Flower of the North eBook

James Oliver Curwood
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 281 pages of information about Flower of the North.

Flower of the North eBook

James Oliver Curwood
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 281 pages of information about Flower of the North.

These days, too, passed for Philip with joyous swiftness; swiftly because they were too short for him.  His life, now, was Jeanne.  Each day she became a more vital part of him.  She crept into his soul until there was no longer left room for any other thought than of her.  And yet his happiness was tampered by a thing which, if not grief, depressed and saddened him at times.  Two days more and they would be at Fort o’ God, and there Jeanne would be no longer his own, as she was now.  Even the wilderness has its conventionality, and at Fort o’ God their comradeship would end.  A day of rest, two at the most, and he would leave for the camp on Blind Indian Lake.  As the time drew nearer when they would be but friends and no longer comrades, Philip could not always hide the signs of gloom which weighed upon him.  He revealed nothing in words; but now and then Jeanne had caught him when the fears at his heart betrayed themselves in his face.  Jeanne became happier as their journey approached its end.  She was alive every moment, joyous, expectant, looking ahead to Fort o’ God; and this in itself was a bitterness to Philip, though he knew that he was a fool for allowing it to be so.  He reasoned, with dull, masculine wit, that if Jeanne cared for him at all she would not be so anxious for their comradeship to end.  But these moods, when they came, passed quickly.  And on this afternoon of the fourth day they passed away entirely, for in an instant there came a solution to it all.  They had known each other but four days, yet that brief time had encompassed what might not have been in as many years.  Life, smooth, uneventful, develops friendship slowly; an hour of the unusual may lay bare a soul.  Philip thought of Eileen Brokaw, whose heart was still a closed mystery to him; who was a stranger, in spite of the years he had known her.  In four days he had known Jeanne a lifetime; in those four days Jeanne had learned more of him than Eileen Brokaw could ever know.  So he arrived at the resolution which made him, too, look eagerly ahead to the end of the journey.  At Fort o’ God he would tell Jeanne of his love.

Jeanne was looking at him when the determination came.  She saw the gloom pass, a flush mount into his face; and when he saw her eyes upon him he laughed, without knowing why.

“If it is so funny,” she said, “please tell me.”

It was a temptation, but he resisted it.

“It is a secret,” he said, “which I shall keep until we reach Fort o’ God.”

Jeanne turned her face up-stream to listen.  A dozen times she had done this during the last half-hour, and Philip had listened with her.  At first they had heard a distant murmur, rising as they advanced, like an autumn wind that grows stronger each moment in the tree-tops.  The murmur was steady now, without the variations of a wind.  It was the distant roaring of the rocks and rushing floods of Big Thunder Rapids.  It grew steadily from a murmur to a moan, from a moan to rumbling thunder.  The current became so swift that Philip was compelled to use all his strength to force the canoe ahead.  A few moments later he turned into shore.

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Project Gutenberg
Flower of the North from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.