Part 4 (1/2)
”By Gar! Jean Marcel!” cried Jules Duroc, his swart face lighting with joy as he crushed the wanderer in a bear hug. ”We t'ink you sure starve out een de bus.h.!.+ You fin' de Beeg Salmon headwater? You see de Windigo?”
”Oui, I fin' de riviere for sure, Jules; but de Windigo he scared of me.
I tell heem Jean Marcel ees fr'en' of Jules Duroc.”
The laughter in the doorway drew the attention of two men descending the ladder from the fur-loft.
”Well, as I live, Jean Marcel!” cried Colin Gillies, the factor, and he wrung the hand of the son of his old head man until Marcel grimaced with pain.
”You're sure good for sore eyes, Jean; we were about giving you up!”
added Andrew McCain, the clerk, seizing Jean's free hand.
”Bon jour, M'sieu Gillies! Bon jour, Andrew! Dey say I leeve my bones on de Beeg Salmon; de Husky shoot at me; but--Tiens! I am here!”
”What? You had trouble with the Huskies?”
”Oui, dey t'o't I was a devil, because I come down riviere from de Bad-Lands, but Kovik, he talk to dem an' I stay. Tell dem I come from Whale Riviere. Den dey get mad because I feesh salmon at de rapide and mak' trouble; and poor Kovik, he tell dem dat I am bad spirit, so I can get away.”
Jean laughed heartily at the memory of Kovik's dilemma. ”Dey mus' t'ink poor Kovik ees d.a.m.n liar by dees tam.” Then he added soberly, ”But he save my life.”
Seated with his three friends, Marcel told of his struggle to reach the Salmon, his meeting with the Esquimos, and escape with his dog.
”So you got a dog after all, Jean? But you were crazy to take a chance with those Huskies; they won't stand trespa.s.sing on their fisheries and they were shy of you because you came from the headwaters. I'm glad you didn't kill that pair, much as they deserved it. It would have made trouble later.”
”Good old Kovik! We won't forget him,” added McCain.
”No, that we will not,” agreed Gillies. ”He thought a lot of your father, Jean.”
”Wal,” said Jean proudly, ”I weel have good dog-team een two year. Dat pup, she ees wort' all de work an' trouble to get her.”
”You're lucky,” said Gillies. ”It's mighty hard on our hunters not to have good dogs, but they couldn't pay the Huskies' price. The Crees only took three for breeding purposes, and six cost us a thousand in trade.
The rest were taken to Fort George and East Main.”
The days at the Mission with Pere Breton and Julie raced by--hours of unalloyed happiness for Jean after ten months in the ”bush.” Not a day pa.s.sed that did not find him romping with the great puppy who had learned to gaze at her tall master through slant eyes eloquent with love. Each morning when he visited the Mission fish nets and his own, the puppy rode in the bow of the canoe. Each afternoon, often accompanied by Julie Breton, they went for a run up the river sh.o.r.e. Man and dog were inseparable.
When he heard that Kovik had arrived, Jean brought Fleur down to the sh.o.r.e, to find the family absent from their lodge. To Marcel's amazement, his puppy at first failed to recognize her brothers, who, yelping madly, rushed her in a ma.s.s.
With flattened ears, and mane stiffened on neck and back, their doughty sister met them half-way. Bowling one over, she shouldered another to the ground, where she threatened him with a fierce display of teeth. And not until their worried mother, made fast to a stake, had recognized her lost daughter and lured her within reach of her tongue, did the nose of Jean's puppy reveal to her the ident.i.ty of her kin. Then there was a mad frolic in which she bullied and roughed her brothers as in the forgotten days before the master with the low voice and the hand that never struck her, took her away in his canoe.
When Kovik appeared in his umiak with his squat wife and family, there was a general handshaking.
”How you leeve my fr'en' on de Salmon, Kovik?”
The Husky gravely shook his head.
”Kovik have troub' wid young men you shoot. Dey say Kovik bad spirit too. You not hurt by dem?”
”Dey miss me an' I dreef down riviere an' ambush dem. I could keel dem easy but eet mak' eet bad for you. Here ees tabac, an' tea an' sugar for de woman. I tell M'sieu Gillies w'at you do for Jean Marcel.”