Straight across the
country, winding over plains, around sleughs,
threading its way through bluffs, over prairie undulations, fording
streams and crossing rivers, and so making its course northwest
from Winnipeg for nine hundred miles, runs the Edmonton trail.
Macmillan was the last
of that far-famed and adventurous body of
men who were known all through the western country for their skill,
their courage, their endurance in their profession of freighters
from Winnipeg to the far outpost of Edmonton and beyond into the
Peace River and Mackenzie River districts. The building of
railroads cut largely into their work, and gradually the freighters
faded from the trails. Old Sam Macmillan was among the last of his
tribe left upon the Edmonton trail. He was a master in his
profession. In the packing of his goods with their almost infinite
variety, in the making up of his load, he was possessed of
marvellous skill, while on the trail itself he was easily king of
them all.
Macmillan was a big
silent Irishman, raw boned, hardy, and with a
highly developed genius for handling ox or horse teams of any size
in a difficult bit of road, and possessing as well a unique command
of picturesque and varied profanity. These gifts he considered as
necessarily related, and the exercise of each was always in
conjunction with the other, for no man ever heard Macmillan swear
in ordinary conversation or on commonplace occasions. But when his
team became involved in a sleugh, it was always a point of doubt
whether he aroused more respect and admiration in his attendants by
his rare ability to get the last ounce of hauling power out of his
team or by the artistic vividness and force of the profanity
expended in producing this desired result. It is related that on
an occasion when he had as part of his load the worldly effects of
an Anglican Bishop en route to his heroic mission to the far North,
the good Bishop, much grieved at Macmillan's profanity, urged upon
him the unnecessary character of this particular form of
encouragement.
"Is it swearing Your
Riverence objects to?" said Macmillan, whose
vocabulary still retained a slight flavour of the Old Land. "I do
assure you that they won't pull a pound without it."
But the Bishop could
not be persuaded of this, and urged upon
Macmillan the necessity of eliminating this part of his persuasion.
"Just as you say, Your
Riverence. I ain't hurried this trip and
we'll do our best."
The next bad sleugh
brought opportunity to make experiment of the
new system. The team stuck fast in the black muck, and every
effort to extricate them served only to imbed them more hopelessly
in the sticky gumbo. Time passed on. A dark and lowering night
was imminent. The Bishop grew anxious. Macmillan, with whip and
voice, encouraged his team, but all in vain. The Bishop's anxiety
increased with the approach of a threatening storm.
"It is growing late,
Mr. Macmillan, and it looks like rain.
Something must be done."
"It does that, Your
Lordship, but the brutes won't pull half their
own weight without I speak to them in the way they are used to."
The good man was in a
sore strait. Another half hour passed, and
still with no result. It was imperative that his goods should be
brought under cover before the storm should break. Again the good
Bishop urged Macmillan to more strenuous effort.
"We can't stay here all
night, sir," he said. "Surely something
can be done."
"Well, I'll tell Your
Lordship, it's one of two things, stick or
swear, and there's nothing else for it."
"Well, well, Mr.
Macmillan," said the Bishop resignedly, "we must
get on. Do as you think best, but I take no responsibility in the
matter." At which Pilate's counsel he retired from the scene,
leaving Macmillan an untrammelled course.
Macmillan seized the
reins from the ground, and walking up and down
the length of his six-horse team, began to address them singly and
in the mass in terms so sulphurously descriptive of their ancestry,
their habits, and their physical and psychological characteristics,
that when he gave the word in a mighty culminating roar of
blasphemous excitation, each of the bemired beasts seemed to be
inspired with a special demon, and so exerted itself to the utmost
limit of its powers that in a single minute the load stood high and
dry on solid ground.
One other
characteristic made Macmillan one of the most trusted of
the freighters upon the trail. While in charge of his caravan he
was an absolute teetotaler, making up, however, for this abstinence
at the end of the trip by a spree whose duration was limited only
by the extent of his credit.
It was to Mr.
Macmillan's care that Mrs. French had committed
Kalman with many and anxious injunctions, and it is Macmillan's due
to say that every moment of that four weeks' journey was one of
undiluted delight to the boy, although it is to be feared that not
the least enjoyable moments in that eventful journey were those
when he stood lost in admiration while his host, with the free use
of his sulphurously psychological lever, pried his team out of the
frequent sleughs that harassed the trail. And before Macmillan had
delivered up his charge, his pork and hard tack, aided by the
ardent suns and sweeping winds of the prairie, had done their work,
so that it was a brown and thoroughly hardy looking lad that was
handed over to Jimmy Green at the Crossing.
"Here is Jack French's
boy," said Macmillan. "And it's him that's
got the ear for music. In another trip he'll dust them horses out
of a hole with any of us. Swear! Well, I should smile! By the
powers! he makes me feel queer."
"Swear," echoed a thick
voice from behind the speaker, "who's
swearing?"
"Hello! Jack," said
Macmillan quietly. "Got a jag on, eh?"
"Attend to your own
business, sir," said Jack French, whose dignity
grew and whose temper shortened with every bottle. "Answer my
question, sir. Who is swearing?"
"Oh, there's nothing to
it, Jack," said Macmillan. "I was telling
Jimmy here that that's a mighty smart boy of yours, and with a
great tongue for language."
"I'll break his back,"
growled Jack French, his face distorted with
a scowl. "Look here, boy," he continued, whirling fiercely upon
the lad, "you are sent to me by the best woman on earth to make a
man of you, and I'll have no swearing on my ranch," delivering
himself of which sentiment punctuated by a feu de joie of muddled
oaths, he lurched away into the back shop and fell into a drunken
sleep, leaving the boy astonished and for some minutes speechless.
"Is that her brother?"
he asked at length, when he had found voice.
"Whose brother?" said
Jimmy Green.
"Yes, boy, that's her
brother," said Macmillan. "But that is not
himself any more than a mad dog. Jimmy here has been filling him
up," shaking his finger at the culprit, "which he had no right to
do, knowing Jack French as he does, by the same token."
"Oh, come on, Mac,"
said Jimmy apologetically. "You know Jack
French, and when he gets a-goin' could I stop him? No, nor you."
Next morning when
Kalman came forth from the loft which served
Jimmy Green as store room for his marvellously varied merchandise,
he found that Macmillan had long since taken the trail and was by
this time miles on his journey toward Edmonton. The boy was lonely
and sick at heart. Macmillan had been a friend to him, and had
constituted the last link that held him to the life he had left
behind in the city. It was to Macmillan that the little white-
faced lady who was to the boy the symbol of all that was high and
holy in character, had entrusted him for safe deliverance to her
brother Jack French. Kalman had spent an unhappy night, his sleep
being broken by the recurring vision of the fierce and bloated face
of the man who had cursed him and threatened him on the previous
evening. The boy had not yet recovered from the horror and
surprise of his discovery that this drunken and brutalized creature
was the noble-hearted brother into whose keeping his friend and
benefactress had given him. That a man should drink himself drunk
was nothing to his discredit in Kalman's eyes, but that Mrs.
French's brother, the loved and honoured gentleman whom she had
taught him to regard as the ideal of all manly excellence, should
turn out to be this bloated and foul-mouthed bully, shocked him
inexpressibly. From these depressing thoughts he was aroused by a
cheery voice.
"Hello! my boy, had
breakfast?"
He turned quickly and
beheld a tall, strongly made and handsome man
of middle age, clean shaven, neatly groomed, and with a fine open
cheery face.
"No, sir," he
stammered, with unusual politeness in his tone, and
staring with all his eyes.
It was Jack French who
addressed him, but this handsome, kindly,
well groomed man was so different from the man who had reeled over
him and poured forth upon him his abusive profanity the night
before, that his mind refused to associate the one with the other.
"Well, boy," said Jack
French, "you must be hungry. Jimmy,
anything left for the boy?"
"Lots, Jack," said
Jimmy eagerly, as if relieved to see him clothed
again and in his right mind. "The very best. Here, boy, set in
here." He opened a door which led into a side room where the
remains of breakfast were disclosed upon the table. "Bacon and
eggs, my boy, eggs! mind you, and Hudson's Bay biscuit and black
strap. How's that?"
The boy, still lost in
wonder, fell to with a great access of good
cheer, and made a hearty meal, while outside he could hear Jack
French's clear, cheery, commanding voice directing the packing of
his buckboard.
The packing of the
buckboard was a business calling for some skill.
In the box seat were stowed away groceries and small parcels for
the ranch and for settlers along the trail. Upon the boards behind
the seat were loaded and roped securely, sides of pork, a sack of
flour, and various articles for domestic use. Last of all, and
with great care, French disposed a mysterious case packed with
straw, the contents of which were perfectly well known to the boy.
The buckboard packed,
there followed the process of hitching up,--a
process at once spectacular and full of exciting incident, for the
trip to the Crossing was to the bronchos, unbroken even to the
halter, their first experience in the ways of civilized man. Wild,
timid and fiercely vicious, they were brought in from their night
pickets on a rope, holding back hard, plunging, snorting, in
terror, and were tied up securely in an out shed. There was no
time spent in gentle persuasion. French took a collar and without
hesitation, but without haste, walked quietly to the side of one of
the shuddering ponies, a buckskin, and paying no heed to its
frantic plunging, slipped it over his neck, keeping close to the
pony's side and crowding it hard against the wall. The rest of the
harness offered more difficulty. The pony went wild at every
approach of the trailing straps and buckles. Kalman looked on in
admiration while French, without loss of temper, without oath or
objurgation, went on quietly with his work.
"Have to put a hitch on
him, Jimmy, I guess," said French after he
had failed in repeated attempts.
Jimmy took a thin
strong line of rope, put a running noose around
the pony's jaw, threw the end over its neck and back through the
noose again, thus making a most cruel bridle, and gave the rope a
single sharp jerk. The broncho fell back upon its haunches, and
before it had recovered from its pain and surprise, French had the
harness on its back and buckled into place.
The second pony, a
piebald or pinto, needed no "Commache hitch,"
but submitted to the harnessing process without any great protest.
"Bring him along,
Jimmy," said French, leading out the pinto.
But this was easier
said than done, for the buckskin after being
faced toward the door, set his feet firmly in front of him and
refused to budge an inch.
"Touch him up behind,
boy," said Green to Kalman, who stood by
eager to assist.
Kalman sprang forward
with a stick in his hand, dodged under the
poles which formed the sides of the stall, and laid a resounding
whack upon the pony's flank. There was a flash of heels, a bang on
the shed wall, a plunge forward, and the pony was found clear of
the shed and Kalman senseless on the ground.
"Jimmy, you eternal
fool!" cried French, "hold this rope!" He ran
to the boy and picked him up in his arms. "The boy is killed, and
there'll be the very deuce to pay."
He laid the insensible
lad on the grass, ran for a pail of water
and dashed a portion of it in his face. In a few moments the boy
opened his eyes with a long deep sigh, and closed them again as if
in contented slumber. French took a flask from his pocket, opened
the boy's mouth, and poured some of its contents between his lips.
At once Kalman began to cough, sat up, gazed around in a stupid
manner upon the ponies and the men.
"He's out," he said at
length, with his eyes upon the pinto.
"Out? Who's out?" cried
French.
"Judas priest!"
exclaimed Jimmy, using his favourite oath. "He
means the broncho."
"By Jove! he IS out,
boy," said French, "and you are as near out as
you are likely to be for some time to come. What in great Caesar's
name were you trying to do?"
"He wouldn't move,"
said the boy simply, "and I hit him."
"Listen here, boy,"
said Jimmy Green solemnly, "when you go to hit
a broncho again, don't take anything short of a ten-foot pole,
unless you're on top of him."
The boy said nothing in
reply, but got up and began to walk about,
still pale and dazed.
"Good stuff, eh,
Jimmy?" said French, watching him carefully.
"You bet!" said Jimmy,
"genuINE clay."
"It is exceptionally
lucky that you were standing so near the
little beast," said French to the boy. "Get into the buckboard
here, and sit down."
Kalman climbed in, and
from that point of vantage watched the rest
of the hitching process. By skillful manoeuvering the two men led,
backed, shoved the ponies into position, and while one held them by
the heads, the other hitched the traces. Carefully French looked
over all straps and buckles, drew the lines free, and then mounting
the buckboard seat, said quietly, "Stand clear, Jimmy. Let them
go." Which Jimmy promptly did.
For a few moments they
stood surprised at their unexpected freedom,
and uncertain what to do with it, then they moved off slowly a few
steps till the push of the buckboard threw them into a sudden
terror, and the fight was on. Plunging, backing, kicking, jibing,
they finally bolted, fortunately choosing the trail that led in the
right direction.
"Good-by, Jimmy. See
you later," sang out French as, with cool
head and steady hand, he directed the running ponies.
"Jumpin' cats!" replied
Jimmy soberly, "don't look as if you
would," as the bronchos tore up the river bank at a terrific
gallop.
Before they reached the
top French had them in hand, and going more
smoothly, though still running at top speed. Kalman sat clinging
to the rocking, pitching buckboard, his eyes alight and his face
aglow with excitement. There was stirring in the boy's brain a dim
and far-away memory of wild rides over the steppes of Southern
Russia, and French, glancing now and then at his glowing face,
nodded grim approval.
"Afraid, boy?" he
shouted over the roar and rattle of the pitching
buckboard.
Kalman looked up and
smiled, and then with a great oath he cried,
"Let them go!"
Jack French was
startled. He hauled up the ponies sharply and
turned to the boy at his side.
"Boy, where did you
learn that?"
"What?" asked the boy
in surprise.
"Where did you learn to
swear like that?"
"Why," said Kalman,
"they all do it."
"Who all?"
"Why, everybody in
Winnipeg."
"Does Mrs. French?"
said Jack quietly.
The boy's face flushed
hotly.
"No, no," he said
vehemently, "never her." Then after a pause and
an evident struggle, "She wants me to stop, but all the men and the
boys do it."
"Kalman," said French
solemnly, "no one swears on my ranch."
Kalman was perplexed,
remembering the scene of the previous night.
"But you--" he began,
and then paused.
"Boy," repeated French
with added solemnity, "swearing is a foolish
and unnecessary evil. There is no swearing on my ranch. Promise
me you will give up this habit."
"I will not," said the
boy promptly, "for I would break my word.
Don't you swear?"
French hesitated, and
then as if forming a sudden resolution he
replied, "When you hear me swear you can begin. And if you don't
mean to quit, don't promise. A gentleman always keeps his word."
The boy looked him
steadily in the eye and then said, as if
pondering this remark, "I remember. I know. My father said so."
French forbore to press
the matter further, but for both man and
boy an attempt at a new habit of speech began that day.
Once clear of the
Saskatchewan River, the trail led over rolling
prairie, set out with numerous "bluffs" of western maple and
poplar, and diversified with sleughs and lakes of varying size, a
country as richly fertile and as fair to look upon as is given the
eyes of man to behold anywhere in God's good world. In the dullest
weather this rolling, tree-decked, sleugh-gemmed prairie presents a
succession of scenes surpassingly beautiful, but with a westering
sun upon it, and on a May day, it offers such a picture as at once
entrances the soul and lives forever in the memory. The waving
lines, the rounded hills, the changing colour, the chasing shadows
on grass and bluff and shimmering water, all combine to make in the
soul high music unto God.
For an hour and more
the buckboard hummed along the trail smooth
and winding, the bronchos pulling hard on the lines without a sign
of weariness, till the bluffs began to grow thicker and gradually
to close into a solid belt of timber. Beyond this belt of timber
lay the Ruthenian Colony but newly placed. The first intimation
of the proximity of this colony came in quite an unexpected way.
Swinging down a sharp hill through a bluff, the bronchos came upon
a man with a yoke of oxen hauling a load of hay. Before their
course could be checked the ponies had pitched heavily into the
slow moving and terrified oxen, and so disconcerted them that they
swerved from the trail and upset the load. Immediately there rose
a volley of shrill execrations in the Galician tongue.
"Whoa, buck! Steady
there!" cried Jack French cheerily as he
steered his team past the wreck. "Too bad that, we must go back
and help to repair damages."
He tied the bronchos
securely to a tree and went back to offer aid.
The Galician, a heavily-built man, was standing on the trail with a
stout stake in his hand, viewing the ruins of his load and
expressing his emotions in voluble Galician profanity with a bad
mixture of halting and broken English. Kalman stood beside French
with wrath growing in his face.
"He is calling you very
bad names!" he burst out at length.
French glanced down at
the boy's angry face and smiled.
"Oh, well, it will do
him good. He will feel better when he gets
it all out. And besides, he has rather good reason to be angry."
"He says he is going to
kill you," said Kalman in a low voice,
keeping close to French's side.
"Oh! indeed," said
French cheerfully, walking straight upon the
man. "That is awkward. But perhaps he will change his mind."
This calm and cheerful
front produced its impression upon the
excited Galician.
"Too bad, neighbour,"
said French in a loud, cheerful tone as he
drew near.
The Galician, who had
recovered something of his fury, damped to a
certain extent by French's calm and cheerful demeanour, began to
gesticulate with his stake. French turned his back upon him and
proceeded to ascertain the extent of the wreck, and to advise a
plan for its repair. As he stooped to examine the wagon for
breakages, the wrathful Galician suddenly swung his club in the
air, but before the blow fell, Kalman shrieked out in the Galician
tongue, "You villain! Stop!"
This unexpected cry in
his own speech served at once to disconcert
the Galician's aim, and to warn his intended victim. French,
springing quickly aside, avoided the blow and with one stride he
was upon the Galician, wrenched the stake from his grasp, and,
taking him by the back of the neck, faced him toward the front
wheels of the wagon, saying, as he did so, "Here, you idiot! take
hold and pull."
The strength of that
grip on his neck produced a salutary effect
upon the excited Galician. He stood a few moments dazed, looking
this way and that way, as if uncertain how to act.
"Tell the fool," said
French to Kalman quietly, "to get hold of
those front wheels and pull."
The boy stood amazed.
"Ain't you going to
lick him?" he said.
"Haven't time just
now," said French cheerfully.
"But he might have
killed you."
"Would have if you
hadn't yelled. I'll remember that too, my boy.
But he didn't, and he won't get another chance. Tell him to take
hold and pull."
Kalman turned to the
subdued and uncertain Galician, and poured
forth a volume of angry abuse while he directed him as to his
present duty. Humbly enough the Galician took hold, and soon the
wagon was put to rights, and after half an hour's work, was loaded
again and ready for its further journey.
By this time the man
had quite recovered his temper and stood for
some time after all was ready, silent and embarrassed. Then he
began to earnestly address French, with eager gesticulations.
"What is it?" said
French.
"He says he is very
sorry, and feels very bad here," said Kalman,
pointing to his heart, "and he wants to do something for you."
"Tell him," said French
cheerfully, "only a fool loses his temper,
and only a cad uses a club or a knife when he fights."
Kalman looked puzzled.
"A cat?"
"No, a cad. Don't you
know what a cad is? Well, a cad is--hanged
if I know how to put it--you know what a gentleman is?"
Kalman nodded.
"Well, the other thing
is a cad."
The Galician listened
attentively while Kalman explained, and made
humble and deprecating reply.
"He says," interpreted
Kalman, "that he is very sorry, but he wants
to know what you fight with. You can't hurt a man with your
hands."
"Can't, eh?" said
French. "Tell him to stand up here to me."
The Galician came up
smiling, and French proceeded to give him his
first lesson in the manly art, Kalman interpreting his directions.
"Put up your hands so.
Now I am going to tap your forehead."
Tap, tap, went French's
open knuckles upon the Galician's forehead.
"Look out, man."
Tap, tap, tap, the
knuckles went rapping on the man's forehead,
despite his flying arms.
"Now," said French,
"hit me."
The Galician made a
feeble attempt.
"Oh, don't be afraid.
Hit me hard."
The Galician lunged
forward, but met rigid arms.
"Come, come," said
French, reaching him sharply on the cheek with
his open hand, "try better than that."
Again the Galician
struck heavily with his huge fists, and again
French, easily parrying, tapped him once, twice, thrice, where he
would, drawing tears to the man's eyes. The Galician paused with a
scornful exclamation.
"He says that's
nothing," interpreted Kalman. "You can't hurt a
man that way."
"Can't, eh? Tell him to
come on, but to look out."
Again the Galician came
forward, evidently determined to land one
blow at least. But French, taking the blow on his guard, replied
with a heavy lefthander fair on the Galician's chest, lifted him
clear off his feet and hurled him breathless against his load of
hay. The man recovered himself, grinning sheepishly, nodding his
head vigorously and talking rapidly.
"That is enough. He
says he would like to learn how to do that.
That is better than a club," interpreted Kalman.
"Tell him that his
people must learn to fight without club or
knife. We won't stand that in this country. It lands them in
prison or on the gallows."
Kalman translated, his
own face fiery red meanwhile, and his own
appearance one of humiliation. He was wondering how much of his
own history this man knew.
"Good-by," said French,
holding out his hand to the Galician.
The man took it and
raised it to his lips.
"He says he thanks you
very much, and he wishes you to forget his
badness."
"All right, old man,"
said French cheerfully. "See you again some
day."
And so they parted,
Kalman carrying with him an uncomfortable sense
of having been at various times in his life something of a cad, and
a fear lest this painful fact should be known to his new master and
friend.
"Well, youngster," said
French, noticing his glum face, "you did me
a good turn that time. That beggar had me foul then, sure enough,
and I won't forget it."
Kalman brightened up
under his words, and without further speech,
each busy with himself, they sped along the trail till the day
faded toward the evening.
But the Edmonton trail
that day set its mark on the lives of boy
and man,--a mark that was never obliterated. To Kalman the day
brought a new image of manhood. Of all the men whom he knew there
was none who could command his loyalty and enthral his imagination.
It is true, his father had been such a man, but now his father
moved in dim shadow across the horizon of his memory. Here was a
man within touch of his hand who illustrated in himself those
qualities that to a boy's heart and mind combine to make a hero.
With what ease and courage and patience and perfect self-command he
had handled those plunging bronchos! The same, qualities too, in
a higher degree, had marked his interview with the wrathful and
murderous Galician, and, in addition, all that day Kalman had been
conscious of a consideration and a quickness of sympathy in his
moods that revealed in this man of rugged strength and forceful
courage a subtle something that marks the finer temper and nobler
spirit, the temper and the spirit of the gentleman. Not that
Kalman could name this thing, but to his sensitive soul it was this
in the man that made appeal and that called forth his loyal homage.
To French, too, the day
had brought thoughts and emotions that had
not stirred within him since those days of younger manhood twenty
years ago when the world was still a place of dreams and life a
tourney where glory might be won. The boy's face, still with its
spiritual remembrances in spite of all the sordidness of his past,
the utter and obvious surrender of soul that shone from his eyes,
made the man almost shudder with a new horror of the foulness that
twenty years of wild license upon the plains had flung upon him.
A fierce hate of what he had become, an appalling vision of what
he was expected to be, grew upon him as the day drew to a close.
Gladly would he have refused the awful charge of this young soul as
yet unruined that so plainly exalted him to a place among the gods,
but for a vision that he carried ever in his heart of a face sad
and sweet and eloquent with trustful love.
"No, by Jove!" he said
to himself between his shut teeth, "I can't
funk it. I'd be a cad if I did."
And with these visions
and these resolvings they, boy and man,
swung off from the Edmonton trail black and well worn, and into the
half-beaten track that led to Wakota, the centre of the Galician
colony. |