Contents
- [Contents]
- [Chapter I—Thirlwell Makes His Choice]
- [Chapter II—Strange's Story]
- [Chapter III—Agatha Makes A Promise]
- [Chapter IV—Strange's Partner]
- [Chapter V—A Night's Watch]
- [Chapter VI—Father Lucien's Adventure]
- [Chapter VII—Agatha's Resolve]
- [Chapter VIII—The Burglar]
- [Chapter IX—Agatha Asks Advice]
- [Chapter X—Thirlwell Gets A Letter]
- [Chapter XI—Stormont Finds A Clue]
- [Chapter XII—On The Trail]
- [Chapter XIII—The Prospectors' Return]
- [Chapter XIV—Stormont Disowns A Debt]
- [Chapter XV—The Grand Rapid]
- [Chapter XVI—The Pit-Prop]
- [Chapter XVII—Drummond Offers Help]
- [Chapter XVIII—The Hand In The Water]
- [Chapter XIX—A Lost Opportunity]
- [Chapter XX—The Plunge]
- [Chapter XXI—The Wilderness]
- [Chapter XXII—Before The Wind]
- [Chapter XXIII—Strange's Legacy]
- [Chapter XXIV—Agatha Resumes Her Journey]
- [Chapter XXV—The Broken Range]
- [Chapter XXVI—The Lode]
- [Chapter XXVII—THIRLWELL'S DULLNESS]
- [Chapter XXVIII—Stormont Tries A Bribe]
- [Chapter XXIX—GEORGE REPROACHES HIMSELF]
- [Chapter XXX—A Change Of Luck]
- [Chapter XXXI—Thirlwell's Reward]
THE LURE OF THE NORTH
Chapter I—Thirlwell Makes His Choice
Dinner was nearly over at the big red hotel that stands high above the city of Quebec, and Thirlwell, sitting at one of the tables, abstractedly glanced about. The spacious room was filled with skilfully tempered light that glimmered on colored glasses and sparkled on silver; pillars and cornices were decorated with artistic taste. A murmur of careless talk rose from the groups of fashionably dressed women and prosperous men, and he heard a girl's soft laugh.
All this struck a note of refined luxury that was strange to Thirlwell, who had spent some years in the wilds, where the small, frost-bitten pines roll across the rocks and muskegs of North Ontario. One lived hard up there, enduring arctic cold, and the heat of the short summer, when bloodthirsty mosquitoes swarm; and ran daunting risks on the lonely prospecting trail. Now it looked as if chance had offered him an easier lot; he could apparently choose between the privations of the wilderness and civilized comfort, but while he grappled with a certain longing he knew this was not so. He had adopted the pioneers' Spartan code; one must stand by one's bargain, and do the thing one had undertaken.
For a few moments he was silent, lost in rather gloomy thought, with a frown on his brown face, and Mrs. Allott, his English relative, studied him across the table. On the whole, Jim Thirlwell had improved in Canada, and she thought he would be welcomed if he returned to England. She had been his mother's friend, and during the week or two they had now spent together, had decided that if he proved amenable she would help him to make a career. Indeed, it was largely on Thirlwell's account she had accompanied her husband on his American tour.