. You can get work at Marquette."</p>
<p>"That ain't a fair shake," cried the man excitedly.</p>
<p>"I'll have no growlers in this camp," said Thorpe with decision.</p>
<p>"By God!" cried the man, "you damned—"</p>
<p>"You get out of here!" cried Thorpe with a concentrated blaze of energetic
passion that made the fellow step back.</p>
<p>"I ain't goin' to get on the wrong side of the law by foolin' with this
office," cried the other at the door, "but if I had you outside for a
minute—"</p>
<p>"Leave this office!" shouted Thorpe.</p>
<p>"S'pose you make me!" challenged the man insolently.</p>
<p>In a moment the defiance had come, endangering the careful structure
Thorpe had reared with such pains. The young man was suddenly angry in
exactly the same blind, unreasoning manner as when he had leaped
single-handed to tackle Dyer's crew.</p>
<p>Without a word he sprang across the shack, seized a two-bladed ax from the
pile behind the door, swung it around his head and cast it full at the now
frightened teamster. The latter dodged, and the swirling steel buried
itself in the snowbank beyond. Without an instant's hesitation Thorpe
reached back for another. The man took to his heels.</p>
<p>"I don't want to see you around here again!" shouted Thorpe after him.</p>
<p>Then in a moment he returned to the office and sat down overcome with
contrition.</p>
<p>"It might have been murder!" he told himself, awe-stricken.</p>
<p>But, as it happened, nothing could have turned out better.</p>
<p>Thorpe had instinctively seized the only method by which these strong men
could be impressed. A rough-and-tumble attempt at ejectment would have
been useless. Now the entire crew looked with vast admiration on their
boss as a man who intended to have his own way no matter what difficulties
or consequences might tend to deter him. And that is the kind of man they
liked. This one deed was more effective in cementing their loyalty than
any increase of wages would have been.</p>
<p>Thorpe knew that their restless spirits would soon tire of the monotony of
work without ultimate interest. Ordinarily the hope of a big cut is
sufficient to keep men of the right sort working for a record. But these
men had no such hope—the camp was too small, and they were too few.
Thorpe adopted the expedient, now quite common, of posting the results of
each day's work in the men's shanty.</p>
<p>Three teams were engaged in travoying, and two in skidding the logs,
either on the banking ground, or along the road. Thorpe divided his camp
into four sections, which he distinguished by the names of the teamsters.
Roughly speaking, each of the three hauling teams had its own gang of
sawyers and skidders to supply it with logs and to take them from it, for
of the skidding teams, one was split;—the horses were big enough so
that one of them to a skidway sufficed. Thus three gangs of men were
performing each day practically the same work. Thorpe scaled the results,
and placed them conspicuously for comparison.</p>
<p>Red Jacket, the teamster of the sorrels, one day was credited with 11,000
feet; while Long Pine Jim and Rollway Charley had put in but 10,500 and
10,250 respectively. That evening all the sawyers, swampers, and skidders
belonging to Red Jacket's outfit were considerably elated; while the
others said little and prepared for business on the morrow.</p>
<p>Once Long Pine Jim lurked at the bottom for three days. Thorpe happened by
the skidway just as Long Pine arrived with a log. The young fellow glanced
solicitously at the splendid buckskins, the best horses in camp.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid I didn't give you a very good team, Jimmy," said he, and
passed on.</p>
<p>That was all; but men of the rival gangs had heard. In camp Long Pine Jim
and his crew received chaffing with balefully red glares. Next day they
stood at the top by a good margin, and always after were competitors to be
feared.</p>
<p>Injin Charley, silent and enigmatical as ever, had constructed a log shack
near a little creek over in the hardwood. There he attended diligently to
the business of trapping. Thorpe had brought him a deer knife from
Detroit; a beautiful instrument made of the best tool steel, in one long
piece extending through the buck-horn handle. One could even break bones
with it. He had also lent the Indian the assistance of two of his
Marquette men in erecting the shanty; and had given him a barrel of flour
for the winter. From time to time Injin Charley brought in fresh meat, for
which he was paid. This with his trapping, and his manufacture of
moccasins, snowshoes and birch canoes, made him a very prosperous Indian
indeed. Thorpe rarely found time to visit him, but he often glided into
the office, smoked a pipeful of the white man's tobacco in friendly
fashion by the stove, and glided out again without having spoken a dozen
words.</p>
<p>Wallace made one visit before the big snows came, and was charmed. He ate
with gusto of the "salt-horse," baked beans, stewed prunes, mince pie, and
cakes. He tramped around gaily in his moccasins or on the fancy snowshoes
he promptly purchased of Injin Charley. There was nothing new to report in
regard to financial matters. The loan had been negotiated easily on the
basis of a mortgage guaranteed by Carpenter's personal signature. Nothing
had been heard from Morrison & Daly.</p>
<p>When he departed, he left behind him four little long-eared, short-legged
beagle hounds. They were solemn animals, who took life seriously. Never a
smile appeared in their questioning eyes. Wherever one went, the others
followed, pattering gravely along in serried ranks. Soon they discovered
that the swamp over the knoll contained big white hares. Their mission in
life was evident. Thereafter from the earliest peep of daylight until the
men quit work at night they chased rabbits. The quest was hopeless, but
they kept obstinately at it, wallowing with contained excitement over a
hundred paces of snow before they would get near enough to scare their
quarry to another jump. It used to amuse the hares. All day long the
mellow bell-tones echoed over the knoll. It came in time to be part of the
color of the camp, just as were the pines and birches, or the cold
northern sky. At the fall of night, exhausted, trailing their long ears
almost to the ground, they returned to the cook, who fed them and made
much of them. Next morning they were at it as hard as ever. To them it was
the quest for the Grail,—hopeless, but glorious.</p>
<p>Little Phil, entrusted with the alarm clock, was the first up in the
morning In the fearful biting cold of an extinct camp, he lighted his
lantern and with numb hands raked the ashes from the stove. A few sticks
of dried pine topped by split wood of birch or maple, all well dashed with
kerosene, took the flame eagerly. Then he awakened the cook, and stole
silently into the office, where Thorpe and Shearer and Andrews, the
surveyor, lay asleep. There quietly he built another fire, and filled the
water-pail afresh. By the time this task was finished, the cook sounded
many times a conch, and the sleeping camp awoke.</p>
<p>Later Phil drew water for the other shanties, swept out all three, split
wood and carried it in to the cook and to the living-camps, filled and
trimmed the lamps, perhaps helped the cook. About half the remainder of
the day he wielded an ax, saw and wedge in the hardwood, collecting
painfully—for his strength was not great—material for the
constant fires it was his duty to maintain. Often he would stand
motionless in the vast frozen, creaking forest, listening with awe to the
voices which spoke to him alone. There was something uncanny in the
misshapen dwarf with the fixed marble white face and the expressive
changing eyes,—something uncanny, and something indefinably
beautiful.</p>
<p>He seemed to possess an instinct which warned him of the approach of wild
animals. Long before a white man, or even an Indian, would have suspected
the presence of game, little Phil would lift his head with a peculiar
listening toss. Soon, stepping daintily through the snow near the swamp
edge, would come a deer; or pat-apat-patting on his broad hairy paws, a
lynx would steal by. Except Injin Charley, Phil was the only man in that
country who ever saw a beaver in the open daylight.</p>
<p>At camp sometimes when all the men were away and his own work was done, he
would crouch like a raccoon in the far corner of his deep square bunk with
the board ends that made of it a sort of little cabin, and play to himself
softly on his violin. No one ever heard him. After supper he was docilely
ready to fiddle to the men's dancing. Always then he gradually worked
himself to a certain pitch of excitement. His eyes glared with the
wolf-gleam, and the music was vulgarly atrocious and out of tune.</p>
<p>As Christmas drew near, the weather increased in severity. Blinding
snow-squalls swept whirling from the northeast, accompanied by a high
wind. The air was full of it,—fine, dry, powdery, like the dust of
glass. The men worked covered with it as a tree is covered after a sleet.
Sometimes it was impossible to work at all for hours at a time, but Thorpe
did not allow a bad morning to spoil a good afternoon. The instant a lull
fell on the storm, he was out with his scaling rule, and he expected the
men to give him something to scale. He grappled the fierce winter by the
throat, and shook from it the price of success.</p>
<p>Then came a succession of bright cold days and clear cold nights. The
aurora gleamed so brilliantly that the forest was as bright as by
moonlight. In the strange weird shadow cast by its waverings the wolves
stole silently, or broke into wild ululations as they struck the trail of
game. Except for these weird invaders, the silence of death fell on the
wilderness. Deer left the country. Partridges crouched trailing under the
snow. All the weak and timid creatures of the woods shrank into
concealment and silence before these fierce woods-marauders with the
glaring famine-struck eyes.</p>
<p>Injin Charley found his traps robbed. In return he constructed deadfalls,
and dried several scalps. When spring came, he would send them out for the
bounty In the night, from time to time, the horses would awake trembling
at an unknown terror. Then the long weird howl would shiver across the
starlight near at hand, and the chattering man who rose hastily to quiet
the horses' frantic kicking, would catch a glimpse of gaunt forms skirting
the edge of the forest.</p>
<p>And the little beagles were disconsolate, for their quarry had fled. In
place of the fan-shaped triangular trail for which they sought, they came
upon dog-like prints. These they sniffed at curiously, and then departed
growling, the hair on their backbones erect and stiff.</p>
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