Presently he vanished within the woods. He went to convey his news to the waiting woman, the woman whose heart was full of a dread she could not shake off, whose love was silently calling, calling for the return of the man who was her whole world.
But his news must be told in his own way, a way which, perhaps, only an Indian, and those whose lives are spent among Indians, can understand.
He came to the fire and sat down, squatting upon his haunches, and remained silent for some minutes. Then he picked up a red-hot cinder and lit his black clay pipe, which he produced from somewhere amidst the furs which encased his squat body.
"We go bimeby," he said, after a long pause. "No storm--no snow. Him very fine. Good."
Audie"s brooding eyes lifted from the fire to the Indian"s broad face.
All her fear, all her trouble was shining in their depths. The man saw and understood. But he did not comment.
"We can"t go--yet," she said. "We must wait. Leo will come back. Oh, I"m sure he"ll come back."
The Indian puffed at his pipe, and finally spat a hissing stream into the fire.
"Maybe," he said.
The woman"s face flushed.
"Maybe? Of course he"ll come back," she cried with heat. "He--he has gone to collect wood."
The Indian nodded and went on smoking.
"Him fetch wood. Sure," he said presently. "Him go day--night--morning.
Si-wash fetch wood. One hour--two--three. Then Si-wash come back.
Si-wash not crazy."
Suddenly Audie sprang to her feet. Her eyes flashed, and a fierce anger swept through her whole body.
"Leo is not crazy. Don"t dare to say he is," she cried vehemently.
"I--I could kill you for saying it."
The Indian gave no sign before the woman"s furious threat. He smoked on, and when she had once more dropped to her seat, and the hopeless light in her eyes had once more returned, he removed his pipe from his mouth.
"Si-wash--you kill "em. It no matter. Leo, him crazy still. You stop here--an" freeze. So. It much no good."
The man"s good humor was quite unruffled, and Audie, in spite of her brave defence of her lover, despairingly buried her face in her hands.
"But he will come back, Si-wash!" she cried haltingly. "Say he will.
You know him. You understand him. He must come back. Say he must. He can never travel this country on foot, without food or shelter. Oh, say he must come back!"
But Si-wash was not to be cajoled from his conviction. He saw the woman"s misery, but it meant nothing to his unsentimental nature. Leo had gone. Well, why should she worry? There were other men in the world. This is what he felt, but he would not have expressed it so.
Instead of that he merely shook his head, and spoke between the puffs of his reeking pipe.
"Leo no come. But the other, him come. Tug, him come quick. Maybe him speak of Leo."
In a flash the girl"s beautiful eyes shot a gleaming inquiry into the man"s coppery face.
"Tug? Tug coming here? It"s--it"s you who"re crazy. Tug is miles away.
He must be getting near the coast by now. He must be safe by now, safe with his precious gold."
"Maybe him not safe. Maybe him lose him gold, too."
"You mean----?"
Audie caught her breath as she left her inquiry unfinished.
"Nothing. All same Tug him come here. I see him. Hark? Sho! That him--he mak noise."
The Indian turned slowly round and stared out into the twilit woods.
Audie followed the direction of his gaze and sat spellbound, listening to the sound of hurrying feet as they crushed the brittle underlay of the woods. The Indian"s dogs, too, had become alert. They were on their toes, with bristling manes and deep-throated grumbling at the intrusion.
As Tug came up Si-wash rose and clubbed the dogs cordially. In a moment they had resumed their places beyond the fire circle, and, squatting on their haunches, licked their lips and yawned indifferently.
"Tug!"
Audie was on her feet staring at the apparition of the man she had believed was even now nearing the coast.
Nor did the man"s usual ironical smile fail him.
"Sure. Didn"t you guess I"d get around after--what has happened?"
Audie eyed him blankly as he waited for her to speak. The Indian, with his eyes fixed upon the fire, had not stirred from his seat. For the moment he was forgotten by these white people. He moved now. It was a slight movement. Very slight. He merely thrust one of his lean hands inside his furcoat.
His movement was quite unnoticed by the others, and as Audie stared, quite at a loss for words, the man went on--
"Well? He"s got away with it. Maybe you"re--satisfied."
Tug"s smile was unequal to the task. The cold rage under it made its way into his eyes. And as she listened a curious change crept into Audie"s eyes, too. Si-wash, with his attention apparently on the fire, was yet quite aware of the change in both, and his hand remained buried in the bosom of his furcoat.
Audie had suddenly become very cool. She pointed at the box which had been Leo"s seat.
"You"d better sit down," she said coldly. "You seem to have something to tell me."
"Tell you?" Tug laughed. "Do you need telling?" he asked, as he dropped upon the seat.
Audie resumed her place at the opposite side of the fire.
The Indian smoked on.
"You"d best tell us all you"ve got to tell," Audie said, with cold severity. "At the present moment you appear to be quite mad or--foolish."
Her manner had the effect of banishing the man"s hateful smile. He stared at her incredulously, and, from her icy face, his eyes wandered to the motionless figure of the silent Indian.
"What the h.e.l.l!" he cried suddenly. "Do you want to tell me that you don"t know what Leo"s done? Do you want to tell me the whole lousy game isn"t a plant, put up by the three of you? Do you want to tell me----?"
"I want to tell you, you"re talking like a skunk. If you"ve got anything to tell us tell it in as few words as possible, or--get out back to your camp."
It was a different woman talking now; a very different woman to the forlorn creature who had appealed to Si-wash a few minutes ago. Just for a second the Indian"s eyes flashed a look in her direction, and it was one of cordial approval.