Flower of the North eBook

James Oliver Curwood
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 281 pages of information about Flower of the North.

Flower of the North eBook

James Oliver Curwood
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 281 pages of information about Flower of the North.

He rose and stirred the fire, and stray ends of birch leaped into flame, lighting his pale face.  He wanted to go to the tent, kneel there where Jeanne could hear him, and tell her that it was all a mistake.  Yet he knew that this could not be, neither the next day nor the next, for to plead extenuation for himself would be to reveal his love.  Two or three times he had been on the point of revealing that love.  Only now, after what had happened, did it occur to him that to disclose his heart to Jeanne would be the greatest crime he could commit.  She was alone with him in the heart of a wilderness, dependent upon him, upon his honor.  He shivered when he thought how narrow had been his escape, how short a time he had known her, and how in that brief spell he had given himself up to an almost insane hope.  To him Jeanne was not a stranger.  She was the embodiment, in flesh and blood, of the spirit which had been his companion for so long.  He loved her more than ever now, for Jeanne the lost child of the snows was more the earthly revelation of his beloved spirit than Jeanne the sister of Pierre.  But—­what was he to Jeanne?

He left the fire and went to the pile of balsam which he had spread out between two rocks for his bed.  He lay down and pulled Pierre’s blanket over him, but his fatigue and his desire for sleep seemed to have left him, and it was a long time before slumber finally drove from him the thought of what he had done.  After that he did not move.  He heard none of the sounds of the night.  A little owl, the devil-witch, screamed horribly overhead and awakened Jeanne, who sat up for a few moments in her balsam bed, white-faced and shivering.  But Philip slept.  Long afterward something warm awakened him, and he opened his eyes, thinking that it was the glow of the fire in his face.  It was the sun.  He heard a sound which brought him quickly into consciousness of day.  It was Jeanne singing softly over beyond the rocks.

He had dreaded the coming of morning, when he would have to face Jeanne.  His guilt hung heavily upon him.  But the sound of her voice, low and sweet, filled with the carroling happiness of a bird, brought a glad smile to his lips.  After all, Jeanne had understood him.  She had forgiven him, if she had not forgotten.

For the first time he noticed the height of the sun, and he sat bolt upright.  Jeanne saw his head and shoulders pop over the top of the rocks, and she laughed at him from their stone table.

“I’ve been keeping breakfast for over an hour, M’sieur Philip,” she cried.  “Hurry down to the creek and wash yourself, or I shall eat all alone!”

Philip rose stupidly and looked at his watch.

“Eight o’clock!” he gasped.  “We should have been ten miles on the way by this time!”

Jeanne was still laughing at him.  Like sunlight she dispelled his gloom of the night before.  A glance around the camp showed him that she must have been awake for at least two hours.  The packs were filled and strapped.  The silken tent was down and folded.  She had gathered wood, built the fire, and cooked breakfast while he slept.  And now she stood a dozen paces from him, blushing a little at his amazed stare, waiting for him.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Flower of the North from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.