Philip was disappointed, but he said nothing more. He tucked Josephine among the furs, cracked the long whip Metoosin had given him, and they were off, with Miriam and her husband waving their hands from the door of Adare House. They had scarcely passed out of view in the forest when with a sudden sharp command Josephine stopped the dogs. She sprang out of her furs and stood laughingly beside Philip.
“Father always insists that I ride. He says it’s not good for a woman to run,” she said. “But I do. I love to run. There!”
As she spoke she had thrown her outer coat on the sledge, and stood before him, straight and slim. Her hair was in a long braid.
“Now, are you ready?” she challenged.
“Good Lord, have mercy on me!” gasped Philip. “You look as if you might fly, Josephine!”
Her signal to the dogs was so low he scarcely heard it, and they sped along the white and narrow trail into which Josephine had directed them. Philip fell in behind her. It had always roused a certain sense of humour in him to see a woman run. But in Josephine he saw now the swiftness and lithesome grace of a fawn. Her head was thrown back, her mittened hands were drawn up to her breast as the forest man runs, and her shining braid danced and rippled in the early sun with each quick step she took.
Ahead of her the gray and yellow backs of the dogs rose and fell with a rhythmic movement that was almost music. Their ears aslant, their crests bristling, their bushy tails curling like plumes over their hips, they responded with almost automatic precision to the low words that fell from the lips of the girl behind them.
With each minute that passed Philip wondered how much longer Josephine could keep up the pace. They had run fully a mile and his own breath was growing shorter when the toe of his moccasined foot caught under a bit of brushwood and he plunged head foremost into the snow. When he had brushed the snow out of his eyes and ears Josephine was standing over him, laughing. The dogs were squatted on their haunches, looking back.
“My poor Philip!” she laughed, offering him an assisting hand. “We almost lost you, didn’t we? It was Captain who missed you first, and he almost toppled me over the sled!”
Her face was radiant. Lips, eyes, and cheeks were glowing. Her breast rose and fell quickly.
“It was your fault!” he accused her. “I couldn’t keep my eyes off you, and never thought of my feet. I shall have my revenge—here!”
He drew her into his arms, protesting. Not until he had kissed her parted, half-smiling lips did he release her.
“I’m going to ride now,” she declared. “I’m not going to run the danger of being accused again.”
He wrapped her again in the furs on the toboggan. It was eight miles to Jac Breuil’s, and they reached his cabin in two hours. Breuil was not much more than a boy, scarcely older than the dark-eyed little French girl who was his wife, and their eyes were big with terror. With a thrill of wonder and pleasure Philip observed the swift change in them as Josephine sprang from the toboggan. Breuil was almost sobbing as he whispered to Philip: