<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER X </h2>
<p>North and west, in the direction of Yellow Bird's people, went Jolly Roger
and Peter after that night. They traveled slowly and cautiously, and with
each day Peter came to understand more clearly there was some reason why
they must be constantly on their guard. His master, he noticed, was
thrillingly attentive whenever a sound came to their ears—perhaps
the cracking of a twig, a mysterious movement of brush, or the tread of a
cloven hoof. And instinctively he came to know they were evading Man. He
remembered vividly their escape from Cassidy and their quiet hiding for
many days in the mass of sun-baked rocks which Jolly Roger had called the
Stew-Kettle. The same vigilance seemed to be a part of his master's
movements now. He did not laugh, or sing, or whistle, or talk loudly. He
built fires so small that at first Peter was absorbed in an almost
scientific analysis of them; and instead of shooting game which could have
been easily secured he set little snares in the evening, and caught fish
in the streams. At night they always slept half a mile or more from the
place where they had built their tiny supper-fire. And during these hours
of sleep Peter was ready to rouse himself at the slightest sound of
movement near them. Scarcely a night passed that his low growl of warning
did not bring Jolly Roger out of his slumber, a hand on his gun, and his
eyes and ears wide open.</p>
<p>Whether he would have used the gun had the red-coated police suddenly
appeared, McKay had not quite assured himself. Day after day the same old
fight went on within him. He analyzed his situation from every point of
view, and always—no matter how he went about it—eventually
found himself face to face with the same definite fact. If the law
succeeded in catching Him it would not trouble itself to punish him for
stealing back the Treaty Money, or for holding up Government mails, or for
any of his other misdemeanors. It would hang him for the murder of Jed
Hawkins. And the minions of the law would laugh at the truth, even if he
told it—which he never would. More than once his imaginative genius
had drawn up a picture of that impossible happening. For it was a truth so
inconceivable that he found the absurdity of it a grimly humorous thing.
Even Nada believed he had killed her scoundrelly foster-father. Yet it was
she—herself—who had killed him! And it was Nada whom the law
would hang, if the truth was known—and believed.</p>
<p>Frequently he went back over the scenes of that tragic night at Cragg's
Ridge when all the happiness in the world seemed to be offering itself to
him—the night when Nada was to go with him to the Missioner's, to
become his wife, And then—the dark trail—the disheveled girl
staggering to him through the starlight, and her sobbing story of how Jed
Hawkins had tried to drag her through the forest to Mooney's cabin, and
how—at last—she had saved herself by striking him down with a
stick which she had caught up out of the darkness. Would the police
believe HIM—an outlaw—if he told the rest of the story?—how
he had gone back to give Jed Hawkins the beating of his life, and had
found him dead in the trail, where Nada had struck him down? Would they
believe him if, in a moment of cowardice, he told them that to protect the
girl he loved he had fastened the responsibility of the crime upon
himself? No, they would not. He had made the evidence too complete. The
world would call him a lying yellow-back if he betrayed what had actually
happened on the trail between Cragg's Ridge and Mooney's cabin.</p>
<p>And this, after all, was the one remaining bit of happiness in Jolly
Roger's heart, the knowledge that he had made the evidence utterly
complete, and that Nada would never know, and the world would never know—the
truth. His love for the blue-eyed girl-woman who had given her heart and
her soul into his keeping, even when she knew he was an outlaw, was an
undying thing, like his love for the mother of years ago. "It will be easy
to die for her," he told Peter, and this, in the end, was what he knew he
was going to do. Thought of the inevitable did not make him afraid. He was
determined to keep his freedom and his life as long as he could, but he
was fatalistic enough, and sufficiently acquainted with the Royal
Northwest Mounted Police, to know what the ultimate of the thing would be.
And yet, with tragedy behind him, and a still grimmer tragedy ahead, the
soul of Jolly Roger was not dead or in utter darkness. In it, waking and
sleeping, he enshrined the girl who had been willing to give up all other
things in the world for him, who had pleaded with him in the last hour of
storm down on the edge of civilization that she be given the privilege of
accompanying him wherever his fate might lead. That he was an outlaw had
not destroyed her faith in him. That he had killed a man—a man unfit
to live—had only drawn her arms more closely about him, and had made
her more completely a part of him. And a thousand times the maddening
thought possessed Jolly Roger—was he wrong, and not right, in
refusing to accept the love and companionship which she had begged him to
accept, in spite of all that had happened and all that might happen?</p>
<p>Day by day he slowly won for himself, and at last, as they traveled in the
direction of Yellow Bird's country, he crushed the final doubt that
oppressed him, and knew that he was right. In his selfishness he had not
shackled her to an outlaw. He had left her free. Life and hope and other
happiness were ahead of her. He had not destroyed her, and this thought
would strengthen him and leave something of gladness in his heart, even in
that gray dawn when the law would compel him to make his final sacrifice.</p>
<p>It is a strange peace which follows grief, a secret happiness no other
soul but one can understand. Out of it excitement and passion have been
burned, and it is then the Great God of things comes more closely into the
possession of his own. And now, as they went westward and north toward the
Wollaston Lake country, this peace possessed Jolly Roger. It mellowed his
world. It was half an ache, half a steady and undying pain, but it drew
Life nearer to him than he had ever known it before. His love for the sun
and the sky, for the trees and flowers and all growing things of the earth
was more worship of the divine than a love for physical things, and each
day he felt it drawing more closely about him in its comradeship,
whispering to him of its might, and of its power to care for him in the
darkest hours of stress that might come.</p>
<p>He did not travel fast after he had reached the decision to go to Yellow
Bird's people. And he tried to imagine, a great deal of the time, that
Nada was with him. He succeeded in a way that bewildered Peter, for quite
frequently the man talked to someone who was not there.</p>
<p>The slowness and caution with which they traveled developed Peter's mental
faculties with marvelous swiftness. His master, free of egoism and
prejudice, had placed him on a plane of intimate equality, and Peter
struggled each day to live up a little more to the responsibility of this
intimacy and confidence. Instinct, together with human training, taught
him woodcraft until in many ways he was more clever than his master. And
along with this Jolly Roger slowly but surely impressed upon him the
difference between wanton slaughter and necessary killing.</p>
<p>"Everything that's got a breath of life must kill—up to a certain
point," Jolly Roger explained to him, repeating the lesson over and over.
"And that isn't wrong, Peter. The sin is in killing when you don't have
to. See that tree over there, with a vine as big as my wrist winding
around it, like a snake? Well, that vine is choking the life out of the
tree, and in time the tree will die. But the vine is doing just what God
A'mighty meant it to do. It needs a tree to live on. But I'm going to cut
the vine, because I think more of the tree than I do the vine. That's MY
privilege—following my conscience. And we're eating young partridges
tonight, because we had to have something to keep us alive. It's the
necessity of the thing that counts, Peter. Think you can understand that?"</p>
<p>It was pretty hard for Peter at first, but he was observant, and his mind
worked quickly. The crime of destroying birdlings in their nest, or on the
ground, was impressed upon him. He began to understand there was a certain
humiliating shame attached to an attack upon a creature weaker than
himself, unless there was a reason for it. He looked chiefly to his master
for decisions in the matter. Snowshoe rabbits, young and half grown, were
very tame in this month of August, and ordinarily he would have destroyed
many of them in a day's travel. But unless Jolly Roger gave him a signal,
or he was hungry, he would pass a snowshoe unconcernedly. This phase of
Peter's development interested Jolly Roger greatly. The outlaw's
philosophy had not been punctured by the egotistical "I am the only
reasoning being" arguments of narrow-gauged nature scientists. He believed
that Peter possessed not only a brain and super-instinct, but also a very
positive reasoning power which he was helping to develop. And the process
was one that fascinated him. When he was not sleeping, or traveling, or
teaching Peter he was usually reading the wonderful little red volumes of
history which he had purloined from the mail sledge up near the Barren
Lands. He knew their contents nearly by heart. His favorites were the
life-stories of Napoleon, Margaret of Anjou, and Peter the Great, and
always when he compared his own troubles with the difficulties and
tragedies over which these people had triumphed he felt a new courage and
inspiration, and faced the world with better cheer. If Nature was his God
and Bible, and Nada his Angel, these finger-worn little books written by a
man half a century dead were voices out of the past urging him on to his
best. Their pages were filled with the vivid lessons of sacrifice, of
courage and achievement, of loyalty, honor and dishonor—and of the
crashing tragedy which comes always with the last supreme egoism and
arrogance of man. He marked the dividing lines, and applied them to
himself. And he told Peter of his conclusions. He felt a consuming
tenderness for the glorious Margaret of Anjou, and his heart thrilled one
day when a voice seemed to whisper to him out of the printed page that
Nada was another Margaret—only more wonderful because she was not a
princess and a queen.</p>
<p>"The only difference," he explained to Peter, "is that Margaret sacrificed
and fought and died for a king, and our Nada is willing to do all that for
a poor beggar of an outlaw. Which makes Margaret a second-rater compared
with Nada," he added. "For Margaret wanted a kingdom along with her
husband, and Nada would take—just you and me. And that's where we're
pulling some Peter the Great stuff," he tried to laugh. "We won't let her
do it!"</p>
<p>And so they went on, day after day, toward the Wollaston waterways—the
country of Yellow Bird and her people.</p>
<p>It was early September when they crossed the Geikie and struck up the
western shore of Wollaston Lake. The first golden tints were ripening in
the canoe-birch leaves, and the tremulous whisper of autumn was in the
rustle of the aspen trees. The poplars were yellowing, the ash were blood
red with fruit, and in cool, dank thickets wild currants were glossy black
and lusciously ripe. It was the season which Jolly Roger loved most of
all, and it was the beginning of Peter's first September. The days were
still hot, but at night there was a bracing something in the air that
stirred the blood, and Peter found a sharp, new note in the voices of the
wild. The wolf howled again in the middle of the night. The loon forgot
his love-sickness, and screamed raucous defiance at the moon. The big
snowshoes were no longer tame, but wary and alert, and the owls seemed to
slink deeper into darkness and watch with more cunning. And Jolly Roger
knew the human masters of the wilderness were returning from the Posts to
their cabins and trap-lines, and he advanced with still greater caution.
And as he went, watching for smoke and listening for sound, he began to
reflect upon the many changes which five years might have produced among
Yellow Bird's people. Possibly other misfortunes had come, other winters
of hunger and pestilence, scattering and destroying the tribe. It might
even be that Yellow Bird was dead.</p>
<p>For three days he followed slowly the ragged shore of Wollaston Lake, and
foreboding of evil was oppressing him when he came upon the fish-racks of
the Indians. They had been abandoned for many days, for black bear tracks
fairly inundated the place, and Peter saw two of the bears—fat and
unafraid—nosing along the shore where the fish offal had been
thrown.</p>
<p>It was the next day, in the hour before sunset, that Jolly Roger and Peter
came out on the edge of a shelving beach where Indian children were
playing in the white sand. Among these children, playing and laughing with
them, was a woman. She was tall and slim, with a skirt of soft buckskin
that came only a little below her knees, and two shining black braids
which tossed like velvety ropes when she ran. And she was running when
they first saw her—running away from them, pursued by the children;
and then she twisted suddenly, and came toward them, until with a startled
cry she stopped almost within the reach of Jolly Roger's hands. Peter was
watching. He saw the half frightened look in her face, then the slow
widening of her dark eyes, and the quick intake of her breath. And in that
moment Jolly Roger cried out a name.</p>
<p>"Yellow Bird!"</p>
<p>He went to her slowly, wondering if it could be possible the years had
touched Yellow Bird so lightly; and Yellow Bird reached out her hands to
him, her face flaming up with sudden happiness, and Peter wondered what it
was all about as he cautiously eyed the half dozen brown-faced little
Indian children who had now gathered quietly about them. In another moment
there was an interruption. A girl came through the fringe of willows
behind them. It was as if another Yellow Bird had come to puzzle Peter—the
same slim, graceful little body, the same shining eyes, and yet she was
half a dozen years younger than Nada. For the first time Peter was looking
at Sun Cloud, the daughter of Yellow Bird. And in that moment he loved
her, just as something gave him confidence and faith in the starry-eyed
woman whose hands were in his master's. Then Yellow Bird called, and the
girl went to her mother, and Jolly Roger hugged her in his arms and kissed
her on the scarlet mouth she turned up to him. Then they hurried along the
shore toward the fishing camp, the children racing ahead to tell the news,
led by Sun Cloud—with Peter running at her heels.</p>
<p>Never had Peter heard anything from a man's throat like the two yells that
came from Slim Buck, Yellow Bird's husband and chief of the tribe, after
he had greeted Jolly Roger McKay. It was a note harking back to the old
war trails of the Crees, and what followed it that night was most exciting
to Peter. Big fires were built of white driftwood, and there was singing
and dancing, and a great deal of laughter and eating, and the interminable
howling of half a hundred Siwash dogs. Peter did not like the dogs, but he
did no fighting because his love for Sun Cloud kept him close to the touch
of her little brown hand.</p>
<p>That night, in the glow of the big fire outside of Slim Buck's tepee,
Jolly Roger's heart thrilled with a pleasure which it had not known for a
long time. He loved to look at Yellow Bird. Five years had not changed
her. Her eyes were starry bright. Her teeth were like milk. The color
still came and went in her brown cheeks, even as it did in Sun Cloud's.
All of which, in this heart of a wilderness, meant that she had been happy
and prosperous. And he also loved to look at Sun Cloud, who possessed all
of that rare wildflower beauty sometimes given to the northern Crees. And
it did him good to look at Slim Buck. He was a splendid mate, and a royal
father, and Jolly Roger found himself strangely happy in their happiness.
In the eyes of men and women and little children he saw that happiness all
about him. For three winters there had been splendid trapping, Slim Buck
told him, and this season they had caught and dried enough fish to carry
them through the following winter, even if black days should come. His
people were rich. They had many warm blankets, and good clothes, and the
best of tepees and guns and sledges, and several treasures besides. Two of
these Yellow Bird and her husband disclosed to Jolly Roger this first
night. One of them was a sewing machine, and the other—a phonograph!
And Jolly Roger listened to "Mother Machree" and "The Rosary" that night
as he sat by Wollaston Lake with six hundred miles of wilderness between
him and Cragg's Ridge.</p>
<p>Later, when the camp slept, Yellow Bird and Slim Buck and Jolly Roger
still sat beside the red embers of their fire, and Jolly Roger told of
what had happened down at the edge of civilization. It was what his heart
needed, and he left out none of the details. Slim Buck was listening, but
Jolly Roger knew he was talking straight at Yellow Bird, and that her warm
heart was full of understanding. Softly, in that low Cree voice which is
the sweetest of all voices, she asked him many questions about Nada, and
gently her slim fingers caressed the tress of Nada's hair which he let her
take in her hands. And after a long time, she said.</p>
<p>"I have given her a name. She is Oo-Mee, the Pigeon."</p>
<p>Slim Buck started at the strange note in her voice.</p>
<p>"The Pigeon," he repeated,</p>
<p>"Yes, Oo-Mee, the Pigeon," Yellow Bird nodded. She was not looking at
them. In the firelight her eyes were glowing pools. Her body had grown a
little tense. Without asking Jolly Roger's permission she placed the tress
of Nada's hair in her bosom. "Oo-Mee, the Pigeon," she said again, looking
far away. "That is her name, because the Pigeon flies fast and straight
and true. Over forests and lakes and worlds the Pigeon flies. It is
tireless. It is swift. It always—flies home."</p>
<p>Slim Buck rose quietly to his feet.</p>
<p>"Come," he whispered, looking at Jolly Roger,</p>
<p>Yellow Bird did not look at them or speak to them, and Slim Buck—with
his hand on Jolly Roger's arm—pulled him gently away. In his eyes
was a little something of fear, and yet along with it a sublime faith.</p>
<p>"Her spirit will be with Oo-Mee, the Pigeon, tonight," he said in a voice
struck with awe. "It will go to this place which you have described, and
it will live in the body of the girl, and through Yellow Bird it will tell
you tomorrow what has happened, and what is going to happen."</p>
<p>In the edge of the shore-willows Jolly Roger stood for a time watching
Yellow Bird as she sat under the stars, motionless as a figure graven out
of stone. He felt a curious tingling at his heart, something stirring
uneasily in his breast, and he stood alone even after Slim Buck had
stretched himself out in the soft sand to sleep. He was not superstitious.
Yet it was equally a part of his philosophy and his creed to believe in
the overwhelming power of the mind. "If you have faith enough, and think
hard enough, you can think anything until it comes true," he had told
himself more than once. And he knew Yellow Bird possessed that illimitable
faith, and that behind her divination lay generations and centuries of an
unbreakable certainty in the power of mind over matter. He realized his
own limitations, but a mysterious voice in the still night seemed
whispering to him that in the crude wisdom of Yellow Bird's brain lay the
secret to strange achievement, and that on this night her mind might
perform for him what he, in his greater wisdom, would call a miracle. He
had seen things like that happen. And he sat down in the sand, sleepless,
and with Peter at his feet waited for Yellow Bird to stir.</p>
<p>He could see the dull shimmer of starlight in her hair, but the rest of
her was a shadow that gave no sign of life. The camp was asleep. Even the
dogs were buried in their wallows of sand, and the last red spark of the
fires had died out. The hour passed, and another hour followed, and the
lids of Jolly Roger's eyes grew heavier as the fading stars seemed to be
sinking deeper into infinity. At last he slept, with his back leaning
against a sand-dune the children had made. He dreamed, and was flying
through the air with Yellow Bird. She was traveling swift and straight,
like an arrow, and he had difficulty in keeping up with her, and at last
he cried out for her to wait—that he could go no farther. The cry
roused him. He opened his eyes, and found cool, gray dawn in the sky.
Peter, alert, was muzzling his hand. Slim Buck lay in the sand, still
asleep. There was no stir in the camp. And then, with a sudden catch in
his breath, he looked toward Yellow Bird's tepee.</p>
<p>Yellow Bird still sat in the sand. Through the hours of fading starlight
and coming dawn she had not moved. Slowly McKay rose to his feet. When he
came to her, making no sound, she looked up. The shimmer of glistening dew
was in her hair. Her long lashes were wet with it. Her face was very pale,
and her eyes so large and dark that for a moment they startled him. She
was tired. Exhaustion was in her slim, limp body.</p>
<p>A sigh came from her lips, and her shoulders swayed a little.</p>
<p>"Sit down, Neekewa," she whispered, drawing the ropes of her hair about
her as if she were cold.</p>
<p>Then she drew a slim hand over her eyes, and shivered.</p>
<p>"It is well, Neekewa," she spoke softly. "I have gone through the clouds
to where lives Oo-Mee, the Pigeon. I found her crying in a trail. I
whispered to her and happiness came, and that happiness is going to live—for
Neekewa and The Pigeon. It cannot die. It cannot be killed. The Red Coated
men of the Great White Father will never destroy it. You will live. She
will live. You will meet again—in happiness. And happiness will
follow ever after. That much I learned, Neekewa. In happiness—you
will meet again."</p>
<p>"Where? When?" whispered Jolly Roger, his heart beating with sudden
swiftness.</p>
<p>Again Yellow Bird passed her hand over her eyes, and as she held it there
for a moment she bowed her head until Jolly Roger could see only her
dew-wet hair and she said,</p>
<p>"In the Country Beyond, Neekewa."</p>
<p>Her eyes were looking at him again, big, dark and filled with mystery.</p>
<p>"And where is this country, Yellow Bird?" he asked, a strange chill
driving the warmth out of his heart. "You mean—up there?" And he
pointed to the gray sky above them.</p>
<p>"No, it is happiness to come in life, not in death," said Yellow Bird
slowly. "It is not beyond the stars. It is—"</p>
<p>He waited, leaning toward her.</p>
<p>"In the Country Beyond," she repeated with a tired little droop of her
head. "And where that is I do not know, Neekewa. I could not pass beyond
the great white cloud that shut me out. But it is—somewhere, I will
find it. And then I will tell you—and The Pigeon."</p>
<p>She stood up, and swayed in the gray light, like one worn out by hard
travel. Then she passed into the tepee, and Jolly Roger heard her fall on
her blanket-bed.</p>
<p>And still stranger whisperings filled his heart as he faced the east,
where the first red blush of day drove back the star-mists of dawn. He
heard a step in the soft sand, and Slim Buck stood beside him. And he
asked.</p>
<p>"Did you ever hear of the Country Beyond?" Slim Buck shook his head, and
both looked in silence toward the rising sun.</p>
<p>Peter was glad when the camp roused itself out of sleep with waking
voices, and laughter, and the building of fires. He waited eagerly for Sun
Cloud. At last she came out of Yellow Bird's tepee, rubbing her eyes in
the face of the glow in the east, and then her white teeth flashed a smile
of welcome at him. Together they ran down to the edge of the lake, and
Peter wagged his tail while Sun Cloud went out knee-deep and scrubbed her
pretty face with handfuls of the cool water. It was a happy day for him.
He was different from the Indian dogs, and Sun Cloud and her playmates
made much of him. But never, even in their most exciting play, did he
entirely lose track of his master.</p>
<p>Jolly Roger, to an extent, forgot Peter. He tried to deaden within him the
impulses which Yellow Bird's conjuring had roused. He tried to see in them
a menace and a danger, and he repeated to himself the folly of placing
credence in Yellow Bird's "medicine." But his efforts were futile, and he
was honest enough to admit it. The uneasiness was in his breast. A new
hope was rising up. And with that hope were fear and suspense, for deep in
him was growing stronger the conviction that what Yellow Bird would tell
him would be true. He noted the calm and dignified stiffness with which
Slim Buck greeted the day. The young chief passed quietly among his
people. A word traveled in whispers, voices and footsteps were muffled and
before the sun was an hour high there was no tepee standing but one on
that white strip of beach. And the one tepee was Yellow Bird's,</p>
<p>Not until the camp was gone, leaving her alone, did Yellow Bird come out
into the day. She saw the food placed at her tepee door. She saw the empty
places where the homes of her people had stood, and in the wet sand of the
beach the marks of their missing canoes. Then she turned her pale face and
tired eyes to the sun, and unbraided her hair so that it streamed
glistening all about her and covered the white sand when she sat down
again in front of the smoke-darkened canvas that had become her conjurer's
house.</p>
<p>Two miles up the beach Slim Buck's people made another camp. But Slim Buck
and Jolly Roger remained in the cover of a wooded headland only half a
mile from Yellow Bird. They saw her when she came out. They watched for an
hour after she sat down in the sand. And then Slim Buck grunted, and with
a gesture of his hands said they would go. Jolly Roger protested. It was
not safe for Yellow Bird to remain entirely beyond their protection. There
were bears prowling about. And human beasts occasionally found their way
through the wilderness. But Slim Buck's face was like a bronze carving in
its faith and pride.</p>
<p>"Yellow Bird only goes with the good spirits," he assured Jolly Roger.
"She does not do witchcraft with the bad. And no harm can come while the
good spirits are with her. It is thus she has brought us happiness and
prosperity since the days of the famine, Neekewa!"</p>
<p>He spoke these words in Cree, and McKay answered him in Cree as they
turned in the direction of the camp. Half way, Sun Cloud came to meet
them, with Peter at her side. She put a brown little hand in Jolly
Roger's. It was quite new and pleasant to be kissed as Jolly Roger had
kissed her, and she held up her mouth to him again. Then she ran ahead,
with Peter yipping foolishly and happily at her moccasined heels.</p>
<p>And Jolly Roger said,</p>
<p>"I wish I was your brother, Slim Buck, and Nada was Yellow Bird's sister—and
that I had many like her," and his eyes followed Sun Cloud with hungry
yearning.</p>
<p>And as he said these words, Yellow Bird sat with bowed head and closed
eyes, with the soft tress of Nada's hair in her hands. It was the physical
union between them, and all that day, and the night that followed, Yellow
Bird held it in her hand or against her breast as she struggled to send
out the soul that was in her on its mission to Oo-Mee the Pigeon. In
darkness she buried the food that was left her, and stamped on it with her
feet. The sacrifice of her body had begun, and for two days thereafter
Jolly Roger and Slim Buck saw no movement of life about the lone tepee in
the sand.</p>
<p>But the third morning they saw the smoke of a little greenwood fire rising
straight up from in front of it.</p>
<p>Slim Buck drew in a deep breath. It was the signal fire.</p>
<p>"She knows," he said, pointing for Jolly Roger to go. "She is calling
you!"</p>
<p>The tenseness was gone from the bronze muscles of his face. He was lonely
without Yellow Bird, and the signal fire meant she would be with him again
soon. Jolly Roger walked swiftly over the white beach. Again he tried to
tell himself what folly it all was, and that he was answering the
signal-fire only to humor Yellow Bird and Slim Buck. But words, even
spoken half aloud, did not quiet the eager beating of his heart.</p>
<p>Not until he was very near did Yellow Bird come out of the tepee. And it
was then Jolly Roger stopped short, a gasp on his lips. She was changed.
Her radiant hair was still down, polished smooth; but her face was whiter
than he had ever seen it, and drawn and pinched almost as in the days of
the famine. For two days and two nights she had taken no food, and for two
days and two nights she had not slept. But there was triumph in her big,
wide-open eyes, and Jolly Roger felt something strange rising up in his
breast.</p>
<p>Yellow Bird held out her hands toward him.</p>
<p>"We have been together, The Pigeon and I," she said. "We have slept in
each other's arms, and the warmth of her head has lain against my breast.
I have learned the secrets, Neekewa—all but one. The spirits will
not tell me where lies the Country Beyond. But it is not up there—beyond
the stars. It is not in death, but in life you will find it. That they
have told me. And you must not go back to where The Pigeon lives, for you
will find black desolation there—but always you must keep on and on,
seeking for the Country Beyond. You will find it. And there also you will
find The Pigeon—and happiness. You cannot fail, Neekewa, yet my
heart stings me that I cannot tell you where that strange country is. But
when I came to it gold and silver clouds shut it in, and I could see
nothing, and yet out of it came the singing of birds and the promise of
sweet voices that it shall be found—if you seek faithfully, Neekewa.
I am glad."</p>
<p>Each word that she spoke in her soft and tremulous Cree was a new message
of hope in the empty heart of Jolly Roger McKay. The world might laugh.
Men might tap their heads and smile. His own voice might argue and taunt.
But deep in his heart he believed.</p>
<p>Something of the radiance of the new day came into his face, even as it
was returning into Yellow Bird's. He looked about him—east, west,
north and south—upon the sunlit glory of water and earth, and
suddenly he reached out his arms.</p>
<p>"I'll find it, Yellow Bird," he cried. "I'll find this place you call the
Country Beyond! And when I do—"</p>
<p>He turned and took one of Yellow Bird's slim hands in both his own.</p>
<p>"And when I do, we'll come back to you, Yellow Bird," he said.</p>
<p>And like a cavalier of old he touched his lips gently to the palm of
Yellow Bird's little brown hand.</p>
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