stranger, throwing back his hood, and for the first time displaying his face. Granger sprang forward with a startled cry, and seized the newcomer by his mittened hand. "By God, it's Spurling!" In a flash all the winter had thawed out of his nature and the spring, which he had despaired of, had returned. Once more he was an emotional living creature, with a throbbing heart and brain, instead of a carcass which walked, and was erect, and muttered occasional words with its mouth as if it were alive, and was in reality a dead thing to which burial had been denied. "Yes, it's Spurling," replied the traveller in a hoarse, uneager voice; then, "Has anyone been here before me?" Granger shook his head, and instinctively stood back a pace from this leaden-eyed, unresponsive stranger, who had been his friend. Spurling was quick to notice the revulsion. "And are you going to desert me and turn me out?" "Desert you! If you knew how lonely I have been you wouldn't ask that question." "I ought to know," he answered, and going over to the window looked out, turning his head from side to side in that furtive manner which Granger had noted in him when he had first seen him advancing across the ice. Facing about suddenly, he asked, "Is there any way out of here, except down there?" pointing to the river frozen in its bed, stretching away interminably to the[19] west, through groves of icicles, and marble forest, like a granite roadway hewn out and levelled by a giant, vanished race. [19] "There is no other," Granger replied, "unless you include the way out which is trodden by the dead." Spurling started almost angrily at the mention of this last pathway of escape, and scowled. It was evident that the fear which made his life a burden was the fear of death—which was proof to Granger that he had not been long in Keewatin. However, he controlled himself and murmured, "Six hundred and eighty miles is a long journey, and it's all that to Winnipeg. Within a fortnight the ice will break, and then for almost a month the only way will be impassable. Thank God for that!" Addressing himself to Granger, "And what lies ahead?" he asked. "The forest and three hundred odd miles of this Last Chance River till you come to the Hudson Bay and