Part 6 (1/2)

”Unless what?” asked Hedin eagerly. ”I thought, at first, that he believed me guilty of stealing the coat,” he went on when Murchison didn't answer. ”I know now that he didn't, but when I asked him the reason for my arrest, he only laughed and said that it was all part of the game.” Then the younger man's voice dropped, and Murchison noted that the look of eagerness had faded from his face. ”As to the hiring of Wentworth,” continued Hedin, ”that is another matter.”

The factor rose slowly and, crossing to the door, opened it and hastily closed it again as a swirl of fine snow-powder enveloped him. Hedin caught the m.u.f.fled roar of the wind, and in the draught of cold air that swept the room, the big swinging lamp flared smokily. Murchison returned to his chair and filled his pipe. ”How's John's daughter comin' along?” he asked between puffs of blue smoke.

”Why, Miss McNabb is very well, I believe,” answered Hedin, a bit awkwardly. ”You were right about that storm,” Hedin hastened to change the subject. ”I'm mighty glad we made G.o.ds Lake to-day, or we would have been held up for the Lord knows how long.”

Murchison suppressed a smile, and hunched his chair a bit nearer the stove. ”When all's said an' done then, the case stands about like this. This engineer will be along in a few days to begin work locatin'

the power dam, an' lookin' up more pulpwood. John believes that Wentworth will let the options expire, an' then swing the stuff over to this man Orcutt an' his crowd--an he's sent you up to block the game.”

Hedin nodded. ”That's it.”

”You're my clerk, an' your name's Sven Larson--that's a good Scandinavian name--an' you don't know nothin' about pulp-wood, nor options. I guess it would be best if we could put him up right here.

We could be watchin' him all the while without seemin' to.”

”I wonder when Wentworth will be here?” speculated Hedin.

”There's no tellin'. It's accordin' to the outfit he packs an' the guide he's got. They'll have to camp for the storm, an' the snow will slow them up one-half. The storm will last three days or four, an'

after that, a day, mebbe a week. Anyways, 'twill give ye time to learn the duties of a factor's clerk, which is a thing the Company has never furnished at G.o.ds Lake, but if John McNabb foots the bill, they'll not worry. 'Twould be better an' ye could play the dolt--not an eediot, or an addlepate--but just a dull fellow, slow of wit, an' knowin' nought except of fur.”

Hedin laughed. ”That won't bother me in the least.”

Murchison shook his head. ”'Twill not be so easy as ye think. Askin'

foolish questions here an' there, forgettin' to do things ye're told to do, ponderin' deep over simple matters, an' above all ye're to neither laugh nor take offense when I berate ye for a dullard. Ye get the idea--your knowledge of fur is your only excuse for livin'?”

”I get it,” smiled Hedin.

Murchison studied the younger man intently. ”This Wentworth--how well did ye know him? Or, rather, how well did he know you?”

”You are wondering whether he will recognize me?”

The factor nodded. ”Yes, I would not have known ye, for as I remember ye wore a mustache, an' were smooth of chin an' jaw, an' of course, ye wore city clothes. But one who had known ye well wouldn't be so easy fooled.”

”He won't recognize me. We have met only a few times. But even if he had known me much better I wouldn't be afraid, because when I left Terrace City dressed in these togs, and carrying a lumberjacks' turkey on my back, I stopped into a cigar store and inquired the way to the station. The clerk who has seen me every day for years pointed out the way without a flicker of recognition in his eyes--and I didn't have this stubby beard then either.”

Murchison seemed satisfied, and after showing his new clerk to his bed, he returned to the stove and knocked the ash from his pipe. ”John is canny,” he grinned. ”As canny in the handlin' of women, as of men.

He'll have the son-in-law he wants, an' careful he'll be that he's the man of the la.s.s's own choosin'.”

XIV

On the day after the big storm old Missinabbee returned to the southward, and the following day Wentworth arrived at the post, cursing his guide, and the storm, and the snow that lay deep in the forest.

The half-breed refused to stop over and rest, but accepted his pay and turned his dogs on the back-trail. And as Murchison accepted McNabb's letter of introduction from Wentworth's hand in the door of the post trading room, his eyes followed the retreating form of the guide. For he had caught a malevolent gleam of hate that flashed from the narrowed black eyes as the man had accepted his pay.

”Ye have not seen the last of yon,” he said, turning to Wentworth with a nod of his head toward the breed. ”Alex Thumb is counted a bad man in the North. I would not rest so easy, an' he was camped on my trail.”

Wentworth scowled. ”Worthless devil! Kicked on my bringing my trunk.

Wanted me to transfer my stuff into duffle bags and carry a pack to ease up on his dogs; and then to top it off with, he wasn't going to let me ride on the sled. But I showed him who was boss. I hired the outfit and believe me, I rode whenever I felt like it. He may have you fellows up here bluffed, but not me.”