The train of the South Shore Railroad shot its way across the
broad reaches of the northern peninsula. On either side of the
right-of-way lay mystery in the shape of thickets so dense and
overgrown that the eye could penetrate them but a few feet at
most. Beyond them stood the forests. Thus Nature screened her
intimacies from the impertinent eye of a new order of things.
Thorpe welcomed the smell of the northland. He became almost eager,
explaining, indicating to the girl at his side.
"There is the Canada balsam," he cried. "Do you remember how I
showed it to you first? And yonder the spruce. How stuck up your
teeth were when you tried to chew the gum before it had been heated.
Do you remember? Look! Look there! It's a white pine! Isn't it
a grand tree? It's the finest tree in the forest, by my way of
thinking, so tall, so straight, so feathery, and so dignified. See,
Hilda, look quick! There's an old logging road all filled with
raspberry vines. We'd find lots of partridges there, and perhaps
a bear. Wouldn't you just like to walk down it about sunset?"
"I wonder what we're stopping for. Seems to me they are stopping
at every squirrel's trail. Oh, this must be Seney. Yes, it is.
Queer little place, isn't it? but sort of attractive. Good deal
like our town. You have never seen Carpenter, have you? Location's
fine, anyway; and to me it's sort of picturesque. You'll like Mrs.
Hathaway. She's a buxom, motherly woman who runs the boarding-house
for eighty men, and still finds time to mend my clothes for me. And
you'll like Solly. Solly's the tug captain, a mighty good fellow,
true as a gun barrel. We'll have him take us out, some still day.
We'll be there in a few minutes now. See the cranberry marshes.
Sometimes there's a good deal of pine on little islands scattered
over it, but it's very hard to log, unless you get a good winter.
We had just such a proposition when I worked for Radway. Oh, you'll
like Radway, he's as good as gold. Helen!"
"I want you to know Radway. He's the man who gave me my start."
"All right, Harry," laughed Helen. "I'll meet anybody or anything
from bears to Indians."
"I know an Indian too--Geezigut, an Ojibwa--we called him Injin
Charley. He was my first friend in the north woods. He helped me
get my timber. This spring he killed a man--a good job, too--and
is hiding now. I wish I knew where he is. But we'll see him some
day. He'll come back when the thing blows over. See! See!"
Thorpe pondered a moment, then laughed. "I am in the mixed attitude
of the small boy," he observed, "who isn't mean enough to wish
anybody's property destroyed, but who wishes that if there is a
fire, to be where he can see it. I am sorry those fellows had to
lose their mill, but it was a good thing for us. The man who set
that fire did us a good turn. If it hadn't been for the burning of
their mill, they would have made a stronger fight against us in
the stock market."
Wallace and Hilda exchanged glances. The girl was long since aware
of the inside history of those days.
"You'll have to tell them that," she whispered over the back of
her seat. "It will please them."
"Our station is next!" cried Thorpe, "and it's only a little ways.
Come, get ready!"
They all crowded into the narrow passage-way near the door, for the
train barely paused.
"All right, sah," said the porter, swinging down his little step.
Thorpe ran down to help the ladies. He was nearly taken from
his feet by a wild-cat yell, and a moment later that result was
actually accomplished by a rush of men that tossed him bodily onto
its shoulders. At the same moment, the mill and tug whistles began
to screech, miscellaneous fire-arms exploded. Even the locomotive
engineer, in the spirit of the occasion, leaned down heartily on
his whistle rope. The saw-dust street was filled with screaming,
jostling men. The homes of the town were brilliantly draped with
cheesecloth, flags and bunting.
For a moment Thorpe could not make out what had happened. This
turmoil was so different from the dead quiet of desertion he had
expected, that he was unable to gather his faculties. All about him
were familiar faces upturned to his own. He distinguished the broad,
square shoulders of Scotty Parsons, Jack Hyland, Kerlie, Bryan
Moloney; Ellis grinned at him from the press; Billy Camp, the fat
and shiny drive cook; Mason, the foreman of the mill; over beyond
howled Solly, the tug captain, Rollway Charley, Shorty, the
chore-boy; everywhere were features that he knew. As his dimming
eyes travelled here and there, one by one the Fighting Forty,
the best crew of men ever gathered in the northland, impressed
themselves on his consciousness. Saginaw birlers, Flat River
drivers, woodsmen from the forests of Lower Canada, bully boys
out of the Muskegon waters, peavey men from Au Sable, white-water
dare-devils from the rapids of the Menominee--all were there to
do him honor, him in whom they had learned to see the supreme
qualities of their calling. On the outskirts sauntered the tall
form of Tim Shearer, a straw peeping from beneath his flax-white
mustache, his eyes glimmering under his flax-white eyebrows. He did
not evidence as much excitement as the others, but the very bearing
of the man expressed the deepest satisfaction. Perhaps he remembered
that zero morning so many years before when he had watched the
thinly-clad, shivering chore-boy set his face for the first time
towards the dark forest.
Big Junko and Anderson deposited their burden on the raised platform
of the office steps. Thorpe turned and fronted the crowd.
At once pandemonium broke loose, as though the previous performance
had been nothing but a low-voiced rehearsal.
The men looked upon their leader and gave voice to the enthusiasm
that was in them. He stood alone there, straight and tall, the
muscles of his brown face set to hide his emotion, his head thrust
back proudly, the lines of his strong figure tense with power,--the
glorification in finer matter of the hardy, reliant men who did him
honor.
"Oh, aren't you proud of him?" gasped Hilda, squeezing Helen's arm
with a little sob.
In a moment Wallace Carpenter, his countenance glowing with pride
and pleasure, mounted the platform and stood beside his friend,
while Morton and the two young ladies stopped half way up the steps.
At once the racket ceased. Everyone stood at attention.
"Mr. Thorpe," Wallace began, "at the request of your friends here,
I have a most pleasant duty to fulfill. They have asked me to tell
you how glad they are to see you; that is surely unnecessary. They
have also asked me to congratulate you on having won the fight with
our rivals."
"You done 'em good." "Can't down the Old Fellow," muttered joyous
voices.
"But," said Wallace, "I think that I first have a story to tell on
my own account.
"At the time the jam broke this spring, we owed the men here for a
year's work. At that time I considered their demand for wages
ill-timed and grasping. I wish to apologize. After the money was
paid them, instead of scattering, they set to work under Jack
Radway and Tim Shearer to salvage your logs. They have worked long
hours all summer. They have invested every cent of their year's
earnings in supplies and tools, and now they are prepared to show
you in the Company's booms, three million feet of logs, rescued by
their grit and hard labor from total loss."
At this point the speaker was interrupted. "Saw off," "Shut up,"
"Give us a rest," growled the audience. "Three million feet ain't
worth talkin' about," "You make me tired," "Say your little say
the way you oughter," "Found purty nigh two millions pocketed
on Mare's Island, or we wouldn't a had that much," "Damn-fool
undertaking, anyhow."
"Men," cried Thorpe, "I have been very fortunate. From failure
success has come. But never have I been more fortunate than in my
friends. The firm is now on its feet. It could afford to lose
three times the logs it lost this year---"
"But," he continued suddenly, "it cannot now, nor ever can afford
to lose what those three million feet represent,--the friends it
has made. I can pay you back the money you have spent and the time
you have put in---" Again he looked them over, and then for the
first time since they have known him his face lighted up with a
rare and tender smile of affection. "But, comrades, I shall not
offer to do it: the gift is accepted in the spirit with which it
was offered---"
He got no further. The air was rent with sound. Even the members of
his own party cheered. From every direction the crowd surged inward.
The women and Morton were forced up the platform to Thorpe. The
latter motioned for silence.
"Now, boys, we have done it," said he, "and so will go back to work.
From now on you are my comrades in the fight."
His eyes were dim; his breast heaved; his voice shook. Hilda was
weeping from excitement. Through the tears she saw them all looking
at their leader, and in the worn, hard faces glowed the affection
and admiration of a dog for its master. Something there was
especially touching in this, for strong men rarely show it.
She felt a great wave of excitement sweep over her. Instantly
she was standing by Thorpe, her eyes streaming, her breast
trobbing with emotion.
"Oh!" she cried, stretching her arms out to them passionately, "Oh!
I love you; I love you all!"