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The tide was nearing flood, and this was vastly to their advantage in counteracting the river current, and the five miles to Grand Lake was accomplished in an hour.
"Oh, 'tis grand!" exclaimed Andy when the long vista of lake appeared before them.
"Aye," said David, "'tis that, and that's why she's called Grand Lake, I'm thinkin'."
At the eastern end of the lake, where they entered it, both the northern and southern sh.o.r.es were lined with low hills wooded to their summits with spruce, white birch, balsam fir, and tamarack, the foliage of the latter making golden splotches in the green. Some few miles up the lake the wooded hills on its southern sh.o.r.e gave place to naked mountains, with perpendicular cliffs rising sheer from the water's edge for several hundred feet, grim and austere, but at the same time giving to the landscape a touch of grandeur and majestic beauty. In the far distance to the westward high peaks in an opalescent haze lifted their summits against the sky.
The vast and boundless wilderness inhabited by no human being other than a few wandering Indians, lay in somber and impressive silence, just as G.o.d had fas.h.i.+oned it untold ages before, untouched and unmarred by the hand of man. There were no smoking chimneys, no ugly brick walls, no shrieking locomotives; no sound to break the silence save the cry of startled gulls, soaring overhead, the honk of a flock of wild geese in southern flight, and the waves lapping upon the rocky sh.o.r.e. The air was fresh and spicy with the odor of balsam and other forest perfumes. It was a wilderness redolent with suggestions of mysteries hidden in the bosom of its unconquered and unmeasured solitudes and waiting for discovery.
"It makes me feel wonderful strange--t' think I'm goin' in there,"
remarked Andy presently, gazing away over the dark forest which receded to the northward over rolling hills, "and t' think we're t' be gone till th' break-up next spring, an' won't see Pop or Margaret or Doctor Joe for so long."
"Not gettin' sorry you're goin', now, be you?" grinned Indian Jake.
"No, I'm not gettin' sorry. Not me! I'm wonderful glad t' be goin',"
Andy a.s.serted stoutly.
"Better not think about the folks and home too much, or you'll be gettin' homesick," counseled Indian Jake.
"I'm not like t' get homesick!" and Andy's voice suggested that nothing in the world was less likely to happen.
"Ah, but you'll have a sore trial, lads," said Indian Jake. "Wait till we're deep in th' trails, and winter settles, and th' wind cuts t' th'
bone, and th' s.h.i.+ftin' snow blinds you, and th' cold's like t' freeze your blood, and t' have t' fight it for your very life. _Then's_ th'
time that you'll be tried out for th' stuff that's in you--both of you. And you can't rest then, for there's fur t' be got out of th'
traps, and there's no one t' get it but you, and you _got_ t' get it.
Then, lads, you'll be thinkin' of your warm snug home at The Jug, with its big stove, and your cozy nest of a bed. There's no rest for the trapper that makes a good hunt, lads. 'Tis the man that rests when th'
storms blow wild and the cold settles bitter and fierce, that makes th' poor hunt. 'Tis always so with work."
"We'll stick to un, and make th' good hunt," David declared stoutly.
"Aye, we'll stick to un, and not be gettin' homesick, either. We'll have plenty o' grit," said Andy.
"That's the way to talk, lads!" said Indian Jake heartily. "Stick to it, lads, and have grit a plenty, and you'll make a good hunt."
"But I was thinkin' o' what a wonderful big place 'tis in there," and Andy was again gazing at the forest-clad hills.
"'Tis a _big_ place," said Indian Jake.
"Pop says," continued Andy, "that 'tis so big they's no end to un."
"Aye," agreed Indian Jake, "no end to un."
"And there'll be n.o.body but just us in there," and there was awe in Andy's voice.
"Just us," said Indian Jake.
Snow was falling when they made camp that evening in the shelter of the forest on the lake sh.o.r.e, and cozy and snug the tent was with a roaring fire in the stove, and the wind swirling the snow outside, and moaning through the tree tops. Indian Jake had said little during the afternoon, but now as he fried a pan of pork by the light of a sputtering candle, while David and Andy laid the bed of fragrant spruce boughs, he volunteered the information that they would be in the Nascaupee River early in the morning.
"That's fine," said David. "We made a wonderful day's travel, now, didn't we?"
Indian Jake did not reply, and the boys, too, fell into silence, until supper was eaten and Indian Jake had lighted his pipe. Then David asked:
"Where were you livin' before you came to th' Bay, Jake?"
"South," grunted Indian Jake.
"Did your folks live there?" asked Andy.
"Yes," answered Indian Jake.
"Why don't yo bring un t' th' Bay t' live, now you're here?" asked Andy. "'Twould be fine t' have your folks t' live with you."
"Because I can't," replied Indian Jake, in a tone that implied he was through talking.
"I'm wonderful sorry," sympathized Andy.
"It's too bad, now," said David.
Indian Jake grunted again, but whether it was a grunt of appreciation or of resentment that they should have asked the questions, they could not tell, and quietly they spread their sleeping bags and slipped into them. They were to learn as the weeks pa.s.sed that Indian Jake had a double personality--that he was both an Indian and a white man--and that he possessed traits of character peculiar to both.
It was Andy's first night in camp, and for a time he lay awake wondering if Jamie and his father and Margaret were very lonely without him and David. And then he fell to listening to the wind and the crackling fire in the stove, and to watching in the dim light of the candle the dark outline of Indian Jake's figure crouched before the stove and silently smoking. The half-breed's face with its beaked nose was never a pleasant thing to see, and now it looked unusually sinister and forbidding to Andy. Presently it began to fade, and a great black wolf took its place, and Andy dreamed that the wolf was crouching over him and David, ready to devour them.
He awoke with a start. The candle light was out and all was darkness and strangely silent, with no sound save David's deep breathing and the moan of wind through the trees. It was weird and lonely there in the darkness, and when Andy thought of how long it would be before he and David returned to The Jug again, it seemed still lonelier.
"I must have plenty o' grit, and keep a stout heart, the way Jamie is doing," he thought, and it gave him courage, and he slept again.
VII
IN THE HEART OF THE WILDERNESS
The boys were awakened in the morning by Indian Jake entering the tent with a kettle of water for the tea. The candle was lighted, and the half-breed, in better humor, or at least more talkative than on the previous evening, greeted them with a cheerful enough:
"Mornin', lads."
"Mornin'," said they, and David added: "Did much snow fall?"
"Just a light fall, and it's clear and fine, and the wind's about gone."
There was no time for dawdling in bed, and the two lads sprang up and made their simple toilet. Already the tent was warm, and they rolled their sleeping bags and tied them into neat bundles, and then sat by the cozy, crackling stove while Indian Jake fried the pork and made the tea.
"Will we get to the rapids today, Jake?" asked David, when finally Indian Jake, after removing the pan of pork from the fire and placing it before them on the ground, poured tea into the tin cups they held out to him.
"If the wind don't come contrary to us," said Indian Jake, dipping a piece of bread into the pan and bringing it forth dripping with hot grease. "It's a long pull from the mouth of the river ag'in' th'
current, but we'll try for it. We'll be losin' no time, leastways, for there's no time t' be lost if we gets t' Seal Lake before th' freeze up, with our late start."