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Two Christmases
by
At twenty below zero a slight increase in the calories consumed or even in the excess of alcohol over the normal two per cent of spruce beer leaves little trace on hardy folk; and when on the third morning, McCrea and his bride fared forth behind their splendid dog-team, every guest was gathered at the starting-point to “whoop up” the departing couple.
“‘T is early I’ll be starting in t’ morning, Nancy, for it’s nigh a fortnight since I tailed my traps, and there were good signs, too, by t’ boiling brooks,” said Malcolm the first evening they arrived home. “A fox following t’ landwash from t’ rattle must surely take t’ path there, for t’ cliff fair shoulders him off t’ land, and t’ ice isn’t fast more’n a foot or so from t’ bluff. ‘T would be a pity to lose a good skin, and us just starting in housekeeping.”
“What’s right’s right, Malcolm,” answered his wife, pouting just perceptibly. “Us must end our honeymoon with the journey down. I’ll not be lonely, I reckon, getting t’ house to rights.” And she laughed gayly as she noticed the results of Malcolm’s sincere but unique attempts at furnishing.
“It’ll be a ration of pork I’ll be needing boiled, and a bun or two for my nonny-bag. I can cover t’ path in two days so be t’ going’s good; but there’s nothing like being prepared.”
“Get a few more splits, then, boy,” she replied, “and I’ll be cutting t’ pork t’ while.” For she knew that Malcolm’s estimate of the supply necessary for a possible delay was not the preparedness which would satisfy her ideas.
Days are short in November in the North, and the moon was still up to see Malcolm picking his way along the unmade trail which led to the spot where the sea ice joined the “ballicaters” or heaped-up shore ice. In the late fall this is the happy hunting-ground of foxes, for a much-needed dinner is often to be picked up in the shape of some enfeebled auk or other sea-bird, while even a dead shark or smaller fish may be discovered.
This was only a brief fall hunt. Malcolm had some fifty traps over ten miles of country, all of which he would take up the following month when the sea ice froze on permanently to the shore, re-tailing them along his real fur-path up the Grand River along the bank of which he had no less than three small shacks some thirty miles apart. Here he made his long winter hunt for sables, otters, and lynxes, using nearly three hundred traps.
It was with keen expectation and brisk step that he now strode along over the open; only the unwritten law of silence for a trapper on his path prevented his whistling as he went. When passing through the long belt of woods which marks the edge of the river delta, he found numerous windfalls blocking his narrow trail; but, keyed up as he was, he managed to get by them without so much as rustling a twig. “I’m fending for two now,” he said to himself, and the very thought was sweet, lending zest to the matching of his capacities against those of the wild.
There was nothing in his first two traps. He hadn’t expected anything. They were only a sort of outliers in case something went wrong with those in the sure places. But now he was nearing the Narrows, and already his fence running from the steep bluff to the river edge was visible. But there was no fox in number three. The trap had not been sprung. The bait was as he had left it. “Maybe there’ll be more to t’ eastward,” he thought, “though there were signs on this side of t’ river.” And, resetting the trap, he plodded along farther on his round.
Midday came. He had passed no less than fifteen of his best traps, and not only had no fox been found, but not one trap was sprung or one bait taken.