The Woodsman's Story of the Great White Chief





The old woodsman shifted the knife with which he was mending his
fishing-rod from one hand to the other, and looked at it musingly, before
he replied to Medallion. "Yes, m'sieu', I knew the White Chief, as they
called him: this was his"--holding up the knife; "and this"--taking a
watch from his pocket. "He gave them to me; I was with him in the Circle
on the great journey."

"Tell us about him, then," Medallion urged; "for there are many tales,
and who knows which is the right one?"

"The right one is mine. Holy, he was to me like a father then! I know
more of the truth than any one." He paused a moment, looking out on the
river where the hot sun was playing with all its might, then took off his
cap with deliberation, laid it beside him, and speaking as it were into
the distance, began:

"He once was a trader of the Hudson's Bay Company. Of his birth some said
one thing, some another; I know he was beaucoup gentil, and his heart, it
was a lion's! Once, when there was trouble with the Chipp'ways, he went
alone to their camp, and say he will fight their strongest man, to stop
the trouble. He twist the neck of the great fighting man of the tribe, so
that it go with a snap, and that ends it, and he was made a chief, for,
you see, in their hearts they all hated their strong man. Well, one
winter there come down to Fort o' God two Esquimaux, and they say that
three white men are wintering by the Coppermine River; they had travel
down from the frozen seas when their ship was lock in the ice, but can
get no farther. They were sick with the evil skin, and starving. The
White Chief say to me: 'Galloir, will you go to rescue them?' I would
have gone with him to the ends of the world--and this was near one end."

The old man laughed to himself, tossed his jet-black hair from his
wrinkled face, and after a moment, went on: "There never was such a
winter as that. The air was so still by times that you can hear the
rustle of the stars and the shifting of the northern lights; but the cold
at night caught you by the heart and clamp it--Mon Dieu, how it clamp! We
crawl under the snow and lay in our bags of fur and wool, and the dogs
hug close to us. We were sorry for the dogs; and one died, and then
another, and there is nothing so dreadful as to hear the dogs howl in the
long night--it is like ghosts crying in an empty world. The circle of the
sun get smaller and smaller, till he only tramp along the high edge of
the north-west. We got to the river at last and found the camp. There is
one man dead--only one; but there were bones--ah, m'sieu', you not guess
what a thing it is to look upon the bones of men, and know that--!"

Medallion put his hand on the old man's arm. "Wait a minute," he said.
Then he poured out coffee for both, and they drank before the rest was
told.

"It's a creepy story," said Medallion, "but go on."

"Well, the White Chief look at the dead man as he sit there in the snow,
with a book and a piece of paper beside him, and the pencil in the book.
The face is bent forward to the knees. The White Chief pick up the book
and pencil, and then kneel down and gaze up in the dead man's face, all
hard like stone and crusted with frost. I thought he would never stir
again, he look so long. I think he was puzzle. Then he turn and say to
me: 'So quiet, so awful, Galloir!' and got up. Well, but it was cold
then, and my head seemed big and running about like a ball of air. But I
light a spirit-lamp, and make some coffee, and he open the dead man's
book--it is what they call a diary--and begin to read. All at once I hear
a cry, and I see him drop the book on the ground, and go to the dead man,
and jerk his fist as if to strike him in the face. But he did not
strike."

Galloir stopped, and lighted his pipe, and was so long silent that
Medallion had to jog him into speaking. He puffed the smoke so that his
face was in the cloud, and he said through it: "No, he did not strike. He
get to his feet and spoke: 'God forgive her!' like that, and come and
take up the book again, and read. He eat and drunk, and read the book
again, and I know by his face that something more than cold was clamp his
heart.

"'Shall we bury him in the snow?' I say. 'No,' he spoke, 'let him sit
there till the Judgmen'. This is a wonderful book, Galloir,' he went on.
'He was a brave man, but the rest--the rest!'--then under his breath
almost: 'She was so young--but a child.' I not understand that. We start
away soon, leaving the thing there. For four days, and then I see that
the White Chief will never get back to Fort Pentecost; but he read the
dead man's book much. . . ."

"I cannot forget that one day. He lies down looking at the world--nothing
but the waves of snow, shining blue and white, on and on. The sun lift an
eye of blood in the north, winking like a devil as I try to drive Death
away by calling in his ear. He wake all at once; but his eyes seem
asleep. He tell me to take the book to a great man in Montreal--he give
me the name. Then he take out his watch--it is stop--and this knife, and
put them into my hands, and then he pat my shoulder. He motion to have
the bag drawn over his head. I do it. . . . Of course that was the end!"

"But what about the book?" Medallion asked.

"That book? It is strange. I took it to the man in Montreal--tonnerre,
what a fine house and good wine had he!--and told him all. He whip out a
scarf, and blow his nose loud, and say very angry: 'So, she's lost both
now! What a scoundrel he was! . . .' Which one did he mean? I not
understan' ever since."



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