breech, with an appearance of indubitable efficiency
about it. It looked like an honest weapon to
David, who was unaccustomed to firearms—and
this was more than he could say for the heavy, 38-calibre
automatic pistol which Father Roland thrust into his
hand, and which looked and felt murderously mysterious.
He frankly confessed his ignorance of these things,
and the Missioner chuckled good-humouredly as he buckled
the belt and holster about his waist and told him
on which hip to keep the pistol, and where to carry
the leather sheath that held a long and keen-edged
hunting knife. Then he turned to the snow shoes.
They were the long, narrow, bush-country shoe.
He placed them side by side on the snow and showed
David how to fasten his moccasined feet in them without
using his hands. For three quarters of an hour
after that, out in the soft, deep snow in the edge
of the spruce, he gave him his first lesson in that
slow, swinging,
out-stepping stride of the north-man
on the trail. At first it was embarrassing for
David, with Thoreau and the Indians grinning openly,
and Marie’s face peering cautiously and joyously
from the cabin door. Three times he entangled
his feet hopelessly and floundered like a great fish
in the snow; then he caught the “swing”
of it and at the end of half an hour began to find
a pleasurable exhilaration, even excitement, in his
ability to skim over the feathery surface of this
great white sea without so much as sinking to his
ankle bones. When he slipped the shoes off and
stood them up beside his rifle against the cabin,
he was panting. His heart was pounding.
His lungs drank in the cold, balsam-scented air like
a suction pump and expelled each breath with the sibilancy
of steam escaping from a valve.
“Winded!” he gasped. And then, gulping
for breath as he looked at Father Roland, he demanded:
“How the devil am I going to keep up with you
fellows on the trail? I’ll go bust inside
of a mile!”
“And every time you go bust we’ll load
you on the sledge,” comforted the Missioner,
his round face glowing with enthusiastic approval.
“You’ve done finely, David. Within
a fortnight you’ll be travelling twenty miles
a day on snow shoes.”
He suddenly seemed to think of something that he had
forgotten and fidgeted with his mittens in his hesitation,
as if there lay an unpleasant duty ahead of him.
Then he said:
“If there are any letters to write, David ...
any business matters....”
“There are no letters,” cut in David quickly.
“I attended to my affairs some weeks ago.
I am ready.”
With a frozen whitefish he returned to Baree.
The dog scented him before the crunch of his footsteps
could be heard in the snow, and when he came out from
the thick spruce and balsam into the little open, Baree
was stretched out flat on his belly, his gaunt gray
muzzle resting on the snow between his forepaws.
He made no movement as David drew near, except that
curious shivers ran through his body, and his throat