The Huntress. Footner Hulbert

The Huntress - Footner Hulbert


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like that, she'd naturally pick a man like Big Jack or Shand. No use storing up trouble for yourself. Put it out of mind. Look the other way. Harden yourself."

      Young Joe swung his heavy shoulders around the shack. Seeing Bela alone, he could scarcely credit his good fortune. He approached her, grinning and fawning in his extreme desire to please.

      "Hello! You're an early bird," he said.

      Bela looked at him in her most inscrutable way.

      "How!" she said, offering him her hand according to the etiquette of the country.

      Joe fondled it clumsily. "Say, the sight of you is good for sore eyes!" he cried, leering into her face. "Hanged if you ain't better looking than the sun-rise!"

      Bela determinedly freed her hand. "Foolish talk!" she said loftily. "Wake the ot'er men and let us eat."

      "Aw, don't be in such a rush," pleaded Joe. "I want to talk to you. I won't likely get another chance."

      "What you want say?" she asked. "More foolishness, I think."

      "Aw, give a fellow a chance," begged Joe. "Be decent to me."

      "Well, say it," she commanded.

      Joe's feeling was genuine enough. The conqueror of the sex found himself at a loss for words.

      "The – the sight of you kind of ties a man's tongue," he stammered. "I can't say it right. You're certainly a wonder! I never thought there was anything like you up here. I could stop here all day just taking you in!"

      "I couldn't," said Bela coolly. "I too 'ongry. Wake the ot'er men and go wash."

      Joe stared at her, scowling, trying to discover if he was being made game of.

      "Ah," he growled, "you might give me a chance to make good."

      "I will cook breakfast," said Bela. "I bring some nice whitefish."

      "To the deuce with breakfast!" cried Joe. "I spoke you fair. You're only trying to put me off!"

      "If you don't wake the men," said Bela coolly, "I will."

      Her eyes were as clear as the lake waters. Joe's fell before them. He went sullenly back and shouted in the door of the shack.

      CHAPTER VII

      THE SUITORS

      The day started well, with Big Jack, Shand, and Joe all on their good behaviour. But it was too good to last. Watching Bela's graceful movements before the fire, and eating the delicious food she put before them, the same thoughts passed through each man's mind.

      What a treasure to enrich the cabin of a lonely pioneer! What would hard work and discouragements matter if a man had that to welcome him home at the end of the day? How could a man endure to live alone, having known such a woman? How could he hope to succeed without her help?

      Each seeing the same thoughts revealed in the faces of his companions, realized that two men stood between him and his desire, and the baleful fires of jealousy were lighted again.

      Each afraid one of the others might steal a march on him, watched his mates like a detective. The consequence was that hating each other, they nevertheless stuck together like burs.

      They followed Bela round in company like dogs contending for scraps, ready upon no occasion at all to bare their teeth and snarl at each other.

      Bela, perceiving her power, and being only a human woman, naturally abused it a little. Thus to see white men, whom all her life she had revered, cringing for her favour, went to her head a little.

      She made them fetch and carry for her like women, she would have said. Thus the situation was reversed from that of her first appearance in the shack.

      "Bring me sewing," she said. "I not lak do not'ing."

      A variety of damaged garments was pressed upon her.

      "I sew one for each man," she said.

      Having made Husky comfortable, she took her work out into the sunshine. Jack, Shand, and Joe lounged in front of her smoking, watching her covertly; each privately making up his mind to secure that charming sewing-machine for his own household, whatever the cost.

      "Ain't you got not'ing to do?" asked Bela coolly.

      "This is a holiday," replied Jack.

      "The stable is dirty," she persisted.

      "That's Shand's job," said Joe.

      "Well, I ain't goin' to leave you two here," growled Shand. "There's plenty of other work, if it comes to that."

      "All go clean the stable," commanded Bela. "I lak a clean stable."

      "Now go cut plenty wood, so I can cook good," she ordered when they came back. "I want pine or birch. No poplar."

      With Sam the case was a little different. When Bela addressed him it was with perhaps a heightened arrogance, but for the most part he managed to keep out of her way.

      Not that he was indifferent; far from it. This new aspect of her exasperated him mightily. "She needs a master," he thought. The idea of taming her was delicious, seductive. "I could do it," he told himself, sneering at the obsequiousness of Big Jack et al.

      Meanwhile he attended strictly to his own duties.

      Sam, when he chose, had command of a face as wooden as Bela's. More than once Bela, when she was unobserved, flashed a hurt and angry look at his indifferent back in the distance. For several hours during the afternoon Sam disappeared altogether. During his absence the other men had an uneasy time at Bela's hands.

      With all her haughty airs she did not relax any of her care of Husky. The others envied him his wound. Hour by hour he was visibly growing better. The fever had left him. He had got over his fear of Bela.

      Now, by a twisted course of reasoning, characteristic of him, he adopted a proprietary air toward her. She was his, he seemed to say, because forsooth, he had been shot by her. This, it need not be said, was highly offensive to the other men.

      In the middle of the afternoon, Bela desiring a pail of water, Jack and Shand fell into a wrangle over who should get it. The fact that each felt he was making a fool of himself did not lessen the bitterness of the dispute.

      Joe attempted to take advantage of it by sneaking out of the door with another pail. He was intercepted, and the argument took on a three-cornered aspect. Another endless, futile jawing-match resulted. Each was restrained from striking a blow by the knowledge that the other two would instantly combine against him.

      Bela finally got the water herself, and ordering the three of them outside, bolted the door after them. The last sound they heard was Husky's triumphant laugh from the bed, whereupon they patched up their differences, and joined in cursing him, and expressing the hope he might yet die of his wound.

      They were not allowed inside again until Sam returned and the supper was started. Their tempers had not improved any, and the situation grew steadily worse. Throughout the meal a sullen silence prevailed.

      Bela maintained the air of a haughty mistress of an unruly school. They all deferred to her uneasily, except Sam, who kept himself strictly to himself. His face was as blank of expression as a wax-work.

      As soon as Bela finished eating she rose.

      "I go now," she said coolly. "Come back to-morrow."

      Three of the faces fell absurdly. Sam did not look up. A tiny flash in Bela's dark eyes showed that she observed the difference. She moved toward the door. Involuntarily Young Joe started to rise.

      "Sit down," snarled Jack and Shand simultaneously.

      Bela went.

      Left to themselves, none of the men were disposed to talk except Husky. Like sick men generally, his fibres were relaxed, and his tongue loosened.

      "I feel fine to-night," he announced at large.

      "A hell of a lot we care!" muttered Joe.

      "It's great to feel your strength coming back," Husky went on, unabashed. "She's a wonderful fine nurse. Takes care of me like a baby. I'd trust myself to


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