snow, which came like blasts of steeled shot, and
hurried into the shelter of the Sun Rock, and stood
there after that listening to the wildness of the storm
and the strange whistling of the wind cutting itself
to pieces far over his head. Since man had first
beheld that rock such storms as this had come and
gone for countless generations. Two hundred years
and more had passed since Grosellier first looked
out upon a wondrous world from its summit. And
yet this storm—to-night—whistling
and moaning about him, filling all space with its grief,
its triumph, and its madness, seemed to be for him—and
for him alone. His heart answered to it.
His soul trembled to the marvelous meaning of it.
To-night this storm was his own. He was a part
of a world which he would never leave. Here,
beside the great Sun Rock of the Crees, he had found
home, life, happiness, his God. Here, henceforth
through all time, he would live with his beloved Jeanne,
dreaming no dreams that went beyond the peace of the
mountains and the forests. He lifted his face
to where the storm swept above him, and for an instant
he fancied that high up on the ragged edge of the
rock there might have stood Pierre, with his great,
gaping, hungry heart, filled with pain and yearning,
staring off into the face of the Almighty. And
he fancied, too, that beside him there hovered the
wife and mother. And then he looked to Fort o’
God. The lights were out. Quiet, if not sleep,
had fallen upon all life within. And it seemed
to Philip, as he went back again through the storm,
that in the moaning tumult of the night there was
music instead of sadness.
He did not sleep until nearly morning. And when
he awoke he found that the storm had passed, and that
over a world of spotless white there had risen a brilliant
sun. He looked out from his window, and saw the
top of the Sun Rock glistening in a golden fire, and
where the forest trees had twisted and moaned there
were now unending canopies of snow, so that it seemed
as though the storm, in passing, had left behind only
light, and beauty, and happiness for all living things.
Trembling with the joy of this, Philip went to his
door, and from the door down the hall, and where the
light of the sun blazed through a window near to the
great room where he expected to find the master of
Fort o’ God, there stood Jeanne. And as
she heard him coming, and turned toward him, all the
glory and beauty of the wondrous day was in her face
and hair. Like an angel she stood waiting for
him, pale and yet flushing a little, her eyes shining
and yearning for him, her soul in the tremble of the
single word on her sweet lips.
“Philip—”
“Jeanne—”
No more—and yet against each other their
hearts told what it was futile for their lips to attempt.
They looked out through the window. Beyond that
window, as far as the vision could reach, swept the
barrens, over which Pierre had brought the little
Jeanne. Something sobbing rose in the girl’s
throat. She lifted her eyes, swimming with love
and tears, to Philip, and from his breast she reached
up both hands gently to his face.