登陆注册
38536900000075

第75章

The Big Horn flowed by a tortuous and rapid course through rough country into the Goat. The trail was bad and, in places, led over high mountain shoulders in a way heartbreaking to packers. For this reason, all who knew the ways and moods of a canoe chose the water in going up the canyon. True enough, there were a number of lift-outs and two rather long portages that made the going up pretty stiff, but if a man had skill with the paddle and knew the water he might avoid these by running the rapids. Men from the Ottawa or from some other north Canadian river, like all true canoemen, hated to portage and loved to take the risk of the rapids. Though the current was fairly rapid, going upstream was not so difficult as one might imagine; that is, if the canoeman happened to know how to take advantage of the eddies, how to sneak up the quiet water by the banks, how to put the nose of his canoe into the swift water and to hold her so that, as Duprez, the keeper of the stopping place at the Landing, said, "She would walk on de rapide toute suite lak one oiseau."

There was a bad outbreak of typhoid at the upper camp on the Big Horn, and Dr. Bailey had been urgently summoned. The upper camp lay on the other side of the Big Horn Lake, twenty miles or more from the steel. The lake itself was six miles long by canoe, but by trail it was at least twice that. Hence, though there would be some stiff paddling in the trip, the doctor did not hesitate in his choice of route. He knew his canoe and loved every rib and thwart in her. He had learned also the woodsman's trick of going light.

A blanket, a tea pail which held his grub, consisting of some Hudson Bay hard tack, a hunk of bacon, and a little tea and sugar, and his drinking cup constituted his baggage, so that he could make the portages in a single carry. Many a mile had he gone, thus equipped, both by trail and by canoe, in his journeyings up and down these valleys, doing his work for the sick and wounded in the railroad, lumber, and tie camps, and more recently in the new-planted mining towns.

It was a great day for his trip. A stiff breeze upstream would help him in his fight with the current and coming down it would be glorious. The sun was just appearing over the row of pines that topped the low mountain range to the east when he packed his kit and blankets under the gunwale in the bow and slipped his canoe into the water. He was about to step in when a voice he had not heard for many days arrested him.

"Hello, Duprez! Did you see the preacher pass this way yesterday?

He was-- By the livin' jumpin' Jemima! Barney!"

It was Ben Fallows, gazing with open mouth on the doctor. With two swift steps the doctor was at his side. He grasped Ben by the arm and walked him swiftly apart.

"Ben," he said, in a low, stern voice, "not a word. I once did you a good turn?"

Ben nodded, still too astonished for speech.

"Then listen to what I tell you. No one must know what you know now."

"But--but Miss Margaret and ****--" gasped Ben.

"They don't know," interrupted the doctor, "and must not know.

Will you promise me this, Ben?"

"By Jove, Barney! I don't--I don't think--"

"Do you hear me, Ben? Do you promise?"

"Yes, by the livin'--"

"Good-bye, Ben; I think I can depend on you for the sake of old days." The doctor's smile set Ben's head in a whirl.

"You bet, Bar--Doctor!" he cried.

"Good old boy, Ben. Good-bye, lad."

He stepped into the canoe and pushed her off into the eddy just above the falls by which the Big Horn plunged into the Goat.

"Bo' voyage, M'sieu le Docteur!" sang out Duprez. "You cache hup de preechere. He pass on de riviere las' night."

"What? Who?"

"De preechere, Boyle. He's pass on wid canoe las' night. He's camp on de Beeg Fall, s'pose."

Barney held his canoe steady for a moment. "Went up last night, did he?"

"Oui. Tom Martin on de Beeg Horn camp he's go ver' seeck. He send for M'sieu Boyle."

"Did he go up alone?"

"Oui. He's not want nobody. Non. He's good man on de canoe."

It was an awkward situation. There was a very good chance that he should fall in with his brother somewhere on the trip, and that, at all costs, he was determined to avoid. For a minute or more he sat holding his canoe, calculating time and distances. At length he came to a resolve. He must visit the camp on the Big Horn, and he trusted his own ingenuity to avoid the meeting he dreaded.

"All right, Duprez! bon jour."

"Bo' jou' an' bon voyage. Gare a vous on de Longue Rapide. You mak' de portage hon dat rapide, n'est ce pas?"

"No, sir. No portage for me, Duprez. I'll run her."

"Prenez garde, M'sieu le Docteur," answered Duprez, shrugging his shoulders. "Maudit! Dat's ver' fas' water!"

"Don't worry about me," cried the doctor. "Just watch me take this little riffle."

"Bien!" cried Duprez, as the doctor slipped his canoe into the eddy and, with a smooth, noiseless stroke, sent her up toward the point where the stream broke into a riffle at the head of the rapid which led to the falls below. It may be that the doctor was putting a little extra weight on his paddle or that he did not exercise that unsleeping vigilance which the successful handling of the canoe demands, but whatever the cause, when the swift water struck the canoe, in spite of all his strength and skill, he soon found himself almost in midstream and going down the rapids.

"Mon Dieu!" cried Duprez, dancing in his excitement from one foot to the other. "A droit! a droit! Non! Don' try for go hup! Come out on de heddy!"

The doctor did not hear him, but, realizing the hopelessness of the frontal attack upon the rapid, he steered his canoe toward the eddy and gradually edged her into the quiet water.

"You come ver' close on de fall, mon gar'!" cried Duprez, as the doctor paddled slowly up the edge past him. "You bes' pass on de portage. Not many mans go hup on de rapids comme ca."

"All right, Duprez. I hit her too hard, that's all."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 从炮灰到王者

    从炮灰到王者

    为族人甘为炮灰,遭遣弃不忘初心。组神威名震大陆,施仁政一统江山。时也!命也!胸有韬略,却无野心的李东生,在形势的逼迫下,走上一条-异于常人的封王路。
  • 东溟记

    东溟记

    大荒千载悠悠岁月,历时战乱。三十七郡和四境之上,道门神宗无数。莫楼大变,百年后。大地终归平静,更是进入再一次的百家争鸣时代。新一代的各道天才们,或是应劫之人,终于粉墨登场。
  • 窃爱

    窃爱

    从无名落魄小雏到风光的荧屏女郎,她总是觉得,自己一生是被他改变。原本以为根本不可能相爱的两个人,加上是是非非的爱恨纠缠,她始终不曾想和这个男人有任何瓜葛。于是,她从一夜落魄到一夜成名再到最后的杀人凶手,她终于相信,这是宿命。可她始终没料到,有一个男人,可以为了她超出自己的生命。青春的疼痛,爱恨的纠缠。只是有一个人,爱她如生命。
  • 受益一生的法律常识

    受益一生的法律常识

    这套《受益一生的法律常识》,以深入浅出的方式,用通俗易懂的语言,把人们眼中抽象而枯燥的法律条文解释给读者,使广大读者在遇到法律问题时能快速、经济、便捷地找到解决办法;在面对各种性质的利益纷争及侵权行为时,能够有理有据地拿起法律武器维护自己的合法权益。本书所涉法律门类广泛,我们尽量采用通俗的语言,以生活中人们经常听到、看到或亲身经历的事件为切入点,采取问答的形式对具体的法律问题进行解析。在向读者解答法律问题时,我们严格遵循着以现行法的规定为依据的原则,做到言必有据,对涉及相关法律问题的法律条文,在解说时全文引出;对法律问题或法律条文所涉及的法律专业术语,用通俗易懂的语言予以解说。
  • 跨星之恋

    跨星之恋

    她,因为一场误会,而变成了全球公认的祸害,他,几乎全世界都认识的贵族冷公子。因她的逃离,让他和她遇见。跨越星球之间的恋爱,会怎么样呢?
  • 陌笙一舞醉倾城

    陌笙一舞醉倾城

    陌笙奉命去丞相大人家里刺杀他的宝贝儿子,本以为一刀毙命,没想到最后他的宝贝儿子命大活了下来!于是她只能再去一次,可是最后怎么样都下不了手。教主催了好几次了呀,她实在舍不得呀,怎么办呢?
  • 墨龙赋

    墨龙赋

    无尽大陆,神魔从来不是这个世界的终结,他们冷酷无情,屠戮苍生。于是他逆天弑神,欲救世必先自救。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 白凤玦之人仙恋

    白凤玦之人仙恋

    一块玉玦牵连着记忆的枷锁,暗夜的幽光、不寻常的举止,失忆的公主能否重回凤族?半心的美男、潇洒的侠客与桀骜的邪魅君王,她又该如何抉择?情牵两世的爱恋,她能否在红尘俗世里领悟爱的真谛?“每个人都有选择的权利,而我的选择只有你!”
  • 重生第一修罗女帝

    重生第一修罗女帝

    她,是异世第一修罗女帝,重生竟穿越成帝都空有一副美貌的慕家第一废物。手撕白莲,脚踩渣男。完美逆袭,十项全能。系统在手,外挂我有。日常打脸虐渣渣,马甲太多慢慢扒。(男主也超厉害,把所有爱都给了女主,只对女主温柔,把女主桃花朵朵掐。)〔男女双洁双强1V1〕【慕云漓VS权御尘】