But his great and sufficient consolation for all toils and troubles was the friendship with his master.In the long summer evenings, when Dan Scott was ****** up his accounts in the store, or studying his pocket cyclopaedia of medicine in the living-room of the Post, with its low beams and mysterious green-painted cupboards, Pichou would lie contentedly at his feet.In the frosty autumnal mornings, when the brant were flocking in the marshes at the head of the bay, they would go out hunting together in a skiff.And who could lie so still as Pichou when the game was approaching? Or who could spring so quickly and joyously to retrieve a wounded bird? But best of all were the long walks on Sunday afternoons, on the yellow beach that stretched away toward the Moisie, or through the fir-forest behind the Pointe des Chasseurs.Then master and dog had fellowship together in silence.To the dumb companion it was like walking with his God in the garden in the cool of the day.
When winter came, and snow fell, and waters froze, Pichou's serious duties began.The long, slim COMETIQUE, with its curving prow, and its runners of whalebone, was put in order.The harness of caribou-hide was repaired and strengthened.The dogs, even the most vicious of them, rejoiced at the prospect of doing the one thing that they could do best.Each one strained at his trace as if he would drag the sledge alone.Then the long tandem was straightened out, Dan Scott took his place on the low seat, cracked his whip, shouted "POUITTE! POUITTE!" and the equipage darted along the snowy track like a fifty-foot arrow.
Pichou was in the lead, and he showed his metal from the start.No need of the terrible FOUET to lash him forward or to guide his course.A word was enough."Hoc! Hoc! Hoc!" and he swung to the right, avoiding an air-hole."Re-re! Re-re!" and he veered to the left, dodging a heap of broken ice.Past the mouth of the Ste.
Marguerite, twelve miles; past Les Jambons, twelve miles more; past the River of Rocks and La Pentecote, fifteen miles more; into the little hamlet of Dead Men's Point, behind the Isle of the Wise Virgin, whither the ******* doctor had been summoned by telegraph to attend a patient with a broken arm--forty-three miles for the first day's run! Not bad.Then the dogs got their food for the day, one dried fish apiece; and at noon the next day, reckless of bleeding feet, they flew back over the same track, and broke their fast at Seven Islands before eight o'clock.The ration was the same, a single fish; always the same, except when it was varied by a cube of ancient, evil-smelling, potent whale's flesh, which a dog can swallow at a single gulp.Yet the dogs of the North Shore are never so full of vigour, courage, and joy of life as when the sledges are running.It is in summer, when food is plenty and work slack, that they sicken and die.
Pichou's leadership of his team became famous.Under his discipline the other dogs developed speed and steadiness.One day they made the distance to the Godbout in a single journey, a wonderful run of over eighty miles.But they loved their leader no better, though they followed him faster.And as for the other teams, especially Carcajou's, they were still firm in their deadly hatred for the dog with the black patch.
III
It was in the second winter after Pichou's coming to Seven Islands that the great trial of his courage arrived.Late in February an Indian runner on snowshoes staggered into the village.He brought news from the hunting-parties that were wintering far up on the Ste.
Marguerite--good news and bad.First, they had already made a good hunting: for the pelletrie, that is to say.They had killed many otter, some fisher and beaver, and four silver foxes--a marvel of fortune.But then, for the food, the chase was bad, very bad--no caribou, no hare, no ptarmigan, nothing for many days.Provisions were very low.There were six families together.Then la grippe had taken hold of them.They were sick, starving.They would probably die, at least most of the women and children.It was a bad job.
Dan Scott had peculiar ideas of his duty toward the savages.He was not romantic, but he liked to do the square thing.Besides, he had been reading up on la grippe, and he had some new medicine for it, capsules from Montreal, very powerful--quinine, phenacetine, and morphine.He was as eager to try this new medicine as a boy is to fire off a new gun.He loaded the Cometique with provisions and the medicine-chest with capsules, harnessed his team, and started up the river.Thermometer thirty degrees below zero; air like crystal;snow six feet deep on the level.
The first day's journey was slow, for the going was soft, and the track, at places, had to be broken out with snow-shoes.Camp was made at the foot of the big fall--a hole in snow, a bed of boughs, a hot fire and a blanket stretched on a couple of sticks to reflect the heat, the dogs on the other side of the fire, and Pichou close to his master.