They had been
shooting all day; the weather had been perfect and the powder straight,
so that when they assembled in the smoking-room after dinner they were
well-pleased with themselves. From discussing the day’s sport and
the weather outlook, the conversation drifted to other, though still
cognate, fields. Lawson, the crack shot of the party, mentioned the
instinctive recognition all animals feel for their natural enemies,
and gave several instances in which he had tested it—tame rats with a
ferret, birds with a snake, and so forth.
‘Even after being domesticated for
generations,’ he said, they recognise their natural enemy at once by
instinct, an enemy they can never even have seen before. It’s
infallible. They know instantly.’
‘Undoubtedly,’ said a voice from
the corner chair; ‘and so do we.’
The speaker was Ericssen, their host, a
great hunter before the Lord, generally uncommunicative but a good
listener, leaving the talk to others. For this latter reason, as well as
for a certain note of challenge in his voice, his abrupt statement
gained attention.
‘What do you mean exactly by “so do
we”?’ asked three men together, after waiting some seconds to see
whether he meant to elaborate, which he evidently did not.
‘We belong to the animal kingdom, of
course,’ put in a fourth, for behind the challenge there obviously lay
a story, though a story that might be difficult to drag out of him. It
was.
Ericssen, who had leaned forward a
moment so that his strong, humorous face was in dear light, now sank
back again into his chair, his expression concealed by the red lampshade
at his side. The light played tricks, obliterating the humorous, almost
tender, lines, while emphasising the strength of the jaw and nose. The
red glare lent to the whole a rather grim expression.
Lawson, man of authority among them,
broke the little pause.
‘You’re dead right,’ he observed;
‘but how do you know it?’—for John Ericssen never made a positive
statement without a good reason for it. That good reason, he felt sure,
involved a personal proof, but a story Ericssen would never tell before
a general audience. He would tell it later, however when the others had
left. ‘There’s such a thing as instinctive antipathy, of course,’
he added, with a laugh, looking round him. ‘That’s what you mean,
probably.’
‘I meant exactly what I said,’
replied the host bluntly. ‘There’s first love. There’s first hate,
too.’
‘Hate’s a strong word,’ remarked
Lawson.
‘So is love,’ put in another.
‘Hate’s strongest,’ said Ericssen
grimly. ‘In the animal kingdom, at least,’ he added suggestively,
and then kept his lips closed, except to sip his liquor, for the rest of
the evening—until the party at length broke up, leaving Lawson and one
other man, both old trusted friends of many years’ standing.
‘It’s not a tale I’d tell to
everybody,’ he began, when they were alone. ‘It’s true, for one
thing; for another, you see, some of those good fellows’ —he
indicated the empty chairs with an expressive nod of his great
head—‘some of ’em knew him. You both knew him too, probably.’
‘The man you hated,’ said the
understanding Lawson.
‘And who hated me,’ came the quiet
confirmation. ‘My other reason,’ he went on, ‘for keeping quiet
was that the tale involves my wife.’
The two listeners said nothing, but
each remembered the curiously long courtship that had been the prelude
to his marriage. No engagement had been announced, the pair were devoted
to one another, there was no known rival on either side, yet the
courtship continued without coming to its expected conclusion. Many
stories were afloat in consequence. It was a social mystery that
intrigued the gossips.
‘I may tell you two,’ Ericssen
continued, ‘the reason my wife refused for so long to marry me. It is
hard to believe, perhaps, but it is true. Another man wished to make her
his wife, and she would not consent to marry me until that other man was
dead. Quixotic, absurd, unreasonable? If you like. I’ll tell you what
she said.’ He looked up with a significant expression in his face
which proved that he, at least, did not now judge her reason foolish.
“‘Because it would be murder,” she told me. “Another man who
wants to marry me would kill you.”
‘She had some proof for the
assertion, no doubt?’ suggested Lawson.
‘None whatever,’ was the reply.
‘Merely her woman’s instinct. Moreover, I
did not know who the other man was, nor would she ever tell me.’
‘Otherwise you might have murdered
him instead?’ said Baynes, the second listener.
‘I did’, said Ericssen grimly.
‘But without knowing he was the man.’ He sipped his whisky and relit
his pipe. The others waited.
‘Our marriage took place two months
later—just after Hazel’s disappearance.’
‘Hazel?’ exclaimed Lawson and
Baynes in a single breath. ‘Hazel! Member of the Hunters!’ His
mysterious disappearance had been a nine days’ wonder some ten years
ago. It had never been explained. They had all been members of the
Hunters’ Club together.
‘That’s the chap,’ Ericssen said.
‘Now I’ll tell you the tale, if you care to hear it.’ They settled
back in their chairs to listen, and Ericssen, who had evidently never
told the affair to another living soul except his own wife, doubtless,
seemed glad this time to tell it to two men.
‘It began some dozen years ago when
my brother Jack and I came home from a shooting trip in China. I’ve
often told you about our adventures there, and you see the heads hanging
up here in the smoking-room—some of ’em’. He glanced round proudly
at the walls. ‘We were glad to be in town again after two years’
roughing it, and we looked forward to our first good dinner at the Club,
to make up for the rotten cooking we had endured so long. We had ordered
that dinner in anticipatory detail many a time together. Well, we had
it and enjoyed it up to a point-the point of the entrée,
to be exact. ‘Up to that point it was delicious, and we let
ourselves go, I can tell you. We had ordered the very wine we had
planned months before when we were snow-bound and half starving in the
mountains.’ He smacked his lips as he mentioned it. ‘I was just
starting on a beautifully cooked grouse,’ he went on, ‘when a figure
went by our table, and Jack looked up and nodded. The two exchanged a
brief word of greeting and explanation2 and the other man
passed on. Evidently they knew each other just enough to make a word or
two necessary, but enough.
“Who’s that?” I asked.
“A new member, named Hazel,” Jack
told me. “A great shot.” He knew him slightly, he explained; he had
once been a client of his—Jack was a barrister, you remember—and
had defended him in some financial case or other. Rather an unpleasant
case, he added. Jack did not ‘care about’ the fellow, he told me, as
he went on with his tender wing of grouse.’
Ericssen paused to relight his pipe a
moment.
‘Not care about him!’ he continued.
‘It didn’t surprise me, for my own feeling, the instant I set eyes
on the fellow, was one of violent, instinctive dislike that amounted to
loathing. Loathing! No. I’ll give it the right word-—hatred. I
simply couldn’t help myself; I hated the man from the very first go
off. A wave of repulsion swept over me as I followed him down the room a
moment with my eyes, till he took his seat at a distant table and was
out of sight. Ugh! He was a big, fat-faced man, with an eyeglass glued
into one of his pale-blue cod-like eyes—out of condition, ugly as a
toad, with a smug expression of intense self-satisfaction on his jowl
that made me long to—
‘I leave it to you to guess what I
would have liked to do to him. But the instinctive loathing he inspired
in me had another aspect, too. Jack had not introduced us during the
momentary pause beside our table, but as I looked up I caught the
fellow’s eye on mine—he was glaring at me instead of at Jack, to
whom he was talking—with an expression of malignant dislike, as keen
evidently as my own. That’s the other aspect I meant. He hated me as
violently as I hated him. We were instinctive enemies, just as the rat
and ferret are instinctive enemies. Each recognised a mortal foe. It was
a case—I swear it—of whoever got first chance.’
‘Bad as that!’ exclaimed Baynes.
‘I knew him by sight. He wasn’t pretty, I’ll admit.’
‘I knew him to nod to,’ Lawson
mentioned. ‘I never heard anything particular against him.’ He
shrugged his shoulders.
Ericssen went on. ‘It was not his
character or qualities I hated,’ he said. ‘I didn’t even know
them. That’s the whole point. There’s no reason you fellows should
have disliked him. My hatred—our mutual hatred—was instinctive, as instinctive as
first love. A man knows his natural mate; also he knows his natural
enemy. I did, at any rate, both with him and with my wife. Given the
chance, Hazel would have done me in; just as surely, given the chance, I
would have done him in. No blame to either of us, what’s more, in my
opinion.’
‘I’ve felt dislike, but never
hatred like that,’ Baynes mentioned. ‘I came across it in a book
once, though. The writer did not mention the instinctive fear of the
human animal for its natural enemy, or anything of that sort. He thought
it was a continuance of a bitter feud begun in an earlier existence. He
called it memory.’
‘Possibly,’ said Ericssen briefly.
‘My mind is not speculative. But I’m glad you spoke of fear. I left
that out. The truth is, I feared the fellow, too, in a way; and had we
ever met face to face in some wild country without witnesses I should
have felt justified in drawing on him at sight, and he would have felt
the same. Murder? If you like. I should call it self-defence. Anyhow,
the fellow polluted the room for me. He spoilt the enjoyment of that
dinner we had ordered months before in China.’
‘But you saw him again, of course,
later?’
‘Lots of times. Not that night,
because we went on to a theatre. But in the Club we were always running
across one another—in the houses of friends at lunch or dinner; at
race-meetings; all over the place; in fact, I even had some trouble to
avoid being introduced to him. And every time we met, our eyes betrayed
us. He felt in his heart what I felt in mine. Ugh! He was as loathsome
to me as leprosy, and as dangerous. Odd, isn’t it? The most intense
feeling, except love, I’ve ever known. I remember’—he laughed
gruffly—‘I used to feel quite sorry for him. If he felt what I felt,
and I’m convinced he did, he must have suffered. His one object—to
get me out of the way for good—was so impossible. Then Fate played a
hand in the game. I’ll tell you how.
‘My brother died a year or two later,
and I went abroad to try and forget it. I went salmon fishing in Canada.
But, though the sport was good, it was not like the old times with Jack.
The camp never felt the same without him. I missed him badly. But I
forgot Hazel for the time; hating did not seem worth while, somehow.
‘When the best of the fishing was
over on the Atlantic side I took a run back to Vancouver and fished
there for a bit. I went up the Campbell River, which was not so crowded
then as it is now, and had some rattling sport. Then I grew tired of the
rod and decided to go after wapiti for a change. I came back to Victoria
and learned what I could about the best places, and decided finally to
go up the west coast of the island. By luck I happened to pick up a good
guide, who was in the town at the moment on business, and we started off
together in one of the little Canadian Pacific Railway boats that ply
along that coast.
‘Outfitting two days later at a small
place the steamer stopped at, the guide said we needed another man to
help pack our kit over portages, and so forth, but the only fellow
available was a Siwash of whom he disapproved. My guide would not have
him at any price; he was lazy, a drunkard, a liar, and even worse, for
on one occasion he came back without the sportsman he had taken up
country on a shooting trio, and his story was not convincing, to say the
least. These disappearances are always awkward, of course, as you both
know. We preferred, anyhow, to go without the Siwash, and off we
started.
‘At first our luck was bad. I saw
many wapiti, but no good heads; only after a fortnight’s hunting did I
manage to get a decent head, though even that was not so good as I
should have liked.
‘We were then near the head waters of
a little river that ran down into the Inlet; heavy rains had made the
river rise; running downstream was a risky job, what with old log-jams
shifting and new ones forming; and, after many narrow escapes, we upset
one afternoon and had the misfortune to lose a lot of our kit, amongst
it most of our cartridges. We could only muster a few between us. The
guide had a dozen; I had two—just enough, we considered, to take us
out all right. Still, it was an infernal nuisance. We camped at once to
dry out our soaked things in front of a big fire, and while this laundry
work was going on the guide suggested my filling in the time by taking a
look at the next little valley, which ran parallel to ours. He had seen
some good heads over there a few weeks ago. Possibly I might come upon
the herd. I started at once, taking my two cartridges with me.
‘It was the devil of a job getting
over the divide, for it was a badly bushed-up place, and where there
were no bushes there were boulders and fallen trees, and the going was
slow and tiring. But I got across at last and came out upon another
stream at the bottom of the new valley. Signs of wapiti were plentiful,
though I never came up with a single beast all the afternoon. Blacktail
deer were everywhere, but the wapiti remained invisible. Providence,
or whatever you like to call that fate which there is no escaping in our
lives, made me save my two cartridges.’
Ericssen stopped a minute then, It was
not to light his pipe or sip his whisky. Nor was it because the
remainder of his story failed in the recollection of any vivid detail.
He paused a moment to think.
‘Tell us the lot,’ pleaded Lawson.
‘Don’t leave out anything.’
Ericssen looked up. His friend’s
remark had helped him to make up his mind apparently. He had
hesitated about something or other, but the hesitation passed. He
glanced at both his listeners.
‘Right,’ he said. ‘I’ll tell
you everything. I’m not imaginative, as you know, and my amount of
superstition, I should judge, is microscopic.’ He took a longer
breath, then lowered his voice a trifle. ‘Anyhow,’ he went on,
‘it’s true, so I don’t see why I should feel shy about admitting
it—but as I stood there, in that lonely valley, where only the
noises of wind and water were audible, and no human being, except my
guide, some miles away, was within reach, a curious feeling came over me
I find difficult to describe. I felt’—obviously he made an effort
to get the word out-— ‘I felt creepy.’
‘You,’ murmured Lawson, with an
incredulous smile—‘you creepy?’ he repeated under his breath.
‘I felt creepy and afraid,’
continued the other, with conviction. ‘I had the sensation of being
seen by someone—as if someone, I mean, was watching me. It was so
unlikely that anyone was near me in that God-forsaken bit of wilderness
that I simply couldn’t believe it at first. But the feeling persisted.
I felt absolutely positive somebody was not far away among the red
maples, behind a boulder, across the little stream, perhaps—somewhere,
at any rate, so near that I was plainly visible to him. It was not an
animal. It was human. Also, it was hostile.
‘I was in danger.
‘You may laugh, both of you, but I
assure you the feeling was so positive that I crouched down
instinctively to hide myself behind a rock. My first thought, that the
guide had followed me for some reason or other, I at once discarded. It
was not the guide. It was an enemy.
‘No, no, I thought of no one in
particular. No name, no face occurred to me. Merely that an enemy was on
my trail, that he saw me, and I did not see him, and that he was near
enough to me to—well, to take instant action. This deep instinctive
feeling of danger, of fear, of anything you like to call it, was simply
overwhelming.
‘Another
curious detail I must also mention. About half an hour before, having
given up all hope of seeing wapiti, I had decided to kill a blacktail
deer for meat. A good shot offered itself, not thirty yards away. I
aimed. But just as I was going to pull the trigger a queer emotion
touched me, and I lowered the rifle. It was exactly as though a voice
said, “Don’t!” I heard no voice, mind you; it was an emotion only,
a feeling, a sudden inexplicable change of mind—a warning, if you
like. I didn’t fire, anyhow.
‘But now, as I crouched behind that
rock, I remembered this curious little incident, and was glad I had not
used up my last two cartridges. More than that I cannot tell you. Things
of that kind are new to me. They’re difficult enough to tell let alone
to explain. But they were real.
‘I crouched there, wondering
what on earth was happening to me, and feeling a bit of a fool, if you
want to know, when suddenly, over the top of the boulder, I saw
something moving. It was a man’s hat. I peered cautiously. Some sixty
yards away the bushes parted, and two men came out on to the river’s
bank, and I knew them both. One was the Siwash I had seen at the store.
The other was Hazel. Before I had time to think I cocked my rifle.’
‘Hazel. Good Lord!’ exclaimed the
listeners.
‘For a moment I was too surprised to
do anything but cock that rifle. I waited, for what puzzled me was that,
after all, Hazel had not seen
me. It was only the feeling of his beastly proximity that had made me
feel I was seen and watched by him. There was something else, too, that
made me pause before—er—doing anything. Two other things, in fact.
One was that I was so intensely interested in watching the fellow’s
actions. Obviously he had the same uneasy sensation that I had. He
shared with me the nasty feeling that danger was about. His rifle, I
saw, was cocked and ready; he kept looking behind him, over his
shoulder, peering this way and that, and sometimes addressing a remark
to the Siwash at his side. I caught the laughter of the latter. The
Siwash evidently did not think there was danger anywhere. It was, of
course, unlikely enough—’
‘And the other thing that stopped
you?’ urged Lawson, impatiently interrupting.
Ericssen turned with a look of grim
humour on his face. ‘Some confounded or perverted sense of chivalry in
me, I suppose,’ he said, ‘that made it impossible to shoot him down
in cold blood, or, rather, without letting him have a chance. For my
blood, as a matter of fact, was far from cold at the moment. Perhaps,
too, I wanted the added satisfaction of letting him know who fired the
shot that was to end his vile existence.
He laughed again. ‘It was rat and
ferret in the human kingdom, he went on, ‘but I wanted my rat to
have a chance, I suppose. Anyhow, though I had a perfect shot in front
of me at easy distance, I did not fire. Instead I got up, holding my
cocked rifle ready, finger on trigger, and came out of my biding-place.
I called to him. “Hazel, you beast! So there you are—at last!”
‘He turned, but turned away from me,
offering his horrid back. The direction of the voice he misjudged. He
pointed down-stream, and the Siwash turned to look. Neither of them had
seen me yet. There was a big log-jam below them. The roar of the water
in their ears concealed my footsteps. I was, perhaps, twenty paces from
them when Hazel, with a jerk of his whole body, abruptly turned dean
round and faced me. We stared into each other’s eyes.
‘The amazement on his face changed
instantly to hatred and resolve. He acted with incredible rapidity. I
think the unexpected suddenness of his turn made me lose a precious
second or two. Anyhow he was ahead of me. He flung his rifle to his
shoulder. ‘You devil!’ I heard his voice. ‘I’ve got you at
last!’ His rifle cracked, for he let drive the same instant. The hair
stirred just above my ear.
‘He had missed!
‘Before he could draw back his bolt
for another shot I had acted.
“You’re not fit to live!” I
shouted, as my bullet crashed into his temple. I had the satisfaction,
too, of knowing that he heard my words. I saw the swift expression of
frustrated loathing in his eyes.
‘He fell like an ox, his face
splashing in the stream. I shoved the body out. I saw it sucked beneath
the log-jam instantly. It disappeared. There could be no inquest on him,
I reflected comfortably. Hazel was gone—gone from this earth, from my
hatred over at last.
The speaker paused a moment. ‘Odd,’
he continued presently—‘very odd indeed.’ He turned to the
others. ‘I felt quite sorry for him suddenly. I suppose,’ he added,
‘the philosophers are right when they gas about hate being very
close to love.’
His friends contributed no remark.
‘Then I came away,’ he resumed
shortly. ‘My wife—well, you know the rest, don’t you? I told her
the whole thing. She—she said nothing. But she married me, you
see.’
There was a moment’s silence. Baynes
was the first to break it. ‘But—the Siwash?’ he asked. ‘The
witness?’ Lawson turned upon him with something of contemptuous
impatience.
‘He told you he had two
cartridges.’
Ericssen, smiling grimly, said nothing
at all.