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Catharine Of The "Crow’s Nest"
by
“Shoes,” said the foreman decidedly. “That snow’ll be above the middle of the biggest horse in the outfit.”
So they set forth on their tramp up the slopes, peering right and left as they went for any indication of the absent woman. Wingate’s old grief was knocking at his heart once more. A woman lost in the appalling vastness of this great Western land was entering into his life again. It took them a full hour to go that mile, although both were experts on the shoes, but as they reached the rim of the canyon they were rewarded by seeing a thin blue streak of smoke curling up from her lodge “chimney.” Wingate sat down in the snows weakly. The relief had unmanned him.
“I didn’t know how much I cared,” he said, “until I knew she was safe. She looks at me as my mother used to; her eyes are like mother’s, and I loved my mother.”
It was a simple, direct speech, but Brown caught its pathos.
“She’s a good woman,” he blurted out, as they trudged along towards the shack. They knocked on the door. There was no reply. Then just as Wingate suggested forcing it in case she were ill and lying helpless within, a long, low call from the edge of the canyon startled them. They turned and had not followed the direction from which the sound came more than a few yards when they met her coming towards them on snowshoes; in her arms she bore a few faggots, and her face, though smileless, was very welcoming.
She opened the door, bidding them enter. It was quite warm inside, and the air of simple comfort derived from crude benches, tables and shelves, assured them that she had not suffered. Near the fire was drawn a rough home-built couch, and on it lay in heaped disorder a pile of gray blankets. As the two men warmed their hands at the grateful blaze, the blankets stirred. Then a small hand crept out and a small arm tossed the covers a little aside.
“Catharine,” exclaimed Wingate, “have you a child here?”
“Yes,” she said simply.
“How long is it that you have had it here?” he demanded.
“Since before I work at your camp,” she replied.
“Whew!” said the foreman, “I now understand why she came home nights.”
“To think I never guessed it!” murmured Wingate. Then to Catharine: “Why didn’t you bring it into camp and keep it there day and night with you, instead of taking these dangerous tramps night and morning?”
“It is a girl child,” she answered.
“Well what of it?” he asked impatiently.
“Your camp no place for girl child,” she replied, looking directly at him. “Your men they rough, they get whisky sometimes. They fight. They speak bad words, what you call swear. I not want her hear that. I not want her see whisky man.”
“Oh, Brown!” said Wingate, turning to his companion. “What a reproach! What a reproach! Here our gang is–the vanguard of the highest civilization, but unfit for association with a little Indian child!”
Brown stood speechless, although in his rough, honest mind he was going over a list of those very “swears” she objected to, but they were mentally directed at the whole outfit of his ruffianly construction gang. He was silently swearing at them for their own shortcomings in that very thing.
The child on the couch stirred again. This time the firelight fell full across the little arm. Wingate stared at it, then his eyes widened. He looked at the woman, then back at the bare arm. It was the arm of a white child.
“Catharine, was your husband white?” he asked, in a voice that betrayed anxiety.
“I got no husban’,” she replied, somewhat defiantly.
“Then–” he began, but his voice faltered.
She came and stood between him and the couch.
Something of the look of a she-panther came into her face, her figure, her attitude. Her eyes lost their mournfulness and blazed a black-red at him. Her whole body seemed ready to spring.