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+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
+<html>
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1">
+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Timid Hare, by Mary Hazelton Wade</title>
+<STYLE TYPE="text/css">
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+<body>
+<center>
+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, Timid Hare, by Mary Hazelton Wade,
+Illustrated by Louis Betts</h1>
+</center>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: Timid Hare </p>
+<p>Author: Mary Hazelton Wade</p>
+<p>Release Date: January 24, 2005 [eBook #14784]</p>
+<p>Language: English </p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TIMID HARE ***</p>
+<br><br><center><h3>E-text prepared by Al Haines</h3></center><br><br>
+<hr noshade>
+<br>
+<br>
+<A NAME="img-cover"></A>
+<CENTER>
+<IMG SRC="images/img-cover.jpg" ALT="Cover Art" BORDER="2" WIDTH="425" HEIGHT="557">
+<H5 ALIGN="center">
+[Illustration: Cover Art]
+</H5>
+</CENTER>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="img-front"></A>
+<CENTER>
+<IMG SRC="images/img-front.jpg" ALT="Frontispiece: Buffalo Rib was a Handsome Youth." BORDER="2" WIDTH="322" HEIGHT="318">
+<H5 ALIGN="center">
+[Frontispiece: Buffalo Rib was a Handsome Youth.]
+</H5>
+</CENTER>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H1 ALIGN="center">
+TIMID HARE
+</H1>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+THE LITTLE CAPTIVE
+</H2>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H4 ALIGN="center">
+by
+</H4>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+MARY H. WADE
+</H3>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H4 ALIGN="center">
+Author of "Little Cousin Series", etc.
+</H4>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H4 ALIGN="center">
+ILLUSTRATED BY
+</H4>
+
+<H4 ALIGN="center">
+LOUIS BETTS
+</H4>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H6 ALIGN="center">
+Whitman Publishing Co.<br>
+Racine&nbsp; &mdash; &nbsp;Chicago
+</H6>
+
+<BR>
+<H4 ALIGN="center">
+1916
+</H4>
+
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H1 ALIGN="center">
+CONTENTS
+</H1>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent" ALIGN="left">
+<A HREF="#chap01">CAPTURED</A><BR>
+<A HREF="#chap02">BEFORE THE CHIEF</A><BR>
+<A HREF="#chap03">THE NEW HOME</A><BR>
+<A HREF="#chap04">HARD WORK</A><BR>
+<A HREF="#chap05">THE CHANGE</A><BR>
+<A HREF="#chap06">THE VISIT</A><BR>
+<A HREF="#chap07">THE MISCHIEF MAKER</A><BR>
+<A HREF="#chap08">THE HAPPY DAY</A><BR>
+<A HREF="#chap09">THE DOG FEAST</A><BR>
+<A HREF="#chap10">THE FESTIVAL</A><BR>
+<A HREF="#chap11">MOVING DAY</A><BR>
+<A HREF="#chap12">THE JOURNEY</A><BR>
+<A HREF="#chap13">THE MEDICINE MAN</A><BR>
+<A HREF="#chap14">THE WINTER HUNT</A><BR>
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H1 ALIGN="center">
+List of Color Plates
+</H1>
+
+
+<H3>
+<a href="#img-front">
+Buffalo Rib Was a Handsome Youth
+</A>
+</H3>
+
+<H3>
+<a href="#img-016">
+The Stone and Her Son Black Bull Were Hurrying Home
+</A>
+</H3>
+
+<H3>
+"Sweet Grass, Listen to Me" [Missing from book]
+</H3>
+
+<H3>
+<a href="#img-052">
+"I Soon Had a Fire Started"
+</A>
+</H3>
+
+<H3>
+<a href="#img-060">
+Black Bull Was Helpless
+</A>
+</H3>
+
+<H3>
+<a href="#img-064">
+Bent Horn's Mind Was Made Up
+</A>
+</H3>
+
+<H3>
+<a href="#img-080">
+They Looked With Wonder at the Medicine Man
+</A>
+</H3>
+
+<H3>
+"Help Me, Great Spirit" [Missing from book]
+</H3>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap01"></A>
+<H1 ALIGN="center">
+TIMID HARE
+</H1>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+CAPTURED
+</H2>
+
+<P>
+Swift Fawn sat motionless on the river-bank.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lap, lap," sang the tiny waves as they struck the shore. "Lap, lap,"
+they kept repeating, but the little girl did not heed the soft music.
+Her mind was too busy with the story White Mink had told her that
+morning.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After the men had started off on a buffalo hunt Swift Fawn had left the
+other children to their games in the village and stolen away to the
+favorite bathing place of the women-folk.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No one will disturb me there," she had said to herself, "and I want to
+be all by myself to think it over."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After she had been there for sometime. Swift Fawn drew out from the
+folds of her deerskin jacket a baby's sock, and turned it over and over
+in her hands curiously. Never had she seen the like of it before. How
+pretty it was! Who could have had the skill to weave the threads of
+scarlet silk in and out of the soft wool in such a dainty pattern? Was
+it--the child whispered the word--could it have been her mother?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+White Mink had always been so good to her, Surely no real mother could
+have been more loving than the Indian woman who had watched over her
+and tended her, and taught her from the time when Three Bears had
+brought her, a year-old baby, to his wife. Where he found the little
+one, he had never told.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And so she was a white child. How strange it was! Yet she had grown
+up into a big girl, loving the ways of the red people more and more
+deeply for eight happy years.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Surely," thought the child, "I could not have loved my own parents
+more than I do White Mink and Three Bears."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I wish--oh, so hard!" she added with a lump in her throat, "that White
+Mink had not told me. I don't want to remember there ever
+was--something different."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With these last words Swift Fawn lifted the little sock and was about
+to hurl it into the water, when she suddenly stopped as she remembered
+White Mink's last words.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I give this shoe into your keeping," the woman had said solemnly. "I
+have spoken because of my dream last night, and because of its warning
+I bid you keep the shoe always."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With a little sigh, Swift Fawn drew back from the edge of the stream
+and replaced the shoe in the bosom of her jacket. Then she stretched
+herself out on the grassy bank and lay looking up into the blue sky
+overhead. How beautiful it was! How gracefully the clouds floated by!
+One took on the shape of a buffalo with big horns and head bent down as
+if to charge. But it was so far away and dreamlike it was not fearful
+to the child. And now it changed; the horns disappeared; the body
+became smaller, and folded wings appeared at the sides; it was now, in
+Swift Fawn's thoughts, a graceful swan sailing, onward, onward, in the
+sky-world overhead.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The little girl's eyes winked and blinked and at last closed tightly.
+She had left the prairie behind her and entered the Land of Nod.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She must have slept a long time, for when she awoke the sun had set,
+and in the gathering darkness, she was aware of a man's face with
+fierce dark eyes bent over her own.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ugh! Ugh!" the man was muttering. "It is a daughter of the Mandans.
+A good prize!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As he spoke he rose to his feet and Swift Fawn, shaking with fear, knew
+that he was beckoning to others to draw near. A moment afterwards she
+was surrounded by a party of warriors. They were taller than the men
+of her own tribe, and were straight and noble in shape, but their faces
+were very stern.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They must belong to the 'Dahcotas,'" thought the child. "And they are
+our enemies."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Many a tale had Swift Fawn heard of the fierce Dahcotas, lovers of war
+and greatly to be feared. It was a terrible thought that she was alone
+and in their power, with the night coming on.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ugh! What shall we do with her?" the brave who had discovered her
+said to the others.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She is fair to look upon," replied one.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But she is a Mandan," was the quick answer of another. As he spoke he
+looked proudly at the scalp lock hanging from his shoulder, for he and
+his companions has just been out on the war path.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Let our Chief decide," said the first speaker. "It is best that Bent
+Horn should settle the question."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ugh! Ugh!" grunted the others, not quite pleased at the idea.
+However, they said nothing more, and turned away, moving softly with
+their moccasined feet to the place where their horses were restlessly
+waiting to go on with the journey.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Swift Fawn's captor now seized her hand, saying gruffly, "Get up."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Dragging her to his horse's side, he lifted her up, bound her to the
+animal's back, leaped up after her and a moment afterwards the whole
+party were galloping faster and faster into the night.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hour after hour they traveled with never a stop. At last, by the light
+of the stars. Swift Fawn knew that she was nearing a large camp, made
+up of many tent-homes.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap02"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+BEFORE THE CHIEF
+</H2>
+
+<P>
+As the party entered the camp the dogs came
+out to meet them, barking in delight at
+their masters' return. Swift Fawn's captor rode
+up with her to the largest of the tents, or tepees
+as the Dahcotas called them. Springing from
+his horse, he unbound the little girl, and again
+seizing her hand, drew the scared child into the
+lodge.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A bright fire was blazing in the fireplace, for
+the night was cold.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Beside it squatted a noble-looking brave,
+wrapped in a bear-skin robe, and with eagles'
+feathers waving from the top of his head. Chains
+of wampum hung around his neck and his face
+was painted in long, bright lines.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Not far from him sat a beautiful and richly-dressed
+young girl, his daughter. She looked
+kindly at Swift Fawn as if to say: "Do not fear,
+little girl."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Behold, a child of the Mandans. I give her
+into your hands, great Chief," said Swift Fawn's
+captor to the brave by the fireside.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bent Horn seemed in no hurry to speak, as
+he looked keenly at the child who could not lift
+her eyes for fear.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Is the girl of the weak Mandans to live, or to
+be a slave among our people?" asked the warrior.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bent Horn was about to answer, as his
+daughter broke in: "Father, let her live. I wish
+it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Chief turned toward the young girl with
+love in his eyes. He smiled as he said, "Sweet
+Grass shall have her wish."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His face became stern, however, as he added:
+"That shrinking creature must be trained. Give
+her into the keeping of The Stone, and let this
+girl henceforth be known as Timid Hare."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Bent Horn spoke he motioned to Swift
+Fawn's captor to take her away, and the man at
+once led her out of the lodge and through the
+camp to a small tepee on the outskirts, where
+the old woman, The Stone, lived with her
+deformed son, Black Bull.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap03"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+THE NEW HOME
+</H2>
+
+<P>
+Drawing aside the heavy buffalo-skin curtain which covered the doorway,
+the man shoved his little captive inside and followed close behind her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ugh, Timid Hare," he said scornfully. "This is your new home. Does
+it please you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The child shuddered without answering, as she mustered courage to look
+about her. The fire on the hearth in the middle of the tepee was
+smouldering. With the help of its dim light the little girl could see
+piles of dirty buffalo robes on either side; the walls of the tent,
+also made of buffalo skins, were blackened by smoke. Long shadows
+stretching across the floor, seemed to take on fearful shapes in the
+child's fancy as the low fire, now and then, gave a sudden leap upward.
+Furthermore, the tepee was empty,--no face looked out from any corner;
+no voice spoke to the new-comers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ugh!" The man shrugged his shoulders as he grunted in displeasure.
+He was in haste to get to his own lodge where a supper of bear steak
+was no doubt awaiting him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Where can The Stone be that she is not here, now that darkness covers
+the earth?" he muttered. "And the crooked boy away too!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The sentence was barely ended when the sound of quick, soft footsteps
+could be heard outside. The Stone and her son, Black Bull, were
+hurrying home. They had been gone all day, having gone to a clay pit
+miles away from the village to get a certain clay for making red dye
+with which The Stone wished to color some reeds for basket weaving.
+Night had taken then by surprise, and wolves howling in the distance
+made them travel as fast as the poor deformed youth could go.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="img-016"></A>
+<CENTER>
+<IMG SRC="images/img-016.jpg" ALT="Illustration: The Stone and her son Black Bull were hurrying home." BORDER="2" WIDTH="398" HEIGHT="529">
+<H5 ALIGN="center">
+[Illustration: The Stone and her son Black Bull were hurrying home.]
+</H5>
+</CENTER>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<P>
+The Stone was the first of the two to enter the lodge. She was bent
+and wrinkled, and her cunning, cruel eyes opened wide with surprise as
+she saw her visitors.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ugh! what does this mean?" she asked sharply, as she looked from the
+brave to the cowering child still held in his strong grip. "Are you
+bringing a daughter of the pale-faces into my keeping?" She ended with
+a wicked laugh.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not much better--it is a child of the Mandans who fell into my hands.
+Better to kill her at once--a goodly scalp that!" With the words the
+man pointed to his captive's long and beautiful hair.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He continued: "But Bent Horn says, No. Let The Stone take her into her
+keeping. So it is then--Timid Hare, shall draw water for you and wait
+upon you and your son."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Black Bull, who had followed close upon his mother, stood staring at
+the captive with wild eyes. The poor fellow was small-witted, as well
+as deformed. He was eighteen years old, yet he had no more
+understanding than a small child. His face was not cruel like his
+mother's, however. His eyes were sad and spoke of a longing for
+something--but what that something was even Black Bull himself did not
+understand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As the little girl looked at him a tiny hope leaped up in her heart.
+"He will not be unkind to me, at any rate," she decided. "And I am
+sorry for him that he has such a mother."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Following close upon this thought came another. It was of White
+Mink--dear, kind White Mink who was perhaps at this very moment weeping
+over the loss of her little Swift Fawn.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But there is no Swift Fawn--she is dead, dead, dead. There is now
+only Timid Hare, the slave of a wicked woman."--The child shuddered at
+the thought. She came to herself to hear The Stone saying,
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Leave her to me and I will train her in the good ways of the
+Dahcotas." The man smiled grimly and went his way, and the woman
+turning to her charge said: "Come, don't stand there cowering and
+useless. Busy yourself. Pile wood upon the fire and put water in that
+kettle. My son and I are hungry and would eat, and the meat must yet
+be cooked."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With The Stone's words came a blow on Timid Hare's shoulder. It was
+the first one the child had ever felt, and though it did not strike
+hard upon the body, it fell with heavy weight upon her aching heart.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Stumbling about, she tried to do the old squaw's bidding, and the two
+soon had the supper ready. The Stone now served her son on his side of
+the fireplace, after which she herself began to eat her fill while
+Swift Fawn sat huddled in a dark comer, hungrily watching.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Take that," the woman said as she finished her meal, and she threw a
+half-picked bone to the little girl. Then she got up, put away
+whatever food was left from the supper, and began to spread out some
+buffalo skins, first for her son's bed on his side of the tepee, then
+on her own side for herself to sleep on.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You can lie where you are," she told Timid Hare, pointing to the pile
+of skins on which the child was crouching.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Soon afterwards The Stone and Black Bull were quietly sleeping, while
+the little captive, with tears rolling down her cheeks, lay thinking of
+the kind friends far away and of the dreadful things that might happen
+on the morrow. All at once she remembered the baby's sock hidden in
+her dress, and of White Mink's words. Perhaps--perhaps--the sock would
+help her. But how? She must guard it, at any rate; not even The Stone
+should discover it. Kind sleep was already drawing near. The tired
+eyes no longer shed tears. Till morning should come, Timid Hare was
+free from trouble.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap04"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+HARD WORK
+</H2>
+
+<P>
+The sun, shining into the tepee through the opening over the fireplace,
+roused The Stone to her day's work. She lost no time in setting a task
+for her little slave. Handing her a needle carved from the bone of a
+deer and thread made of a deer's sinew, she hade her sew up a rent in
+the skin curtain of the doorway.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Poor Timid Hare! she had learned to embroider and to weave baskets in
+the old home, but sewing on heavy skins had never yet fallen to her
+share of the daily duties. "There will be time enough," White Mink had
+thought, "when the little fingers have grown bigger and the tender back
+is stronger."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So now the hands were clumsy, and the stitches were not as even as they
+should be. The Stone watched her with a scowl and frequent scoldings;
+often an uplifted arm seemed ready to strike. But seeing that the
+child was trying to do her best, the expected beating did not come.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After she and Black Bull had eaten their own breakfast of bread made
+out of wild rice, together with some buffalo fat, she gave a small
+portion to Timid Hare. Then she and Black Bull went out of the lodge,
+leaving the little girl alone at her work.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+How different--how very different--this home was from the one among the
+Mandans! The old one was so big and comfortable, and there was such a
+jolly household of parents and grandparents and uncles and aunts, and
+children of all ages gathered together under one roof. Then, too, the
+floor was so smooth and shiny, and the bedsteads, each one shut off by
+a curtain and made pretty with fringe and pictures, seemed almost like
+tiny sleeping rooms. Moreover, the banking of earth over the framework
+of the lodge kept out the chill winds and biting cold of winter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But here, in The Stoned tepee, where the skin covering was old and
+torn, one must often suffer. At least so thought Timid Hare as she
+looked up now and then from her work to get acquainted with her new
+home.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Besides, it is so small," she said to herself, "and only two people in
+the whole household before I came. How strange it is!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was quite true that the ways of the Dahcotas were unlike those of
+the Mandans. Each family lived by itself and thus the home did not
+need to be so large. Timid Hare did not know this, nor that the
+people, as a rule, lived in great comfort. They preferred tents,
+rather than houses like those of the Mandans, of frame-work covered
+with earth because they liked to move from place to place and they
+could thus carry their homes with them. Yet their tepees were warm and
+comfortable because the covering of strong, thick buffalo skins was
+generally double. Fires were kept burning on their hearths in winter
+and supplies of food and clothing were easy to obtain from the wild
+creatures of the woods and prairies. What more could any red people
+wish?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Timid Hare had heard her foster father tell much of the powerful
+Dahcotas and that they were rich, as Indians count riches.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why are they so powerful?" she now asked herself. "Ugh! it was
+because of their fierce war spirit. It was this that made them drive
+other tribes before them, so that they became free to roam over the
+prairies and enjoy the richest hunting grounds."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I cannot help myself," now thought the child. "If I should run away,
+the braves would either find and kill me, or I should be devoured by
+the hungry wolves that go forth at nightfall."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But might not Three Bears make up a war party and go forth to seek her?
+"Alas! that may not be," Timid Hare told herself. "My dear father
+would himself meet death at the hands of these cruel warriors."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The rent in the curtain was nearly sewed up when Black Bull stole into
+the lodge. He wanted to talk to the little stranger with eyes sad like
+his own, and he did not wish his mother to know it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Behind Black Bull came his dog, wolfish-looking like most of his breed,
+but as Black Bull squatted in his corner, the animal crouched close at
+his master's side as though he loved him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Poor fellow, he has a pet to follow him about just as I had at home,"
+thought Timid Hare. "Perhaps by-and-by the dog may learn to love me
+too." There was a big lump in the little girl's throat, and she
+coughed as she tried to choke it back.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hard work," said Black Bull as he watched her pulling the coarse
+thread through the buffalo skin and trying not to tear it. "Hard
+work," he repeated. "Too bad."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Timid Hare nodded. "Good dog," she ventured after a while, looking at
+the dog with a sad little smile. "I had a dog; I loved him," she added.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Very good dog. He is my friend," replied the youth. "He goes with me
+everywhere--everywhere. He makes me--not lonely. I call him Smoke."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Black Bull put his arm lovingly around Smoke's neck and the dog whined
+softly. It was the only way in which he could say, "I love you, poor
+master, if no one else does."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My people are great people," Black Bull went on. "They are very
+strong." Timid Hare nodded. "The Dahcotas are brave above all men.
+Their bands are so many I could not count them." The very thought of
+counting a large number made the simple-minded youth look puzzled.
+"And they are tall and strong of body beyond the red men of all tribes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again Timid Hare nodded. But she also shuddered as she thought that
+she was in their power, a helpless captive. Then, as her eyes turned
+towards Black Bull, they filled with pity. Here was one of the
+Dahcotas, at least, who was not strong and tall and well-shaped. Nor
+would he do her harm, she felt sure.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Black Bull had turned to his lute which lay on the floor behind him and
+begun to play a low, sweet tune when The Stone entered the lodge. She
+looked sharply at Timid Hare, and then at the work which the little
+girl had just finished.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ugh! Ugh!" grunted the squaw. "You must learn to sew better than
+that, you little cringing coward. Ah, ha! I know something that may
+help you." The Stone cut the air with a switch that she held in her
+hand. "Something else may also help you to gain the spirit of a red
+woman. Of that, by-and-by. And now you shall fetch me fresh water
+from the spring. Black Bull, put yourself to some use. Show the girl
+where the water may be drawn."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Handing an earthen crock to Timid Hare, she turned to her own
+work--that of making dye out of the clay she had got the day before.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Timid Hare, holding the big crock as carefully as possible on her
+shoulder, followed Black Bull out of the tepee. It seemed good to be
+outdoors, even in a village of the Dahcotas. In the doorway of the
+next lodge stood a young woman with pleasant eyes and beautiful glossy
+hair. She looked curiously at the little girl, for she had just heard
+of her capture. She must have pitied the child, for she smiled kindly
+at her. Black Bull, catching the smile, said, "The Fountain, this is
+Timid Hare. Is she not strange to look upon--so fair? She must be
+like the pale-faces I have never seen."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Fountain had no chance to answer, for Black Bull now turned to his
+companion. "Hurry, Timid Hare, hurry, lest my mother be angry and beat
+you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As the two went on their way, the little girl saw other children like
+herself, playing together and laughing happily. One of them had her
+doll, and was carrying it in a baby-cradle on her back. She was
+pretending it was too small to walk, and was singing a lullaby to make
+it go to sleep.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All the children stopped to look at the little stranger.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A Mandan! Oof!" cried one.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Her hair is not black like ours," said another.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nor is her skin as dark. She is more like the pale-faces whom we
+hate," remarked a third.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then they turned to their play as if she were not worth noticing, and
+poor little Timid Hare blushed for shame. It was hard indeed that even
+the children should despise her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A little farther on she noticed a group of men dancing together in the
+sunlight. They were much taller than the Mandan braves, and noble to
+look upon, as Black Bull had said. But to the little girl holding in
+mind the capture of the day before, they seemed cruel and fearful even
+now while they were dancing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The Dahcotas dance much--always," explained Black Bull, pointing to
+the men. "We have many, many dances. For everything there is a dance.
+When we feast, and before we hunt, when councils are held, when guests
+come among us, we dance. It is a noble thing to dance. Sometimes," he
+went on, "it is too make us laugh. Sometimes it is to make our faces
+grow long--so!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At this Black Bull's face took on a look of sadness as though he were
+grieving.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Timid Hare was used to the dances of the Mandans, and she loved them.
+But they were not so many as those of the Dahcotas, she felt sure.
+Why, the night before, whenever she wakened, she heard the sound of
+dancing in different lodges in the village.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There is the spring. Now I go," said Black Bull, pointing it out
+half-hidden in a hollow shaded by clumps of bushes. The youth, with
+Smoke who had followed close at his heels ever since leaving the lodge,
+turned back and Timid Hare stooped down to fill the crock.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As she did so her eyes met a pair of large black ones fastened upon her
+own, and just above the water's edge. They belonged to the chief's
+only son Young Antelope, who had come for a drink of cool water before
+going off on a hunting trip. He was a handsome youth. As he lay
+stretched out on the grassy bank above the spring he had heard the
+sound of Timid Hare's steps as she drew near, and looked up to see who
+it was.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oof! the stranger," he said, but he did not scowl like the little
+girls whom the little captive had passed a few minutes before.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next minute he had sprung to his pony's back and gone galloping
+away. Timid Hare thought sadly of the dear foster-brother far away on
+the wide prairie, as she trudged back with her load to the tepee where
+The Stone awaited her.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap05"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+THE CHANGE
+</H2>
+
+<P>
+"Bad," scolded the squaw as she looked into the crock and saw that some
+of the water had been spilled on the way home.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She reached for her willow switch and used it twice on Timid Hare's
+back.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have a nice little task for you," she said. "Do you see this?" She
+pointed to a dish full of a dull red dye. "It is for you," she
+continued. "No more pale-faces about us now. You are to take this dye
+and paint yourself--every part of your body, mind you. Then, when you
+have used this on your hair--" she pointed to a smaller dish containing
+a black dye--"we may be able to make a Dahcota out of you after all."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Waste no time," she commanded, as Timid Hare turned slowly to the
+dishes of dye. "I leave you now for a little while and when I come
+back--then I may like to look at you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Stone left the lodge and Timid Hare was left to change herself so
+that even White Mink would not know her. Trained as she had been in
+the ways of all Indians, her tears fell often as she covered her body
+with the paint. She dare not leave one spot untouched, nor one tress
+of the beautiful hair that had been White Mink's pride. When the work
+was at last finished, there was no mirror in which to look at herself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Once--just once, during her eight years of life among the Mandans, she
+had seen a looking-glass. It was no larger than the palm of her small
+hand, and belonged to the chief into whose hands it had come from a
+white hunter years before. It was such a wonderful thing! Timid Hare
+thought of it now and wished that she might see the picture that it
+would of herself reflect.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"When I am next sent to the spring," she thought, "I will seek the
+quiet little pool where some of the water lingers. Then, if the clouds
+give a deep shadow, I can see the Timid Hare I now am."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good," muttered The Stone when she returned and examined her little
+slave. But when Black Bull noticed the change, he said nothing--only
+looked sad. Perhaps he felt that the little stranger had somehow lost
+herself.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap06"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+THE VISIT
+</H2>
+
+<P>
+One day, soon after Timid Hare's coming, she was sent to the chief's
+tepee on an errand. The Stone and she had been gathering rushes for
+the chief's daughter Sweet Grass who wished them for a mat she was
+weaving. It was to be a surprise for her father; she meant it to be so
+beautiful that he would wish to sit on it at feasts when entertaining
+chiefs of other bands.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Stone and Timid Hare had spent many hours searching for the most
+beautiful rushes, and the old squaw was pleased at having succeeded at
+last.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sweet Grass's mother will give me much bear meat for getting the
+rushes for her daughter," she thought. But to Timid Hare she only
+said: "Take these to the home of our chief and place them in the hands
+of Sweet Grass. Make haste, for she may already be impatient."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Stone did not know that Sweet Grass had ever seen Timid Hare, nor
+that she had begged her father for the child's life.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The little girl was glad to go. She had thought many times of the
+chief's daughter, and of her kind face and gentle voice. Whenever she
+had gone near Bent Horn's tepee she had been on the lookout for Sweet
+Grass, but she had not been able to get a glimpse of her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Timid Hare trudged along with her load she thought of that dreadful
+night after her capture. "I think I would have died of fright but for
+the sight of the chief's beautiful daughter," she said to herself.
+"But after she spoke, my heart did not beat so hard."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Now, however, as she neared the chief's lodge, she began to breathe
+more quickly. The chief had such power! The Stone said ugly words to
+her and did not give her enough to eat; sometimes she beat her; but she
+would not do her terrible harm because the chief had given the order:
+Care for the child. Suppose he should change his mind!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Trembling, Timid Hare stopped in front of the lodge.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come in. I am waiting for you," called a sweet voice, for Sweet
+Grass, looking up from her work, had caught a glimpse of the little
+girl standing outside with her bundle.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Timid Hare's heart leaped for joy. It was so good to have some one
+speak kindly to her once more. And the young girl who had spoken was
+so lovely to look upon! Her eyes shone like stars. Her long hair was
+bound with a coronet made out of pretty shells. Her robe of deer skin
+was trimmed with long fringe. Her moccasins, cut differently from
+those of the Mandans, were bound into shape with ribbons made of rabbit
+skin. Around her neck were many chains that made pleasant music as
+they jingled against each other.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+While Timid Hare was peeping out of the corners of her eyes at this
+beautiful sight. Sweet Grass was in her turn examining the little
+captive.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You are--changed," she said slowly. "What has The Stone been doing?
+Ugh! I see. She has tried to make a Dahcota out of you. Well, it may
+be well, and yet, I think I liked you better as you were before."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lay the rushes here, beside me," she continued. "And now, little
+Timid Hare, tell me about The Stone. Is she good to you? And Black
+Bull--does he treat you well?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sweet Grass was tender as a sister as she asked these questions and
+many others. And Timid Hare's tongue slowly became brave. She told of
+the hard work which The Stone made her do. She showed scars on her
+hands which the work had left. And--yes--there were also scars on the
+little back from the cruel touch of The Stone's switch.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But Black Bull--poor Black Bull! The child spoke of him with loving
+pity. "I am sorry for him," she said. "He has only his dog to make
+him happy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Would you like to live with me?" asked Sweet Grass, when the story was
+finished.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh-h!" The little girl drew a long sigh of wonder and delight. If
+only it were possible!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We will see. I will talk to my father by-and-by. And now you must
+run home. Good-by." The young girl bent over her work and Timid Hare
+ran swiftly out of the lodge and back to The Stone who was angrily
+waiting.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You must have stopped on the way, you good-for-nothing. Sweet Grass
+could not have kept you all this time," she scolded.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The little girl made no answer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hm! has the child won the heart of the chief's daughter?" she
+muttered. "And next it would be the chief himself. That must not be.
+Moreover, no bear meat was sent me. Ugh!"
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap07"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+THE MISCHIEF MAKER
+</H2>
+
+<P>
+That afternoon the sun shone brightly. It was a beautiful day of the
+late Indian summer. Sweet Grass, taking the mat she was weaving, left
+the lodge and sought a pleasant spot near the spring to go on with her
+work.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Stone had been skulking about near the chief's lodge for several
+hours. She wanted to catch Sweet Grass alone and yet as if she had
+come upon her by accident.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She stealthily watched the young girl as she made her way to the
+spring, but did not appear before her for some time. When she did, she
+held some fine rushes in her hands.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have just found more. You will like them, Sweet Grass," she said,
+trying to make her harsh voice as soft as possible.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The chief's daughter had never liked The Stone; and now, after hearing
+Timid Hare's story, it was not easy to act friendly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"For the child's sake, I must not show my dislike," she thought
+quickly. So she smiled, and looking at the rushes, said, "These are
+good, very good. I can use them for my mat."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She turned to her work while The Stone stood silent, watching her.
+Then, suddenly, the old squaw bent over her and said, "Sweet Grass,
+listen to me. I sent the child of the Mandans to you this morning.
+She is bad--lazy--very lazy. Your father gave her into my keeping and
+I will train her, though it is hard. No one else would be patient with
+her wicked, lying ways. No one!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Stone stopped as suddenly as she had begun. She hoped that she had
+succeeded in making Sweet Grass believe that the little captive was as
+bad as she had said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why do you talk? I do not care to listen to you," said the young
+girl, looking up into the ugly face bending over her. Then she went on
+with her weaving as though she were alone. There was nothing left for
+The Stone but to go on her way, muttering.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"After this," she promised herself, "Timid Hare shall go little from my
+sight. I need her to do my bidding and save my steps. She must not be
+taken from me through any foolish fancy that Sweet Grass may have taken
+for her."
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap08"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+THE HAPPY DAY
+</H2>
+
+<P>
+That evening the chief, Bent Horn, sat by his fireside, smoking with
+his friends. Close beside him was his handsome son. On the women's
+side of the lodge Sweet Grass and her mother squatted, listening to the
+stories of the men. As the hours passed by, the visitors rose one by
+one and went home for the night's sleep. When the last one had gone
+Sweet Grass got up from her place and held out to her father the mat
+she had been making for him. A pretty picture had been woven into the
+rushes; it had taken all the young girl's skill to do it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"For you, my father," said Sweet Grass.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The chief smiled. He was proud of his young son who gave promise of
+becoming a fine hunter. But he was also proud of this one daughter.
+He loved her so dearly that he could not bear to say, No, to anything
+she might ask of him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My father," now said Sweet Grass, "I wish to speak to you of the child
+Timid Hare whom you gave into the keeping of The Stone."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The chief scowled. "That pale-faced daughter of the cowardly Mandans?
+She may thank you that she still lives," he said sternly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But I have seen her and talked with her, my father, and she has won my
+heart. I want her to live with me and serve me. Will you let it be
+so?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was no answer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And she no longer makes one think of the pale-faced Mandans. Her skin
+is now dark with paint so that she looks even as we do." The voice of
+Sweet Grass was tender with pleading.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I saw her at the spring one day," broke in young Antelope. "The
+hump-back, Black Bull, had just left her. Her eyes spoke fright, but
+also a good temper. Let my sister have her wish."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The chief turned to his wife. In matters of the household the Indian
+woman generally has her will.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Let the child come and serve Sweet Grass," said the squaw who had a
+noble face and must once have been as beautiful as her daughter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You shall have your wish." Bent Horn spoke as though not wholly
+pleased; but when he saw the delight his words gave Sweet Grass, his
+face showed more kindness than his voice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Two days afterwards a messenger from Bent Horn appeared in The Stone's
+doorway.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I bring you word from our chief," he told her. "The captive, Timid
+Hare, is to return with me. She will serve the maiden Sweet Grass."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Stone's ugly eyes filled with anger. Yet she did not dare refuse
+the command of the chief.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Go," she said turning to Timid Hare, who was busy at one side of the
+lodge pounding wild rice into flour. "Go, you cowardly
+good-for-nothing. Let the chief discover what I have borne."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Timid Hare was almost overcome with delight. To serve the beautiful
+maiden, Sweet Grass! It seemed too good to be true.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Yet it must be true, for The Stone, with uplifted arms, was fairly
+driving her from the lodge as she would a troublesome mosquito.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As the little girl passed through the doorway she met Black Bull
+entering, with Smoke at his heels. Over the youth's eyes swept a cloud
+of fear at the unusual brightness in the little girl's face. He felt
+instantly that she was going to leave him. Sad as she had been, she
+had brought a little sunshine into the dreary home.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good-bye, Black Bull," she whispered. "I will not forget you." Then,
+without a last glance at The Stone, she hurried on after the messenger
+who had come for her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When she reached the chief's lodge, there was Sweet Grass waiting for
+her with a kind smile. The maiden's mother, whom she had never seen
+before, was also in the lodge. The squaw was busily cooking the
+evening meal like any other red woman, though her husband was the chief
+of the whole band.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sweet Grass had just motioned to the little girl to take her place
+beside her, when Young Antelope burst into the tepee. The day before
+he had gone hunting, and when night came had not appeared. His mother
+and sister had worried at his absence, but the chief had said, "We will
+not fear. The lad has no doubt lost his way. But he knows how to care
+for himself."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And now Young Antelope stood once more in the home, safe and happy! He
+had had an exciting adventure, and was eager to tell of it. Yes, he
+had lost his way out on the prairies. He was ashamed of this, for he
+had been taught that an Indian should always watch the winds and the
+heavens, and carefully mark every change in the appearance of the
+country over which he travels; then it is an easy matter to find his
+way back without trouble.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But his pony was fleet of foot, and the birds he was seeking flew fast.
+After many, many miles had been covered and his game bag had been
+filled, he decided to return. But he was hungry; he thought of the
+tender birds he had killed and of the feast they would make.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I will rest for awhile and cook some of the game," he decided.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All this he now told his mother on his return home. So eager was he to
+describe his adventure that he did not notice the little stranger
+squatting beside Sweet Grass, and looking at him with admiring eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I soon had a fire started," he continued, "and then began to roast my
+game. Ugh! the feast was a fine one. But after it was over, I began
+the search for home. Then darkness fell suddenly and fast gathering
+clouds covered the setting sun. I was alone and far from you all. I
+could hear wolves howling in the distance. They were hungry as I had
+been."
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="img-052"></A>
+<CENTER>
+<IMG SRC="images/img-052.jpg" ALT="Illustration: &quot;I soon had a fire started&quot;" BORDER="2" WIDTH="401" HEIGHT="522">
+<H5 ALIGN="center">
+[Illustration: "I soon had a fire started."]
+</H5>
+</CENTER>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<P>
+The youth shivered. Then he went on: "But I remembered how to keep
+wolves from drawing too near. They do not love fire. I piled the
+brush high, and flames leaped up in the air. All night long I did
+this, and now, my mother and my sister, I am with you once more. No
+harm befell me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You did well, my son," replied his mother. That was all, but her eyes
+shone with pride and gladness. So did those of Sweet Grass who
+exclaimed, "Those fearful wolves! How I hate them! But you are safe.
+They did not devour you; that is enough."
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap09"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+THE DOG FEAST
+</H2>
+
+<P>
+Soon after Timid Hare went to live in Bent Horn's lodge to serve his
+beautiful daughter, there was a good deal of excitement in the village.
+Messengers had come from other bands of the Dahcotas saying that their
+chiefs were about to make a visit to Bent Horn. They wished to talk
+over important matters in regard to the good of the whole tribe.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Both braves and squaws were busy preparing for the great time. There
+would be dances and feasts, games and wrestling matches. The warriors
+must make ready their best garments and noblest head-dresses. They
+must use much grease and paint to look as grand as possible when
+receiving their guests.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sweet Grass and her mother had much to do getting ready for the
+celebration, and Timid Hare tried her best to help. She ran errands,
+pounded rice, brought wild sweet potatoes and dried berries from the
+pit in which the stores of food were buried, and tended the fire in
+which buffalo and bear meat were roasting, for much would be eaten
+during the visit which would last several days at least.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sweet Grass smiled upon her little helper. So did her mother. Both of
+them were pleased with the child, and came near forgetting that she was
+not one of their own people.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then came the day when word was sent through the village that the
+coming visit was to be celebrated by the Feast of the Dog. Different
+families would be asked to sacrifice the dog dearest to their hearts.
+Every one believed it would be a fit offering to the Great Spirit and
+would fill his heart with tenderness for his red children.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It would also bind the hearts of the chiefs more closely together.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Timid Hare went through the village one morning--it was the last one
+before the visitors should arrive--she met Black Bull. It was the
+first time she had seen him since she had gone from his lodge. As she
+ran towards him he did not seem glad to see her. He simply looked at
+her pitifully.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What is the matter, Black Bull? Is there trouble? Tell me. Everyone
+else is happy over the coming good time." Timid Hare spoke fast.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My dog," he said brokenly. "My one friend must die. I must give him
+as a sacrifice, so my mother has said." The poor fellow began to cry.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Your dear Smoke! I am so sorry for you, Black Bull." Timid Hare's
+own eyes filled with tears. "So sorry," she repeated.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I will try to save him, though." The deformed youth looked wildly
+about him as he spoke, as though he feared some one besides Timid Hare
+would hear him. Then, without waiting for her to reply, he went off in
+the direction of the spring, beyond which was a sharp bluff. Below
+this bluff flowed a stream of water which in the autumn was deep--so
+deep that any one could drown in it easily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I wonder what Black Bull meant when he said he would try to save
+Smoke," thought Timid Hare, as she stood watching. "He cannot save the
+dog. How hard it is! No one in the village seems to care for Black
+Bull. The Stone, his own mother, treats him cruelly. The dog is his
+only friend, as he says. I will tell my young mistress about him. It
+may be she can help him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As soon as Timid Hare had done her errand she ran home, still with the
+thought of Black Bull's trouble in her mind. She had been in the tepee
+only a few minutes before Sweet Grass noticed that something was the
+matter with her little maid.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What has happened, Timid Hare?" she asked. "Your face is long--so!"
+She drew her own mouth down at the corners and made herself look so
+funny that Timid Hare, sad as she felt, broke into a laugh.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is Black Bull," she answered. "He is in trouble. It is greater
+than it would be with any one else in the village."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then she went on to speak of the youth's lonely life, and that even his
+mother treated him badly. Only one loved him: this was the dog Smoke
+who followed him wherever he went and who did not mock him as the
+children of the village sometimes did. Smoke was ever ready to smile
+at him in the one way dogs can--with his tail. It was Smoke's love
+alone that made Black Bull glad to live. And now--Timid Hare's voice
+broke as she went on to tell of what must soon happen.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Poor fellow!" said Sweet Grass softly. "Poor fellow," she repeated,
+half to herself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As it happened, Young Antelope was in the lodge when Timid Hare was
+telling the story. He was busy making a shield; he intended to wear it
+when first allowed to go forth on a war party with the older braves.
+But though he was busy at his work, he listened with interest to the
+words of Timid Hare.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Soon afterwards he left the tepee and ran along the path leading to the
+spring. "If I see Black Bull," he thought, "I will speak kindly to him
+even if he is such a useless creature."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When Young Antelope reached the spring he heard some one talking
+angrily. This was followed by a cry of fear. The sounds came from the
+direction of the bluff beyond, but the youth could see no one because
+of clumps of brush which shut off the view from any one at the spring
+below.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Young Antelope hurried along, till suddenly he caught a glimpse of two
+figures on the very edge of the rocky summit of the bluff. One was
+that of Thunder Cloud, a worthless fellow; the other which he held
+struggling in his arms was that of The Stoned's deformed son. Black
+Bull was helpless; he was at the mercy of Thunder Cloud who was about
+to cast him into the stream below.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="img-060"></A>
+<CENTER>
+<IMG SRC="images/img-060.jpg" ALT="Illustration: Black Bull was helpless." BORDER="2" WIDTH="387" HEIGHT="523">
+<H5 ALIGN="center">
+[Illustration: Black Bull was helpless.]
+</H5>
+</CENTER>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<P>
+"What is this?" shouted Young Antelope. Thunder Cloud, startled,
+turned suddenly about.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I would punish this worthless fellow as he deserves," he answered.
+"Do you know what he dared to do? He brought his dog to yonder brush
+and fastened him in the midst. He thought to keep the animal from the
+sacrifice. Ugh! A wretched creature indeed. His mother bade me
+follow him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Make him free," said Young Antelope with the air of a mighty chief.
+"My father will take care of him. As for you, go from my sight."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Thunder Cloud, who had already set Black Bull on his feet, though he
+still clutched him tightly, let go his hold, and skulked away.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Let your dog loose," Young Antelope now ordered Black Bull who stood
+before him, still shivering from fright. "There! Now we will go to my
+father and let him settle the matter. Follow me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Black Bull, with Smoke capering about him in the joy of being set free,
+followed Young Antelope silently till the two neared the council house
+where Bent Horn was busy planning for the coming celebration. There,
+in the autumn sunlight, they waited till the chief should appear and
+the son whom he loved dearly should have a chance to ask for a certain
+boon.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That night Black Bull went to sleep as happy as a king, even though his
+mother had just given him a beating. Smoke was safe! Another, Young
+Antelope, who had more treasures than he, was willing to make the
+sacrifice in his place.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap10"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+THE FESTIVAL
+</H2>
+
+<P>
+The celebration was over and Timid Hare was tired out from excitement.
+Never before had she seen so many wonders. Why, the chief of chiefs,
+the chief of all the Dahcotas, had been one of the visitors and had
+slept in Bent Horn's tepee. Timid Hare herself had helped to serve
+him. And when he had gone forth to the council and to the feasts he
+was the grandest looking person she had ever beheld in her life. He
+wore a head-dress of war-eagle feathers. Thick and heavy was this
+head-dress, and beautiful were the feathers beyond compare. The great
+chief's face shone with grease, and was made fearful to look upon with
+much paint. On his robe were pictured the many battles in which he had
+taken part; it was trimmed with a heavy fringe of scalp-locks. His
+leggings and moccasins were richly embroidered with porcupine quills.
+He walked forth like a king. The children of the village trembled as
+they gazed upon him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bent Horn looked grand also in his own robes of state. Many a day had
+his wife spent embroidering this robe with porcupine quills and
+trimming it with fringes of his enemies scalp-locks. Heavy chains hung
+around his neck. His long hair, which he had greased well, had been
+divided into two parts and crossed on the top of his head, where it was
+then gathered into a knot.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bent Horn's head-dress is almost as handsome as that of the Great
+Chief," Timid Hare said to herself, as she watched the two men walking
+together towards the council house.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The sun shone brightly throughout the whole celebration and the feasts
+were spread outdoors. The chiefs and braves sat in a half-circle at
+these feasts and the food was passed to them from steaming kettles.
+There was bear meat in plenty, fat and rich; baked turtles; juicy
+buffalo steaks and stews; but at the principal feast of all, only dog
+flesh was served.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then it was that the people of the village gathered in crowds around
+the feasters to watch and listen. Closest of all were the braves and
+their sons. Back of them were the squaws and their little daughters.
+Timid Hare, beside her young mistress Sweet Grass, listened with wonder
+to the noble speeches of the chiefs. Bent Horn spoke first of all.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My brother," he said to the Great Chief, "our hearts are almost
+bursting with gladness that you are with us today.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And you also"--Bent Horn continued, turning to one after another of
+the lesser chiefs, "we welcome you with gladness and feel that the
+Great Spirit has sent you to us. In token of our love we have killed
+faithful dogs that you may feast. May the Great Spirit bind us closely
+together. I say no more."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Bent Horn ended his speech he lifted before the eyes of the feasters
+a carved necklace made of the claws of grizzly bears, and his own robe
+of elk skins which he had just taken from his shoulders. Then he
+slowly rose and, going to the side of the guest of honor, he laid the
+gifts before him. Next, he took other gifts--embroidered moccasins and
+leggings--and presented them to the lesser chiefs.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a moment all were silent. Then the guests themselves made
+speeches, each one telling of his love for Bent Horn and his band, and
+giving rich gifts in return.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And now the pipe of peace was lighted and brought to Bent Horn.
+Solemnly he pointed the stem to the north, the south, the east, and the
+west. Last of all, he lifted it towards the sun. Then he spoke.
+"How--how--how," he said slowly. Then in silence he smoked it, but
+only to take one long whiff, after which he held it in turn to the
+mouths of the other chiefs, that they might smoke it also.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Not a word was spoken by any one during this solemn time. But as soon
+as the last guest had smoked, the dog-meat, floating in rich gravy, was
+brought from the steaming kettles and handed around in wooden bowls
+among the guests. All ate their fill. Then silently, they got up and
+went away. They had smoked and eaten the sacrifice together. Surely,
+they thought, there could be no better token of their friendship for
+each other.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Timid Hare looked on from afar. She felt pride in her dear mistress's
+brother who had given up his own pet dog, in place of Black Bull. She
+was also filled with wonder at the greatness of the Dahcotas.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They are a mighty tribe," thought the little girl. She drew a long
+breath of sadness, feeling that she could never hope to go from among
+them. But when she afterwards looked on at the wrestling matches,
+races on horseback, and dances such as she had never seen before, she
+forgot everything else for the moment. Her eyes shone with excitement;
+her breath came quick. Never before, it seemed to her, had she seen
+such skill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When the entertainment of each day ended, however, and Timid Hare went
+to her bed of buffalo skins, she would lie thinking of the old home, of
+the loving White Mink, the kind Three Bears, and the good
+foster-brother Big Moose. Then tears would roll down over the little
+girl's cheeks and she would choke back a sob.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Can it be," she would think, "that the story White Mink told me before
+I was taken from her, is true? Am I truly a white child, and is she
+not my real mother?" Then the little captive would touch the baby's
+sock fastened by a cord of deer-sinews about her waist and next to her
+flesh.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is safe," she would whisper to herself, "and no one here has
+discovered it--not even The Stone. It did not save me from being
+captured, but it may yet bring good fortune, even as White Mink hoped."
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap11"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+MOVING DAY
+</H2>
+
+<P>
+The visitors had all gone away and the village was once more
+quiet--that is, as quiet as it might be among the Dahcotas, the lovers
+of the dance and of music.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Now and then some of the braves went forth on a war-party, or on a hunt
+after bears or buffaloes. But the buffaloes were scarce, they told
+their chief; the herds must have wandered far, and the hunters often
+returned empty-handed. This was bad, because the winter was drawing
+near and supplies of meat were needed for that long season of bitter
+cold.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One morning Bent Horn rose earlier than usual and made his way to the
+council house. There he staid for some time talking with the medicine
+men and other leading braves of the village.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Should there be a bear dance and a buffalo dance to call the attention
+of the Great Spirit to the needs of His people, that He might send
+plenty of prey nearer the village? Or should the band first move to a
+different part of the country, where no red man dwelt and where the
+buffaloes, at least, might be plentiful?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When the talk was ended the men who had gathered at the council went
+their way. Bent Horn's mind was made up. "My people must move to a
+new camping ground," he said to himself. "We will journey to the
+eastward. In that direction, the hunters say, we are likely to draw
+near the feeding grounds of large herds of buffaloes. Tomorrow morning
+at sunrise we must be on our way."
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="img-064"></A>
+<CENTER>
+<IMG SRC="images/img-064.jpg" ALT="Illustration: Bent Horn's mind was made up." BORDER="2" WIDTH="401" HEIGHT="529">
+<H5 ALIGN="center">
+[Illustration: Bent Horn's mind was made up.]
+</H5>
+</CENTER>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<P>
+The news was quickly carried from one tepee to another and the squaws
+set to work with a will to prepare for moving.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When Timid Hare heard the news she thought sadly: "Shall I go farther
+than ever from my dear White Mink?" The little girl had been so
+frightened at the time of her capture that she was not sure in which
+direction she travelled.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was not a moment now, however, to consider herself, as Sweet
+Grass and her mother kept the child helping them prepare for the
+moving. The stores of grain and other dry food, the dishes and kettles
+and clothing must be packed in readiness for the early start on the
+morrow.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap12"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+THE JOURNEY
+</H2>
+
+<P>
+"Awake, Timid Hare, for there is a faint light in the eastern sky. The
+sun is already rising from his bed."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At these words from Sweet Grass, Timid Hare's eyes burst wide open and
+she sprang from her bed. There was much to do at once, for the signal
+must be given to the whole village from the home of Bent Horn.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So quickly did his squaw and young daughter work that a half-hour
+afterwards the walls of the chief's tepee were flapping in the morning
+breeze. Immediately afterwards the same thing happened to every other
+home in the village. Next, down came the tent poles of the chief's
+tepee, and then those of all the others.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Timid Hare went quickly here and there, obeying the orders of her
+mistress. Ropes of skin must be brought to tie the poles into two
+bundles. The little girl must help hold these bundles in place, while
+Bent Horn's best pack horses were brought up and the bundles fastened
+against the sides of their bodies, and at the same time allowed to drag
+on the ground behind.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Quick, Timid Hare," Sweet Grass would say, pointing now to this bundle
+of bedding, and now to another of dishes or clothing. The horses were
+restless and the bundles must be well-fastened to the poles before they
+should be ready to start. Some of Bent Horn's dogs were also loaded in
+the same way.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+While Sweet Grass and her mother, with Timid Hare's help, were packing
+their own stores every other woman in the village was doing the same.
+In a wonderfully short time the procession was on its way, the squaws
+leading the pack horses. When they started out, however, the braves
+and youths, riding their favorite horses and ponies, were already far
+ahead.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Timid Hare trudged bravely along beside her young mistress who led one
+of the pack horses. She carried a big bundle on her back. So did
+Sweet Grass and her mother. So did all the other squaws except those
+who were too old and feeble.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Let us move fast while we are fresh," Sweet Grass would say now and
+then when Timid Hare began to lag. "When the day grows old, then is
+the time to move like the turtle."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As they travelled along. Timid Hare passed The Stone who looked at her
+with ugly eyes. The old squaw was thinking, "Had it not been for my
+sending the girl that day to Sweet Grass she would now be making my
+load light. Fool that I was!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Afterwards Timid Hare and her mistress talked with The Fountain, the
+pretty bride who lived near The Stone. The Fountain smiled pleasantly
+at the little girl. She said, "Sometime, Timid Hare, you shall come to
+see me in the new home. I may have a surprise for you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The sun had nearly set when word came down the line: "The chief has
+chosen a place for the new camp. It is beside a stream of clear water
+and the tracks of buffaloes are not far distant."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Timid Hare was glad to hear the news, because her feet and back ached.
+She was not strong as an Indian girl of her own age should be and she
+knew it. "But I look like one," she said to herself. She was glad now
+that her body was stained. She had colored it afresh of her own accord
+just before the journey, for she felt she would not be jeered at by the
+children of the Dahcotas so long as her hair and body were of the same
+color as their own.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When the new camping ground was reached, she was very tired. "But I
+must not show it," she thought. "I must be bright and cheerful." So
+she moved quickly, helping to set up the tepee and get supper for the
+family. But her eyelids closed the moment she lay down to rest, and
+she knew nothing more till the barking of the dogs roused her the next
+morning. At the same time she heard Sweet Grass and her mother talking
+together.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The Fountain was last seen when we stopped at a spring to get water in
+the late afternoon," one of them was saying.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I hope she is safe," replied the other, "and that the gray wolf was
+not abroad."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Timid Hare shuddered. "Where can The Fountain be?" she wondered. "She
+is so good and so pretty, I hope she is unharmed."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The very next moment a neighbor appeared in the door. "The Fountain
+has just reached us," she said. "She spent the night by the spring,
+and she now brings with her a baby son. He is a lusty child. May he
+grow up to be a noble warrior!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I will go to her and give her my best wishes," declared the chief's
+wife. "It is a good sign for the new home that one more is added to
+our people."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Soon afterwards Timid Hare and her young mistress were also on their
+way to visit the young mother. She was very happy. So was her
+husband. So was her baby; at least it seemed happy to Timid Hare as
+she looked at it nestling quietly in its mother's arms. The little
+girl longed for it to open its eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"By and by," The Fountain told her with a smile, "my son will awake.
+But now he must sleep, for he finds this world a strange one, and he is
+tired."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The Great Spirit has been kind to The Fountain," said Sweet Grass as
+she walked homeward with her little maid.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How powerful He must be," declared Timid Hare thoughtfully. "Whenever
+He speaks to us in the thunder and lightning I tremble with fear. But
+when I looked at the little baby just now I felt His love."
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap13"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+THE MEDICINE MAN
+</H2>
+
+<P>
+The next morning Timid Hare was allowed to go once more to visit The
+Fountain and her little son. The baby lay fastened into a pretty frame
+the young mother had made for him. The straps were embroidered with
+porcupine quills, and finished very neatly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Timid Hare entered the tepee, The Fountain was about to lift the
+baby in his frame to her back.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am going to see Black Bull," she said. "He is ill. He has not been
+well since before the Dog Feast."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Timid Hare at once thought of a reason for Black Bull's illness,--he
+had worried much over the thought of losing his dog. But Young
+Antelope had not told her that he came near losing his life and of his
+terrible fright at the time.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Has the medicine man visited Black Bull?" asked Timid Hare.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not yet." The Fountain shook her head sadly. "I doubt if The Stone
+cares whether her son lives or dies. But I am going to see the poor
+creature. Afterwards, if the medicine man has not been sought, I will
+ask my husband to get his help."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Fountain started on her errand, and Timid Hare went back to the
+chief's lodge to tell her young mistress what she had learned. On the
+way she passed a clump of trees beneath which she saw several people
+sitting and listening to the voice of a tall man who stood before them.
+He was one of the most powerful medicine men of the band.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He must be speaking of some great mystery," thought Timid Hare. "How
+noble he is! How much he must know! It may be that he is telling of
+the secrets he reads in the fire."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Turning her eyes towards the listeners, she saw they were thinking
+deeply of his words. They looked with wonder at the medicine man.
+"Yes, he must be speaking of the secrets no one but he can discover."
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="img-080"></A>
+<CENTER>
+<IMG SRC="images/img-080.jpg" ALT="Illustration: They looked with wonder at the medicine man." BORDER="2" WIDTH="398" HEIGHT="529">
+<H5 ALIGN="center">
+[Illustration: They looked with wonder at the medicine man.]
+</H5>
+</CENTER>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<P>
+When Timid Hare reached home she spoke of this medicine man to her
+mistress. "If only he could go to Black Bull, the sickness would leave
+the poor fellow," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Soon afterwards Sweet Grass herself sought the medicine man. She
+brought him presents of buffalo marrow, deer meat, and a juicy,
+well-cooked land turtle. Then she asked his help for the deformed
+youth, and he promised to go to him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next day word came to the chief's lodge that Black Bull had gone to
+join the people of the grave. Though the medicine man had gone to him
+and worked his mysteries with songs and drum beating, the Great Spirit
+had not willed that he should live.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Better so," declared Bent Horn, when the news was brought to the
+lodge. "Black Bull was of no help to his people. He suffered, and was
+not happy. Better so!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I will take his dog," Sweet Grass promised her sad little maid.
+"Smoke shall be cared for, though his master has left him."
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap14"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+THE WINTER HUNT
+</H2>
+
+<P>
+The new home proved to be a good one. Each time the hunters went forth
+they returned with a load of game. The squaws were kept busy drying
+buffalo and bear meat, packing away the marrow and cleaning the bones
+and skins. Every part of the animals was put to some use.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The days of the long, cold winter were at hand, and all must work
+busily. Timid Hare had much to do, but sometimes she was allowed to
+play outside of the tepee with other children; they were kinder to her
+now that she lived in the chief's home. She had plenty to eat, and
+Sweet Grass and her mother treated her well, but she longed for
+something that was lacking here but was freely given in the old home:
+it was love.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The snow fell thick and fast. It covered the prairie for miles in
+every direction. In some places it was deeper than Timid Hare was
+tall. A thick crust formed over the top.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Young Antelope set to work to make himself new snowshoes. As he bent
+the hoops for the frames and crossed them with networks of leather
+strings. Timid Hare looked on with longing. She had had snowshoes of
+her own before, and she had enjoyed skimming over the snow fields on
+them, but they were far away--very far away.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I will help you make some shoes," Young Antelope told her, when he
+caught the look. "You can do the easy part, and I will do the hard."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Timid Hare was pleased because Young Antelope did not notice her very
+often. The snowshoes were soon made and the little girl longed to try
+them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The very next day Young Antelope went out with the men on a winter
+hunt. There were large stores of meat in the village, but the cold was
+bitter and more warm buffalo robes were needed for beds and coverlets.
+Moreover, at this time of the year the fur of the animals was heaviest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It will be easy to get our prey," Bent Horn said to his son the night
+before the hunt. "There is little snow on the south slopes of the
+hills, where the buffaloes will be feeding. We can take them by
+surprise and drive them down into the ice-crusted fields. They are so
+heavy that their feet will fall through. Then the hunter can draw near
+on his swift snowshoes, and will pierce the heart of his prey with his
+spear without trouble."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I will be such a hunter on the morrow," the youth had replied. "My
+spear is already sharpened. It shall bring death to more than one of
+the creatures that provide us with comfort through the moon of
+difficulty," as he had been taught to call the month of January.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Young Antelope skimmed along over the snow fields next morning, he
+thought more than once of the little captive at home.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She behaves well," he said to himself, "and she will be a good
+homekeeper when she is older. It may be--it may be--that I will yet
+choose her for my wife."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Young Antelope was only sixteen years old, but he was already thinking
+of getting married! It was the way of his people. The girls married
+even younger than the boys--sometimes when only twelve or thirteen
+years had passed over their heads. It was therefore not strange that
+the chief's son should be considering what wife he would choose.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With many of the braves away on the hunt, the village was quiet, and
+the squaws took a little vacation from their work, as on the morrow
+they must be very busy caring for the supplies brought home by the
+hunters.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the afternoon Sweet Grass said kindly: "Timid Hare, you have been a
+good girl and worked hard of late. You may have the rest of the day
+for play. Try your new snowshoes, if you like."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The rest of the day--two whole hours before sunset! It seemed too good
+to be true. Never had such a thing happened to the child since she
+left the home of the Mandans.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Without wasting a moment, Timid Hare got the snowshoes and left the
+tepee. For a moment she looked about her to see if any other little
+girl would like to join her in a skim over the fields. But all seemed
+busy at their games, and even now she was not enough at home with any
+one of them to ask them to leave their own play and go off with her, a
+captive.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So, binding on the shoes, she started off alone. What fun it was to
+move so fast and so smoothly! How clear was the air! How delightful
+it was to feel the blood rushing freely through every part of her body!
+Her cheeks tingled pleasantly; her heart beat with joy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mile after mile the child darted on in the opposite direction from that
+taken by the hunters in the morning. So happy, so free felt the child
+that she forgot how far she was travelling. Sometimes there were
+little rolls in the land. She would get up her speed as she approached
+them, so as to have force enough to reach the summit of a roll with
+ease. And then what fun it was to travel like the wind down the other
+side!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On, on, on! and then suddenly, Timid Hare came to herself. Where was
+the village? In what direction? Could she not see smoke rising
+somewhere behind her, telling of the fires burning in the homes of the
+people?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was nothing, nothing, to guide her back--only some fields
+apparently untrodden in every direction. So light was the little
+girl's body that her shoes had rarely pressed through the crust. The
+short winter day was near its end. A bank of clouds was gathering
+about the setting sun, they told of an approaching storm; so also spoke
+the chill wind that blew in the child's face.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Fright clutched at Timid Hare's heart. She thought of the power of the
+storm-king. Here, in the snowy wilderness, it seemed that she must
+perish. Was there no one to turn to in this time of danger? Yes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Help me, Great Spirit," cried the child, lifting her hands towards the
+sky where she believed He dwelt.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With that cry came a feeling that somehow her prayer would be answered.
+And at the same time Timid Hare remembered the little sock which she
+always carried in her bosom. She pressed a hand against the place
+where it should rest. Yes, it was safe.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"White Mink had faith in it. So will I," Timid Hare said to herself.
+Many a time during the hard days with The Stone, she had repeated the
+same words. It had always helped her to do so.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And now she turned in the direction she hoped was the village of the
+Dahcotas, but her feet felt numb. It was hard to travel. Hark! what
+was that? It seemed as though men's voices could be heard shouting to
+each other in the distance. They came nearer. Could it be that Sweet
+Grass had sent some of the village boys out after her?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Nearer! Nearer! Timid Hare stood still, listening. If they would
+only hurry! She suddenly felt drowsy--the snow-chill was benumbing her
+whole body, and somehow she no longer cared whether she was found or
+not. She tottered, fell.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next thing she knew, she was lying in the arms of a man with kind
+blue eyes. He was smiling at her, and he was white! Another man,
+white like himself, was rubbing her arms and legs.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"All right now," the first man was saying to the other. "Poor little
+thing! How did she ever get out here? That Dahcota village is a good
+dozen miles from here, and the child's moccasins tell that she is of
+that tribe."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We must waste no time in getting farther away from them ourselves,"
+replied the other. "Little time would be wasted in taking our scalps
+if they caught us alone."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But we can't leave this helpless creature," said the first speaker.
+"Do you know, Ben, she must be about the age of my own little daughter
+if--" The man's voice broke suddenly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Poor fellow--yes, I understand. You never will get over that blow.
+But, really, Tom, we must not stay here. The savages may be upon us
+any moment. Here, use this. It may bring her to."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The speaker held out a bottle of cordial which the man who held Timid
+Hare held to her lips. She tried to swallow, but it choked her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There," she said with a gasp, "it is enough," and she lifted herself
+up.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good," said both men, who knew a little of the Indian tongue.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, but my shoe!" cried the little girl in fright. It had slipped a
+little from its usual resting place, and she now missed it. In spite
+of being alone on the snow-covered prairie, with two strangers, her
+first thought was of the little talisman White Mink had given into her
+keeping. Oh! she could feel it pressing against her waist, and she
+gave a happy sigh.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the meantime, the men had decided that it would be best to take the
+child to their camp. The rest could be settled afterwards.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Can you trust yourself to your snowshoes again?" the man whom his
+friend called Tom asked her gently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She nodded, and with the help of one of her companions, they were bound
+on her feet. A biscuit was now given her--she had never tasted its
+like before--and she ate greedily. This was followed by another
+swallow of the cordial, and the little girl was ready for the start.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Many miles were before her, but the men often took hold of her hands to
+give her fresh courage. Besides, she was greatly excited. What was
+coming? Were these strangers bringing her back to the village of the
+Dahcotas, or guiding her to something far different? From time to time
+one of the men struck a match--such a wonderful thing it seemed to
+Timid Hare--and looked at a tiny instrument he carried in his pocket.
+It seemed to tell him if they were travelling in the right direction.
+"How wise," thought Timid Hare, "the white people must be! Perhaps
+they are as wise as the medicine men!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And she--why, she was of their own race, though her stained skin did
+not show it! At the thought, she lifted her hand to her side. Yes,
+her treasure was safe!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When it seemed to the child as if she could not move her feet longer, a
+faint light shone out in the distance. The camp of the white men would
+soon be reached.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When the travellers at last arrived at the journey's end there was
+great excitement among the men who were anxiously watching for the
+return of their two companions. They had feared that their friends had
+lost their way and been overcome by cold; or more probable, that they
+had been killed or captured by the Indians. They were in the Dahcota
+country,--this they knew; also that these Dahcotas were fierce warriors
+and hated the white men.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+How surprised they were to see what they thought was an Indian child
+with their companions! How did it happen? What was to be done with
+her?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But now, as Timid Hare almost fell to the floor of the warm, brightly
+lighted tent, all saw that she was quite exhausted. She must be fed,
+and afterwards sleep. There would be time enough to question her next
+morning.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hot soup was brought, and never, it seemed, had anything ever tasted so
+delicious to Timid Hare. And the heat of the burning logs--how
+pleasant it was! Timid Hare was too tired to be afraid, or even to
+think, and even as she ate, she fell sound asleep.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She awoke next morning with her hand clutching the place where the sock
+lay hidden, and saw a kind face bending over her. It belonged to the
+same man who had held her when she roused from the snow-chill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What is it?" he asked gently. He pointed to her hand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is--my charm. It is to bring me good."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"May I see it?" The man's voice was so kind that it filled Timid Hare
+with perfect trust.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You will--help me?" The child's eyes were full of pleading.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, little one."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slowly Timid Hare drew forth the sock. It was faded and soiled, yet
+the pattern in which the silk had been woven into the worsted was quite
+plain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How did--Why, tell me at once how you got this." The man's voice was
+half stern, half pleading.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It was--so." With this beginning Timid Hare repeated the story as
+White Mink had told it to her. Many a time she had since told it to
+herself during her hard life with The Stone. It was such a strange
+story--so full of wonder to her still. The wonder of it was in her
+voice even now.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The man listened with half-closed eyes, but saying never a word till
+she finished. Then, as in a dream, he said in a low tone: "It is my
+baby's sock--the pattern is one planned by my dear wife Alice who died
+out on this lonely prairie. And then--the sudden attack of the
+Dahcotas--and I made prisoner, while my baby Alice was left behind to
+perish. Afterwards I was rescued, though I cared little to live."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But child, child," he burst out, "though your eyes have the same
+color, the same expression as those of my dear wife, your skin is that
+of the red people."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I stained it--The Stone made me--and when I saw Sweet Grass liked me
+best so, I put on the color again and yet again."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"God be praised! I have found my darling who, I thought, was lost
+forever." The man lifted Timid Hare and clasped her tenderly in his
+arms. And she--well, the little girl rested there content and happy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next minute the rest of the party who had been out exploring,
+entered the tent with word that the start must be made at once. The
+clouds of the night before had lifted; the snow might not begin falling
+for several hours, and the most must be made of the morning towards
+reaching a larger camp where sledges would carry them a long ways
+towards a fur station.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Great was the joy of the others when they learned the good fortune that
+had come to their friend, and merry was the whole party as it made its
+way onward. Yes, Timid Hare, or rather Alice, now more like the Swift
+Fawn she had been, was merry too. But as she went on her way to the
+new and beautiful life that would soon be hers, she begged her father
+to take her back by-and-by for a visit to her foster-parents and Big
+Moose in the Mandan village on the river. And he promised gladly.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+<hr noshade>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TIMID HARE ***</p>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Timid Hare, by Mary Hazelton Wade,
+Illustrated by Louis Betts
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Timid Hare
+
+Author: Mary Hazelton Wade
+
+Release Date: January 24, 2005 [eBook #14784]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TIMID HARE ***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Al Haines
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original lovely illustrations.
+ See 14784-h.htm or 14784-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/4/7/8/14784/14784-h/14784-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/4/7/8/14784/14784-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+TIMID HARE
+
+The Little Captive
+
+by
+
+MARY H. WADE
+
+Author of "Little Cousin Series", etc.
+
+Illustrated by Louis Betts
+
+Whitman Publishing Co.
+Racine -- Chicago
+
+1916
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Cover Art]
+
+
+[Frontispiece: Buffalo Rib was a Handsome Youth.]
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CAPTURED
+ BEFORE THE CHIEF
+ THE NEW HOME
+ HARD WORK
+ THE CHANGE
+ THE VISIT
+ THE MISCHIEF MAKER
+ THE HAPPY DAY
+ THE DOG FEAST
+ THE FESTIVAL
+ MOVING DAY
+ THE JOURNEY
+ THE MEDICINE MAN
+ THE WINTER HUNT
+
+
+
+
+List of Color Plates
+
+
+ Buffalo Rib Was a Handsome Youth
+
+ The Stone and Her Son Black Bull Were Hurrying Home
+
+ "Sweet Grass, Listen to Me" [Missing from book]
+
+ "I Soon Had a Fire Started"
+
+ Black Bull Was Helpless
+
+ Bent Horn's Mind Was Made Up
+
+ They Looked With Wonder at the Medicine Man
+
+ "Help Me, Great Spirit" [Missing from book]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CAPTURED
+
+Swift Fawn sat motionless on the river-bank.
+
+"Lap, lap," sang the tiny waves as they struck the shore. "Lap, lap,"
+they kept repeating, but the little girl did not heed the soft music.
+Her mind was too busy with the story White Mink had told her that
+morning.
+
+After the men had started off on a buffalo hunt Swift Fawn had left the
+other children to their games in the village and stolen away to the
+favorite bathing place of the women-folk.
+
+"No one will disturb me there," she had said to herself, "and I want to
+be all by myself to think it over."
+
+After she had been there for sometime. Swift Fawn drew out from the
+folds of her deerskin jacket a baby's sock, and turned it over and over
+in her hands curiously. Never had she seen the like of it before. How
+pretty it was! Who could have had the skill to weave the threads of
+scarlet silk in and out of the soft wool in such a dainty pattern? Was
+it--the child whispered the word--could it have been her mother?
+
+White Mink had always been so good to her, Surely no real mother could
+have been more loving than the Indian woman who had watched over her
+and tended her, and taught her from the time when Three Bears had
+brought her, a year-old baby, to his wife. Where he found the little
+one, he had never told.
+
+And so she was a white child. How strange it was! Yet she had grown
+up into a big girl, loving the ways of the red people more and more
+deeply for eight happy years.
+
+"Surely," thought the child, "I could not have loved my own parents
+more than I do White Mink and Three Bears."
+
+"I wish--oh, so hard!" she added with a lump in her throat, "that White
+Mink had not told me. I don't want to remember there ever
+was--something different."
+
+With these last words Swift Fawn lifted the little sock and was about
+to hurl it into the water, when she suddenly stopped as she remembered
+White Mink's last words.
+
+"I give this shoe into your keeping," the woman had said solemnly. "I
+have spoken because of my dream last night, and because of its warning
+I bid you keep the shoe always."
+
+With a little sigh, Swift Fawn drew back from the edge of the stream
+and replaced the shoe in the bosom of her jacket. Then she stretched
+herself out on the grassy bank and lay looking up into the blue sky
+overhead. How beautiful it was! How gracefully the clouds floated by!
+One took on the shape of a buffalo with big horns and head bent down as
+if to charge. But it was so far away and dreamlike it was not fearful
+to the child. And now it changed; the horns disappeared; the body
+became smaller, and folded wings appeared at the sides; it was now, in
+Swift Fawn's thoughts, a graceful swan sailing, onward, onward, in the
+sky-world overhead.
+
+The little girl's eyes winked and blinked and at last closed tightly.
+She had left the prairie behind her and entered the Land of Nod.
+
+She must have slept a long time, for when she awoke the sun had set,
+and in the gathering darkness, she was aware of a man's face with
+fierce dark eyes bent over her own.
+
+"Ugh! Ugh!" the man was muttering. "It is a daughter of the Mandans.
+A good prize!"
+
+As he spoke he rose to his feet and Swift Fawn, shaking with fear, knew
+that he was beckoning to others to draw near. A moment afterwards she
+was surrounded by a party of warriors. They were taller than the men
+of her own tribe, and were straight and noble in shape, but their faces
+were very stern.
+
+"They must belong to the 'Dahcotas,'" thought the child. "And they are
+our enemies."
+
+Many a tale had Swift Fawn heard of the fierce Dahcotas, lovers of war
+and greatly to be feared. It was a terrible thought that she was alone
+and in their power, with the night coming on.
+
+"Ugh! What shall we do with her?" the brave who had discovered her
+said to the others.
+
+"She is fair to look upon," replied one.
+
+"But she is a Mandan," was the quick answer of another. As he spoke he
+looked proudly at the scalp lock hanging from his shoulder, for he and
+his companions has just been out on the war path.
+
+"Let our Chief decide," said the first speaker. "It is best that Bent
+Horn should settle the question."
+
+"Ugh! Ugh!" grunted the others, not quite pleased at the idea.
+However, they said nothing more, and turned away, moving softly with
+their moccasined feet to the place where their horses were restlessly
+waiting to go on with the journey.
+
+Swift Fawn's captor now seized her hand, saying gruffly, "Get up."
+
+Dragging her to his horse's side, he lifted her up, bound her to the
+animal's back, leaped up after her and a moment afterwards the whole
+party were galloping faster and faster into the night.
+
+Hour after hour they traveled with never a stop. At last, by the light
+of the stars. Swift Fawn knew that she was nearing a large camp, made
+up of many tent-homes.
+
+
+
+
+BEFORE THE CHIEF
+
+As the party entered the camp the dogs came
+out to meet them, barking in delight at
+their masters' return. Swift Fawn's captor rode
+up with her to the largest of the tents, or tepees
+as the Dahcotas called them. Springing from
+his horse, he unbound the little girl, and again
+seizing her hand, drew the scared child into the
+lodge.
+
+A bright fire was blazing in the fireplace, for
+the night was cold.
+
+Beside it squatted a noble-looking brave,
+wrapped in a bear-skin robe, and with eagles'
+feathers waving from the top of his head. Chains
+of wampum hung around his neck and his face
+was painted in long, bright lines.
+
+Not far from him sat a beautiful and richly-dressed
+young girl, his daughter. She looked
+kindly at Swift Fawn as if to say: "Do not fear,
+little girl."
+
+"Behold, a child of the Mandans. I give her
+into your hands, great Chief," said Swift Fawn's
+captor to the brave by the fireside.
+
+Bent Horn seemed in no hurry to speak, as
+he looked keenly at the child who could not lift
+her eyes for fear.
+
+"Is the girl of the weak Mandans to live, or to
+be a slave among our people?" asked the warrior.
+
+Bent Horn was about to answer, as his
+daughter broke in: "Father, let her live. I wish
+it."
+
+The Chief turned toward the young girl with
+love in his eyes. He smiled as he said, "Sweet
+Grass shall have her wish."
+
+His face became stern, however, as he added:
+"That shrinking creature must be trained. Give
+her into the keeping of The Stone, and let this
+girl henceforth be known as Timid Hare."
+
+As Bent Horn spoke he motioned to Swift
+Fawn's captor to take her away, and the man at
+once led her out of the lodge and through the
+camp to a small tepee on the outskirts, where
+the old woman, The Stone, lived with her
+deformed son, Black Bull.
+
+
+
+
+THE NEW HOME
+
+Drawing aside the heavy buffalo-skin curtain which covered the doorway,
+the man shoved his little captive inside and followed close behind her.
+
+"Ugh, Timid Hare," he said scornfully. "This is your new home. Does
+it please you?"
+
+The child shuddered without answering, as she mustered courage to look
+about her. The fire on the hearth in the middle of the tepee was
+smouldering. With the help of its dim light the little girl could see
+piles of dirty buffalo robes on either side; the walls of the tent,
+also made of buffalo skins, were blackened by smoke. Long shadows
+stretching across the floor, seemed to take on fearful shapes in the
+child's fancy as the low fire, now and then, gave a sudden leap upward.
+Furthermore, the tepee was empty,--no face looked out from any corner;
+no voice spoke to the new-comers.
+
+"Ugh!" The man shrugged his shoulders as he grunted in displeasure.
+He was in haste to get to his own lodge where a supper of bear steak
+was no doubt awaiting him.
+
+"Where can The Stone be that she is not here, now that darkness covers
+the earth?" he muttered. "And the crooked boy away too!"
+
+The sentence was barely ended when the sound of quick, soft footsteps
+could be heard outside. The Stone and her son, Black Bull, were
+hurrying home. They had been gone all day, having gone to a clay pit
+miles away from the village to get a certain clay for making red dye
+with which The Stone wished to color some reeds for basket weaving.
+Night had taken then by surprise, and wolves howling in the distance
+made them travel as fast as the poor deformed youth could go.
+
+[Illustration: The Stone and her son Black Bull were hurrying home.]
+
+The Stone was the first of the two to enter the lodge. She was bent
+and wrinkled, and her cunning, cruel eyes opened wide with surprise as
+she saw her visitors.
+
+"Ugh! what does this mean?" she asked sharply, as she looked from the
+brave to the cowering child still held in his strong grip. "Are you
+bringing a daughter of the pale-faces into my keeping?" She ended with
+a wicked laugh.
+
+"Not much better--it is a child of the Mandans who fell into my hands.
+Better to kill her at once--a goodly scalp that!" With the words the
+man pointed to his captive's long and beautiful hair.
+
+He continued: "But Bent Horn says, No. Let The Stone take her into her
+keeping. So it is then--Timid Hare, shall draw water for you and wait
+upon you and your son."
+
+Black Bull, who had followed close upon his mother, stood staring at
+the captive with wild eyes. The poor fellow was small-witted, as well
+as deformed. He was eighteen years old, yet he had no more
+understanding than a small child. His face was not cruel like his
+mother's, however. His eyes were sad and spoke of a longing for
+something--but what that something was even Black Bull himself did not
+understand.
+
+As the little girl looked at him a tiny hope leaped up in her heart.
+"He will not be unkind to me, at any rate," she decided. "And I am
+sorry for him that he has such a mother."
+
+Following close upon this thought came another. It was of White
+Mink--dear, kind White Mink who was perhaps at this very moment weeping
+over the loss of her little Swift Fawn.
+
+"But there is no Swift Fawn--she is dead, dead, dead. There is now
+only Timid Hare, the slave of a wicked woman."--The child shuddered at
+the thought. She came to herself to hear The Stone saying,
+
+"Leave her to me and I will train her in the good ways of the
+Dahcotas." The man smiled grimly and went his way, and the woman
+turning to her charge said: "Come, don't stand there cowering and
+useless. Busy yourself. Pile wood upon the fire and put water in that
+kettle. My son and I are hungry and would eat, and the meat must yet
+be cooked."
+
+With The Stone's words came a blow on Timid Hare's shoulder. It was
+the first one the child had ever felt, and though it did not strike
+hard upon the body, it fell with heavy weight upon her aching heart.
+
+Stumbling about, she tried to do the old squaw's bidding, and the two
+soon had the supper ready. The Stone now served her son on his side of
+the fireplace, after which she herself began to eat her fill while
+Swift Fawn sat huddled in a dark comer, hungrily watching.
+
+"Take that," the woman said as she finished her meal, and she threw a
+half-picked bone to the little girl. Then she got up, put away
+whatever food was left from the supper, and began to spread out some
+buffalo skins, first for her son's bed on his side of the tepee, then
+on her own side for herself to sleep on.
+
+"You can lie where you are," she told Timid Hare, pointing to the pile
+of skins on which the child was crouching.
+
+Soon afterwards The Stone and Black Bull were quietly sleeping, while
+the little captive, with tears rolling down her cheeks, lay thinking of
+the kind friends far away and of the dreadful things that might happen
+on the morrow. All at once she remembered the baby's sock hidden in
+her dress, and of White Mink's words. Perhaps--perhaps--the sock would
+help her. But how? She must guard it, at any rate; not even The Stone
+should discover it. Kind sleep was already drawing near. The tired
+eyes no longer shed tears. Till morning should come, Timid Hare was
+free from trouble.
+
+HARD WORK
+
+The sun, shining into the tepee through the opening over the fireplace,
+roused The Stone to her day's work. She lost no time in setting a task
+for her little slave. Handing her a needle carved from the bone of a
+deer and thread made of a deer's sinew, she hade her sew up a rent in
+the skin curtain of the doorway.
+
+Poor Timid Hare! she had learned to embroider and to weave baskets in
+the old home, but sewing on heavy skins had never yet fallen to her
+share of the daily duties. "There will be time enough," White Mink had
+thought, "when the little fingers have grown bigger and the tender back
+is stronger."
+
+So now the hands were clumsy, and the stitches were not as even as they
+should be. The Stone watched her with a scowl and frequent scoldings;
+often an uplifted arm seemed ready to strike. But seeing that the
+child was trying to do her best, the expected beating did not come.
+
+After she and Black Bull had eaten their own breakfast of bread made
+out of wild rice, together with some buffalo fat, she gave a small
+portion to Timid Hare. Then she and Black Bull went out of the lodge,
+leaving the little girl alone at her work.
+
+How different--how very different--this home was from the one among the
+Mandans! The old one was so big and comfortable, and there was such a
+jolly household of parents and grandparents and uncles and aunts, and
+children of all ages gathered together under one roof. Then, too, the
+floor was so smooth and shiny, and the bedsteads, each one shut off by
+a curtain and made pretty with fringe and pictures, seemed almost like
+tiny sleeping rooms. Moreover, the banking of earth over the framework
+of the lodge kept out the chill winds and biting cold of winter.
+
+But here, in The Stoned tepee, where the skin covering was old and
+torn, one must often suffer. At least so thought Timid Hare as she
+looked up now and then from her work to get acquainted with her new
+home.
+
+"Besides, it is so small," she said to herself, "and only two people in
+the whole household before I came. How strange it is!"
+
+It was quite true that the ways of the Dahcotas were unlike those of
+the Mandans. Each family lived by itself and thus the home did not
+need to be so large. Timid Hare did not know this, nor that the
+people, as a rule, lived in great comfort. They preferred tents,
+rather than houses like those of the Mandans, of frame-work covered
+with earth because they liked to move from place to place and they
+could thus carry their homes with them. Yet their tepees were warm and
+comfortable because the covering of strong, thick buffalo skins was
+generally double. Fires were kept burning on their hearths in winter
+and supplies of food and clothing were easy to obtain from the wild
+creatures of the woods and prairies. What more could any red people
+wish?
+
+Timid Hare had heard her foster father tell much of the powerful
+Dahcotas and that they were rich, as Indians count riches.
+
+"Why are they so powerful?" she now asked herself. "Ugh! it was
+because of their fierce war spirit. It was this that made them drive
+other tribes before them, so that they became free to roam over the
+prairies and enjoy the richest hunting grounds."
+
+"I cannot help myself," now thought the child. "If I should run away,
+the braves would either find and kill me, or I should be devoured by
+the hungry wolves that go forth at nightfall."
+
+But might not Three Bears make up a war party and go forth to seek her?
+"Alas! that may not be," Timid Hare told herself. "My dear father
+would himself meet death at the hands of these cruel warriors."
+
+The rent in the curtain was nearly sewed up when Black Bull stole into
+the lodge. He wanted to talk to the little stranger with eyes sad like
+his own, and he did not wish his mother to know it.
+
+Behind Black Bull came his dog, wolfish-looking like most of his breed,
+but as Black Bull squatted in his corner, the animal crouched close at
+his master's side as though he loved him.
+
+"Poor fellow, he has a pet to follow him about just as I had at home,"
+thought Timid Hare. "Perhaps by-and-by the dog may learn to love me
+too." There was a big lump in the little girl's throat, and she
+coughed as she tried to choke it back.
+
+"Hard work," said Black Bull as he watched her pulling the coarse
+thread through the buffalo skin and trying not to tear it. "Hard
+work," he repeated. "Too bad."
+
+Timid Hare nodded. "Good dog," she ventured after a while, looking at
+the dog with a sad little smile. "I had a dog; I loved him," she added.
+
+"Very good dog. He is my friend," replied the youth. "He goes with me
+everywhere--everywhere. He makes me--not lonely. I call him Smoke."
+
+Black Bull put his arm lovingly around Smoke's neck and the dog whined
+softly. It was the only way in which he could say, "I love you, poor
+master, if no one else does."
+
+"My people are great people," Black Bull went on. "They are very
+strong." Timid Hare nodded. "The Dahcotas are brave above all men.
+Their bands are so many I could not count them." The very thought of
+counting a large number made the simple-minded youth look puzzled.
+"And they are tall and strong of body beyond the red men of all tribes."
+
+Again Timid Hare nodded. But she also shuddered as she thought that
+she was in their power, a helpless captive. Then, as her eyes turned
+towards Black Bull, they filled with pity. Here was one of the
+Dahcotas, at least, who was not strong and tall and well-shaped. Nor
+would he do her harm, she felt sure.
+
+Black Bull had turned to his lute which lay on the floor behind him and
+begun to play a low, sweet tune when The Stone entered the lodge. She
+looked sharply at Timid Hare, and then at the work which the little
+girl had just finished.
+
+"Ugh! Ugh!" grunted the squaw. "You must learn to sew better than
+that, you little cringing coward. Ah, ha! I know something that may
+help you." The Stone cut the air with a switch that she held in her
+hand. "Something else may also help you to gain the spirit of a red
+woman. Of that, by-and-by. And now you shall fetch me fresh water
+from the spring. Black Bull, put yourself to some use. Show the girl
+where the water may be drawn."
+
+Handing an earthen crock to Timid Hare, she turned to her own
+work--that of making dye out of the clay she had got the day before.
+
+Timid Hare, holding the big crock as carefully as possible on her
+shoulder, followed Black Bull out of the tepee. It seemed good to be
+outdoors, even in a village of the Dahcotas. In the doorway of the
+next lodge stood a young woman with pleasant eyes and beautiful glossy
+hair. She looked curiously at the little girl, for she had just heard
+of her capture. She must have pitied the child, for she smiled kindly
+at her. Black Bull, catching the smile, said, "The Fountain, this is
+Timid Hare. Is she not strange to look upon--so fair? She must be
+like the pale-faces I have never seen."
+
+The Fountain had no chance to answer, for Black Bull now turned to his
+companion. "Hurry, Timid Hare, hurry, lest my mother be angry and beat
+you."
+
+As the two went on their way, the little girl saw other children like
+herself, playing together and laughing happily. One of them had her
+doll, and was carrying it in a baby-cradle on her back. She was
+pretending it was too small to walk, and was singing a lullaby to make
+it go to sleep.
+
+All the children stopped to look at the little stranger.
+
+"A Mandan! Oof!" cried one.
+
+"Her hair is not black like ours," said another.
+
+"Nor is her skin as dark. She is more like the pale-faces whom we
+hate," remarked a third.
+
+Then they turned to their play as if she were not worth noticing, and
+poor little Timid Hare blushed for shame. It was hard indeed that even
+the children should despise her.
+
+A little farther on she noticed a group of men dancing together in the
+sunlight. They were much taller than the Mandan braves, and noble to
+look upon, as Black Bull had said. But to the little girl holding in
+mind the capture of the day before, they seemed cruel and fearful even
+now while they were dancing.
+
+"The Dahcotas dance much--always," explained Black Bull, pointing to
+the men. "We have many, many dances. For everything there is a dance.
+When we feast, and before we hunt, when councils are held, when guests
+come among us, we dance. It is a noble thing to dance. Sometimes," he
+went on, "it is too make us laugh. Sometimes it is to make our faces
+grow long--so!"
+
+At this Black Bull's face took on a look of sadness as though he were
+grieving.
+
+Timid Hare was used to the dances of the Mandans, and she loved them.
+But they were not so many as those of the Dahcotas, she felt sure.
+Why, the night before, whenever she wakened, she heard the sound of
+dancing in different lodges in the village.
+
+"There is the spring. Now I go," said Black Bull, pointing it out
+half-hidden in a hollow shaded by clumps of bushes. The youth, with
+Smoke who had followed close at his heels ever since leaving the lodge,
+turned back and Timid Hare stooped down to fill the crock.
+
+As she did so her eyes met a pair of large black ones fastened upon her
+own, and just above the water's edge. They belonged to the chief's
+only son Young Antelope, who had come for a drink of cool water before
+going off on a hunting trip. He was a handsome youth. As he lay
+stretched out on the grassy bank above the spring he had heard the
+sound of Timid Hare's steps as she drew near, and looked up to see who
+it was.
+
+"Oof! the stranger," he said, but he did not scowl like the little
+girls whom the little captive had passed a few minutes before.
+
+The next minute he had sprung to his pony's back and gone galloping
+away. Timid Hare thought sadly of the dear foster-brother far away on
+the wide prairie, as she trudged back with her load to the tepee where
+The Stone awaited her.
+
+
+
+
+THE CHANGE
+
+"Bad," scolded the squaw as she looked into the crock and saw that some
+of the water had been spilled on the way home.
+
+She reached for her willow switch and used it twice on Timid Hare's
+back.
+
+"I have a nice little task for you," she said. "Do you see this?" She
+pointed to a dish full of a dull red dye. "It is for you," she
+continued. "No more pale-faces about us now. You are to take this dye
+and paint yourself--every part of your body, mind you. Then, when you
+have used this on your hair--" she pointed to a smaller dish containing
+a black dye--"we may be able to make a Dahcota out of you after all."
+
+"Waste no time," she commanded, as Timid Hare turned slowly to the
+dishes of dye. "I leave you now for a little while and when I come
+back--then I may like to look at you."
+
+The Stone left the lodge and Timid Hare was left to change herself so
+that even White Mink would not know her. Trained as she had been in
+the ways of all Indians, her tears fell often as she covered her body
+with the paint. She dare not leave one spot untouched, nor one tress
+of the beautiful hair that had been White Mink's pride. When the work
+was at last finished, there was no mirror in which to look at herself.
+
+Once--just once, during her eight years of life among the Mandans, she
+had seen a looking-glass. It was no larger than the palm of her small
+hand, and belonged to the chief into whose hands it had come from a
+white hunter years before. It was such a wonderful thing! Timid Hare
+thought of it now and wished that she might see the picture that it
+would of herself reflect.
+
+"When I am next sent to the spring," she thought, "I will seek the
+quiet little pool where some of the water lingers. Then, if the clouds
+give a deep shadow, I can see the Timid Hare I now am."
+
+"Good," muttered The Stone when she returned and examined her little
+slave. But when Black Bull noticed the change, he said nothing--only
+looked sad. Perhaps he felt that the little stranger had somehow lost
+herself.
+
+
+
+
+THE VISIT
+
+One day, soon after Timid Hare's coming, she was sent to the chief's
+tepee on an errand. The Stone and she had been gathering rushes for
+the chief's daughter Sweet Grass who wished them for a mat she was
+weaving. It was to be a surprise for her father; she meant it to be so
+beautiful that he would wish to sit on it at feasts when entertaining
+chiefs of other bands.
+
+The Stone and Timid Hare had spent many hours searching for the most
+beautiful rushes, and the old squaw was pleased at having succeeded at
+last.
+
+"Sweet Grass's mother will give me much bear meat for getting the
+rushes for her daughter," she thought. But to Timid Hare she only
+said: "Take these to the home of our chief and place them in the hands
+of Sweet Grass. Make haste, for she may already be impatient."
+
+The Stone did not know that Sweet Grass had ever seen Timid Hare, nor
+that she had begged her father for the child's life.
+
+The little girl was glad to go. She had thought many times of the
+chief's daughter, and of her kind face and gentle voice. Whenever she
+had gone near Bent Horn's tepee she had been on the lookout for Sweet
+Grass, but she had not been able to get a glimpse of her.
+
+As Timid Hare trudged along with her load she thought of that dreadful
+night after her capture. "I think I would have died of fright but for
+the sight of the chief's beautiful daughter," she said to herself.
+"But after she spoke, my heart did not beat so hard."
+
+Now, however, as she neared the chief's lodge, she began to breathe
+more quickly. The chief had such power! The Stone said ugly words to
+her and did not give her enough to eat; sometimes she beat her; but she
+would not do her terrible harm because the chief had given the order:
+Care for the child. Suppose he should change his mind!
+
+Trembling, Timid Hare stopped in front of the lodge.
+
+"Come in. I am waiting for you," called a sweet voice, for Sweet
+Grass, looking up from her work, had caught a glimpse of the little
+girl standing outside with her bundle.
+
+Timid Hare's heart leaped for joy. It was so good to have some one
+speak kindly to her once more. And the young girl who had spoken was
+so lovely to look upon! Her eyes shone like stars. Her long hair was
+bound with a coronet made out of pretty shells. Her robe of deer skin
+was trimmed with long fringe. Her moccasins, cut differently from
+those of the Mandans, were bound into shape with ribbons made of rabbit
+skin. Around her neck were many chains that made pleasant music as
+they jingled against each other.
+
+While Timid Hare was peeping out of the corners of her eyes at this
+beautiful sight. Sweet Grass was in her turn examining the little
+captive.
+
+"You are--changed," she said slowly. "What has The Stone been doing?
+Ugh! I see. She has tried to make a Dahcota out of you. Well, it may
+be well, and yet, I think I liked you better as you were before."
+
+"Lay the rushes here, beside me," she continued. "And now, little
+Timid Hare, tell me about The Stone. Is she good to you? And Black
+Bull--does he treat you well?"
+
+Sweet Grass was tender as a sister as she asked these questions and
+many others. And Timid Hare's tongue slowly became brave. She told of
+the hard work which The Stone made her do. She showed scars on her
+hands which the work had left. And--yes--there were also scars on the
+little back from the cruel touch of The Stone's switch.
+
+But Black Bull--poor Black Bull! The child spoke of him with loving
+pity. "I am sorry for him," she said. "He has only his dog to make
+him happy."
+
+"Would you like to live with me?" asked Sweet Grass, when the story was
+finished.
+
+"Oh-h!" The little girl drew a long sigh of wonder and delight. If
+only it were possible!
+
+"We will see. I will talk to my father by-and-by. And now you must
+run home. Good-by." The young girl bent over her work and Timid Hare
+ran swiftly out of the lodge and back to The Stone who was angrily
+waiting.
+
+"You must have stopped on the way, you good-for-nothing. Sweet Grass
+could not have kept you all this time," she scolded.
+
+The little girl made no answer.
+
+"Hm! has the child won the heart of the chief's daughter?" she
+muttered. "And next it would be the chief himself. That must not be.
+Moreover, no bear meat was sent me. Ugh!"
+
+
+
+
+THE MISCHIEF MAKER
+
+That afternoon the sun shone brightly. It was a beautiful day of the
+late Indian summer. Sweet Grass, taking the mat she was weaving, left
+the lodge and sought a pleasant spot near the spring to go on with her
+work.
+
+The Stone had been skulking about near the chief's lodge for several
+hours. She wanted to catch Sweet Grass alone and yet as if she had
+come upon her by accident.
+
+She stealthily watched the young girl as she made her way to the
+spring, but did not appear before her for some time. When she did, she
+held some fine rushes in her hands.
+
+"I have just found more. You will like them, Sweet Grass," she said,
+trying to make her harsh voice as soft as possible.
+
+The chief's daughter had never liked The Stone; and now, after hearing
+Timid Hare's story, it was not easy to act friendly.
+
+"For the child's sake, I must not show my dislike," she thought
+quickly. So she smiled, and looking at the rushes, said, "These are
+good, very good. I can use them for my mat."
+
+She turned to her work while The Stone stood silent, watching her.
+Then, suddenly, the old squaw bent over her and said, "Sweet Grass,
+listen to me. I sent the child of the Mandans to you this morning.
+She is bad--lazy--very lazy. Your father gave her into my keeping and
+I will train her, though it is hard. No one else would be patient with
+her wicked, lying ways. No one!"
+
+The Stone stopped as suddenly as she had begun. She hoped that she had
+succeeded in making Sweet Grass believe that the little captive was as
+bad as she had said.
+
+"Why do you talk? I do not care to listen to you," said the young
+girl, looking up into the ugly face bending over her. Then she went on
+with her weaving as though she were alone. There was nothing left for
+The Stone but to go on her way, muttering.
+
+"After this," she promised herself, "Timid Hare shall go little from my
+sight. I need her to do my bidding and save my steps. She must not be
+taken from me through any foolish fancy that Sweet Grass may have taken
+for her."
+
+
+
+
+THE HAPPY DAY
+
+That evening the chief, Bent Horn, sat by his fireside, smoking with
+his friends. Close beside him was his handsome son. On the women's
+side of the lodge Sweet Grass and her mother squatted, listening to the
+stories of the men. As the hours passed by, the visitors rose one by
+one and went home for the night's sleep. When the last one had gone
+Sweet Grass got up from her place and held out to her father the mat
+she had been making for him. A pretty picture had been woven into the
+rushes; it had taken all the young girl's skill to do it.
+
+"For you, my father," said Sweet Grass.
+
+The chief smiled. He was proud of his young son who gave promise of
+becoming a fine hunter. But he was also proud of this one daughter.
+He loved her so dearly that he could not bear to say, No, to anything
+she might ask of him.
+
+"My father," now said Sweet Grass, "I wish to speak to you of the child
+Timid Hare whom you gave into the keeping of The Stone."
+
+The chief scowled. "That pale-faced daughter of the cowardly Mandans?
+She may thank you that she still lives," he said sternly.
+
+"But I have seen her and talked with her, my father, and she has won my
+heart. I want her to live with me and serve me. Will you let it be
+so?"
+
+There was no answer.
+
+"And she no longer makes one think of the pale-faced Mandans. Her skin
+is now dark with paint so that she looks even as we do." The voice of
+Sweet Grass was tender with pleading.
+
+"I saw her at the spring one day," broke in young Antelope. "The
+hump-back, Black Bull, had just left her. Her eyes spoke fright, but
+also a good temper. Let my sister have her wish."
+
+The chief turned to his wife. In matters of the household the Indian
+woman generally has her will.
+
+"Let the child come and serve Sweet Grass," said the squaw who had a
+noble face and must once have been as beautiful as her daughter.
+
+"You shall have your wish." Bent Horn spoke as though not wholly
+pleased; but when he saw the delight his words gave Sweet Grass, his
+face showed more kindness than his voice.
+
+Two days afterwards a messenger from Bent Horn appeared in The Stone's
+doorway.
+
+"I bring you word from our chief," he told her. "The captive, Timid
+Hare, is to return with me. She will serve the maiden Sweet Grass."
+
+The Stone's ugly eyes filled with anger. Yet she did not dare refuse
+the command of the chief.
+
+"Go," she said turning to Timid Hare, who was busy at one side of the
+lodge pounding wild rice into flour. "Go, you cowardly
+good-for-nothing. Let the chief discover what I have borne."
+
+Timid Hare was almost overcome with delight. To serve the beautiful
+maiden, Sweet Grass! It seemed too good to be true.
+
+Yet it must be true, for The Stone, with uplifted arms, was fairly
+driving her from the lodge as she would a troublesome mosquito.
+
+As the little girl passed through the doorway she met Black Bull
+entering, with Smoke at his heels. Over the youth's eyes swept a cloud
+of fear at the unusual brightness in the little girl's face. He felt
+instantly that she was going to leave him. Sad as she had been, she
+had brought a little sunshine into the dreary home.
+
+"Good-bye, Black Bull," she whispered. "I will not forget you." Then,
+without a last glance at The Stone, she hurried on after the messenger
+who had come for her.
+
+When she reached the chief's lodge, there was Sweet Grass waiting for
+her with a kind smile. The maiden's mother, whom she had never seen
+before, was also in the lodge. The squaw was busily cooking the
+evening meal like any other red woman, though her husband was the chief
+of the whole band.
+
+Sweet Grass had just motioned to the little girl to take her place
+beside her, when Young Antelope burst into the tepee. The day before
+he had gone hunting, and when night came had not appeared. His mother
+and sister had worried at his absence, but the chief had said, "We will
+not fear. The lad has no doubt lost his way. But he knows how to care
+for himself."
+
+And now Young Antelope stood once more in the home, safe and happy! He
+had had an exciting adventure, and was eager to tell of it. Yes, he
+had lost his way out on the prairies. He was ashamed of this, for he
+had been taught that an Indian should always watch the winds and the
+heavens, and carefully mark every change in the appearance of the
+country over which he travels; then it is an easy matter to find his
+way back without trouble.
+
+But his pony was fleet of foot, and the birds he was seeking flew fast.
+After many, many miles had been covered and his game bag had been
+filled, he decided to return. But he was hungry; he thought of the
+tender birds he had killed and of the feast they would make.
+
+"I will rest for awhile and cook some of the game," he decided.
+
+All this he now told his mother on his return home. So eager was he to
+describe his adventure that he did not notice the little stranger
+squatting beside Sweet Grass, and looking at him with admiring eyes.
+
+"I soon had a fire started," he continued, "and then began to roast my
+game. Ugh! the feast was a fine one. But after it was over, I began
+the search for home. Then darkness fell suddenly and fast gathering
+clouds covered the setting sun. I was alone and far from you all. I
+could hear wolves howling in the distance. They were hungry as I had
+been."
+
+[Illustration: "I soon had a fire started."]
+
+The youth shivered. Then he went on: "But I remembered how to keep
+wolves from drawing too near. They do not love fire. I piled the
+brush high, and flames leaped up in the air. All night long I did
+this, and now, my mother and my sister, I am with you once more. No
+harm befell me."
+
+"You did well, my son," replied his mother. That was all, but her eyes
+shone with pride and gladness. So did those of Sweet Grass who
+exclaimed, "Those fearful wolves! How I hate them! But you are safe.
+They did not devour you; that is enough."
+
+
+
+
+THE DOG FEAST
+
+Soon after Timid Hare went to live in Bent Horn's lodge to serve his
+beautiful daughter, there was a good deal of excitement in the village.
+Messengers had come from other bands of the Dahcotas saying that their
+chiefs were about to make a visit to Bent Horn. They wished to talk
+over important matters in regard to the good of the whole tribe.
+
+Both braves and squaws were busy preparing for the great time. There
+would be dances and feasts, games and wrestling matches. The warriors
+must make ready their best garments and noblest head-dresses. They
+must use much grease and paint to look as grand as possible when
+receiving their guests.
+
+Sweet Grass and her mother had much to do getting ready for the
+celebration, and Timid Hare tried her best to help. She ran errands,
+pounded rice, brought wild sweet potatoes and dried berries from the
+pit in which the stores of food were buried, and tended the fire in
+which buffalo and bear meat were roasting, for much would be eaten
+during the visit which would last several days at least.
+
+Sweet Grass smiled upon her little helper. So did her mother. Both of
+them were pleased with the child, and came near forgetting that she was
+not one of their own people.
+
+Then came the day when word was sent through the village that the
+coming visit was to be celebrated by the Feast of the Dog. Different
+families would be asked to sacrifice the dog dearest to their hearts.
+Every one believed it would be a fit offering to the Great Spirit and
+would fill his heart with tenderness for his red children.
+
+It would also bind the hearts of the chiefs more closely together.
+
+As Timid Hare went through the village one morning--it was the last one
+before the visitors should arrive--she met Black Bull. It was the
+first time she had seen him since she had gone from his lodge. As she
+ran towards him he did not seem glad to see her. He simply looked at
+her pitifully.
+
+"What is the matter, Black Bull? Is there trouble? Tell me. Everyone
+else is happy over the coming good time." Timid Hare spoke fast.
+
+"My dog," he said brokenly. "My one friend must die. I must give him
+as a sacrifice, so my mother has said." The poor fellow began to cry.
+
+"Your dear Smoke! I am so sorry for you, Black Bull." Timid Hare's
+own eyes filled with tears. "So sorry," she repeated.
+
+"I will try to save him, though." The deformed youth looked wildly
+about him as he spoke, as though he feared some one besides Timid Hare
+would hear him. Then, without waiting for her to reply, he went off in
+the direction of the spring, beyond which was a sharp bluff. Below
+this bluff flowed a stream of water which in the autumn was deep--so
+deep that any one could drown in it easily.
+
+"I wonder what Black Bull meant when he said he would try to save
+Smoke," thought Timid Hare, as she stood watching. "He cannot save the
+dog. How hard it is! No one in the village seems to care for Black
+Bull. The Stone, his own mother, treats him cruelly. The dog is his
+only friend, as he says. I will tell my young mistress about him. It
+may be she can help him."
+
+As soon as Timid Hare had done her errand she ran home, still with the
+thought of Black Bull's trouble in her mind. She had been in the tepee
+only a few minutes before Sweet Grass noticed that something was the
+matter with her little maid.
+
+"What has happened, Timid Hare?" she asked. "Your face is long--so!"
+She drew her own mouth down at the corners and made herself look so
+funny that Timid Hare, sad as she felt, broke into a laugh.
+
+"It is Black Bull," she answered. "He is in trouble. It is greater
+than it would be with any one else in the village."
+
+Then she went on to speak of the youth's lonely life, and that even his
+mother treated him badly. Only one loved him: this was the dog Smoke
+who followed him wherever he went and who did not mock him as the
+children of the village sometimes did. Smoke was ever ready to smile
+at him in the one way dogs can--with his tail. It was Smoke's love
+alone that made Black Bull glad to live. And now--Timid Hare's voice
+broke as she went on to tell of what must soon happen.
+
+"Poor fellow!" said Sweet Grass softly. "Poor fellow," she repeated,
+half to herself.
+
+As it happened, Young Antelope was in the lodge when Timid Hare was
+telling the story. He was busy making a shield; he intended to wear it
+when first allowed to go forth on a war party with the older braves.
+But though he was busy at his work, he listened with interest to the
+words of Timid Hare.
+
+Soon afterwards he left the tepee and ran along the path leading to the
+spring. "If I see Black Bull," he thought, "I will speak kindly to him
+even if he is such a useless creature."
+
+When Young Antelope reached the spring he heard some one talking
+angrily. This was followed by a cry of fear. The sounds came from the
+direction of the bluff beyond, but the youth could see no one because
+of clumps of brush which shut off the view from any one at the spring
+below.
+
+Young Antelope hurried along, till suddenly he caught a glimpse of two
+figures on the very edge of the rocky summit of the bluff. One was
+that of Thunder Cloud, a worthless fellow; the other which he held
+struggling in his arms was that of The Stoned's deformed son. Black
+Bull was helpless; he was at the mercy of Thunder Cloud who was about
+to cast him into the stream below.
+
+[Illustration: Black Bull was helpless.]
+
+"What is this?" shouted Young Antelope. Thunder Cloud, startled,
+turned suddenly about.
+
+"I would punish this worthless fellow as he deserves," he answered.
+"Do you know what he dared to do? He brought his dog to yonder brush
+and fastened him in the midst. He thought to keep the animal from the
+sacrifice. Ugh! A wretched creature indeed. His mother bade me
+follow him."
+
+"Make him free," said Young Antelope with the air of a mighty chief.
+"My father will take care of him. As for you, go from my sight."
+
+Thunder Cloud, who had already set Black Bull on his feet, though he
+still clutched him tightly, let go his hold, and skulked away.
+
+"Let your dog loose," Young Antelope now ordered Black Bull who stood
+before him, still shivering from fright. "There! Now we will go to my
+father and let him settle the matter. Follow me."
+
+Black Bull, with Smoke capering about him in the joy of being set free,
+followed Young Antelope silently till the two neared the council house
+where Bent Horn was busy planning for the coming celebration. There,
+in the autumn sunlight, they waited till the chief should appear and
+the son whom he loved dearly should have a chance to ask for a certain
+boon.
+
+That night Black Bull went to sleep as happy as a king, even though his
+mother had just given him a beating. Smoke was safe! Another, Young
+Antelope, who had more treasures than he, was willing to make the
+sacrifice in his place.
+
+
+
+
+THE FESTIVAL
+
+The celebration was over and Timid Hare was tired out from excitement.
+Never before had she seen so many wonders. Why, the chief of chiefs,
+the chief of all the Dahcotas, had been one of the visitors and had
+slept in Bent Horn's tepee. Timid Hare herself had helped to serve
+him. And when he had gone forth to the council and to the feasts he
+was the grandest looking person she had ever beheld in her life. He
+wore a head-dress of war-eagle feathers. Thick and heavy was this
+head-dress, and beautiful were the feathers beyond compare. The great
+chief's face shone with grease, and was made fearful to look upon with
+much paint. On his robe were pictured the many battles in which he had
+taken part; it was trimmed with a heavy fringe of scalp-locks. His
+leggings and moccasins were richly embroidered with porcupine quills.
+He walked forth like a king. The children of the village trembled as
+they gazed upon him.
+
+Bent Horn looked grand also in his own robes of state. Many a day had
+his wife spent embroidering this robe with porcupine quills and
+trimming it with fringes of his enemies scalp-locks. Heavy chains hung
+around his neck. His long hair, which he had greased well, had been
+divided into two parts and crossed on the top of his head, where it was
+then gathered into a knot.
+
+"Bent Horn's head-dress is almost as handsome as that of the Great
+Chief," Timid Hare said to herself, as she watched the two men walking
+together towards the council house.
+
+The sun shone brightly throughout the whole celebration and the feasts
+were spread outdoors. The chiefs and braves sat in a half-circle at
+these feasts and the food was passed to them from steaming kettles.
+There was bear meat in plenty, fat and rich; baked turtles; juicy
+buffalo steaks and stews; but at the principal feast of all, only dog
+flesh was served.
+
+Then it was that the people of the village gathered in crowds around
+the feasters to watch and listen. Closest of all were the braves and
+their sons. Back of them were the squaws and their little daughters.
+Timid Hare, beside her young mistress Sweet Grass, listened with wonder
+to the noble speeches of the chiefs. Bent Horn spoke first of all.
+
+"My brother," he said to the Great Chief, "our hearts are almost
+bursting with gladness that you are with us today.
+
+"And you also"--Bent Horn continued, turning to one after another of
+the lesser chiefs, "we welcome you with gladness and feel that the
+Great Spirit has sent you to us. In token of our love we have killed
+faithful dogs that you may feast. May the Great Spirit bind us closely
+together. I say no more."
+
+As Bent Horn ended his speech he lifted before the eyes of the feasters
+a carved necklace made of the claws of grizzly bears, and his own robe
+of elk skins which he had just taken from his shoulders. Then he
+slowly rose and, going to the side of the guest of honor, he laid the
+gifts before him. Next, he took other gifts--embroidered moccasins and
+leggings--and presented them to the lesser chiefs.
+
+For a moment all were silent. Then the guests themselves made
+speeches, each one telling of his love for Bent Horn and his band, and
+giving rich gifts in return.
+
+And now the pipe of peace was lighted and brought to Bent Horn.
+Solemnly he pointed the stem to the north, the south, the east, and the
+west. Last of all, he lifted it towards the sun. Then he spoke.
+"How--how--how," he said slowly. Then in silence he smoked it, but
+only to take one long whiff, after which he held it in turn to the
+mouths of the other chiefs, that they might smoke it also.
+
+Not a word was spoken by any one during this solemn time. But as soon
+as the last guest had smoked, the dog-meat, floating in rich gravy, was
+brought from the steaming kettles and handed around in wooden bowls
+among the guests. All ate their fill. Then silently, they got up and
+went away. They had smoked and eaten the sacrifice together. Surely,
+they thought, there could be no better token of their friendship for
+each other.
+
+Timid Hare looked on from afar. She felt pride in her dear mistress's
+brother who had given up his own pet dog, in place of Black Bull. She
+was also filled with wonder at the greatness of the Dahcotas.
+
+"They are a mighty tribe," thought the little girl. She drew a long
+breath of sadness, feeling that she could never hope to go from among
+them. But when she afterwards looked on at the wrestling matches,
+races on horseback, and dances such as she had never seen before, she
+forgot everything else for the moment. Her eyes shone with excitement;
+her breath came quick. Never before, it seemed to her, had she seen
+such skill.
+
+When the entertainment of each day ended, however, and Timid Hare went
+to her bed of buffalo skins, she would lie thinking of the old home, of
+the loving White Mink, the kind Three Bears, and the good
+foster-brother Big Moose. Then tears would roll down over the little
+girl's cheeks and she would choke back a sob.
+
+"Can it be," she would think, "that the story White Mink told me before
+I was taken from her, is true? Am I truly a white child, and is she
+not my real mother?" Then the little captive would touch the baby's
+sock fastened by a cord of deer-sinews about her waist and next to her
+flesh.
+
+"It is safe," she would whisper to herself, "and no one here has
+discovered it--not even The Stone. It did not save me from being
+captured, but it may yet bring good fortune, even as White Mink hoped."
+
+
+
+
+MOVING DAY
+
+The visitors had all gone away and the village was once more
+quiet--that is, as quiet as it might be among the Dahcotas, the lovers
+of the dance and of music.
+
+Now and then some of the braves went forth on a war-party, or on a hunt
+after bears or buffaloes. But the buffaloes were scarce, they told
+their chief; the herds must have wandered far, and the hunters often
+returned empty-handed. This was bad, because the winter was drawing
+near and supplies of meat were needed for that long season of bitter
+cold.
+
+One morning Bent Horn rose earlier than usual and made his way to the
+council house. There he staid for some time talking with the medicine
+men and other leading braves of the village.
+
+Should there be a bear dance and a buffalo dance to call the attention
+of the Great Spirit to the needs of His people, that He might send
+plenty of prey nearer the village? Or should the band first move to a
+different part of the country, where no red man dwelt and where the
+buffaloes, at least, might be plentiful?
+
+When the talk was ended the men who had gathered at the council went
+their way. Bent Horn's mind was made up. "My people must move to a
+new camping ground," he said to himself. "We will journey to the
+eastward. In that direction, the hunters say, we are likely to draw
+near the feeding grounds of large herds of buffaloes. Tomorrow morning
+at sunrise we must be on our way."
+
+[Illustration: Bent Horn's mind was made up.]
+
+The news was quickly carried from one tepee to another and the squaws
+set to work with a will to prepare for moving.
+
+When Timid Hare heard the news she thought sadly: "Shall I go farther
+than ever from my dear White Mink?" The little girl had been so
+frightened at the time of her capture that she was not sure in which
+direction she travelled.
+
+There was not a moment now, however, to consider herself, as Sweet
+Grass and her mother kept the child helping them prepare for the
+moving. The stores of grain and other dry food, the dishes and kettles
+and clothing must be packed in readiness for the early start on the
+morrow.
+
+
+
+
+THE JOURNEY
+
+"Awake, Timid Hare, for there is a faint light in the eastern sky. The
+sun is already rising from his bed."
+
+At these words from Sweet Grass, Timid Hare's eyes burst wide open and
+she sprang from her bed. There was much to do at once, for the signal
+must be given to the whole village from the home of Bent Horn.
+
+So quickly did his squaw and young daughter work that a half-hour
+afterwards the walls of the chief's tepee were flapping in the morning
+breeze. Immediately afterwards the same thing happened to every other
+home in the village. Next, down came the tent poles of the chief's
+tepee, and then those of all the others.
+
+Timid Hare went quickly here and there, obeying the orders of her
+mistress. Ropes of skin must be brought to tie the poles into two
+bundles. The little girl must help hold these bundles in place, while
+Bent Horn's best pack horses were brought up and the bundles fastened
+against the sides of their bodies, and at the same time allowed to drag
+on the ground behind.
+
+"Quick, Timid Hare," Sweet Grass would say, pointing now to this bundle
+of bedding, and now to another of dishes or clothing. The horses were
+restless and the bundles must be well-fastened to the poles before they
+should be ready to start. Some of Bent Horn's dogs were also loaded in
+the same way.
+
+While Sweet Grass and her mother, with Timid Hare's help, were packing
+their own stores every other woman in the village was doing the same.
+In a wonderfully short time the procession was on its way, the squaws
+leading the pack horses. When they started out, however, the braves
+and youths, riding their favorite horses and ponies, were already far
+ahead.
+
+Timid Hare trudged bravely along beside her young mistress who led one
+of the pack horses. She carried a big bundle on her back. So did
+Sweet Grass and her mother. So did all the other squaws except those
+who were too old and feeble.
+
+"Let us move fast while we are fresh," Sweet Grass would say now and
+then when Timid Hare began to lag. "When the day grows old, then is
+the time to move like the turtle."
+
+As they travelled along. Timid Hare passed The Stone who looked at her
+with ugly eyes. The old squaw was thinking, "Had it not been for my
+sending the girl that day to Sweet Grass she would now be making my
+load light. Fool that I was!"
+
+Afterwards Timid Hare and her mistress talked with The Fountain, the
+pretty bride who lived near The Stone. The Fountain smiled pleasantly
+at the little girl. She said, "Sometime, Timid Hare, you shall come to
+see me in the new home. I may have a surprise for you."
+
+The sun had nearly set when word came down the line: "The chief has
+chosen a place for the new camp. It is beside a stream of clear water
+and the tracks of buffaloes are not far distant."
+
+Timid Hare was glad to hear the news, because her feet and back ached.
+She was not strong as an Indian girl of her own age should be and she
+knew it. "But I look like one," she said to herself. She was glad now
+that her body was stained. She had colored it afresh of her own accord
+just before the journey, for she felt she would not be jeered at by the
+children of the Dahcotas so long as her hair and body were of the same
+color as their own.
+
+When the new camping ground was reached, she was very tired. "But I
+must not show it," she thought. "I must be bright and cheerful." So
+she moved quickly, helping to set up the tepee and get supper for the
+family. But her eyelids closed the moment she lay down to rest, and
+she knew nothing more till the barking of the dogs roused her the next
+morning. At the same time she heard Sweet Grass and her mother talking
+together.
+
+"The Fountain was last seen when we stopped at a spring to get water in
+the late afternoon," one of them was saying.
+
+"I hope she is safe," replied the other, "and that the gray wolf was
+not abroad."
+
+Timid Hare shuddered. "Where can The Fountain be?" she wondered. "She
+is so good and so pretty, I hope she is unharmed."
+
+The very next moment a neighbor appeared in the door. "The Fountain
+has just reached us," she said. "She spent the night by the spring,
+and she now brings with her a baby son. He is a lusty child. May he
+grow up to be a noble warrior!"
+
+"I will go to her and give her my best wishes," declared the chief's
+wife. "It is a good sign for the new home that one more is added to
+our people."
+
+Soon afterwards Timid Hare and her young mistress were also on their
+way to visit the young mother. She was very happy. So was her
+husband. So was her baby; at least it seemed happy to Timid Hare as
+she looked at it nestling quietly in its mother's arms. The little
+girl longed for it to open its eyes.
+
+"By and by," The Fountain told her with a smile, "my son will awake.
+But now he must sleep, for he finds this world a strange one, and he is
+tired."
+
+"The Great Spirit has been kind to The Fountain," said Sweet Grass as
+she walked homeward with her little maid.
+
+"How powerful He must be," declared Timid Hare thoughtfully. "Whenever
+He speaks to us in the thunder and lightning I tremble with fear. But
+when I looked at the little baby just now I felt His love."
+
+
+
+
+THE MEDICINE MAN
+
+The next morning Timid Hare was allowed to go once more to visit The
+Fountain and her little son. The baby lay fastened into a pretty frame
+the young mother had made for him. The straps were embroidered with
+porcupine quills, and finished very neatly.
+
+As Timid Hare entered the tepee, The Fountain was about to lift the
+baby in his frame to her back.
+
+"I am going to see Black Bull," she said. "He is ill. He has not been
+well since before the Dog Feast."
+
+Timid Hare at once thought of a reason for Black Bull's illness,--he
+had worried much over the thought of losing his dog. But Young
+Antelope had not told her that he came near losing his life and of his
+terrible fright at the time.
+
+"Has the medicine man visited Black Bull?" asked Timid Hare.
+
+"Not yet." The Fountain shook her head sadly. "I doubt if The Stone
+cares whether her son lives or dies. But I am going to see the poor
+creature. Afterwards, if the medicine man has not been sought, I will
+ask my husband to get his help."
+
+The Fountain started on her errand, and Timid Hare went back to the
+chief's lodge to tell her young mistress what she had learned. On the
+way she passed a clump of trees beneath which she saw several people
+sitting and listening to the voice of a tall man who stood before them.
+He was one of the most powerful medicine men of the band.
+
+"He must be speaking of some great mystery," thought Timid Hare. "How
+noble he is! How much he must know! It may be that he is telling of
+the secrets he reads in the fire."
+
+Turning her eyes towards the listeners, she saw they were thinking
+deeply of his words. They looked with wonder at the medicine man.
+"Yes, he must be speaking of the secrets no one but he can discover."
+
+[Illustration: They looked with wonder at the medicine man.]
+
+When Timid Hare reached home she spoke of this medicine man to her
+mistress. "If only he could go to Black Bull, the sickness would leave
+the poor fellow," she said.
+
+Soon afterwards Sweet Grass herself sought the medicine man. She
+brought him presents of buffalo marrow, deer meat, and a juicy,
+well-cooked land turtle. Then she asked his help for the deformed
+youth, and he promised to go to him.
+
+The next day word came to the chief's lodge that Black Bull had gone to
+join the people of the grave. Though the medicine man had gone to him
+and worked his mysteries with songs and drum beating, the Great Spirit
+had not willed that he should live.
+
+"Better so," declared Bent Horn, when the news was brought to the
+lodge. "Black Bull was of no help to his people. He suffered, and was
+not happy. Better so!"
+
+"I will take his dog," Sweet Grass promised her sad little maid.
+"Smoke shall be cared for, though his master has left him."
+
+
+
+
+THE WINTER HUNT
+
+The new home proved to be a good one. Each time the hunters went forth
+they returned with a load of game. The squaws were kept busy drying
+buffalo and bear meat, packing away the marrow and cleaning the bones
+and skins. Every part of the animals was put to some use.
+
+The days of the long, cold winter were at hand, and all must work
+busily. Timid Hare had much to do, but sometimes she was allowed to
+play outside of the tepee with other children; they were kinder to her
+now that she lived in the chief's home. She had plenty to eat, and
+Sweet Grass and her mother treated her well, but she longed for
+something that was lacking here but was freely given in the old home:
+it was love.
+
+The snow fell thick and fast. It covered the prairie for miles in
+every direction. In some places it was deeper than Timid Hare was
+tall. A thick crust formed over the top.
+
+Young Antelope set to work to make himself new snowshoes. As he bent
+the hoops for the frames and crossed them with networks of leather
+strings. Timid Hare looked on with longing. She had had snowshoes of
+her own before, and she had enjoyed skimming over the snow fields on
+them, but they were far away--very far away.
+
+"I will help you make some shoes," Young Antelope told her, when he
+caught the look. "You can do the easy part, and I will do the hard."
+
+Timid Hare was pleased because Young Antelope did not notice her very
+often. The snowshoes were soon made and the little girl longed to try
+them.
+
+The very next day Young Antelope went out with the men on a winter
+hunt. There were large stores of meat in the village, but the cold was
+bitter and more warm buffalo robes were needed for beds and coverlets.
+Moreover, at this time of the year the fur of the animals was heaviest.
+
+"It will be easy to get our prey," Bent Horn said to his son the night
+before the hunt. "There is little snow on the south slopes of the
+hills, where the buffaloes will be feeding. We can take them by
+surprise and drive them down into the ice-crusted fields. They are so
+heavy that their feet will fall through. Then the hunter can draw near
+on his swift snowshoes, and will pierce the heart of his prey with his
+spear without trouble."
+
+"I will be such a hunter on the morrow," the youth had replied. "My
+spear is already sharpened. It shall bring death to more than one of
+the creatures that provide us with comfort through the moon of
+difficulty," as he had been taught to call the month of January.
+
+As Young Antelope skimmed along over the snow fields next morning, he
+thought more than once of the little captive at home.
+
+"She behaves well," he said to himself, "and she will be a good
+homekeeper when she is older. It may be--it may be--that I will yet
+choose her for my wife."
+
+Young Antelope was only sixteen years old, but he was already thinking
+of getting married! It was the way of his people. The girls married
+even younger than the boys--sometimes when only twelve or thirteen
+years had passed over their heads. It was therefore not strange that
+the chief's son should be considering what wife he would choose.
+
+With many of the braves away on the hunt, the village was quiet, and
+the squaws took a little vacation from their work, as on the morrow
+they must be very busy caring for the supplies brought home by the
+hunters.
+
+In the afternoon Sweet Grass said kindly: "Timid Hare, you have been a
+good girl and worked hard of late. You may have the rest of the day
+for play. Try your new snowshoes, if you like."
+
+The rest of the day--two whole hours before sunset! It seemed too good
+to be true. Never had such a thing happened to the child since she
+left the home of the Mandans.
+
+Without wasting a moment, Timid Hare got the snowshoes and left the
+tepee. For a moment she looked about her to see if any other little
+girl would like to join her in a skim over the fields. But all seemed
+busy at their games, and even now she was not enough at home with any
+one of them to ask them to leave their own play and go off with her, a
+captive.
+
+So, binding on the shoes, she started off alone. What fun it was to
+move so fast and so smoothly! How clear was the air! How delightful
+it was to feel the blood rushing freely through every part of her body!
+Her cheeks tingled pleasantly; her heart beat with joy.
+
+Mile after mile the child darted on in the opposite direction from that
+taken by the hunters in the morning. So happy, so free felt the child
+that she forgot how far she was travelling. Sometimes there were
+little rolls in the land. She would get up her speed as she approached
+them, so as to have force enough to reach the summit of a roll with
+ease. And then what fun it was to travel like the wind down the other
+side!
+
+On, on, on! and then suddenly, Timid Hare came to herself. Where was
+the village? In what direction? Could she not see smoke rising
+somewhere behind her, telling of the fires burning in the homes of the
+people?
+
+There was nothing, nothing, to guide her back--only some fields
+apparently untrodden in every direction. So light was the little
+girl's body that her shoes had rarely pressed through the crust. The
+short winter day was near its end. A bank of clouds was gathering
+about the setting sun, they told of an approaching storm; so also spoke
+the chill wind that blew in the child's face.
+
+Fright clutched at Timid Hare's heart. She thought of the power of the
+storm-king. Here, in the snowy wilderness, it seemed that she must
+perish. Was there no one to turn to in this time of danger? Yes.
+
+"Help me, Great Spirit," cried the child, lifting her hands towards the
+sky where she believed He dwelt.
+
+With that cry came a feeling that somehow her prayer would be answered.
+And at the same time Timid Hare remembered the little sock which she
+always carried in her bosom. She pressed a hand against the place
+where it should rest. Yes, it was safe.
+
+"White Mink had faith in it. So will I," Timid Hare said to herself.
+Many a time during the hard days with The Stone, she had repeated the
+same words. It had always helped her to do so.
+
+And now she turned in the direction she hoped was the village of the
+Dahcotas, but her feet felt numb. It was hard to travel. Hark! what
+was that? It seemed as though men's voices could be heard shouting to
+each other in the distance. They came nearer. Could it be that Sweet
+Grass had sent some of the village boys out after her?
+
+Nearer! Nearer! Timid Hare stood still, listening. If they would
+only hurry! She suddenly felt drowsy--the snow-chill was benumbing her
+whole body, and somehow she no longer cared whether she was found or
+not. She tottered, fell.
+
+The next thing she knew, she was lying in the arms of a man with kind
+blue eyes. He was smiling at her, and he was white! Another man,
+white like himself, was rubbing her arms and legs.
+
+"All right now," the first man was saying to the other. "Poor little
+thing! How did she ever get out here? That Dahcota village is a good
+dozen miles from here, and the child's moccasins tell that she is of
+that tribe."
+
+"We must waste no time in getting farther away from them ourselves,"
+replied the other. "Little time would be wasted in taking our scalps
+if they caught us alone."
+
+"But we can't leave this helpless creature," said the first speaker.
+"Do you know, Ben, she must be about the age of my own little daughter
+if--" The man's voice broke suddenly.
+
+"Poor fellow--yes, I understand. You never will get over that blow.
+But, really, Tom, we must not stay here. The savages may be upon us
+any moment. Here, use this. It may bring her to."
+
+The speaker held out a bottle of cordial which the man who held Timid
+Hare held to her lips. She tried to swallow, but it choked her.
+
+"There," she said with a gasp, "it is enough," and she lifted herself
+up.
+
+"Good," said both men, who knew a little of the Indian tongue.
+
+"Oh, but my shoe!" cried the little girl in fright. It had slipped a
+little from its usual resting place, and she now missed it. In spite
+of being alone on the snow-covered prairie, with two strangers, her
+first thought was of the little talisman White Mink had given into her
+keeping. Oh! she could feel it pressing against her waist, and she
+gave a happy sigh.
+
+In the meantime, the men had decided that it would be best to take the
+child to their camp. The rest could be settled afterwards.
+
+"Can you trust yourself to your snowshoes again?" the man whom his
+friend called Tom asked her gently.
+
+She nodded, and with the help of one of her companions, they were bound
+on her feet. A biscuit was now given her--she had never tasted its
+like before--and she ate greedily. This was followed by another
+swallow of the cordial, and the little girl was ready for the start.
+
+Many miles were before her, but the men often took hold of her hands to
+give her fresh courage. Besides, she was greatly excited. What was
+coming? Were these strangers bringing her back to the village of the
+Dahcotas, or guiding her to something far different? From time to time
+one of the men struck a match--such a wonderful thing it seemed to
+Timid Hare--and looked at a tiny instrument he carried in his pocket.
+It seemed to tell him if they were travelling in the right direction.
+"How wise," thought Timid Hare, "the white people must be! Perhaps
+they are as wise as the medicine men!"
+
+And she--why, she was of their own race, though her stained skin did
+not show it! At the thought, she lifted her hand to her side. Yes,
+her treasure was safe!
+
+When it seemed to the child as if she could not move her feet longer, a
+faint light shone out in the distance. The camp of the white men would
+soon be reached.
+
+When the travellers at last arrived at the journey's end there was
+great excitement among the men who were anxiously watching for the
+return of their two companions. They had feared that their friends had
+lost their way and been overcome by cold; or more probable, that they
+had been killed or captured by the Indians. They were in the Dahcota
+country,--this they knew; also that these Dahcotas were fierce warriors
+and hated the white men.
+
+How surprised they were to see what they thought was an Indian child
+with their companions! How did it happen? What was to be done with
+her?
+
+But now, as Timid Hare almost fell to the floor of the warm, brightly
+lighted tent, all saw that she was quite exhausted. She must be fed,
+and afterwards sleep. There would be time enough to question her next
+morning.
+
+Hot soup was brought, and never, it seemed, had anything ever tasted so
+delicious to Timid Hare. And the heat of the burning logs--how
+pleasant it was! Timid Hare was too tired to be afraid, or even to
+think, and even as she ate, she fell sound asleep.
+
+She awoke next morning with her hand clutching the place where the sock
+lay hidden, and saw a kind face bending over her. It belonged to the
+same man who had held her when she roused from the snow-chill.
+
+"What is it?" he asked gently. He pointed to her hand.
+
+"It is--my charm. It is to bring me good."
+
+"May I see it?" The man's voice was so kind that it filled Timid Hare
+with perfect trust.
+
+"You will--help me?" The child's eyes were full of pleading.
+
+"Yes, little one."
+
+Slowly Timid Hare drew forth the sock. It was faded and soiled, yet
+the pattern in which the silk had been woven into the worsted was quite
+plain.
+
+"How did--Why, tell me at once how you got this." The man's voice was
+half stern, half pleading.
+
+"It was--so." With this beginning Timid Hare repeated the story as
+White Mink had told it to her. Many a time she had since told it to
+herself during her hard life with The Stone. It was such a strange
+story--so full of wonder to her still. The wonder of it was in her
+voice even now.
+
+The man listened with half-closed eyes, but saying never a word till
+she finished. Then, as in a dream, he said in a low tone: "It is my
+baby's sock--the pattern is one planned by my dear wife Alice who died
+out on this lonely prairie. And then--the sudden attack of the
+Dahcotas--and I made prisoner, while my baby Alice was left behind to
+perish. Afterwards I was rescued, though I cared little to live."
+
+"But child, child," he burst out, "though your eyes have the same
+color, the same expression as those of my dear wife, your skin is that
+of the red people."
+
+"I stained it--The Stone made me--and when I saw Sweet Grass liked me
+best so, I put on the color again and yet again."
+
+"God be praised! I have found my darling who, I thought, was lost
+forever." The man lifted Timid Hare and clasped her tenderly in his
+arms. And she--well, the little girl rested there content and happy.
+
+The next minute the rest of the party who had been out exploring,
+entered the tent with word that the start must be made at once. The
+clouds of the night before had lifted; the snow might not begin falling
+for several hours, and the most must be made of the morning towards
+reaching a larger camp where sledges would carry them a long ways
+towards a fur station.
+
+Great was the joy of the others when they learned the good fortune that
+had come to their friend, and merry was the whole party as it made its
+way onward. Yes, Timid Hare, or rather Alice, now more like the Swift
+Fawn she had been, was merry too. But as she went on her way to the
+new and beautiful life that would soon be hers, she begged her father
+to take her back by-and-by for a visit to her foster-parents and Big
+Moose in the Mandan village on the river. And he promised gladly.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TIMID HARE ***
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