But Sergeant Cameron was done with the Service for ever. An
accumulating current of events had swept him from his place in the
Force, as an unheeding traveler crossing a mountain torrent is
swept from his feet by a raging freshet. The sudden blazing of his
smoldering love into a consuming flame for the clumsy country girl,
for whom two years ago he had cherished a pitying affection, threw
up upon the horizon of his life and into startling clearness a new
and absorbing objective. In one brief quarter of an hour his life
had gathered itself into a single purpose; a purpose, to wit, to
make a home to which he might bring this girl he had come to love
with such swift and fierce intensity, to make a home for her where
she could be his own, and for ever. All the vehement passion of
his Highland nature was concentrated upon the accomplishing of this
purpose. That he should ever have come to love Mandy Haley, the
overworked slattern on her father's Ontario farm, while a thing of
wonder, was not the chief wonder to him. His wonder now was that
he should ever have been so besottedly dull of wit and so stupidly
unseeing as to allow the unlovely exterior of the girl to hide the
radiant soul within. That in two brief years she had transformed
herself into a woman of such perfectly balanced efficiency in her
profession as nurse, and a creature of such fascinating comeliness,
was only another proof of his own insensate egotism, and another
proof, too, of those rare powers that slumbered in the girl's soul
unknown to herself and to her world. Small wonder that with her
unfolding Cameron's whole world should become new.
Hard upon this experience the unexpected news of his father's death
and of the consequent winding up of the tangled affairs of the
estate threw upon Cameron the responsibility of caring for his
young sister, now left alone in the Homeland, except for distant
kindred of whom they had but slight knowledge.
A home was immediately and imperatively necessary, and hence he
must at once, as a preliminary, be married. Cameron fortunately
remembered that young Fraser, whom he had known in his Fort Macleod
days, was dead keen to get rid of the "Big Horn Ranch." This ranch
lay nestling cozily among the foothills and in sight of the
towering peaks of the Rockies, and was so well watered with little
lakes and streams that when his eyes fell upon it Cameron was
conscious of a sharp pang of homesickness, so suggestive was it of
the beloved Glen Cuagh Oir of his own Homeland. There would be a
thousand pounds or more left from his father's estate. Everybody
said it was a safe, indeed a most profitable investment.
A week's leave of absence sufficed for Cameron to close the deal
with Fraser, a reckless and gallant young Highlander, whose
chivalrous soul, kindling at Cameron's romantic story, prompted a
generous reduction in the price of the ranch and its outfit
complete. Hence when Mandy's shrewd and experienced head had
scanned the contract and cast up the inventory of steers and
horses, with pigs and poultry thrown in, and had found nothing
amiss with the deal--indeed it was rather better than she had
hoped--there was no holding of Cameron any longer. Married he
would be and without delay.
The only drag in the proceedings had come from the Superintendent,
who, on getting wind of Cameron's purpose, had thought, by promptly
promoting him from Corporal to Sergeant, to tie him more tightly to
the Service and hold him, if only for a few months, "till this
trouble should blow over." But Cameron knew of no trouble. The
trouble was only in the Superintendent's mind, or indeed was only a
shrewd scheme to hold Cameron to his duty. A rancher he would be,
and a famous rancher's wife Mandy would make. And as for his
sister Moira, had she not highly specialized in pigs and poultry on
the old home farm at the Cuagh Oir? There was no stopping the
resistless rush of his passionate purpose. Everything combined to
urge him on. Even his college mate and one time football comrade
of the old Edinburgh days, the wise, cool-headed Dr. Martin, now in
charge of the Canadian Pacific Railway Hospital, as also the little
nurse who, through those momentous months of Mandy's transforming,
had been to her guide, philosopher and friend, both had agreed that
there was no good reason for delay. True, Cameron had no means of
getting inside the doctor's mind and therefore had no knowledge of
the vision that came nightly to torment him in his dreams and the
memory that came daily to haunt his waking hours; a vision and a
memory of a trim little figure in a blue serge gown, of eyes brown,
now sunny with laughing light, now soft with unshed tears, of hair
that got itself into a most bewildering perplexity of waves and
curls, of lips curving deliciously, of a voice with a wonderfully
soft Highland accent; the vision and memory of Moira, Cameron's
sister, as she had appeared to him in the Glen Cuagh Oir at her
father's door. Had Cameron known of this tormenting vision and
this haunting memory he might have questioned the perfect sincerity
of his friend's counsel. But Dr. Martin kept his secret well and
none shared with him his visions and his dreams.
So there had been only the Superintendent to oppose.
Hence, because no really valid objection could be offered, the
marriage was made. And with much shrieking of engines--it seemed
as if all the engines with their crews within a hundred miles had
gathered to the celebration--with loud thunder of exploding
torpedoes, with tumultuous cheering of the construction gangs
hauled thither on gravel trains, with congratulations of railroad
officials and of the doctor, with the tearful smiles of the little
nurse, and with grudging but finally hearty good wishes of the
Superintendent, they had ridden off down the Kootenay Trail for
their honeymoon, on their way to the Big Horn Ranch some hundreds
of miles across the mountains.
There on the Big Horn Ranch through the long summer days together
they rode the ranges after the cattle, cooking their food in the
open and camping under the stars where night found them, care-free
and deeply happy, drinking long full draughts of that mingled wine
of life into which health and youth and love and God's sweet sun
and air poured their rare vintage. The world was far away and
quite forgotten.
Summer deepened into autumn, the fall round-up was approaching, and
there came a September day of such limpid light and such nippy
sprightly air as to suggest to Mandy nothing less than a holiday.
"Let's strike!" she cried to her husband, as she looked out toward
the rolling hills and the overtopping peaks shining clear in the
early morning light. "Let's strike and go a-fishing."
Her husband let his eyes wander over the full curves of her strong
and supple body and rest upon the face, brown and wholesome, lit
with her deep blue eyes and crowned with the red-gold masses of her
hair, and exclaimed:
"You need a holiday, Mandy. I can see it in the drooping lines of
your figure, and in the paling of your cheeks. In short," moving
toward her, "you need some one to care for you."
"Not just at this moment, young man," she cried, darting round the
table. "But, come, what do you say to a day's fishing away up the
Little Horn?"
"The Little Horn?"
"Yes, you know the little creek running into the Big Horn away up
the gulch where we went one day in the spring. You said there were
fish there."
"Yes, but why 'Little Horn,' pray? And who calls it so? I suppose
you know that the Big Horn gets its name from the Big Horn, the
mountain sheep that once roamed the rocks yonder, and in that sense
there's no Little Horn."
"Well, 'Little Horn' I call it," said his wife, "and shall. And if
the big stream is the Big Horn, surely the little stream should be
the Little Horn. But what about the fishing? Is it a go?"
"Well, rather! Get the grub, as your Canadian speech hath it."
"My Canadian speech!" echoed his wife scornfully. "You're just as
much Canadian as I am."
"And I shall get the ponies. Half an hour will do for me."
"And less for me," cried Mandy, dancing off to her work.
And she was right. For, clever housekeeper that she was, she stood
with her hamper packed and the fishing tackle ready long before her
husband appeared with the ponies.
The trail led steadily upward through winding valleys, but for the
most part along the Big Horn, till as it neared a scraggy pine-wood
it bore sharply to the left, and, clambering round an immense
shoulder of rock, it emerged upon a long and comparatively level
ridge of land that rolled in gentle undulations down into a wide
park-like valley set out with clumps of birch and poplar, with here
and there the shimmer of a lake showing between the yellow and
brown of the leaves.
"Oh, what a picture!" cried Mandy, reining up her pony. "What a
ranch that would make, Allan! Who owns it? Why did we never come
this way before?"
"Piegan Reserve," said her husband briefly.
"How beautiful! How did they get this particular bit?"
"They gave up a lot for it," said Cameron drily.
"But think, such a lovely bit of country for a few Indians! How
many are there?"
"Some hundreds. Five hundred or so. And a tricky bunch they are.
They're over-fond of cattle to be really desirable neighbors."
"Well, I think it rather a pity!"
"Look yonder!" cried her husband, sweeping his arm toward the
eastern horizon. From the height on which they stood a wonderful
panorama of hill and valley, river, lake and plain lay spread out
before them. "All that and for nine hundred miles beyond that line
these Indians and their kin gave up to us under persuasion. There
was something due them, eh? Let's move on."
For a mile or more the trail ran along the high plateau skirting
the Piegan Reserve, where it branched sharply to the right.
Cameron paused.
"You see that trail?" pointing to the branch that led to the left
and downward into the valley. "That is one of the oldest and most
famous of all Indian trails. It strikes down through the Crow's
Nest Pass and beyond the pass joins the ancient Sun Dance Trail.
That's my old beat. And weird things are a-doing along that same
old Sun Dance Trail this blessed minute or I miss my guess. I
venture to say that this old trail has often been marked with blood
from end to end in the fierce old days."
"Let's go," said Mandy, with a shudder, and, turning her pony to
the right, she took the trail that led them down from the plateau,
plunged into a valley, wound among rocks and thickets of pine till
it reached a tumbling mountain torrent of gray-blue water, fed from
glaciers high up between the great peaks beyond.
"My Little Horn!" cried Mandy with delight.
Down by its rushing water they scrambled till they came to a sunny
glade where the little fretful torrent pitched itself headlong into
a deep shady pool, whence, as if rested in those quiet deeps, it
issued at first with gentle murmuring till, out of earshot of the
pool, it broke again into turbulent raging, brawling its way to the
Big Horn below.
Mandy could hardly wait for the unloading and tethering of the
ponies.
"Now," she cried, when all was ready, "for my very first fish. How
shall I fling this hook and where?"
"Try a cast yonder, just beside that overhanging willow. Don't
splash! Try again--drop it lightly. That's better. Don't tell me
you've never cast a fly before."
"Never in my life."
"Let it float down a bit. Now back. Hold it up and let it dance
there. I'll just have a pipe."
But next moment Cameron's pipe was forgotten. With a shout he
sprang to his wife's side.
"By Jove, you've got him!"
"No! No! Leave me alone! Just tell me what to do. Go away!
Don't touch me! Oh-h-h! He's gone!"
"Not a bit. Reel him up--reel him up a little."
"Oh, I can't reel the thing! Oh! Oh-h-h! Is he gone?"
"Hold up. Don't haul him too quickly--keep him playing. Wait till
I get the net." He rushed for the landing net.
"Oh, he's gone! He's gone! Oh, I'm so mad!" She stamped savagely
on the grass. "He was a monster."
"They always are," said her husband gravely. "The fellows that get
off, I mean."
"Now you're just laughing at me, and I won't have it! I could just
sit down and cry! My very first fish!"
"Never mind, Mandy, we'll get him or just as good a one again."
"Never! He'll never bite again. He isn't such a fool."
"Well, they do. They're just like the rest of us. They keep
nibbling till they get caught; else there would be no fun in
fishing or in-- Now try another throw--same place--a little
farther down. Ah! That was a fine cast. Once more. No, no, not
that way. Flip it lightly and if you ever get a bite hold your rod
so. See? Press the end against your body so that you can reel
your fish in. And don't hurry these big fellows. You lose them
and you lose your fun."
"I don't want the fun," cried Mandy, "but I do want that fish and
I'm going to get him."
"By Jove, I believe you just will!" The young man's dark eyes
flashed an admiring glance over the strong, supple, swaying figure
of the girl at his side, whose every move, as she cast her fly,
seemed specially designed to reveal some new combination of the
graceful curves of her well-knit body.
"Keep flicking there. You'll get him. He's just sulking. If he
only knew, he'd hurry up."
"Knew what?"
"Who was fishing for him."
"Oh! Oh! I've got him." The girl was dancing excitedly along the
bank. "No! Oh, what a wretch! He's gone. Now if I get him you
tell me what to do, but don't touch me."
"All you have to do is to hold him steady at the first. Keep your
line fairly tight. If he begins to plunge, give him line. If he
slacks, reel in. Keep him nice and steady, just like a horse on
the bit."
"Oh, why didn't you tell me before? I know exactly what that
means--just like a colt, eh? I can handle a colt."
"Exactly! Now try lower down--let your fly float down a bit--
there."
Again there was a wild shriek from the girl.
"Oh, I've got him sure! Now get the net."
"Don't jump about so! Steady now--steady--that's better. Fine!
Fine work! Let him go a bit--no, check--wind him up. Look out!
Not too quick! Fine! Oh! Look out! Get him away from that jam!
Reel him up! Quick! Now play him! Let me help you."
"Don't you dare touch this rod, Allan Cameron, or there'll be
trouble!"
"Quite right--pardon me--quite right. Steady! You'll get him
sure. And he's a beauty, a perfect Rainbow beauty."
"Keep quiet, now," admonished Mandy. "Don't shout so. Tell me
quietly what to do."
"Do as you like. You can handle him. Just watch and wait--feel
him all the time. Ah-h-h! For Heaven's sake don't let him into
that jam! There he goes up stream! That's better! Good!"
"Don't get so excited! Don't yell so!" again admonished Mandy.
"Tell me quietly."
"Quietly? Who's yelling, I'd like to know? Who's excited? I
won't say another word. I'll get the landing-net ready for the
final act."
"Don't leave me! Tell me just what to do. He's getting tired, I
think."
"Watch him close. Wind him up a bit. Get all the line in you can.
Steady! Let go! Let go! Let him run! Now wind him again. Wait,
hold him so, just a moment--a little nearer! Hurrah! Hurrah!
I've got him and he's a beauty--a perfectly typical Rainbow trout."
"Oh, you beauty!" cried Mandy, down on her knees beside the trout
that lay flapping on the grass. "What a shame! Oh, what a shame!
Oh, put him in again, Allan, I don't want him. Poor dear, what a
shame."
"But we must weigh him, you see," remonstrated her husband. "And
we need him for tea, you know. He really doesn't feel it much.
There are lots more. Try another cast. I'll attend to this chap."
"I feel just like a murderer," said Mandy. "But isn't it glorious?
Well, I'll just try one more. Aren't you going to get your rod out
too?"
"Well, rather! What a pool, all unspoiled, all unfished!"
"Does no one fish up here?"
"Yes, the Police come at times from the Fort. And Wyckham, our
neighbor. And old man Thatcher, a born angler, though he says it's
not sport, but murder."
"Why not sport?"
"Why? Old Thatcher said to me one day, 'Them fish would climb a
tree to get at your hook. That ain't no sport.'"
But sport, and noble sport, they found it through the long
afternoon, so that, when through the scraggy pines the sun began to
show red in the western sky, a score or more lusty, glittering,
speckled Rainbow trout lay on the grass beside the shady pool.
Tired with their sport, they lay upon the grassy sward, luxuriating
in the warm sun.
"Now, Allan," cried Mandy, "I'll make tea ready if you get some
wood for the fire. You ought to be thankful I taught you how to
use the ax. Do you remember?"
"Thankful? Well, I should say. Do you remember that day, Mandy?"
"Remember!" cried the girl, with horror in her tone. "Oh, don't
speak of it. It's too awful to think of."
"Awful what?"
"Ugh!" she shuddered, "I can't bear to think of it. I wish you
could forget."
"Forget what?"
"What? How can you ask? That awful, horrid, uncouth, sloppy
girl." Again Mandy shuddered. "Those hands, big, coarse, red,
ugly."
"Yes," cried Allan savagely, "the badge of slavery for a whole
household of folk too ignorant to know the price that was being
paid for the service rendered them."
"And the hair," continued Mandy relentlessly, "uncombed, filthy,
horrid. And the dress, and--"
"Stop it!" cried Allan peremptorily.
"No, let me go on. The stupid face, the ignorant mind, the uncouth
speech, the vulgar manners. Oh, I loathe the picture, and I wonder
you can ever bear to look at her again. And, oh, I wish you could
forget."
"Forget!" The young man's lean, swarthy face seemed to light up
with the deep glowing fires in his dark eyes. His voice grew
vibrant. "Forget! Never while I live. Do you know what I
remember?"
"Ah, spare me!" moaned his wife, putting her hands over his mouth.
"Do you know what I remember?" he repeated, pulling her hands
away and holding them fast. "A girl with hands, face, hair, form,
dress, manners damned to coarseness by a cruel environment? That?
No! No! To-day as I look back I remember only two blue eyes,
deep, deep as wells, soft, blue, and wonderfully kind. And I
remember all through those days--and hard days they were to a green
young fool fresh from the Old Country trying to keep pace with your
farm-bred demon-worker Perkins--I remember all through those days a
girl that never was too tired with her own unending toil to think
of others, and especially to help out with many a kindness a home-
sick, hand-sore, foot-sore stranger who hardly knew a buck-saw from
a turnip hoe, and was equally strange to the uses of both, a girl
that feared no shame nor harm in showing her kindness. That's what
I remember. A girl that made life bearable to a young fool, too
proud to recognize his own limitations, too blind to see the gifts
the gods were flinging at him. Oh, what a fool I was with my silly
pride of family, of superior education and breeding, and with no
eye for the pure gold of as true and loyal a soul as ever offered
itself in daily unmurmuring sacrifice for others, and without a
thought of sacrifice. Fool and dolt! A self-sufficient prig!
That's what I remember."
The girl tore her hands away from him.
"Ah, Allan, my boy," she cried with a shrill and scornful laugh
that broke at the end, "how foolishly you talk! And yet I love to
hear you talk so. I love to hear you. But, oh, let me tell you
what else I remember of those days!"
"No, no, I will not listen. It's all nonsense."
"Nonsense! Ah, Allan! Let me tell you this once." She put her
hands upon his shoulders and looked steadily into his eyes. "Let
me tell you. I've never told you once during these six happy
months--oh, how happy, I fear to think how happy, too much joy, too
deep, too wonderful, I'm afraid sometimes--but let me tell you what
I see, looking back into those old days--how far away they seem
already and not yet three years past--I see a lad so strange, so
unlike all I had known, a gallant lad, a very knight for grace and
gentleness, strong and patient and brave, not afraid--ah, that
caught me--nothing could make him afraid, not Perkins, the brutal
bully, not big Mack himself. And this young lad, beating them all
in the things men love to do, running, the hammer--and--and
fighting too!--Oh, laddie, laddie, how often did I hold my hands
over my heart for fear it would burst for pride in you! How often
did I check back my tears for very joy of loving you! How often
did I find myself sick with the agony of fear that you should go
away from me forever! And then you went away, oh, so kindly, so
kindly pitiful, your pity stabbing my heart with every throb. Why
do I tell you this to-day? Let me go through it. But it was this
very pity stabbing me that awoke in me the resolve that one day you
would not need to pity me. And then, then I fled from the farm and
all its dreadful surroundings. And the nurse and Dr. Martin, oh
how good they were! And all of them helped me. They taught me.
They scolded me. They were never tired telling me. And with that
flame burning in my soul all that outer, horrid, awful husk seemed
to disappear and I escaped, I became all new."
"You became yourself, yourself, your glorious, splendid, beautiful
self!" shouted Allan, throwing his arms around her. "And then I
found you again. Thank God, I found you! And found you for keeps,
mine forever. Think of that!"
"Forever." Mandy shuddered again. "Oh, Allan, I'm somehow afraid.
This joy is too great."
"Yes, forever," said Allan again, but more quietly, "for love will
last forever."
Together they sat upon the grass, needing no words to speak the joy
that filled their souls to overflowing. Suddenly Mandy sprang to
her feet.
"Now, let me go, for within an hour we must be away. Oh, what a
day we've had, Allan, one of the very best days in all my life!
You know I've never been able to talk of the past to you, but to-
day somehow I could not rest till I had gone through with it all."
"Yes, it's been a great day," said Allan, "a wonderful day, a day
we shall always remember." Then after a silence, "Now for a fire
and supper. You're right. In an hour we must be gone, for we are
a long way from home. But, think of it, Mandy, we're going home.
I can't quite get used to that!"
And in an hour, riding close as lovers ride, they took the trail to
their home ten miles away.