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PAGE 4

Shon Mcgann’s Tobogan Ride
by [?]

But, no.

There was a tilt in the glacier, and the gold-pan, suddenly swirling, again swung to the outer edge, and shot over.

As if hurled from a catapult, the Irishman was ejected from the white monster’s back. He fell on a wide shelf of ice, covered with light snow, through which he was tunnelled, and dropped on another ledge below, near the path by which he and his companions had ascended. “Shied from the finish, by God!” said Jo Gordineer. “‘Le pauvre Shon!'” added Pretty Pierre.

The Honourable was making his way down, his brain haunted by the words, “He’ll never go back to Farcalladen more.”

But Jo was right.

For Shon McGann was alive. He lay breathless, helpless, for a moment; then he sat up and scanned his lacerated fingers: he looked up the path by which he had come; he looked down the path he seemed destined to go; he started to scratch his head, but paused in the act, by reason of his fingers.

Then he said: “It’s my mother wouldn’t know me from a can of cold meat if I hadn’t stopped at this station; but wurrawurra, what a car it was to come in!” He examined his tattered clothes and bare elbows; then he unbuckled the gold-pan, and no easy task was it with his ragged fingers. “‘Twas not for deep minin’ I brought ye,” he said to the pan, “nor for scrapin’ the clothes from me back.”

Just then the Honourable came up. “Shon, my man… alive, thank God! How is it with you?”

“I’m hardly worth the lookin’ at. I wouldn’t turn my back to ye for a ransom.”

“It’s enough that you’re here at all.”

“Ah, ‘voila!’ this Irishman!” said Pretty Pierre, as his light fingers touched Shon’s bruised arm gently. This from Pretty Pierre!

There was that in the voice which went to Shon’s heart. Who could have guessed that this outlaw of the North would ever show a sign of sympathy or friendship for anybody? But it goes to prove that you can never be exact in your estimate of character. Jo Gordineer only said jestingly: “Say, now, what are you doing, Shon, bringing us down here, when we might be well into the Valley by this time?”

“That in your face and the hair aff your head,” said Shon; “it’s little you know a tobogan ride when you see one. I’ll take my share of the grog, by the same token.”

The Honourable uncorked his flask. Shon threw back his head with a laugh.

“For it’s rest when the gallop is over, me men!
And it’s here’s to the lads that have ridden their last;
And it’s here’s–“

But Shon had fainted with the flask in his hand and this snatch of a song on his lips.

They reached shelter that night. Had it not been for the accident, they would have got to their destination in the Valley; but here they were twelve miles from it. Whether this was fortunate or unfortunate may be seen later. Comfortably bestowed in this mountain tavern, after they had toasted and eaten their venison and lit their pipes, they drew about the fire.

Besides the four, there was a figure that lay sleeping in a corner on a pile of pine branches, wrapped in a bearskin robe. Whoever it was slept soundly.

“And what was it like–the gold-pan flyer–the tobogan ride, Shon?” remarked Jo Gordineer.

“What was it like?–what was it like”? replied Shon. “Sure, I couldn’t see what it was like for the stars that were hittin’ me in the eyes. There wasn’t any world at all. I was ridin’ on a streak of lightnin’, and nivir a rubber for the wheels; and my fingers makin’ stripes of blood on the snow; and now the stars that were hittin’ me were white, and thin they were red, and sometimes blue–“

“The Stars and Stripes,” inconsiderately remarked Jo Gordineer.

“And there wasn’t any beginning to things, nor any end of them; and whin I struck the snow and cut down the core of it like a cat through a glass, I was willin’ to say with the Prophet of Ireland–“