BIG TIMBER
A Story of the Northwest
By BERTRAND W. SINCLAIR
With Frontispiece
By DOUGLAS DUER
1916
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I
GREEN FIELDS AND PASTURES NEW
The Imperial Limited lurched with a swing around the last
hairpin curve of the Yale canyon. Ahead opened out a timbered
valley,—narrow on its floor, flanked with bold mountains, but
nevertheless a valley,—down which the rails lay straight and
shining on an easy grade. The river that for a hundred miles had
boiled and snarled parallel to the tracks, roaring through the
granite sluice that cuts the Cascade Range, took a wider channel
and a leisurely flow. The mad haste had fallen from it as haste
falls from one who, with time to spare, sees his destination near
at hand; and the turgid Fraser had time to spare, for now it was
but threescore miles to tidewater. So the great river moved
placidly—as an old man moves when all the headlong urge of
youth is spent and his race near run.
On the river side of the first coach behind the diner, Estella
Benton nursed her round chin in the palm of one hand, leaning her
elbow on the window sill. It was a relief to look over a widening
valley instead of a bare-walled gorge all scarred with slides, to
see wooded heights lift green in place of barren cliffs, to watch
banks of fern massed against the right of way where for a day and a
night parched sagebrush, brown tumble-weed, and such scant growth
as flourished in the arid uplands of interior British Columbia had
streamed in barren monotony, hot and dry and still.
She was near the finish of her journey. Pensively she considered
the end of the road. How would it be there? What manner of folk and
country? Between her past mode of life and the new that she was
hurrying toward lay the vast gulf of distance, of custom, of class
even. It was bound to be crude, to be full of inconveniences and
uncouthness. Her brother's letters had partly prepared her for
that. Involuntarily she shrank from it, had been shrinking from it
by fits and starts all the way, as flowers that thrive best in
shady nooks shrink from hot sun and rude winds. Not that Estella
Benton was particularly flower-like. On the contrary she was a
healthy, vigorous-bodied young woman, scarcely to be described as
beautiful, yet undeniably attractive. Obviously a daughter of the
well-to-do, one of that American type which flourishes in families
to which American politicians unctuously refer as the backbone of
the nation. Outwardly, gazing riverward through the dusty pane, she
bore herself with utmost serenity. Inwardly she was full of
misgivings.
Four days of lonely travel across a continent, hearing the
drumming clack of car wheels and rail joint ninety-six hours on
end, acutely conscious that every hour of the ninety-six put its
due quota of miles between the known and the unknown, may be either
an adventure, a bore, or a calamity, depending altogether upon the
individual point of view, upon conditioning circumstances and
previous experience.
Estella Benton's experience along such lines was chiefly a blank
and the conditioning circumstances of her present journey were
somber enough to breed thought that verged upon the melancholy.
Save for a natural buoyancy of spirit she might have wept her way
across North America. She had no tried standard by which to measure
life's values for she had lived her twenty-two years wholly
shielded from the human maelstrom, fed, clothed, taught, an untried
product of home and schools. Her head was full of university lore,
things she had read, a smattering of the arts and philosophy,
liberal portions of academic knowledge, all tagged and sorted like
parcels on a shelf to be reached when called for. Buried under
these externalities the ego of her lay unaroused, an incalculable
quantity.
All of which is merely by way of stating that Miss Estella
Benton was a young woman who had grown up quite complacently in
that station of life in which—to quote the
Philistines—it had pleased God to place her, and that Chance
had somehow, to her astonished dismay, contrived to thrust a spoke
in the smooth-rolling wheels of destiny. Or was it Destiny? She had
begun to think about that, to wonder if a lot that she had taken
for granted as an ordered state of things was not, after all,
wholly dependent upon Chance. She had danced and sung and played
lightheartedly accepting a certain standard of living, a certain
position in a certain set, a pleasantly ordered home life, as her
birthright, a natural heritage. She had dwelt upon her ultimate
destiny in her secret thoughts as foreshadowed by that of other
girls she knew. The Prince would come, to put it in a nutshell. He
would woo gracefully. They would wed. They would be delightfully
happy. Except for the matter of being married, things would move
along the same pleasant channels.
Just so. But a broken steering knuckle on a heavy touring car
set things in a different light—many things. She learned then
that death is no respecter of persons, that a big income may be
lived to its limit with nothing left when the brain force which
commanded it ceases to function. Her father produced perhaps
fifteen to twenty thousand dollars a year in his brokerage
business, and he had saved nothing. Thus at one stroke she was put
on an equal footing with the stenographer in her father's office.
Scarcely equal either, for the stenographer earned her bread and
was technically equipped for the task, whereas Estella Benton had
no training whatsoever, except in social usage. She did not yet
fully realize just what had overtaken her. Things had happened so
swiftly, to ruthlessly, that she still verged upon the incredulous.
Habit clung fast. But she had begun to think, to try and establish
some working relation between herself and things as she found them.
She had discovered already that certain theories of human relations
are not soundly established in fact.
She turned at last in her seat. The Limited's whistle had
shrilled for a stop. At the next stop—she wondered what lay
in store for her just beyond the next stop. While she dwelt
mentally upon this, her hands were gathering up some few odds and
ends of her belongings on the berth.
Across the aisle a large, smooth-faced young man watched her
with covert admiration. When she had settled back with bag and
suitcase locked and strapped on the opposite seat and was hatted
and gloved, he leaned over and addressed her genially.
"Getting off at Hopyard? Happen to be going out to Roaring
Springs?"
Miss Benton's gray eyes rested impersonally on the top of his
head, traveled slowly down over the trim front of his blue serge to
the polished tan Oxfords on his feet, and there was not in eyes or
on countenance the slightest sign that she saw or heard him. The
large young man flushed a vivid red.
Miss Benton was partly amused, partly provoked. The large young
man had been her vis-à-vis at dinner the day before and at
breakfast that morning. He had evinced a yearning for conversation
each time, but it had been diplomatically confined to salt and
other condiments, the weather and the scenery. Miss Benton had no
objection to young men in general, quite the contrary. But she did
not consider it quite the thing to countenance every amiable
stranger.
Within a few minutes the porter came for her things, and the
blast of the Limited's whistle warned her that it was time to leave
the train. Ten minutes later the Limited was a vanishing object
down an aisle slashed through a forest of great trees, and Miss
Estella Benton stood on the plank platform of Hopyard station.
Northward stretched a flat, unlovely vista of fire-blackened
stumps. Southward, along track and siding, ranged a single row of
buildings, a grocery store, a shanty with a huge sign proclaiming
that it was a bank, dwelling, hotel and blacksmith shop whence
arose the clang of hammered iron. A dirt road ran between town and
station, with hitching posts at which farmers' nags stood
dispiritedly in harness.
To the Westerner such spots are common enough; he sees them not
as fixtures, but as places in a stage of transformation. By every
side track and telegraph station on every transcontinental line
they spring up, centers of productive activity, growing into
orderly towns and finally attaining the dignity of cities. To her,
fresh from trim farmsteads and rural communities that began setting
their houses in order when Washington wintered at Valley Forge,
Hopyard stood forth sordid and unkempt. And as happens to many a
one in like case, a wave of sickening loneliness engulfed her, and
she eyed the speeding Limited as one eyes a departing friend.
"How could one live in a place like this?" she asked
herself.
But she had neither Slave of the Lamp at her beck, nor any Magic
Carpet to transport her elsewhere. At any rate, she reflected,
Hopyard was not her abiding-place. She hoped that her destination
would prove more inviting.
Beside the platform were ranged two touring cars. Three or four
of those who had alighted entered these. Their baggage was piled
over the hoods, buckled on the running boards. The driver of one
car approached her. "Hot Springs?" he inquired tersely.
She affirmed this, and he took her baggage, likewise her trunk
check when she asked how that article would be transported to the
lake. She had some idea of route and means, from her brother's
written instruction, but she thought he might have been there to
meet her. At least he would be at the Springs.
So she was whirled along a country road, jolted in the tonneau
between a fat man from Calgary and a rheumatic dame on her way to
take hot sulphur baths at St. Allwoods. She passed seedy
farmhouses, primitive in construction, and big barns with moss
plentifully clinging on roof and gable. The stretch of charred
stumps was left far behind, but in every field of grain and
vegetable and root great butts of fir and cedar rose amid the
crops. Her first definitely agreeable impression of this land,
which so far as she knew must be her home, was of those huge and
numerous stumps contending with crops for possession of the fields.
Agreeable, because it came to her forcibly that it must be a sturdy
breed of men and women, possessed of brawn and fortitude and high
courage, who made their homes here. Back in her country, once
beyond suburban areas, the farms lay like the squares of a chess
board, trim and orderly, tamely subdued to agriculture. Here, at
first hand, she saw how man attacked the forest and conquered it.
But the conquest was incomplete, for everywhere stood those
stubborn roots, six and eight and ten feet across, contending with
man for its primal heritage, the soil, perishing slowly as perish
the proud remnants of a conquered race.
Then the cleared land came to a stop against heavy timber. The
car whipped a curve and drove into what the fat man from Calgary
facetiously remarked upon as the tall uncut. Miss Benton sighted up
these noble columns to where a breeze droned in the tops, two
hundred feet above. Through a gap in the timber she saw mountains,
peaks that stood bold as the Rockies, capped with snow. For two
days she had been groping for a word to define, to sum up the
feeling which had grown upon her, had been growing upon her
steadily, as the amazing scroll of that four-day journey unrolled.
She found it now, a simple word, one of the simplest in our mother
tongue—bigness. Bigness in its most ample sense,—that
was the dominant note. Immensities of distance, vastness of rolling
plain, sheer bulk of mountain, rivers that one crossed, and after a
day's journey crossed again, still far from source or confluence.
And now this unending sweep of colossal trees!
At first she had been overpowered with a sense of insignificance
utterly foreign to her previous experience. But now she discovered
with an agreeable sensation of surprise she could vibrate to such a
keynote. And while she communed with this pleasant discovery the
car sped down a straight stretch and around a corner and stopped
short to unload sacks of mail at a weather-beaten yellow edifice,
its windows displaying indiscriminately Indian baskets, groceries,
and hardware. Northward opened a broad scope of lake level, girt
about with tremendous peaks whose lower slopes were banked with
thick forest.
Somewhere distant along that lake shore was to be her home. As
the car rolled over the four hundred yards between store and
white-and-green St. Allwoods, she wondered if Charlie would be
there to meet her. She was weary of seeing strange faces, of being
directed, of being hustled about.
But he was not there, and she recalled that he never had been
notable for punctuality. Five years is a long time. She expected to
find him changed—for the better, in certain directions. He
had promised to be there; but, in this respect, time evidently had
wrought no appreciable transformation.
She registered, was assigned a room, and ate luncheon to the
melancholy accompaniment of a three-man orchestra struggling vainly
with Bach in an alcove off the dining room. After that she began to
make inquiries. Neither clerk nor manager knew aught of Charlie
Benton. They were both in their first season there. They advised
her to ask the storekeeper.
"MacDougal will know," they were agreed. "He knows everybody
around here, and everything that goes on."
The storekeeper, a genial, round-bodied Scotchman, had the
information she desired.
"Charlie Benton?" said he. "No, he'll be at his camp up the
lake. He was in three or four days back. I mind now, he said he'd
be down Thursday; that's to-day. But he isn't here yet, or his
boat'd be by the wharf yonder."
"Are there any passenger boats that call there?" she asked.
MacDougal shook his head.
"Not reg'lar. There's a gas boat goes t' the head of the lake
now an' then. She's away now. Ye might hire a launch. Jack Fyfe's
camp tender's about to get under way. But ye wouldna care to go on
her, I'm thinkin'. She'll be loaded wi' lumberjacks—every man
drunk as a lord, most like. Maybe Benton'll be in before
night."
She went back to the hotel. But St. Allwoods, in its dual
capacity of health-and-pleasure resort, was a gilded shell, making
a brave outward show, but capitalizing chiefly lake, mountains, and
hot, mineral springs. Her room was a bare, cheerless place. She did
not want to sit and ponder. Too much real grief hovered in the
immediate background of her life. It is not always sufficient to be
young and alive. To sit still and think—that way lay tears
and despondency. So she went out and walked down the road and out
upon the wharf which jutted two hundred yards into the lake.
It stood deserted save for a lone fisherman on the outer end,
and an elderly couple that preceded her. Halfway out she passed a
slip beside which lay moored a heavily built, fifty-foot boat,
scarred with usage, a squat and powerful craft. Lakeward stretched
a smooth, unrippled surface. Overhead patches of white cloud
drifted lazily. Where the shadows from these lay, the lake spread
gray and lifeless. Where the afternoon sun rested, it touched the
water with gleams of gold and pale, delicate green. A white-winged
yacht lay offshore, her sails in slack folds. A lump of an island
lifted two miles beyond, all cliffs and little, wooded hills. And
the mountains surrounding in a giant ring seemed to shut the place
away from all the world. For sheer wild, rugged beauty, Roaring
Lake surpassed any spot she had ever seen. Its quiet majesty, its
air of unbroken peace soothed and comforted her, sick with hurry
and swift-footed events.
She stood for a time at the outer wharf end, mildly interested
when the fisherman drew up a two-pound trout, wondering a little at
her own subtle changes of mood. Her surrounding played upon her
like a virtuoso on his violin. And this was something that she did
not recall as a trait in her own character. She had never inclined
to the volatile—perhaps because until the motor accident
snuffed out her father's life she had never dealt in anything but
superficial emotions.
After a time she retraced her steps. Nearing the halfway slip,
she saw that a wagon from which goods were being unloaded blocked
the way. A dozen men were stringing in from the road, bearing
bundles and bags and rolls of blankets. They were big, burly men,
carrying themselves with a reckless swing, with trousers cut off
midway between knee and ankle so that they reached just below the
upper of their high-topped, heavy, laced boots. Two or three were
singing. All appeared unduly happy, talking loudly, with deep
laughter. One threw down his burden and executed a brief clog.
Splinters flew where the sharp calks bit into the wharf planking,
and his companions applauded.
It dawned upon Stella Benton that these might be Jack Fyfe's
drunken loggers, and she withdrew until the way should be clear,
vitally interested because her brother was a logging man, and
wondering if these were the human tools he used in his business, if
these were the sort of men with whom he associated. They were a
rough lot—and some were very drunk. With the manifestations
of liquor she had but the most shadowy acquaintance. But she would
have been little less than a fool not to comprehend this.
Then they began filing down the gangway to the boat's deck. One
slipped, and came near falling into the water, whereat his fellows
howled gleefully. Precariously they negotiated the slanting
passage. All but one: he sat him down at the slip-head on his
bundle and began a quavering chant. The teamster imperturbably
finished his unloading, two men meanwhile piling the goods
aboard.
The wagon backed out, and the way was clear, save for the logger
sitting on his blankets, wailing his lugubrious song. From below
his fellows urged him to come along. A bell clanged in the pilot
house. The exhaust of a gas engine began to sputter through the
boat's side. From her after deck a man hailed the logger sharply,
and when his call was unheeded, he ran lightly up the slip. A
short, squarely-built man he was, light on his feet as a dancing
master.
He spoke now with authority, impatiently.
"Hurry aboard, Mike; we're waiting."
The logger rose, waved his hand airily, and turned as if to
retreat down the wharf. The other caught him by the arm and spun
him face to the slip.
"Come on, Slater," he said evenly. "I have no time to fool
around."
The logger drew back his fist. He was a fairly big man. But if
he had in mind to deal a blow, it failed, for the other ducked and
caught him with both arms around the middle. He lifted the logger
clear of the wharf, hoisted him to the level of his breast, and
heaved him down the slip as one would throw a sack of bran.
The man's body bounced on the incline, rolled, slid, tumbled,
till at length he brought up against the boat's guard, and all that
saved him a ducking was the prompt extension of several stout arms,
which clutched and hauled him to the flush after deck. He sat on
his haunches, blinking. Then he laughed. So did the man at the top
of the slip and the lumberjacks clustered on the boat. Homeric
laughter, as at some surpassing jest. But the roar of him who had
taken that inglorious descent rose loudest of all, an explosive,
"Har—har—har!"
He clambered unsteadily to his feet, his mouth expanded in an
amiable grin.
"Hey, Jack," he shouted. "Maybe y' c'n throw m' blankets down
too, while y'r at it."
The man at the slip-head caught up the roll, poised it high, and
cast it from him with a quick twist of his body. The woolen missile
flew like a well-put shot and caught its owner fair in the breast,
tumbling him backwards on the deck—and the Homeric laughter
rose in double strength. Then the boat began to swing, and the man
ran down and leaped the widening space as she drew away from her
mooring.
Stella Benton watched the craft gather way, a trifle shocked,
her breath coming a little faster. The most deadly blows she had
ever seen struck were delivered in a more subtle, less virile mode,
a curl of the lip, an inflection of the voice. These were a
different order of beings. This, she sensed was man in a more
primitive aspect, man with the conventional bark stripped clean off
him. And she scarcely knew whether to be amused or frightened when
she reflected that among such her life would presently lie. Charlie
had written that she would find things and people a trifle rougher
than she was used to. She could well believe that. But—they
were picturesque ruffians.
Her interested gaze followed the camp tender as it swung around
the wharf-end, and so her roaming eyes were led to another craft
drawing near. This might be her brother's vessel. She went back to
the outer landing to see.
Two men manned this boat. As she ranged alongside the piles, one
stood forward, and the other aft with lines to make fast. She cast
a look at each. They were prototypes of the rude crew but now
departed, brown-faced, flannel-shirted, shod with calked boots,
unshaven for days, typical men of the woods. But as she turned to
go, the man forward and almost directly below her looked her full
in the face.
"Stell!"
She leaned over the rail.
"Charlie Benton—for Heaven's sake."
They stared at each other.
"Well," he laughed at last. "If it were not for your mouth and
eyes, Stell, I wouldn't have known you. Why, you're all grown
up."
He clambered to the wharf level and kissed her. The rough
stubble of his beard pricked her tender skin and she drew back.
"My word, Charlie, you certainly ought to shave," she observed
with sisterly frankness. "I didn't know you until you spoke. I'm
awfully glad to see you, but you do need some one to look
after you."
Benton laughed tolerantly.
"Perhaps. But, my dear girl, a fellow doesn't get anywhere on
his appearance in this country. When a fellow's bucking big timber,
he shucks off a lot of things he used to think were quite
essential. By Jove, you're a picture, Stell. If I hadn't been
expecting to see you, I wouldn't have known you."
"I doubt if I should have known you either," she returned
drily.
CHAPTER II
MR. ABBEY ARRIVES
Stella accompanied her brother to the store, where he gave an
order for sundry goods. Then they went to the hotel to see if her
trunks had arrived. Within a few yards of the fence which enclosed
the grounds of St. Allwoods a man hailed Benton, and drew him a few
steps aside. Stella walked slowly on, and presently her brother
joined her.
The baggage wagon had brought the trunks, and when she had paid
her bill, they were delivered at the outer wharf-end, where also
arrived at about the same time a miscellaneous assortment of
supplies from the store and a Japanese with her two handbags. So
far as Miss Estella Benton could see, she was about to embark on
the last stage of her journey.
"How soon will you start?" she inquired, when the last of the
stuff was stowed aboard the little steamer.
"Twenty minutes or so," Benton answered. "Say," he went on
casually, "have you got any money, Stell? I owe a fellow thirty
dollars, and I left the bank roll and my check book at camp."
Miss Benton drew the purse from her hand bag and gave it to him.
He pocketed it and went off down the wharf, with the brief
assurance that he would be gone only a minute or so.
The minute, however, lengthened to nearly an hour, and Sam Davis
had his blow-off valve hissing, and Stella Benton was casting
impatient glances shoreward before Charlie strolled leisurely
back.
"You needn't fire up quite so strong, Sam," he called down. "We
won't start for a couple of hours yet."
"Sufferin' Moses!" Davis poked his fiery thatch out from the
engine room. "I might 'a' known better'n to sweat over firin' up.
You generally manage to make about three false starts to one
get-away."
Benton laughed good-naturedly and turned away.
"Do you usually allow your men to address you in that
impertinent way?" Miss Benton desired to know.
Charlie looked blank for a second. Then he smiled, and linking
his arm affectionately in hers, drew her off along the wharf,
chuckling to himself.
"My dear girl," said he, "you'd better not let Sam Davis or any
of Sam's kind hear you pass remarks like that. Sam would say
exactly what he thought about such matters to his boss, or King
George, or to the first lady of the land, regardless. Sabe? We're
what you'll call primitive out here, yet. You want to forget that
master and man business, the servant proposition, and proper
respect, and all that rot. Outside the English colonies in one or
two big towns, that attitude doesn't go in B.C. People in this neck
of the woods stand pretty much on the same class footing, and
you'll get in bad and get me in bad if you don't remember that.
I've got ten loggers working for me in the woods. Whether they're
impertinent or profane cuts no figure so long as they handle the
job properly. They're men, you understand, not servants. None of
them would hesitate to tell me what he thinks about me or anything
I do. If I don't like it, I can fight him or fire him. They won't
stand for the sort of airs you're accustomed to. They have the
utmost respect for a woman, but a man is merely a two-legged male
human like themselves, whether he wears mackinaws or broadcloth,
has a barrel of money of none at all. This will seem odd to you at
first, but you'll get used to it. You'll find things rather
different out here."
"I suppose so," she agreed. "But it sounds queer. For instance,
if one of papa's clerks or the chauffeur had spoken like that, he'd
have been discharged on the spot."
"The logger's a different breed," Benton observed drily. "Or
perhaps only the same breed manifesting under different conditions.
He isn't servile. He doesn't have to be."
"Why the delay, though?" she reverted to the point. "I thought
you were all ready to go."
"I am," Charlie enlightened. "But while I was at the store just
now, Paul Abbey 'phoned from Vancouver to know if there was an
up-lake boat in. His people are big lumber guns here, and it will
accommodate him and won't hurt me to wait a couple of hours and
drop him off at their camp. I've got more or less business dealings
with them, and it doesn't hurt to be neighborly. He'd have to hire
a gas-boat otherwise. Besides, Paul's a pretty good head."
This, of course, being strictly her brother's business, Stella
forbore comment. She was weary of travel, tired with the tension of
eternally being shunted across distances, anxious to experience
once more that sense of restful finality which comes with a
journey's end. But, in a measure her movements were no longer
dependent upon her own volition.
They walked slowly along the broad roadway which bordered the
lake until they came to a branchy maple, and here they seated
themselves on the grassy turf in the shadow of the tree.
"Tell me about yourself," she said. "How do you like it here,
and how are you getting on? Your letters home were always chiefly
remarkable for their brevity."
"There isn't a great lot to tell," Benton responded. "I'm just
beginning to get on my feet. A raw, untried youngster has a lot to
learn and unlearn when he hits this tall timber. I've been out here
five years, and I'm just beginning to realize what I'm equal to and
what I'm not. I'm crawling over a hump now that would have been a
lot easier if the governor hadn't come to grief the way he did. He
was going to put in some money this fall. But I think I'll make it,
anyway, though it will keep me digging and figuring. I have a
contract for delivery of a million feet in September and another
contract that I could take if I could see my way clear to finance
the thing. I could clean up thirty thousand dollars net in two
years if I had more cash to work on. As it is, I have to go slow,
or I'd go broke. I'm holding two limits by the skin of my teeth.
But I've got one good one practically for an annual pittance. If I
make delivery on my contract according to schedule it's plain
sailing. That about sizes up my prospects, Sis."
"You speak a language I don't understand," she smiled. "What
does a million feet mean? And what's a limit?"
"A limit is one square mile—six hundred and forty acres
more or less—of merchantable timber land," he explained. "We
speak of timber as scaling so many board feet. A board foot is one
inch thick by twelve inches square. Sound fir timber is worth
around seven dollars per thousand board feet in the log, got out of
the woods, and boomed in the water ready to tow to the mills. The
first limit I got—from the government—will scale around
ten million feet. The other two are nearly as good. But I got them
from timber speculators, and it's costing me pretty high. They're a
good spec if I can hang on to them, though."
"It sounds big," she commented.
"It is big," Charlie declared, "if I could go at it
right. I've been trying ever since I got wise to this timber
business to make the governor see what a chance there is in it. He
was just getting properly impressed with the possibilities when the
speed bug got him. He could have trimmed a little here and there at
home and put the money to work. Ten thousand dollars would have
done the trick, given me a working outfit along with what I've got
that would have put us both on Easy Street. However, the poor old
chap didn't get around to it. I suppose, like lots of other
business men, when he stopped, everything ran down. According to
Lander's figures, there won't be a thing left when all accounts are
squared."
"Don't talk about it, Charlie," she begged. "It's too near, and
I was through it all."
"I would have been there too," Benton said. "But, as I told you,
I was out of reach of your wire, and by the time I got it, it was
all over. I couldn't have done any good, anyway. There's no use
mourning. One way and another we've all got to come to it some
day."
Stella looked out over the placid, shimmering surface of Roaring
Lake for a minute. Her grief was dimming with time and distance,
and she had all her own young life before her. She found herself
drifting from painful memories of her father's sudden death to a
consideration of things present and personal. She found herself
wondering critically if this strange, rude land would work as many
changes in her as were patent in this bronzed and burly
brother.
He had left home a slim, cocksure youngster, who had proved more
than a handful for his family before he was half through college,
which educational finishing process had come to an abrupt stop
before it was complete. He had been a problem that her father and
mother had discussed in guarded tones. Sending him West had been a
hopeful experiment, and in the West that abounding spirit which
manifested itself in one continual round of minor escapades
appeared to have found a natural outlet. She recalled that latterly
their father had taken to speaking of Charlie in accents of pride.
He was developing the one ambition that Benton senior could
thoroughly understand and properly appreciate, the desire to get
on, to grasp opportunities, to achieve material success, to make
money.
Just as her father, on the few occasions when he talked business
before her, spoke in a big way of big things as the desirable
ultimate, so now Charlie spoke, with plans and outlook to match his
speech. In her father's point of view, and in Charlie's now, a
man's personal life did not seem to matter in comparison with
getting on and making money. And it was with that personal side of
existence that Stella Benton was now chiefly concerned. She had
never been required to adjust herself to an existence that was
wholly taken up with getting on to the complete exclusion of
everything else. Her work had been to play. She could scarce
conceive of any one entirely excluding pleasure and diversion from
his or her life. She wondered if Charlie had done so. And if not,
what ameliorating circumstances, what social outlet, might be found
to offset, for her, continued existence in this isolated region of
towering woods. So far as her first impressions went, Roaring Lake
appeared to be mostly frequented by lumberjacks addicted to rude
speech and strong drink.
"Are there many people living around this lake?" she inquired.
"It is surely a beautiful spot. If we had this at home, there would
be a summer cottage on every hundred yards of shore."
"Be a long time before we get to that stage here," Benton
returned. "And scenery in B.C. is a drug on the market; we've got
Europe backed off the map for tourist attractions, if they only
knew it. No, about the only summer home in this locality is the
Abbey place at Cottonwood Point. They come up here every summer for
two or three months. Otherwise I don't know of any lilies of the
field, barring the hotel people, and they, being purely transient,
don't count. There's the Abbey-Monohan outfit with two big logging
camps, my outfit, Jack Fyfe's, some hand loggers on the east shore,
and the R.A.T. at the head of the lake. That's the
population—and Roaring Lake is forty-two miles long and eight
wide."
"Are there any nice girls around?" she asked.
Benton grinned widely.
"Girls?" said he. "Not so you could notice. Outside the Springs
and the hatchery over the way, there isn't a white woman on the
lake except Lefty Howe's wife,—Lefty's Jack Fyfe's
foreman,—and she's fat and past forty. I told you it was a
God-forsaken hole as far as society is concerned, Stell."
"I know," she said thoughtfully. "But one can scarcely realize
such a—such a social blankness, until one actually
experiences it. Anyway, I don't know but I'll appreciate utter
quiet for awhile. But what do you do with yourself when you're not
working?"
"There's seldom any such time," he answered. "I tell you,
Stella, I've got a big job on my hands. I've got a definite mark to
shoot at, and I'm going to make a bull's-eye in spite of hell and
high water. I have no time to play, and there's no place to play if
I had. I don't intend to muddle along making a pittance like a hand
logger. I want a stake; and then it'll be time to make a splurge in
a country where a man can get a run for his money."
"If that's the case," she observed, "I'm likely to be a handicap
to you, am I not?"
"Lord, no," he smiled. "I'll put you to work too, when you get
rested up from your trip. You stick with me, Sis, and you'll wear
diamonds."
She laughed with him at this, and leaving the shady maple they
walked up to the hotel, where Benton proposed that they get a canoe
and paddle to where Roaring River flowed out of the lake half a
mile westward, to kill the time that must elapse before the
three-thirty train.
The St. Allwoods' car was rolling out to Hopyard when they came
back. By the time Benton had turned the canoe over to the boathouse
man and reached the wharf, the horn of the returning machine
sounded down the road. They waited. The car came to a stop at the
abutting wharf. The driver handed two suitcases off the burdened
hood of his machine. From out the tonneau clambered a large,
smooth-faced young man. He wore an expansive smile in addition to a
blue serge suit, white Panama, and polished tan Oxfords, and he
bestowed a hearty greeting upon Charlie Benton. But his smile
suffered eclipse, and a faint flush rose in his round cheeks, when
his eyes fell upon Benton's sister.
CHAPTER III
HALFWAY POINT
Miss Benton's cool, impersonal manner seemed rather to heighten
the young man's embarrassment. Benton, apparently observing nothing
amiss, introduced them in an offhand fashion.
"Mr. Abbey—my sister."
Mr. Abbey bowed and murmured something that passed for
acknowledgment. The three turned up the wharf toward where Sam
Davis had once more got up steam. As they walked, Mr. Abbey's
habitual assurance returned, and he directed part of his genial
flow of conversation to Miss Benton. To Stella's inner amusement,
however, he did not make any reference to their having been fellow
travelers for a day and a half.
Presently they were embarked and under way. Charlie fixed a seat
for her on the after deck, and went forward to steer, whither he
was straightway joined by Paul Abbey. Miss Benton was as well
pleased to be alone. She was not sure she should approve of young
men who made such crude efforts to scrape acquaintance with women
on trains. She was accustomed to a certain amount of formality in
such matters. It might perhaps be laid to the "breezy Western
manner" of which she had heard, except that Paul Abbey did not
impress her as a Westerner. He seemed more like a type of young man
she had encountered frequently in her own circle. At any rate, she
was relieved when he did not remain beside her to emit polite
commonplaces. She was quite satisfied to sit by herself and look
over the panorama of woods and lake—and wonder more than a
little what Destiny had in store for her along those silent
shores.
The Springs fell far behind, became a few white spots against
the background of dusky green. Except for the ripples spread by
their wake, the water laid oily smooth. Now, a little past four in
the afternoon, she began to sense by comparison the great bulk of
the western mountains,—locally, the Chehalis Range,—for
the sun was dipping behind the ragged peaks already, and deep
shadows stole out from the shore to port. Beneath her feet the
screw throbbed, pulsing like an overdriven heart, and Sam Davis
poked his sweaty face now and then through a window to catch a
breath of cool air denied him in the small inferno where he stoked
the fire box.
The Chickamin cleared Echo Island, and a greater sweep of
lake opened out. Here the afternoon wind sprang up, shooting
gustily through a gap between the Springs and Hopyard and ruffling
the lake out of its noonday siesta. Ripples, chop, and a growing
swell followed each other with that marvellous rapidity common to
large bodies of fresh water. It broke the monotony of steady
cleaving through dead calm. Stella was a good sailor, and she
rather enjoyed it when the Chickamin began to lift and yaw
off before the following seas that ran up under her fantail
stern.
After about an hour's run, with the south wind beginning to whip
the crests of the short seas into white foam, the boat bore in to a
landing behind a low point. Here Abbey disembarked, after taking
the trouble to come aft and shake hands with polite farewell.
Standing on the float, hat in hand, he bowed his sleek blond head
to Stella.
"I hope you'll like Roaring Lake, Miss Benton," he said, as
Benton jingled the go-ahead bell. "I tried to persuade Charlie to
stop over awhile, so you could meet my mother and sister, but he's
in too big a hurry. Hope to have the pleasure of meeting you again
soon."
Miss Benton parried courteously, a little at a loss to fathom
this bland friendliness, and presently the widening space cut off
their talk. As the boat drew offshore, she saw two women in white
come down toward the float, meet Abbey, and turn back. And a little
farther out through an opening in the woods, she saw a white and
green bungalow, low and rambling, wide-verandahed, set on a hillock
three hundred yards back from shore. There was an encircling area
of smooth lawn, a place restfully inviting.
Watching that, seeing a figure or two moving about, she was
smitten with a recurrence of that poignant loneliness which had
assailed her fitfully in the last four days. And while the
Chickamin was still plowing the inshore waters on an even
keel, she walked the guard rail alongside and joined her brother in
the pilot house.
"Isn't that a pretty place back there in the woods?" she
remarked.
"Abbey's summer camp; spells money to me, that's all," Charlie
grumbled. "It's a toy for their women,—up-to-date cottage,
gardeners, tennis courts, afternoon tea on the lawn for the guests,
and all that. But the Abbey-Monohan bunch has the money to do what
they want to do. They've made it in timber, as I expect to make
mine. You didn't particularly want to stay over and get acquainted,
did you?"
"I? Of course not," she responded.
"Personally, I don't want to mix into their social game,"
Charlie drawled. "Or at least, I don't propose to make any
tentative advances. The women put on lots of side, they say. If
they want to hunt us up and cultivate you, all right. But I've got
too much to do to butt into society. Anyway, I didn't want to run
up against any critical females looking like I do right now."
Stella smiled.
"Under certain circumstances, appearances do count then, in this
country," she remarked. "Has your Mr. Abbey got a young and
be-yutiful sister?"
"He has, but that's got nothing to do with it," Charlie
retorted. "Paul's all right himself. But their gait isn't
mine—not yet. Here, you take the wheel a minute. I want to
smoke. I don't suppose you ever helmed a forty-footer, but you'll
never learn younger."
She took the wheel and Charlie stood by, directing her. In
twenty minutes they were out where the run of the sea from the
south had a fair sweep. The wind was whistling now. All the
roughened surface was spotted with whitecaps. The Chickamin
would hang on the crest of a wave and shoot forward like a racer,
her wheel humming, and again the roller would run out from under
her, and she would labor heavily in the trough.
It began to grow insufferably hot in the pilot house. The wind
drove with them, pressing the heat from the boiler and fire box
into the forward portion of the boat, where Stella stood at the
wheel. There were puffs of smoke when Davis opened the fire box to
ply it with fuel. All the sour smells that rose from an unclean
bilge eddied about them. The heat and the smell and the surging
motion began to nauseate Stella.
"I must get outside where I can breathe," she gasped, at length.
"It's suffocating. I don't see how you stand it."
"It does get stuffy in here when we run with the wind," Benton
admitted. "Cuts off our ventilation. I'm used to it. Crawl out the
window and sit on the forward deck. Don't try to get aft. You might
slip off, the way she's lurching."
Curled in the hollow of a faked-down hawser with the clean air
fanning her, Stella recovered herself. The giddiness left her. She
pitied Sam Davis back in that stinking hole beside the fire box.
But she supposed he, like her brother, was "used to it." Apparently
one could get used to anything, if she could judge by the amazing
change in Charlie.
Far ahead loomed a ridge running down to the lake shore and
cutting off in a bold promontory. That was Halfway Point, Charlie
had told her, and under its shadow lay his camp. Without any
previous knowledge of camps, she was approaching this one with less
eager anticipation than when she began her long journey. She began
to fear that it might be totally unlike anything she had been able
to imagine, disagreeably so. Charlie, she decided, had grown hard
and coarsened in the evolution of his ambition to get on, to make
his pile. She was but four years younger than he, and she had
always thought of herself as being older and wiser and steadier.
She had conceived the idea that her presence would have a good
influence on him, that they would pull together—now that
there were but the two of them. But four hours in his company had
dispelled that illusion. She had the wit to perceive that Charlie
Benton had emerged from the chrysalis stage, that he had the will
and the ability to mold his life after his elected fashion, and
that her coming was a relatively unimportant incident.
In due course the Chickamin bore in under Halfway Point,
opened out a sheltered bight where the watery commotion outside
raised but a faint ripple, and drew in alongside a float.
The girl swept lake shore, bay, and sloping forest with a
quickening eye. Here was no trim-painted cottage and velvet lawn.
In the waters beside and lining the beach floated innumerable logs,
confined by boomsticks, hundreds of trunks of fir, forty and sixty
feet long, four and six feet across the butt, timber enough, when
it had passed through the sawmills, to build four such towns as
Hopyard. Just back from the shore, amid stumps and littered
branches, rose the roofs of divers buildings. One was long and low.
Hard by it stood another of like type but of lesser dimension. Two
or three mere shanties lifted level with great stumps,—crude,
unpainted buildings. Smoke issued from the pipe of the larger, and
a white-aproned man stood in the doorway.
Somewhere in the screen of woods a whistle shrilled. Benton
looked at his watch.
"We made good time, in spite of the little roll," said he.
"That's the donkey blowing quitting time—six o'clock. Well,
come on up to the shack, Sis. Sam, you get a wheelbarrow and run
those trunks up after supper, will you?"
Away in the banked timber beyond the maples and alder which
Stella now saw masked the bank of a small stream flowing by the
cabins, a faint call rose, long-drawn:
"Tim-ber-r-r-r!"
They moved along a path beaten through fern and clawing
blackberry vine toward the camp, Benton carrying the two grips. A
loud, sharp crack split the stillness; then a mild swishing sound
arose. Hard on the heels of that followed a rending, tearing crash,
a thud that sent tremors through the solid earth under their feet.
The girl started.
"Falling gang dropped a big fir," Charlie laughed. "You'll get
used to that. You'll hear it a good many times a day here."
"Good Heavens, it sounded like the end of the world," she
said.
"Well, you can't fell a stick of timber two hundred feet high
and six or eight feet through without making a pretty considerable
noise," her brother remarked complacently. "I like that sound
myself. Every big tree that goes down means a bunch of money."
He led the way past the mess-house, from the doorway of which
the aproned cook eyed her with frank curiosity, hailing his
employer with nonchalant air, a cigarette resting in one corner of
his mouth. Benton opened the door of the second building. Stella
followed him in.
It had the saving grace of cleanliness—according to
logging-camp standards. But the bareness of it appalled her. There
was a rusty box heater, littered with cigar and cigarette stubs, a
desk fabricated of undressed boards, a homemade chair or two,
sundry boxes standing about. The sole concession to comfort was a
rug of cheap Axminster covering half the floor. The walls were
decorated chiefly with miscellaneous clothing suspended from nails,
a few maps and blue prints tacked up askew. Straight across from
the entering door another stood ajar, and she could see further
vistas of bare board wall, small, dusty window-panes, and a bed
whereon gray blankets were tumbled as they fell when a waking
sleeper cast them aside.
Benton crossed the room and threw open another door.
"Here's a nook I fixed up for you, Stella," he said briskly. "It
isn't very fancy, but it's the best I could do just now."
She followed him in silently. He set her two bags on the floor
and turned to go. Then some impulse moved him to turn back, and he
put both hands on her shoulders and kissed her gently.
"You're home, anyway," he said. "That's something, if it isn't
what you're used to. Try to overlook the crudities. We'll have
supper as soon as you feel like it."
He went out, closing the door behind him.
Miss Estella Benton stood in the middle of the room fighting
against a swift heart-sinking, a terrible depression that strove to
master her.
"Good Lord in Heaven," she muttered at last. "What a place to be
marooned in. It's—it's simply impossible."
Her gaze roved about the room. A square box, neither more nor
less, fourteen by fourteen feet of bare board wall, unpainted and
unpapered. There was an iron bed, a willow rocker, and a rude
closet for clothes in one corner. A duplicate of the
department-store bargain rug in the other room lay on the floor. On
an upturned box stood an enamel pitcher and a tin washbasin. That
was all.
She sat down on the bed and viewed it forlornly. A wave of
sickening rebellion against everything swept over her. To herself
she seemed as irrevocably alone as if she had been lost in the
depths of the dark timber that rose on every hand. And sitting
there she heard at length the voices of men. Looking out through a
window curtained with cheesecloth she saw her brother's logging
gang swing past, stout woodsmen all, big men, tall men,
short-bodied men with thick necks and shoulders, sunburned, all
grimy with the sweat of their labors, carrying themselves with a
free and reckless swing, the doubles in type of that roistering
crew she had seen embark on Jack Fyfe's boat.
In so far as she had taken note of those who labored with their
hands in the region of her birth, she had seen few like these. The
chauffeur, the footman, the street cleaner, the factory
workers—they were all different. They lacked
something,—perhaps nothing in the way of physical excellence;
but these men betrayed in every movement a subtle difference that
she could not define. Her nearest approximation and the first
attempt she made at analysis was that they looked like pirates.
They were bold men and strong; that was written in their faces and
the swing of them as they walked. And they served the very
excellent purpose of taking her mind off herself for the time
being.
She watched them cluster by a bench before the cookhouse, dabble
their faces and hands in washbasins, scrub themselves promiscuously
on towels, sometimes one at each end of a single piece of cloth,
hauling it back and forth in rude play.
All about that cookhouse dooryard spread a confusion of empty
tin cans, gaudily labeled, containers of corn and peas and
tomatoes. Dishwater and refuse, chips, scraps, all the refuse of
the camp was scattered there in unlovely array.
But that made no more than a passing impression upon her. She
was thinking, as she removed her hat and gloves, of what queer
angles come now and then to the human mind. She wondered why she
should be sufficiently interested in her brother's hired men to
drive off a compelling attack of the blues in consideration of them
as men. Nevertheless, she found herself unable to view them as she
had viewed, say, the clerks in her father's office.
She began to brush her hair and to wonder what sort of food
would be served for supper.