<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XXII </h2>
<p>Dripping from the bog-holes and lathered with mud, it was the mystery of
Breault's noiseless presence somewhere near him in the still night that
drew Peter continually deeper into the swamp.</p>
<p>Half a dozen times he caught the scent of him in a quiet air that seemed
only now and then to rise up in his face softly, as if stirred by
butterflies' wings. Always it came from ahead, and Peter's mind worked
swiftly to the decision that where Breault was there also would be Nada
and Jolly Roger. Yet he caught the scent of neither of these two, and that
puzzled him.</p>
<p>Many times he found himself at the edge of the black lip of water, but
never quite at the right time to see a shadow in its darkness, or hear the
sound of Breault's pole.</p>
<p>But in the swamp, as he went on, he saw nothing but shadow, and heard
weird and nameless sounds which made his blood creep, even though his
courage was now full-grown within him.</p>
<p>He was not frightened at the ugly sputter of the owls, as in the days of
old. Their throaty menace and snapping beaks did not stop him nor turn him
aside. The slashing scrape of claws in the bark of trees and the
occasional crackling of brush were matters of intimate knowledge, and he
gave but little attention to them in his eagerness to reach those who had
gone ahead of him. What troubled him, and filled his eyes with sudden red
glares, were the oily gurgles of the pitfalls which tried to suck him
down; the laughing madness of muck that held him as if living things were
in it, and which spluttered and coughed when he freed himself.</p>
<p>Half blinded at times, so that even the black shadows were blotted out, he
went on. And at last, coming again to the edge of the stream, he heard a
new kind of sound—the slow, steady dipping of Breault's pole.</p>
<p>He hurried on, finding harder ground under his feet, and came noiselessly
abreast of the man on his raft of cedar timbers. He could almost hear his
breathing. And very faintly he could see in the vast gloom a shadow—a
shadow that moved slowly against the background of a still deeper shadow
beyond.</p>
<p>But there was no scent of Nada or Jolly Roger, and whatever desire had
risen in him to make himself known was smothered by caution and suspicion.
After this he did not go ahead of Breault, but kept behind him or abreast
of him, within sound of the dipping pole. And every minute his heart
thumped expectantly, and he sniffed the new air for signs of those he most
desired to find.</p>
<p>Dawn was breaking in the sky when they came out of the swamp, and the
first flush of the sun was lighting up the east when Breault headed his
improvised craft for the sandbar upon which Nada and McKay had rested many
hours before.</p>
<p>Breault was tired, but his eyes lighted up when he saw the footprints in
the sand, and he chuckled—almost good humoredly. As a matter of fact
he was in a good humor. But one would not have reckoned it as such in
Breault. A hard man, the forests called him; a man with the hunting
instincts of the fox and the wolf and the merciless persistency of the
weazel—a man who lived his code to the last letter of the law,
without pity and without favoritism. At least so he was judged, and his
hard, narrow eyes, his thin lips and his cynically lined face seldom
betrayed the better thoughts within him, if he possessed any at all. In
the Service he was regarded as a humanly perfect mechanism, a bit of
machinery that never failed, the dreaded Nemesis to be set on the trail of
a wrong-doer when all others had failed.</p>
<p>But this morning, with every bone and muscle in him aching from his long
night of tedious exertion, the chuckle grew into a laugh as he looked upon
the telltale signs in the sand.</p>
<p>He stretched himself and his tired bones cracked.</p>
<p>Breault did not think aloud. But he was saying to himself.</p>
<p>"There, against that rock, Jolly Roger McKay sat There is the imprint of
only one person sitting. The girl was in his arms. Here are little holes
where her outstretched heels rested in the sand. She is wearing shoes and
not moccasins."</p>
<p>He grinned as he drew his service pack from the two-log cedar raft.</p>
<p>"Plenty of time now," he continued to think. "They are mine this time—sure.
They believe they have fooled me, and they haven't. That's fatal. Always."</p>
<p>Not infrequently, when entirely alone, Breault let a little part of
himself loose, as if freeing a prisoner from bondage for a short time. For
instance, he whistled. It was not an unpleasant whistle, but rather oddly
reminiscent of tender things he remembered away back somewhere; and as he
fried his bacon and steamed a handful of desiccated potatoes he hummed a
song, also rather pleasant to ears that were as closely attentive as
Peter's.</p>
<p>For Peter had crept up through a tangle of ground-scrub and lay not twenty
paces away, smelling of the bacon hungrily, and watching intently from his
concealment.</p>
<p>Peter knew the fox and the wolf, but he did not know Breault, and he did
not guess why the man's whistling grew a little louder, nor why his
humming voice grew stronger. But after a time, with his back and not his
face toward Peter, Breault called in the most natural and matter-of-fact
voice in the world,</p>
<p>"Come on, Peter. Breakfast is ready!"</p>
<p>Peter's jaws dropped in amazement. And as Breault turned toward him, his
thin face a-grin, and continued to invite him in a most companionable way,
he forgot his concealment entirely and stood up straight, ready either to
fight or fly.</p>
<p>Breault tossed him a dripping slice of bacon which he held in his hand. It
fell within a foot of Peter's nose, and Peter was ravenously hungry. The
delicious odor of it demoralized his senses and his caution. For a few
seconds he resisted, then thrust himself out toward it an inch at a time,
made a sudden grab, and swallowed it at one gulp.</p>
<p>Breault laughed outright, and with the first of the sun striking into his
face he did not look like an enemy to Peter.</p>
<p>A second slice of bacon followed the first, and then a third—until
Breault was frying another mess over the fire.</p>
<p>"That's partial payment for what you did up on the Barren," he was saying
inside himself. "If it hadn't been for you—"</p>
<p>He didn't even imagine the rest. Nor after that did he pay the slightest
attention to Peter. For Breault knew dogs possibly even better than he
knew men, and not by the smallest sign did he give Peter to understand
that he was interested in him at all. He washed his dishes, whistling and
humming, reloaded his pack on the raft, and once more began poling his way
downstream.</p>
<p>Peter, still in the edge of the scrub, was not only puzzled, but felt a
further sense of abandonment. After all, this man was not his enemy, and
he was leaving him as his master and mistress had left him. He whined. And
Breault was not out of sight when he trotted down to the sandbar, and
quickly found the scent of Nada and McKay. Purposely Breault had left a
lump of desiccated potato as big as his fist, and this Peter ate as
ravenously as he had eaten the bacon. Then, just as Breault knew he would
do, he began following the raft.</p>
<p>Breault did not hurry, and he did not rest. There was something almost
mechanically certain in his slow but steady progress, though he knew it
was possible for the canoe to outdistance him three to one. He was missing
nothing along the shore. Three times during the forenoon he saw where the
canoe had landed, and he chuckled each time, thinking of the old story of
the tortoise and the hare. He stopped for not more than two or three
minutes at each of these places, and was then on his way again.</p>
<p>Peter was fascinated by the unexcited persistency of the man's movement.
He followed it, watched it, and became more and more interested in the
unvarying monotony of it. There were the same up-and-down strokes of the
long pole, the slight swaying of the upstanding body, the same eddy behind
the cedar logs—and occasionally wisps of smoke floating behind when
the pursuer smoked his pipe. Not once did Peter see Breault turn his head
to look behind him. Yet Breault was seeing everything. Five times that
morning he saw Peter, but not once did he make a sign or call to him.</p>
<p>He drove his raft ashore at twelve o'clock to prepare his dinner, and
after he had built a fire, and his cooking things were scattered about, he
straightened himself up and called in that same matter-of-fact way, as if
expecting an immediate response,</p>
<p>"Here, Peter!—Peter!—Come in, Boy!"</p>
<p>And Peter came. Fighting against the last instinct that held him back he
first thrust his head out from the brush and looked at Breault. Breault
paid no attention to him for a few moments, but sliced his bacon. When the
perfume of the cooking meat reached Peter's nose he edged himself a little
nearer, and with a whimpering sigh flattened himself on his belly.</p>
<p>Breault heard the sigh, and grunted a reply,</p>
<p>"Hungry again, Peter?" he inquired casually.</p>
<p>He had saved for this moment a piece of cooked bacon held over from
breakfast, and tearing this with his fingers he tossed the strips to
Peter. As he did this he was thinking to himself,</p>
<p>"Why am I doing this? I don't want the dog. He will be a nuisance. He will
eat my grub. But it's fair. I'm paying a debt. He helped to save me up on
the Barren."</p>
<p>Thus did Breault, the man without mercy, the Nemesis, briefly analyze the
matter. And he cooked five pieces of bacon for Peter.</p>
<p>During the rest of that day Peter made no effort to keep himself in
concealment as he followed Breault and his raft. This afternoon Breault
shot a fawn, and when he made camp that night both he and Peter feasted on
fresh meat. This broke down the last of Peter's suspicion, and Breault
laid a hand on his head. He did not particularly like the feel of the
hand, but he tolerated it, and Breault grunted aloud, with a note of
commendation in his hard voice.</p>
<p>"A one-man dog—never anything else."</p>
<p>Half a dozen times during the day Peter had found the scent of Nada and
Roger where they had come ashore, and from this night on he associated
Breault as a necessary agent in his search for them. And with Breault he
went, instinctively guessing the truth.</p>
<p>The next day they found where Nada and McKay had abandoned the canoe, and
had struck south through the wilderness. This pleased Breault, who was
tired of his poling. This third night there was a new moon, and something
about it stirred in Peter an impulse to run ahead and overtake those he
was seeking. But a still strong instinct held him to Breault.</p>
<p>Tonight Breault slept like a dead man on his cedar boughs. He was up and
had a fire built an hour before dawn, and with the first gray streaking of
day was on the trail again. He made no further effort to follow signs of
the pursued, for that was a hopeless task. But he knew how McKay was
heading, and he traveled swiftly, figuring to cover twice the distance
that Nada might travel in the same given time. It was three o'clock in the
afternoon when he came to a great ridge, and on its highest pinnacle he
stopped.</p>
<p>Peter had grown restless again, and a little more suspicious of Breault.
He was not afraid of him, but all that day he had found no scent of Nada
or Jolly Roger, and slowly the conviction was impinging itself upon him
that he should seek for himself in the wilderness.</p>
<p>Breault saw this restlessness, and understood it.</p>
<p>"I'll keep my eye on the dog," he thought. "He has a nose, and an uncanny
sixth sense, and I haven't either. He will bear watching. I believe McKay
and the girl cannot be far away. Possibly they have traveled more slowly
than I thought, and haven't passed this ridge; or it may be they are down
there, in the plain. If so I should catch sign of smoke or fire—in
time."</p>
<p>For an hour he kept watch over the plain through his binoculars, seeking
for a wisp of smoke that might rise at any time over the treetops. He did
not lose sight of Peter, questing out in widening circles below him. And
then, quite unexpectedly, something happened. In the edge of a tiny meadow
an eighth of a mile away Peter was acting strangely. He was nosing the
ground, gulping the wind, twisting eagerly back and forth. Then he set
out, steadily and with unmistakable decision, south and west.</p>
<p>In a flash Breault was on his feet, had caught up his pack, and was
running for the meadow. And there he found something in the velvety
softness of the earth which brought a grim smile to his thin lips as he,
too, set out south and west.</p>
<p>The scent he had found, hours old, drew Peter on until in the edge of the
dusk of evening it brought him to a foot-worn trail leading to the
Hudson's Bay Company post many miles south. In this path, beaten by the
feet of generations of forest dwellers, the hard heels of McKay's boots
had made their imprint, and after this the scent was clearer under Peter's
nose. But with forest-bred caution he still traveled slowly, though his
blood was burning like a pitch-fed fire in his veins. Almost as swiftly
followed Breault behind him.</p>
<p>Again came darkness, and then the moon, brighter than last night, lighting
his way between the two walls of the forest.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />